[Surname] Re: Hallman?
in reply to a message by Meredith
Okay, after further research I went to "Hall", because Hallman is an occupational varriant. On Hall it says it is a Germanic name, so would that have anything to do with my name being German?
Replies
If you look here -
http://www.ancestry.com/learn/facts/Fact.aspx?fid=10&ln=Hallman
you will see that an English, or Swedish, OR German origin is possible, though the original German spelling had a double-L ending.
English, German and Swedish all trace back to a common ancestral language that linguistic historians have named "Old Germanic".
English word MAN is MAN in Swedish also, and MANN in German. English word HALL is HALL in Swedish and HALLE in German.
http://www.ancestry.com/learn/facts/Fact.aspx?fid=10&ln=Hallman
you will see that an English, or Swedish, OR German origin is possible, though the original German spelling had a double-L ending.
English, German and Swedish all trace back to a common ancestral language that linguistic historians have named "Old Germanic".
English word MAN is MAN in Swedish also, and MANN in German. English word HALL is HALL in Swedish and HALLE in German.
In German, there is another possible interpretation of the element HALL: salt mine. So HALLMANN could have been someone working in such a mine or a factory producing salt.
In Grimm's dictionary I found this:
HALLKNECHT, m. arbeiter im salzwerke zu Halle a. S. HOHNDORF beschreibung des salzwerks; s. hallor.
HALLMEISTER, m. siedemeister (boiler) in einem salzwerk.
In Grimm's dictionary I found this:
HALLKNECHT, m. arbeiter im salzwerke zu Halle a. S. HOHNDORF beschreibung des salzwerks; s. hallor.
HALLMEISTER, m. siedemeister (boiler) in einem salzwerk.
Apologies: line two should read - spelling had a double-N ending.
I hope that hasn't created any problems.
I hope that hasn't created any problems.
No it hasn't! You were very helpfull, thank you!