Saturday, August 30, 2008

Website Maps Surnames Worldwide

A website which maps global surnames has been launched to help people find the origins of their name and how far it may have spread.

The Public Profiler site plots 10.8 million last names using data from electoral rolls and phone directories.

The site covers a billion people in 26 countries, showing the origins of names and where families have scattered.

David Beckham, for example, has an English name, but there are more Beckhams in the US than Britain. But the region of the world containing the most Beckhams was even further from the footballer's east London origins - in the New Zealand province of Northland.

The site - www.publicprofiler.org/worldnames - also reveals which of the 6.5 million forenames are most closely associated with different surnames and lists the top regions and cities for each surname.

A name is now not just a statement of who you are but where you are Professor Paul Longley
It was developed by a team of geographers from University College London.
Professor Paul Longley, one of the researchers, said: "The information is not just historical but geographical.
"We can link names to places - a name is now not just a statement of who you are but where you are."

Most surnames originated in specific places in the world and remain most frequent in those areas, but have often spread to other countries because of migration, the research showed.
Searches for Britain's three multi-gold medallists at the recent Olympics and the leaders of the three main political parties revealed some mixed results.
• Swimmer Rebecca Adlington's surname is most prevalent in New Zealand
• Cyclist Chris Hoy's surname is Irish but more common in Denmark
• Cyclist Bradley Wiggins's surname is most popular in the US
• Prime Minister Gordon Brown's surname tops the list in Australia
• Conservative leader David Cameron's surname is most prevalent in New Zealand
• Liberal Democrat leader Nick Clegg's surname is still most common in Britain
Prof Longley said that the site was currently struggling to cope with demand.
"We are being deluged with requests and we ask people to be patient. There is obviously a lot of interest in family names and family history globally," he said.

Story from BBC NEWS:http://news.bbc.co.uk/go/pr/fr/-/2/hi/uk_news/7588968.stmPublished: 2008/08/30 10:36:15 GMT

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