Question:
Italians with the last name morgan in italy?
anonymous
2011-04-18 19:03:28 UTC
Italians with the last name morgan in italy?
there seems to be italians in italy with the last name morgan and trying to find out what is the orgin behind it it seems to be common in trieste which is in friuli and northern italian regions italians such as piedmont and veneto as well here is the phonebook for example: http://www.paginebianche.it/execute.cgi?btt=1&ts=101&cb=8&mr=10&rk=&om=&srd=&srm=&qs=morgan&qsn=&dv=Trieste&ind=

and here are the regions which will show http://www.paginebianche.it/execute.cgi?btt=1&ts=101&cb=8&mr=10&rk=&om=&srd=&srm=&qs=morgan&qsn=&dv=Trieste&ind=

so is slovene german or friulian behind the origin please tell me
Five answers:
Maxi
2011-04-19 01:15:36 UTC
The origin of the surname Morgan, although this only tellls you the first place this name was recorded, anyone, anywhere in the world could have ths last name and all Morgans are not related...More information how people got last names in Europe http://familytimeline.webs.com/originsofsurnames.htm and it could be as simple as someone in Italy hearing the last name liking it and so using it.

This is a truly famous surname whose Gaelic-Celtic ancestry pre-dates Christianity. Originally, the name was purely personal and spelt as "Morcant", the change to Morgan being medieval. The exact meaning is uncertain but "sea chief" or "sea defender" are the generally accepted interpretations. The importance of the name is shown by its incorporation in the ancient Welsh kingdom of Glamorgan, a corrupt form of "Ap Morgan", the son of Morgan. The first true recording as a surname is however English (see below). In Wales the first recording may be Thomas Morgaine, Knight of Monmouth, in 1538, whilst in Scotland, one John Morgane was a burgess of Glasgow in 1419. In Ireland the name is popular in Leinster and Ulster, and in some cases is an Anglicization of Merrigan and Morahan, the first recording being that of Edward Morgane, of Dublin, on April 26th 1654. Not only does the name indicate a sea warrior, it is with the sea that the Morgan name has won most renown. Amongst these famous people was Sir Henry Morgan, Governor of Jamaica and the epitome of the privateering buccaneer of the 17th Century. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of John Morgan, which was dated 1214, in the "Curia Regis Rolls of Berkshire", during the reign of King John, known as "Lackland", 1199 - 1216. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.



Read more: http://www.surnamedb.com/Surname/morgan#ixzz1JxFygVaS
?
2017-01-19 02:23:27 UTC
1
Giuly
2014-12-24 09:43:32 UTC
People don't know that plenty of Venetian surnames end in N, R, L, T, and many of them look like more English than Italian, for example a Venetian surname is Mason...the surname Morgan comes from Trieste in Friuli Venezia Giulia, a region that has been part of the Austrian Empire and many of its natives were from Histria.

I don't think your ancestors were British.
wendy c
2011-04-18 19:13:37 UTC
the obvious conclusion is that someone named Morgan moved there, and has family. Just because they are in the phone book, does not indicate that they have lived there hundreds of years.



edit

So, John Morgan from England moves to Italy, married a beautiful Italian girl, and she was emphatic to name the children after her side of the family.

Hey, I am just giving you a logical scenario, possible explanation. You are hoping to find Morgans in Italy, way back, with some exotic origin. My opinion is that it is very unlikely. The other option is there was an Italian name that somehow became anglicized to Morgan.

Like any name in the US, the process is to work back with the known ancestors until you find documents to prove/ disprove the facts. Anglo persons move to Italy as well.
anonymous
2011-04-19 03:41:35 UTC
Morgan was originally a Welsh surname, but it is found all over the UK & to some extent in Ireland.



Just because someone called Morgan moved to Italy & his name lives on, does not mean that he is related to you.



The odds are that the origin of your surname is British.


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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