Raymond
From Hull AWE
Revision as of 18:54, 12 March 2020 by PeterWilson (Talk | contribs)
The forename Raymond is perhaps most commonly seen in anglophone circles in the abbreviated form Ray. It existed in England from 1066, where a Giraldus Reimundus is recorded as seving with the |the Conqueropr. Raymond has been used as a surname as well as a first name ever since, though never in great numbers.
- Etymological note: Rsymond is derived from an Old French name, Raimund, of Germanic origin, from ragin ‘advice, decision’ + mund ‘protector’. This was adopted by the Normans and introduced by them to Britain. (Hanks, Hardcastle and Hodges, 2006). In other languages, and at other tiomes,it has had many forms. Now, it is Raimundo in Italian, Ramón in Spanish, and occasionally Redmond in English. Itr has been spelled Raimund, Reimund, etc.
Users of AWE may come across some historical 'Raymond's: