Surnames in Five English Villages: Relationship to each other, to Surrounding Areas, and to England and Wales
- 1 January 1983
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Journal of Biosocial Science
- Vol. 15 (1) , 25-34
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0021932083006239
Abstract
Summary: The surnames of all adult residents of five neighbouring communities in the fenlands of Cambridgeshire are compared with each other and with those of the 165,533 persons married in England and Wales in the period January to March 1975. Among the villages the average coefficient of relationship by isonymy (Ri) is 76 × 10−5. The villages nearer together may have a tendency to higher values of Ri: the correlation of Ri with the natural log of distance between villages is −0·49, p = 0·07. The surnames of the five villages give a weighted average Ri with the whole area about 25 miles of 54 × 10−5 and with a zone 25–40 miles away of 45 × 10−5, whereas Ri with all England and Wales is 42 × 10−5. Rare surnames show a much sharper gradient and contribute approximately twice as much to the coefficient in the 25–40 mile zone and six times as much within 25 miles as found with all England and Wales. Moderately frequent surnames and even common surnames show the same gradient, but to a lesser degree. In the part of Cambridgeshire studied, the present distribution of surnames indicates a slight but appreciable local isolation, with the degree of relationship decreasing from among local villages to that between the villages and all England and Wales. This pattern is consistent with the theory of genetic inbreeding based on distance but there is considerable variability in individual instances.Keywords
This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Surnames in the Study of Human BiologyAmerican Anthropologist, 1980
- Secular trends in genetic structure: an isonymic analysis of Northumberland parish recordsAnnals of Human Biology, 1974
- A mathematical analysis of the effects of movement on the relatedness between populationsAnnals of Human Genetics, 1969
- Measurement of inbreeding from the frequency of marriages between persons of the same surnameEugenics Quarterly, 1965