want2buytheworldacoke
originally shared this to Mayes and Pruitt Family Trees
PAIN (PAINE):
Pain: variant of Paine.
Payne: English variant of Paine. Irish: well-established surname.
PAINE: English (mainly Kent and Sussex): from the Middle English personal name "Pain(e)" or "Payn(e)" (Old French "Paien," and from Latin "Paganus"). Introduced to Britain by the Norman conquerors. The Latin name is a derivative of "pagus", (an outlying village), and meant at first a person who lived in the country (ass opposted to "urbanus" ...a city dweller). Then the meaning advanced to a civilian, as opposed to a soldier, and eventually came to mean a heathen (one not enrolled in the army of Christ). This remained a popular name in the Middle Ages and then died out by the 16th Century.
From: Dictionary of American Family Names, Oxford Univ Press, ISBN 0-19-508137-4. Courtesy of Ancestry.com's search tool.
want2buytheworldacoke
originally shared this to Mayes and Pruitt Family Trees
The content of this page should adhere to our community guidelines.
Please report inappropriate content or possible copyright violations.