Bourgeois

Bourgeois
Recorded in many forms including Bourges, Bourgaize, Bourgeois, (France), Burgess, Burges and Burgis (England and Scotland), Borghese, Borgesio and Burgisi (Italy), and others, this interesting surname is of pre 8th century Old French origins. It derives from the word "burgeis", meaning inhabitant and freeman of a fortified town, one which could apply municipal rates, taxes, and duties. A burgeis generally had tenure of land or buildings from a landlord by "burgage", which involved the payment of a fixed money rent. In Scotland, the position of burgess required not only the making of payments, but to be availble to take part in guarding the town. The surname is one of the earliest recorded anywhere in the world. These recordings are from England because this country was the first to adopt both hereditary surnames and to make the necessary registers in which to record them. France was several centuries later, and Italy, not until the 19th century in most areas. Early recordings showing the influence of the Norman-French in England after the Invasion of 1066 include: Ralph le Burgeis, in the Pipe Rolls of the county of Sussex in 1195, and Philip Bourges in the cartulary of Oseney Abbey, Oxford in 1197. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Geoffrey Burgeis, which was dated 1115, in the "Winton Rolls" of Hampshire. This was during the reign of King Henry 1st, known as "The Lion of Justice", 1100 - 1135. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. Over the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop", often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.

Surnames reference. 2013.

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  • bourgeois — bourgeois, oise [ burʒwa, waz ] n. et adj. • burgeis 1080; de bourg 1 ♦ Au Moyen Âge, Citoyen d un bourg, d une ville, bénéficiant d un statut privilégié. Les bourgeois de Calais. 2 ♦ En Suisse, Personne possédant la bourgeoisie (2o). Conseil des …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • bourgeois — bourgeois, oise 1. (bour joî, joî z ; l s se lie : un bourgeois honorable, dites : un bour joî z honorable) s. m. et f. 1°   Citoyen, citoyenne d une ville, jouissant des droits attachés à ce titre. Un bourgeois considéré. Une riche bourgeoise.… …   Dictionnaire de la Langue Française d'Émile Littré

  • bourgeois — BOURGEOIS, EOISE. s. (On pr. Bourjois.) Citoyen d une ville. Bourgeois de Paris. Un riche Bourgeois. Une riche Bourgeoise. Un bon Bourgeois. Un Bourgeois aisé et accommodé. f♛/b] On dit absolument, Le Bourgeois, pour dire, Tout le Corps des… …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798

  • Bourgeois — Désigne l habitant du bourg, éventuellement caractérisé par les privilèges dont il jouit, les bourgeois formant une classe sociale intermédiaire entre la paysannerie et la noblesse. Le nom est très fréquent dans toute la France, en particulier en …   Noms de famille

  • bourgeois — Bourgeois, Bourgeoise. subst. Citoyen, habitant d une ville. Bourgeois de Paris. bon bourgeois. On dit absolument, Le bourgeois, pour dire, Tout le corps des habitans d une ville. Le bourgeois s est souslevé. le bourgeois a pris les armes. Il… …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • bourgeois — Bourgeois, Ciuis. Il vient de Burgus. Il est bourgeois de cette ville, Hinc ciuis est. Bourgeois du ciel, Caelicola. Bourgeois de Rome, Ciuis Romanus. Passer ou faire bourgeois, Asciscere aut recipere in ciuitatem, vel ciuitate recipere,… …   Thresor de la langue françoyse

  • BOURGEOIS (V.) — BOURGEOIS VICTOR (1897 1962) Brillant chef d’atelier d’architecture à l’École nationale supérieure d’architecture et des arts visuels (La Cambre, Bruxelles, 1934 1962), Victor Bourgeois est un ancien élève de l’Académie des beaux arts de… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Bourgeois — Bour*geois , n. [From a French type founder named Bourgeois, or fr. F. bourgeois of the middle class; hence applied to an intermediate size of type between brevier and long primer: cf. G. bourgeois, borgis. Cf. {Burgess}.] (Print.) A size of type …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • Bourgeois — Sm wohlhabender Bürger per. Wortschatz grupp. (18. Jh.) Entlehnung. Entlehnt aus frz. bourgeois, einer Ableitung von frz. bourg befestigte Siedlung . Zunächst Bezeichnung des freien Staatsbürgers; dann immer stärkere Hervorhebung der… …   Etymologisches Wörterbuch der deutschen sprache

  • bourgeois — 1560s, of the French middle class, from Fr. bourgeois, from O.Fr. burgeis, borjois town dweller (see BOURGEOISIE (Cf. bourgeoisie)). Sense of socially or aesthetically conventional is from 1764; in communist and socialist writing, as a noun, a… …   Etymology dictionary

  • bourgeois — [boor zhwä′, boor′zhwä΄] n. pl. bourgeois [boorzhwä′] [Fr < OFr burgeis < ML burgensis < burgus, borgus, town < OFr borc or Frank * burg,BOURG] 1. Obs. a freeman of a medieval town 2. a self employed person, as a shopkeeper or… …   English World dictionary

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