Jeal

Jeal
This unusual and interesting name is a dialectual variant of the pre 10th century biblical given name Julian or Julius, which was borne by a number of early saints. The derivation is from the Latin "Iulianus", meaning hairy or downy, and was originally a Roman Clan name for a tribal family renowed for their long, flowing, locks, of which Julius Caesar was a member. The name was probably introduced into England by the French after the 1066 Norman Invasion, or perhaps by the later Crusaders on their return from the Holy Land. In medieval times the name was borne in the same form by women, hence the modern girls' name Gillian. In the modern surnames the spellings include Jell, Geal, Gell, and Gelle. In England the name attained such favour that Jack and Jill took the place of Godric and Godivu as the representatives of the sexes. Early examples of the surname recordings include at St. Annes church, Blackfriars, London, John Jeal was christened in 1682 and later Anne Geal was christened in 1699. The first recorded spelling of the family name is believed to be that of John Jelle, which was dated 1296, in the "Subsidy Rolls of the county of Sussex". This was during the reign of King Edward 1st, known as "The Hammer of the Scots", 1272 - 1307. Throughout 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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Look at other dictionaries:

  • jeal — jeal·ous; jeal·ous·ly; jeal·ous·ness; jeal·ou·sy; …   English syllables

  • jeal´ous|ness — jeal|ous «JEHL uhs», adjective. 1. fearful that a person one loves may love someone else or prefer someone else: »When my brother sees Mother holding the new baby, he becomes jealous. One may be jealous of the person loved or of the rival. 2.… …   Useful english dictionary

  • jeal´ous|ly — jeal|ous «JEHL uhs», adjective. 1. fearful that a person one loves may love someone else or prefer someone else: »When my brother sees Mother holding the new baby, he becomes jealous. One may be jealous of the person loved or of the rival. 2.… …   Useful english dictionary

  • jeal|ous — «JEHL uhs», adjective. 1. fearful that a person one loves may love someone else or prefer someone else: »When my brother sees Mother holding the new baby, he becomes jealous. One may be jealous of the person loved or of the rival. 2. full of… …   Useful english dictionary

  • jeal|ous|y — «JEHL uh see», noun, plural ous|ies. 1. a jealous condition or feeling; dislike or fear of rivals; envy. 2. an instance of jealous feeling …   Useful english dictionary

  • jeal·ou·sy — /ˈʤɛləsi/ noun, pl sies 1 : an unhappy or angry feeling of wanting to have what someone else has [noncount] professional jealousy [=resentment of the success of someone who is in the same profession as you] [count] petty jealousies among… …   Useful english dictionary

  • Tim Jeal — Infobox Writer name = Tim Jeal imagesize = 200px caption = Publicity picture for Dulwich Festival 2006 birthdate = 1945 birthplace = London? occupation = novelist, biographer nationality = United Kingdom period = 1960s ndash; genre = fiction;… …   Wikipedia

  • un|jeal|ous — «uhn JEHL uhs», adjective. not jealous; not suspicious or mistrustful …   Useful english dictionary

  • jealousy — jeal·ou·sy …   English syllables

  • jealous — jeal•ous [[t]ˈdʒɛl əs[/t]] adj. 1) resentful and envious, as of someone s success, advantages, etc.: to be jealous of a rich brother[/ex] 2) proceeding from suspicious fears or envious resentment: a jealous rage[/ex] 3) inclined to suspicions of… …   From formal English to slang

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