Lode

Lode
Recorded in several spellings including Load, Loade, Loads, Loades, Lode, Lodman and Loadman, this is an English surname. It is residential or possibly on occasion, job descriptive, for a person who lived or worked by a 'lad'. This was an Olde English pre 7th century word which later developed into the modern form of lode. 'Lads' were usually a rocky area where minerals specifically lead, were to be found in cracks in cracks and crevises. By the 16th century the word as lode usually referred to a watercourse or underground tunnel or shaft which worked the minerals. It is not clear when the surname first developed, but in the year 1273 in the county of Somerset, an area where a lot of early mining took place, the recording of 'Robert atte Lode' is found in the documents known as 'Kirby's Quest', and John atte Lode in Sussex in 1327. Later recordings taken from authentic surviving church registers include examples such as: William Load of Worcester, who in 1753 married Elizabeth Read of London at St Georges chapel, Mayfair, whilst in 1769, Thomas Load and Sarah Sqibb were married at the same church. As Loadman or occasionally Loadsman, the name seems to refer to a carrier of lead. John Lademan being recorded in Yorkshire in 1301 and Petronilla Lodman in Colchester in 1327.

Surnames reference. 2013.

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  • Lode — (l[=o]d), n. [AS. l[=a]d way, journey, fr. l[=i][eth]an to go. See {Lead} to guide, and cf. {Load} a burden.] 1. A water course or way; a reach of water. [1913 Webster] Down that long, dark lode . . . he and his brother skated home in triumph. C …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • lode — / lɔde/ (ant. loda) s.f. [lat. laus laudis ]. 1. [approvazione per l operato o il comportamento di una persona, o per la qualità di una cosa: parole di l. ; un impresa degna di l. ] ▶◀ elogio, encomio, plauso. ↑ esaltazione, (spreg.) inno.… …   Enciclopedia Italiana

  • lode — [ləud US loud] n [C usually singular] [: Old English; Origin: lad course, support ] an amount of ↑ore (=metal in its natural form) found in a layer between stones →↑mother lode …   Dictionary of contemporary English

  • lode — [lōd] n. [var. of LOAD (ME lode < OE lad) retaining etym. senses “course, way”] Mining 1. a vein containing important quantities of metallic ore and filling a well defined fissure in the rock 2. any flat deposit of valuable ore separated from… …   English World dictionary

  • Lode — Lode, 1) so v.w. Lappen od. Lumpen; 2) Art grobes, wollenes Zeug; daher Lodeweber, welche es verfertigen; 3) das junge Laubholz, so lange es Ruthenstärke hat …   Pierer's Universal-Lexikon

  • Lode — Lode, in einigen Gegenden Deutschlands grobes Wolletuch, in andern Leinwand; daher L.nweber …   Herders Conversations-Lexikon

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