Where Did Those Ashkenazi Jewish Last Names Come From? - Would Jew Guess

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  • Опубликовано: 24 янв 2025

Комментарии • 756

  • @joannatiger
    @joannatiger 3 года назад +109

    My 5th great grandfather was a man named Wulf. He picked our last name, Tiger, around 1790. He became Wulf Tiger. I loved discovering this and it still brings me joy.

    • @bonnieparkertheoutlaw7353
      @bonnieparkertheoutlaw7353 3 года назад +5

      How did you find this out? Did you use some sort of ancestry website?

    • @ksaejt3443
      @ksaejt3443 3 года назад +2

      joanna, you fine still

    • @alexscastle
      @alexscastle 3 года назад

      @@bonnieparkertheoutlaw7353 r

    • @alexscastle
      @alexscastle 3 года назад

      @@bonnieparkertheoutlaw7353 rrd

    • @mattzager4879
      @mattzager4879 2 года назад

      I found someone named Wolf Elephant when looking for my relative on an immigration manifest.

  • @loneyplanet
    @loneyplanet 3 года назад +150

    Many surnames aren’t necessarily Jewish; they are just German.

    • @PodcastCentral333
      @PodcastCentral333 3 года назад +15

      True

    • @annecohen8927
      @annecohen8927 2 года назад +13

      Feldman is German.....

    • @InfraKH
      @InfraKH 2 года назад +10

      Yiddish

    • @somenamearound
      @somenamearound 2 года назад +9

      In Judaism there are not really family names it's just Moshe ben (son) Abraham or Rivkah bat (daughter) Shlomo and so on. In the 18th and 19th century in several European countries it was mandated to adopt and register a family name for taxes and conscription purposes and that's the origin of European legal Jewish names (which can be from towns or cities, professions and occupations, and so on). But the traditional Jewish naming still persists and is used for the ketuba, for kadish and other documents and comunal usage

    • @chosenbyyah6379
      @chosenbyyah6379 2 года назад

      Real Israelites are all black. Bye

  • @ssnobrakesable
    @ssnobrakesable 2 года назад +75

    I am half Cuban and half Jewish. That makes me a Juban.

    • @mundopixel23
      @mundopixel23 Год назад +2

      Wtf since when is cuban a race 🤔🤔???

    • @whlewis9164
      @whlewis9164 Год назад +4

      Cu-ish

    • @jessicaferrari3987
      @jessicaferrari3987 11 месяцев назад +4

      Cub...ish?😅 I hope you're not squared headed! Jk

    • @user-B_8
      @user-B_8 11 месяцев назад +1

      😂😂😂

    • @yellowsugar5096
      @yellowsugar5096 11 месяцев назад

      @@mundopixel23 and jewish a race LOL

  • @helenelevy1642
    @helenelevy1642 3 года назад +19

    Brad, your program on Jewish last names is the best. You are amazing. Love, Helene

  • @Landis_Grant
    @Landis_Grant 9 месяцев назад +33

    Jewish surnames: Golden. Gold, Silver, Stein, Shapiro, Weiner, Lerner, Goldman, Sachs, Goodman, Weinstein, Blank, Kraft, Goodell, Bettman, Sterling, Dolan, Seinfeld, Kissinger, Singer, Epstein, Abrams, etc.

    • @capncake8837
      @capncake8837 7 месяцев назад +5

      Not Kissinger. Henry’s grandfather changed his name to that after the town of Bad Kissingen. It’s not a common surname among Jews,

    • @Tehillim-91-Psalms
      @Tehillim-91-Psalms Месяц назад

      Is Zilberstein last name Jewish ?? Many people kept telling me I’m possibly Jew and do not know it I have grandmother lived in Berlin Germany back 1940,

    • @declanmurphy6427
      @declanmurphy6427 21 день назад

      is it a coincidence that these names are names of notorious criminals as well?

  • @altrey520
    @altrey520 3 года назад +33

    My grandfather came to the US at 7 years old by way of Spain by way of France by way of Germany and when he came his name was Marcial and since he came from northen Spain, Galicia, he used the surname Gallego which was the dialect in Galicia. Now, 5 generations later, I'm now only 10 percent Ashkenazi Jew but learning more and more of my Jewish heritage!!! Cool fact...he was actually raised by the one and only Geronimo and yeah we have pictures and documentation to prove it lol.

    • @Promqueen23
      @Promqueen23 2 года назад +2

      wow

    • @rachelsamuel3328
      @rachelsamuel3328 2 года назад +1

      So cool!!

    • @steviewax
      @steviewax 2 года назад +3

      Along with being Jewish, I have connections to the Apache chief Geronimo. I would be interested to this side of your story and see the photographs.

    • @VeraDonna
      @VeraDonna 2 года назад +4

      Gallego / Galician is a language and it's the patronymic for the galician people.

    • @joseortega-us6rn
      @joseortega-us6rn Год назад

      Them he got a good role model, as I know Geronimo was a worrior that always fight for his people, a very noble sentiment, you may also have Sepharim ancestry (spain)., I heard their music is getting very popular. Abrazos Hermano.

  • @juliea4857
    @juliea4857 9 месяцев назад +10

    Klein and Weiss etc are NOT direct translations from German. They ARE German because these people lived in German-language territories (Austria-Hungary, Germany)

    • @music4onlyu
      @music4onlyu 24 дня назад

      True, lots of them also moved to the east of europe and later to Palestine.

  • @joramaris1700
    @joramaris1700 6 месяцев назад +4

    Very appreciative for your conveying such basic, foundational knowledge. I am grateful to you.

  • @davidsdiamond3269
    @davidsdiamond3269 2 года назад +18

    Started tracing our family tree, dad's side, and it's been interesting. Our lineage is Lithuanian, Latvian, & Belarus Ashkenazi. Family names are Diamond and Moss. Most of that side of the family ends in WWII, at the camps, and there is not a lot of info to find. Gonna keep digging and see what I can find.

    • @ns2110theonly
      @ns2110theonly 2 года назад +1

      I went to high school with someone named Moss, but they’re Yekkish (German Jews). From what I remember all Jewish Moss’s are related.

    • @shainazion4073
      @shainazion4073 2 года назад +2

      Many of the shtetles in Europe, Poland, Russia... still have their original birth, marriage, death records. My mother's family came from Poland. My sister traced my Family back to the 1600s. We knew many towns, first and last names, etc. The spelling is sometimes Russian, sometimes Polish, depending on the years, or the towns. There are ways to write to the actual towns in Polish or Russian, and people who can help with some translations.

  • @cornelkittell9926
    @cornelkittell9926 7 дней назад

    That was great! Thanks, it explains so much.

  • @richardsimms251
    @richardsimms251 Год назад +5

    Great video. BUT, music is too loud.

  • @tagbarzeev3571
    @tagbarzeev3571 3 года назад +32

    The term Ashkenaz is what the Jews of The early middle ages called Germany.They settled along the Rhine River in cities like Mainz, Worms and Spyers. Yiddish is Middle high German with loan words from Hebrew Aramaic and a touch of slavic.Slavic came later as Jews left Western Europe due to Anti semitism. A Polish king actually Casimir the Great wanted Jews in his land.

    • @tagbarzeev3571
      @tagbarzeev3571 3 года назад +1

      @The Last Stand learn history from Sam Aranow or Dr Henry Abramson

    • @tagbarzeev3571
      @tagbarzeev3571 3 года назад

      @The Last Stand LMFAO

    • @tagbarzeev3571
      @tagbarzeev3571 3 года назад

      @The Last Stand research by Ron dalton and Benayah Israel.lmfao

    • @tagbarzeev3571
      @tagbarzeev3571 3 года назад

      @The Last Stand We Jews are from Shem and that is why we say the SHEMA.

    • @tagbarzeev3571
      @tagbarzeev3571 3 года назад +2

      @The Last Stand delusions exist among the uneducated on both sides. That one Haredi was probably from Neutra Cartra they are wackos. The third video talks about Mizrahi jews who are about 50 percent of the Israeli Jewish population .Mizrahi jews are geneticly similar to Ashkenazi or sephardic jews we all come from the Levant and both Mizrahi jews and sephardic jews use the same Minhag.I see know reason to go on unless you want to be made more foolish.

  • @briansheets3996
    @briansheets3996 9 месяцев назад +16

    I'm Ashkenazi of German/Jewish descent. My surname was anglicized from Schutz to Sheets. It is a occupational surname meaning guard, or warden. Or one who shoots a bow or rifle.

    • @briansheets3996
      @briansheets3996 3 месяца назад

      @zvr-08 Maybe we're distantly related. Who knows?

  • @cthoffman9351
    @cthoffman9351 3 года назад +29

    From the recent Israeli - Palestinian conflict, and issues with my digestive system since a young age, I've traced it to my Ashkenazi ancestry. Even though my last name is an obvious sign, I had never known or could've even told you what that meant. I'm American through and through, raised Christian, but proud of my ancestry and hope im able to learn more soon.

    • @daveconrad6562
      @daveconrad6562 3 года назад +2

      Same bro, my stomach is so weak

    • @cthoffman9351
      @cthoffman9351 3 года назад +4

      @@daveconrad6562 my uncle has Crohns and the rate at which Ashkenazi descendants have Crohns or inflammatory bowel disease is quite astronomical compared to the general population with no relation to Ashkenazi Jews. but do pay attention to your digestive system because it's not just a weakness or "soft" the in my case, major swelling to the point where it's very painful digesting and moving throughout my system and even effects my blood flow. drinking plenty of water seems to help quite a bit if you are looking for something that helps whether it helps with pain or the stress on your body in general. my uncle has had to have surgery for his and as severe as mine is, I imagine I will too in the near future if God blesses me with the money to do so. because as of right now, it's almost impossible to live a normal life.

    • @Shadow_foxx1
      @Shadow_foxx1 3 года назад +6

      Same here my weight gain problems where traced back to my ashkenazi heritage I just found out about my biological-fathers last name is Katz. My ancestors came from Poland. Although I am mostly Sicilian raised catholic I’m very proud to be Jewish very proud to be A part of such a strong background. ❤️ although people may think it’s wrong I will were my cross right next to my Star of David. This is who I am this is who you are and I’m glad to see others cherishing it.

    • @cthoffman9351
      @cthoffman9351 3 года назад +2

      @@Shadow_foxx1 it's important to pass it on. it's lasted this long because it was cherished. even if we might not have experienced it to the full, it's important to carry it and hand it to the next generation. our ancestors went through way too much.. from 75 years ago to a few thousand years ago.. way too much struggling and hardships, specifically due to their identity, to not do our duty.

    • @Shadow_foxx1
      @Shadow_foxx1 3 года назад +3

      @@cthoffman9351 so wonderful to read this. I have informed my 16 yr old son of his heritage and his eyes lit up and he was very happy. Even going as far as too tell all his friends. We will keep our history alive in every way possible ❤️

  • @theswordofkings7549
    @theswordofkings7549 3 года назад +10

    Quite a bit of information for three minutes, thanks👍

    • @JewishLifeTV
      @JewishLifeTV  3 года назад

      Glad it was helpful!

    • @kennethmartin1300
      @kennethmartin1300 3 месяца назад

      @@JewishLifeTVIndeed! That hyper-speed drawing artwork is mesmerizing!🎨🖊

  • @judithdaar4425
    @judithdaar4425 Год назад +3

    I have read that now that we have genetic testing, it has been found the Cohens and Levys are separate groups whose DNA goes way back and indicates that those people are in fact descendants of the ancient priesthoods. I don't remember where I read this, so I can't verify the source.

    • @davehughesfarm7983
      @davehughesfarm7983 11 месяцев назад

      partly yes.....20 generations ago we have 1 million ancestors

  • @EmiliavanBeugen
    @EmiliavanBeugen 3 года назад +8

    Very helpful and certainly pretty common in the US. I am not sure why my ancestors in 1802 took their last name: van Beugen. The son of Jacob Moijses (Moses Jacob) migrated from the town of Nijmegen to Den Haag during the late 1700s. As far as I can tell they never lived in the little town "Beugen" ... who knows?

  • @jeff_n1535
    @jeff_n1535 2 года назад +3

    Paternal grandmother's maiden name is Kieck, and I am keen to explore this further. Any advice please?

    • @EmpressEmylia
      @EmpressEmylia 2 года назад +1

      There is a village east of Berlin with the name Kieck. On Google Maps it looks like there is nothing but a rehab clinic there these days though

  • @nerminsoysal2076
    @nerminsoysal2076 9 месяцев назад +7

    I'm a Turkish stemming from south Siberia, through a long way of Mongolia, Central Asia abd Khazar to Anatolia. My DNA shows 6 percent Ashkenazi Jews. Is this something that shows the origin of Ashkenazi Jews as Khazarian?

  • @christopherchmiel7872
    @christopherchmiel7872 3 месяца назад +3

    It’s astounding to me how convoluted the word Jew has become in modern times. Jew is derived from Yahudin, one from the tribe of Judah. It is not an all encompassing word. Ashkenaz are of the bloodline of Japheth and cannot be Jews in the natural sense.

    • @alp5725
      @alp5725 2 месяца назад

      ABSOLUTELY!!!!!!!!!

  • @lilydiallo594
    @lilydiallo594 3 года назад +22

    I am from Argentina 🇦🇷,and my maiden name is Krajuam. It is Ashkenazi, I have Eastern European ancestry

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop Год назад

      @Jxxkkkk That's interesting you say that. I'm almost all Ashkenazi but my other contributing genetics is mainly Eastern European.
      PS It's DNA, not "dma"

    • @donramon9723
      @donramon9723 Год назад

      @@jxxkkkk433 Nope. DNA studies show the Maternal lines in Jewish populations are mostly from European females. This is consistent with history of human migratory patterns, that is, men travel and get it on with local women of regions traveled or conquered.
      Ashkenazi jews are a unique ethnogroup in that sense, However their religion and literal biblical views claims they are the sole heirs of a a "chosen" people from ancient times. This is a genetic impossibility. Welcome to the 21st century.

    • @yellowsugar5096
      @yellowsugar5096 11 месяцев назад

      @@jxxkkkk433 keep on sleeping or ignoring , truth will still be told at the end LOL

    • @davehughesfarm7983
      @davehughesfarm7983 11 месяцев назад

      oh B,S. most have 50% or more..@@jxxkkkk433

  • @Tomara632
    @Tomara632 3 года назад +3

    Thanks. Very interesting.

  • @kenlukwesa5929
    @kenlukwesa5929 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great teaching

  • @wanderlustdetailer
    @wanderlustdetailer 2 года назад +5

    Grandma came from Germany in the 1940's her maiden name was Gerson/Gérson. I believe it's a Hebrew origin and I see the name used a lot in Portuguese and Spanish speaking countries

    • @m00njaguar
      @m00njaguar 7 месяцев назад +1

      Gerson is used as a man's first name here in Honduras and around Central America

    • @wanderlustdetailer
      @wanderlustdetailer 7 месяцев назад

      @@m00njaguar yea that’s what I’ve seen, that it’s a popular name though out Latin America and Brazil.

  • @staciecarverd8136
    @staciecarverd8136 12 дней назад

    Really makes me want to further delve into my Polish ancestry and see if I might be able to determine which ancestor was the contributor to my Jewish DNA.

  • @LiunaTiger
    @LiunaTiger Год назад +3

    A smaller branch in Hungary on my mother's side have German names mostly or Hungarized ones, while my paternal line from Translvania also has some Slavic ending names (not all of them though), e. g. Berkovits. I have a Weisz great great grandmother and someone claimed her grave's Hebrew writing said halevi, so her relatives were Levites too. I didn't find any Levys or Levines etc. I also have an Ungár anccestor, maybe that comes from Hungary too? (I am Hungarian).

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop 5 месяцев назад

      Ungar îs a place name for Jews in this case Hungary :) BTW, Jews have loved in Hungary for a very long time. In fact the Jews were there before the Magyars even got there!

  • @scented-leafpelargonium3366
    @scented-leafpelargonium3366 Месяц назад

    In the UK many Germanic sounding Jewish names got Anglicised due to the two world wars with Germany, as German would have been viewed as the language of the enemy, such as Zucker(mann) to Sugar, Shochet (a kosher butcher) into Suchet (Hebrew to French), Hecht into Howard and many suchlike examples, while some covered up their names altogether.
    It is all a very interesting subject, although sadly many hid manes due to persecution.

  • @JaySchwartz-k4v
    @JaySchwartz-k4v 2 месяца назад

    My name is Schwartz but I, and many of my relatives on my father's side, have blond hair. Although my hair is now mostly grey.

  • @inmyopinion651
    @inmyopinion651 Год назад +2

    This is incredible information. I did not know this at all. Thanks for the info.

  • @wyntresorrow403
    @wyntresorrow403 3 года назад +3

    I hear occupations were also Jewish last names. Such as Baker. My last name. Is this correct or have I been lied to

    • @edwynaspiegel1546
      @edwynaspiegel1546 3 года назад +1

      My last name is Spiegel, mirror makers.

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop Год назад

      Many Ashkenazi names are occupational ones like Schmidt (Smith) or Yager (Hunter).

    • @johncoxe6329
      @johncoxe6329 6 месяцев назад

      Very common. But in the case of Baker, it could have just evolved from another name, like Bokser.

  • @CulturedGem
    @CulturedGem 2 года назад +2

    Thank you so much! Our family name was Weiss, changed to Wise once arriving in the US. We often wondered how this happened. Still don't know. Thank you.

    • @wegood563
      @wegood563 2 года назад

      en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/You_Gentiles
      Did you know your people terrorized mine for thousands of years

    • @thedude232
      @thedude232 Год назад +2

      Many people and families "Angelicized" their last name to either cover their ancestry or as a means to start over.

    • @NoelYu
      @NoelYu Год назад +2

      Weiss = White in German (also in Yiddish).

    • @Bob_Adkins
      @Bob_Adkins Год назад +1

      @@thedude232 Or some dull government bureaucrat spelled it wrong. That happens a lot. I knew some old folks who named their son "Wilbert" and he was registered as "Milbert" which was too much hassle to change so he was stuck with it forever.

  • @GeorginaC
    @GeorginaC 3 года назад +91

    Ashkenazi Jews are not from Shem but descendants of Japhet

    • @akivatalansky
      @akivatalansky 3 года назад +20

      False.

    • @imnotimpressed420
      @imnotimpressed420 2 года назад +22

      @@akivatalansky keep telling yourself that

    • @rachelsamuel3328
      @rachelsamuel3328 2 года назад +26

      The Ashkenazi are Jews, you got that right, as Judeans they only descend from Shem. They were from the land known as Ashkenaz, they were never Ashkenazians or Ashkenazites they like the Sepharads are from the land of Sepharad (Spain & Portugal) the Ashkenazim are from the land of Ashkenaz ( Germany & France).

    • @Vrythos
      @Vrythos 2 года назад +16

      This nonsense has gained traction, particular in black communities that are trying to discover their roots and claim to be the true Israelites based on simple readings of the Bible.

    • @esausjudeannephew6317
      @esausjudeannephew6317 2 года назад

      Really?

  • @glenmalesa8902
    @glenmalesa8902 2 года назад +1

    Very precise.

  • @generallee5330
    @generallee5330 3 месяца назад +2

    Do y’all understand Genesis chapter 10, the descendants of Japheth and the nations of Gentiles? Hebrews were big on this and would never just adopt those nations names. Also u saying that how they got to Europe is skeptical, that in it self tells u something is off. If u want to know the truth u have to read an actual Bible and not the newer revised version and definitely not the online bibles because they have corrupted them all and removed certain key information from the verses to lead you astray.

  • @luannefarmer
    @luannefarmer 4 месяца назад

    my grandfathers mother was an .'Anglo' Jew born in Birmingham England with origins from Poland/Russia her maiden name was Barnett ( anglicized form of Barruk ) both her parents were Jews. Many female relatives had very Jewish names like Kerrenhepah, Hepzibah, Rachel but the sons were given 'Christian' names like Charles, etc. Apparently so they can better get work. They were jewellers, brass founders, watch makers, etc. My grandfather was killed by the Nazi at Dunkirk WW2 as a British solider, so we had no idea he was Jewish, till 2016 when I found it out and was confirmed by my fathers long lost cousins in UK. As my grandfathers wife was Christian and after being a young widow married again after the war and emigrated to NZ

  • @nadiachicago33
    @nadiachicago33 5 месяцев назад +4

    Duh they are white ppl who converted to Judaism

    • @JohnDove-d8d
      @JohnDove-d8d Месяц назад

      Nope.

    • @JohnDove-d8d
      @JohnDove-d8d Месяц назад

      Some families might have admixture from other races but that's on a case by case basis and it doesn't represent the base population.

  • @miskorado8315
    @miskorado8315 2 года назад +2

    I did my heritage and other dna tests, came out that i have 3% ashkenazy jewish supriced

  • @leonardcaplan2884
    @leonardcaplan2884 7 месяцев назад

    Great video! I read somewhere that some Jewish last names like "Tannenbaum "which translates to "Christmas tree" were imposed by local authorities to humiliate Jews. Is this true or not?

  • @PasqualeDeRosa-n1v
    @PasqualeDeRosa-n1v 5 месяцев назад

    Thanks for that, I feel I should have known this, but I didn't. And now I do.

  • @evangelosstavridis3521
    @evangelosstavridis3521 Год назад

    Very interesting. Especially the explanation about the last names. Thank' s.
    Only the Austro-Hungarian Monarchy often referred to as the Austro-Hungarian Empire or the Dual Monarchy, was a multi-national constitutional monarchy in Central Europe between 1867 and 1918. Only 50 years. It was in the aftermath of the Austro-Prussian War. It is not very important but 1787 was the Austrian Empire. Just to make (be) everything correct.

  • @Tehillim-91-Psalms
    @Tehillim-91-Psalms Месяц назад

    Where does Zilberstein last originate come from is it Jewish? Many people keep telling me am Jewish don’t even know it my grandmother died during ww2 she lived in Berlin Germany

  • @johncoxe6329
    @johncoxe6329 6 месяцев назад

    One of my lines was Edelman. While Edel is from German, for Noble, or something like that, it was just the given name of my ancestor's mother-in-law. Man, mann, sohn, son was postpended by direct descendants to honor her as his benefactor is financially supporting his yeshiva. His name was Shmuel Eliezer ha-Levi and added Edeks (or Edeles) to his name. The name iltimately was retained in literature as MaHaRSh"A, the acronym for Morenu HaRav Shmuel Adels (Our Teach the Rav Shmuel Adels/Edels). Rabbinic lineages often used such honorific titles compressed into acronyms. But anyway, the -man and -son type names, more generally, are suggestive of affinities to wives and in-laws when they were adopted. Mendelsohn, for instance, derives from Son of Mendel, where Mendel could have been the originator's father or father-in-law.

  • @cathyhetzel5944
    @cathyhetzel5944 2 года назад

    Korb,and there's a city in Germany named after them. They asked my grandmother for money during WW2 and she was so angry because she thought they were nazis. They had a Castile in italy which is now a hotel. My grandfather's name was Harry Louis Korb.

  • @christineesterhuizen2346
    @christineesterhuizen2346 3 месяца назад

    my surname is Woest. I
    heard that my great grand father came to south africa on a ship and changed our surname from Woescht to Woest. any idee where and what it can mean. my ancestors from Germany and Ireland.

  • @annecohen8927
    @annecohen8927 3 года назад +3

    Excellent video!!!👍👍. It’s a coincidence because after my aunt was divorced from her husband Peter Probst, many years ago, she married Louis Levy!

  • @germanicus2850
    @germanicus2850 Год назад +1

    Still haven’t figured out my last name, Libson, we believe it was Libinson at one point !

  • @Leon-ej3kh
    @Leon-ej3kh 2 месяца назад

    What you did not mention, is that some like my surname translates, back into Hebrew, as does my wife's maiden name. I'm of Polish decent, whereas my wife of Baltic decent,traces her ancestry, back to Spain.

  • @robincook4349
    @robincook4349 4 месяца назад +1

    very interesting

  • @youknowmyfirstlastname3206
    @youknowmyfirstlastname3206 Год назад +12

    Ash-means food. Kazan means dish. Their dna and background turks.

    • @kaius3351
      @kaius3351 8 месяцев назад +2

      Elias Kazantzoglou (1909 - 2003), also known as Elia Kazan, was American film and theater producer, screenwriter and actor.

    • @wódzBiałaRzeka
      @wódzBiałaRzeka 8 месяцев назад +1

      Aaron Kebabovitz

    • @johncoxe6329
      @johncoxe6329 6 месяцев назад +2

      Ashkenaz is ancient biblical designation of a supposed person or tribe that was designated to the geographical region associated later with Germanic tribes. In the earlier centuries of the current Jewish Diaspora, settlement in that area and the development of Yiddish as a vernacular Jewish tongue there designated that branch as Ashkenazi. It has nothing to do with genetics associated with the non-Jewish local population. The Gentile admixture was mostly from female converts in 1st Century Rome, as more of the Judaean refugees there were men, often merchants who needed brides. As most of population migrated to the Pale of Settlement in Eastern Europe, they maintained Yiddish as the common language tongue, with Hebrew and Aramaic reserved for liturgical use and religious study. Some words Hebraic words entered Yiddish (goniff from ganev=thief, tsooris from tzaarot=leprosy, ...), but the grammar remained Germanic from their earlier hosts. It was a practicality for international mercantile and trade reasons, just as Ladino and Judeo-Arabic were for other Duaspora communities.

    • @kaius3351
      @kaius3351 6 месяцев назад +2

      @@johncoxe6329 : Thank you for your explanation about Ashkenazi Jews. I learned a lot from your explanation.
      Have a great day. 👍

    • @alp5725
      @alp5725 2 месяца назад +1

      Totally intellectually dishonest to claim Ashkenaz as some supposed person or tribe and Jews as real people when both are derived from the same Bible, all because you want believe and convince others of the lie that modern day "jewish" people are not European impostors usurping another's identity.

  • @dafnimbus
    @dafnimbus 9 месяцев назад +1

    My family was originally Hess from Berlin

  • @waynesilva9157
    @waynesilva9157 5 месяцев назад

    What does lipshizts mean.

  • @calebgreen9645
    @calebgreen9645 2 года назад +1

    Paul also said these people were the children of Ishmael 2,000 years ago and I don't think anything's changed

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop Год назад

      LOL, ishmael is the polar opposite of Jews.

    • @davehughesfarm7983
      @davehughesfarm7983 11 месяцев назад

      You probably have just as much Hebrew in you too.

    • @davehughesfarm7983
      @davehughesfarm7983 11 месяцев назад

      Isaac

    • @calebgreen9645
      @calebgreen9645 10 месяцев назад

      @@davehughesfarm7983 the children of Isaac were gathered before the first century generation ended the 12 Stones have become chalk stones which means Jacobs iniquities have been removed they're known as the Saints of heaven today

  • @robkunkel8833
    @robkunkel8833 Год назад

    A lot of good stuff here. Never guessed. So this all started in 1787 with the Austrian Hungarian Empire. Interesting.

  • @kristinamullen4066
    @kristinamullen4066 3 года назад +1

    What about the name Holzman?

    • @rachelsamuel3328
      @rachelsamuel3328 2 года назад

      Last names were picked by most in the 1800s, before that you were just Samuel, son of Aaron, or Samuel the metal maker.

    • @EmpressEmylia
      @EmpressEmylia 2 года назад

      Holzman = wood man (German - and maybe Yiddish?)

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop Год назад

      @@EmpressEmylia Same in Yiddish.

  • @LizzyLizard65
    @LizzyLizard65 Год назад

    Where did kowitz come from, as in Lefkowitz?

  • @airevolt1
    @airevolt1 11 месяцев назад

    They also picked surnames that imply wealth or status, using gold, silver, diamond or pearl, or names like rich or king.

    • @johncoxe6329
      @johncoxe6329 6 месяцев назад

      Or just occupation. A fair number of Jews were engaged in the jewelry trades. They ended up as Silverberg, Goldstein, Diamond, Ruby, etc.

  • @jansmeulders7141
    @jansmeulders7141 4 месяца назад

    I learn plenty from yr program.....

  • @kimberlymoore8172
    @kimberlymoore8172 2 года назад

    My Jewish ancestors in Prussia were three generations of women who married Christians: Sundermeier, Tiesmeier and Berensmeier.

  • @londoncalling20111
    @londoncalling20111 2 года назад

    Erm 1797 wishful thinking as late as 1850 in Hamburg our people were being chased to adopt a family name

  • @waltersacharzewski6803
    @waltersacharzewski6803 4 месяца назад +1

    Aren't Ashkenazi's Khazars that adopted Judaism as early as 740 . Other sources are speculating around 861 . It is a rather very complicated issue . After their final defeat many escapades to Russia . Because of their unorthodox practices many were expelled from there .

    • @JohnDove-d8d
      @JohnDove-d8d 16 дней назад

      Nope. That theory doesn't exist outside of racist circles. Check your source.

    • @JohnDove-d8d
      @JohnDove-d8d 16 дней назад

      Yiddish doesn't come from the East of Europe, it comes into the East of Europe from the West of Europe. It represents the convergence of Greco Roman civilization and Middle Eastern diaspora. Then transplanted into German context.
      There is an Eastern European Yiddish also but it's developed out of the Western European Yiddish when it transplanted into Russia, etc.

    • @JohnDove-d8d
      @JohnDove-d8d 16 дней назад

      The Ashkenazim of Eastern Europe didn't migrate from the East, they came from the West, out of Italy, and Germany, during diaspora, into the Slavic societies. They are not Khazarian.

    • @JohnDove-d8d
      @JohnDove-d8d 16 дней назад

      The Khazarian Theory ignores the existence of the Western European Ashkenazim and the Development of Yiddish. A fundamentally German-Hebrew fusion. Developed out of the existence of Greco-Roman Jews among Medieval German States.
      Which was then transplanted into Eastern Europe in some forms. Where it took on some different characteristics due to a Slavic influence. Producing the Eastern European Ashkenazim.
      Yiddish language comes from the West, not East, how can they be Turks?. it's a German-Hebrew fusion. How do you figure that that's developed by a Turkic people in what would be Slavic societies?

    • @JohnDove-d8d
      @JohnDove-d8d 16 дней назад

      Where did the Russian Jews that you claim are Khazars, get their language? A German-Hebrew fusion? That's what Yiddish is. It came from the Middle East to the West to the East.

  • @rebekahwhite2939
    @rebekahwhite2939 Год назад +1

    Some of my Dad Fred White's family members died in the Holocaust. My Dad, Fred White was born on April 23, 1917, and he was in the NAVY during World War 2. There are exhibits at some of the museums for documents that are kept on file for family members of people who died in the Holocaust. There is also a genealogy research library at some of the Jewish centers.
    My Dad, Fred White's gravesite is located at Beth David Cemetery in Elmont, New York in Long Island.

    • @NoelYu
      @NoelYu Год назад

      In part of Russian Empire, now Belarus, was common hebrew last name Belinky (Whiteley, white in Russian).

  • @suchisthismystery2814
    @suchisthismystery2814 6 месяцев назад

    Does anyone know if the surname Benjamin is originally Ashkenazic or Sephardic? Many thanks.

    • @johncoxe6329
      @johncoxe6329 6 месяцев назад +1

      It is from Hebrew, Binyamin, literally Jacob's righthand son. The person who adopted the surname probably had a father of that name. Some such names added -son to the end (Jacobson, Abramson, ...), but others were awkward and became just Benjamin, Reubens, and similar.

    • @suchisthismystery2814
      @suchisthismystery2814 6 месяцев назад

      @@johncoxe6329 Many thanks; I really appreciate your going to the trouble of responding. Many thanks once again.

  • @dreadfulspiller8766
    @dreadfulspiller8766 5 месяцев назад

    So Steven Spielberg's name means talking mountain? I wonder how they came up with that?

    • @yarnmisery
      @yarnmisery 3 месяца назад +1

      shortened form of spiegel (lookout point) + berg (hill or mountain)
      or spiel (play/game) + berg

  • @sonofdionysis
    @sonofdionysis 6 месяцев назад

    My paternal grandmother’s surname is Noach. Which is Noah.

  • @skycher-63
    @skycher-63 5 месяцев назад

    Explain : _ _ _ _ insky
    Is it Czech , or Russian , or Polish , or Jewish ?

  • @Nostalgic_4_Disaster
    @Nostalgic_4_Disaster 2 года назад +2

    Missed mine! Mine’s Rich.

  • @aaronzegas5270
    @aaronzegas5270 7 месяцев назад

    I'm pretty close to 100% Ashkenazic Jewish, but my mom's surname is both a common German and Yiddish surname and my dad's surname used to be Bruder, German for brother, but they changed it. Not at Ellis Island, but a good two centuries before my great-grandfather immigrated. They changed it to something that sounds vaguely Polish, but doesn't actually mean anything, as far as we know.

    • @yarnmisery
      @yarnmisery 3 месяца назад

      no names were changed at ellis island

    • @aaronzegas5270
      @aaronzegas5270 3 месяца назад

      @@yarnmisery yes, I'm aware that that's somewhat of a myth.

  • @LeonardAaron
    @LeonardAaron 8 месяцев назад +3

    I read somewhere that some Jewish names like Tannenbaum were imposed upon Jewish families by authorities hoping to humiliate them. Tannenbaum means "Christmas Tree" so that one would be pointing out that this family didn't celebrate Christmas.

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop 5 месяцев назад +1

      Tannenbaum (Tennenbaum) is a fir tree. Not Christmas tree.

  • @MatthewCaruso-ky4uz
    @MatthewCaruso-ky4uz Год назад +1

    what was the guys name who killed Jesus Christ?

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop Год назад

      It was some Roman guy that whacked Jesus.

    • @davehughesfarm7983
      @davehughesfarm7983 11 месяцев назад

      Pontius Pilate. But a guard stabbed him with spear at Calvery.

  • @fauxamy23
    @fauxamy23 2 года назад +1

    Bene Manasseh and Bene Ephraim derive their surnames from the nature in the language called tamil or kurux outside the state of tamil nadu. These jews speak my languages now limited to only the tribes of east India with whom they married and settled down with.

    • @gordumherseyi
      @gordumherseyi Год назад

      "bnei menashe and ephraim" are converts within living memory. nothing to do with settling down.

  • @margaretadler6162
    @margaretadler6162 2 года назад

    What are the origins of the name Adler?

  • @joellukewarriorforjesusthe293
    @joellukewarriorforjesusthe293 2 года назад

    I found out that my great great grandma was Jewish Noami Warner. And on my mum mums side aswell

  • @shaynebergwever6268
    @shaynebergwever6268 3 года назад +2

    Wondering if Bergwever is a Jewish surname?

    • @aremedyproject9569
      @aremedyproject9569 3 года назад +2

      Shayne I think berg means forest. I’m curious about Asberg.

    • @shaynebergwever6268
      @shaynebergwever6268 3 года назад

      @@aremedyproject9569 I did Google translate, it said, Mountain-weaver, but I've found it very difficult to varify. I know there's a Camp-ground in The Netherlands, with our Surname. That's as close as I have gotten. I think it maybe Ashkenazi, perhaps explaining why theres only 11-12(?)of us in total now.

    • @EmiliavanBeugen
      @EmiliavanBeugen 3 года назад +1

      @@aremedyproject9569 no berg means mountain

    • @EmiliavanBeugen
      @EmiliavanBeugen 3 года назад

      @Clandestine Council and in Dutch as wel

    • @notexactlyrocketscience
      @notexactlyrocketscience 3 года назад

      Bergweber is a town in South Germany. The v is just a common typo.

  • @dwalke0593
    @dwalke0593 2 года назад +1

    As a convert I must explain my surname often

  • @karinhubert8015
    @karinhubert8015 7 месяцев назад

    Thank you 🌞

  • @721Irish
    @721Irish 4 месяца назад

    My Grandfather was a Mayers, originally Majores! from Luxembourg

  • @crush3095
    @crush3095 2 месяца назад

    That was SO cool

  • @rr7firefly
    @rr7firefly Год назад +1

    I hate videos with this drawing hand in them. Totally unnecessary and a visual pain.

  • @crp9347
    @crp9347 5 месяцев назад

    Could Baranuk be Jewish from Ukraine early 1900

  • @metteholm4833
    @metteholm4833 2 года назад

    What about Lütz as surname?

  • @qworky902
    @qworky902 Месяц назад

    This video ignores the reality that many jews had to select last names off of government lists, and weren't actually allowed to just choose anything they wanted. Also, having lived in germany, one thing i eas told is that, if the german name actually 'means' something in modern german, its somewhat more likely to belong to a jewish person, because non jewish germans were likelier to get german last names earlier in history from older forms of german that are no longer spoken.

    • @عليياسر-ك9ظ
      @عليياسر-ك9ظ 22 дня назад

      Wait, aren't the Ashkenazis Iranians and Germans? 😮😮😮😮😮😮😮😢😢

  • @tommybrowne8759
    @tommybrowne8759 3 месяца назад

    my Mom and Grandparents are Goldschmidt my grandmothers maiden name was Stern, they are all from Saarland Germany

  • @karolw.5208
    @karolw.5208 2 года назад +4

    A historian once told me that the Austrian officials who assigned new surnames to poor Galician Jews who did not speak German made fun of them by registering names like Goldberg and Rosenfeld.

    • @amymack1954
      @amymack1954 2 года назад +2

      This is correct. The more outlandish the name, the better the antisemitic Austrians liked it. They especially liked flowery names like Rosenblatt (rose leaf), Rosenbloom (rose flower), etc. My family is Galician on both sides, so I'm very familiar with this practice.

    • @NuNugirl
      @NuNugirl 2 года назад

      Wow. My family only spoke German/ French/ and Hungarian! So their name's are Good Man & New Man. So simple. My Mom's family were English Jews. Sterling & Mayor.

    • @igorjee
      @igorjee 2 года назад +2

      @@amymack1954 I read it was the opposite. Jews often were willing to pay for good-sounding names with Gold, Silber, Diamant, or Rose in it. Poor Jews who couldn't bribe the authorities got less appealing names like Kurtz (short), Schwartz, Klein, etc.

    • @amymack1954
      @amymack1954 2 года назад

      @@igorjee I have never read or heard that. I'd be interested to know where you saw that.

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop Год назад +1

      @@amymack1954 That is not true to my knowledge. Those are "fanciful" names and only the families with clout could have them.

  • @diyahhumaira6984
    @diyahhumaira6984 Год назад +1

    all claim to be human beings, right? Don't look for differences, live in peace

  • @cristiangerardinobilityhou5410
    @cristiangerardinobilityhou5410 3 года назад +6

    Mine is "Girardi" from Northeastern Italy/Austria/Bavaria Germany. They were involved in the crusades as knights Templar. Weird. I found the family crest but using their non-Jewish one.

  • @michaelpreston233
    @michaelpreston233 2 месяца назад

    Mel ''Brooks'' Arron Sorkin. interesting

  • @donaldpelles5107
    @donaldpelles5107 7 месяцев назад +1

    Not just Eastern European - German Jews are Ashkenazi.

  • @believeinpeace
    @believeinpeace 2 года назад

    Please tell me about Silberman or Zilberman Thank you

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop Год назад +1

      Silverman; I suspect an occupational name. A person who works with silver.

    • @believeinpeace
      @believeinpeace Год назад

      @@Lagolop That doesn’t help me know which spelling it is, but thank you🙂

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop Год назад +1

      @@believeinpeace Either spelling is possible but if you are asking for the "correct" Yiddish, transliteration is Zilberman.

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop Год назад

      @@believeinpeace PS This is a short vid which will show how some Yiddish words sound.
      ruclips.net/video/FKxk14_A7wc/видео.html

    • @believeinpeace
      @believeinpeace Год назад

      @@Lagolop so Zilberman is Yiddish and Silberman is Lithuanian?

  • @ragenhildcoventry6756
    @ragenhildcoventry6756 2 года назад +1

    Hecht :Family name origins & meanings
    German and Dutch : from Middle High German hech(e)t, Middle Dutch heect, hecht ‘pike’, generally a nickname for a rapacious and greedy person. In some instances it may have been a metonymic occupational name for a fisher and in others it may be a habitational name from a house distinguished by a sign depicting this fish.
    Jewish (Ashkenazic) : ornamental name from GermanHecht or Yiddish hekht ‘pike’, one of the many Ashkenazic ornamental names taken from vocabulary words denoting wildlife.

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop 2 года назад

      Actually Hecke translates to HEDGE in German/Yiddish.
      Blaybn gezunt un shtark.

  • @daveconrad6562
    @daveconrad6562 3 года назад

    Elseasser means land of askenaz, anyone know how i can learn more?

    • @notexactlyrocketscience
      @notexactlyrocketscience 3 года назад +4

      It's German and it means person from the Elsaß (Alsace, Alsatian).

    • @daveconrad6562
      @daveconrad6562 3 года назад

      @@notexactlyrocketscience thank you kindly

    • @Lagolop
      @Lagolop Год назад

      @@notexactlyrocketscience Many Alsatians were Jews.

  • @amyh5020
    @amyh5020 2 года назад

    Rosenthal here -- valley of roses

  • @DonKeibals2
    @DonKeibals2 7 месяцев назад +1

    Amazingly, there isn't a single Arab or Middle Eastern-sounding name among them, yet these Europeans claim legal entitlement to land in the Middle East that belongs to others

    • @PodcastCentral333
      @PodcastCentral333 7 месяцев назад +1

      because surnames changed, ashkenazi surnames 1000 years ago were still in hebrew

    • @Meirstein
      @Meirstein 5 месяцев назад

      There is a huge Palestinian population in Chile. If they all adopted Spanish surnames, would they stop being Palestinians?

    • @robincook4349
      @robincook4349 4 месяца назад

      GOD gave them that land nobody can take it away from them!

    • @JohnDove-d8d
      @JohnDove-d8d Месяц назад

      Jews were living in the Middle East before Arabs.

    • @JohnDove-d8d
      @JohnDove-d8d Месяц назад

      Ashkenazi Jews didn't take surnames at all until 1790 genius. They took those which related to groups of people around them.

  • @barrycohen311
    @barrycohen311 3 года назад +1

    Sounds like Lee Camp narrating...

  • @Camila-ih1jd
    @Camila-ih1jd 3 года назад +2

    Kalasnik, maker of kalach bread

  • @tecumsehcristero
    @tecumsehcristero 3 года назад +1

    Serpents and tombs

  • @mikets42
    @mikets42 2 года назад

    Mine is simple, a distorted "Israeli". There are quite a few of us, all from a certain area of Poland/Belorussia, originally. In Russian, Zrull was additionally distorted into Tsiroulnik[ov].

  • @WennIFAwartburgspielt
    @WennIFAwartburgspielt 2 месяца назад

    Is Snufkin Jewish?

  • @stephaniekerr
    @stephaniekerr Год назад

    Sarver, for server or caterer

  • @stevenkovler5133
    @stevenkovler5133 Год назад

    I wonder where Kovler came from. There are so few of us and we are all genetically related ..

  • @grimmmunro2279
    @grimmmunro2279 2 года назад

    Very interesting.does anyone know if the name.leeson is Jewish..they were eastern European.

    • @karmibenreuben5240
      @karmibenreuben5240 7 месяцев назад +1

      levi son

    • @grimmmunro2279
      @grimmmunro2279 7 месяцев назад

      @@karmibenreuben5240 thank you for your kind reply..I have always felt that it was a Jewish name.