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Re: Need help with Ivars
in reply to a message by Marc
But there is also a nordic surname, and that is known fact. http://www.sturmunddrang.fi/index.php?page=alex
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ann-Marie_IvarsAnd, as I mentione before, there is Ívars in Iceland and the Faroese Islands. Plus, HouseOfNames.com account, which says that it was firts found in Normandy, which it's far from the Basque country.It seems virtually impossible that all these Ivars are of Basque origin.
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I didn't mean to imply that Ivars didn't also have a Scandinavian origin. It's just one of those cases where the same form can have two or more different etymologies. I focused on the Spanish form because you didn't mention this in your original query. Most of the facts you cited about the Scandinavian Ivars are correct as far as I can tell. The name is related to English Ivers which Hanks & Hodges (A Dictionary of Surnames) derive from Old Norse Ivarr which is "of uncertain origin, probably from iw, yew, bow and herr, army." If the name was once found in Normandy, it's because some Vikings brought it there, not because it has a French origin.
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Thank you. If anyone has more information on "any" Ivars, please, post here. And sorry if I sounded rude, Marc.
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Ivars is also a Latvian first name... However, that's just Latvian version of "Ivar", Latvian masculine names always end with "s". But it's very well possible that all the Scandinavian Ivarses are simply derived from the first name Ivar.
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