[Surname] Re: The name Ella or Aella
in reply to a message by Marc
First, as Marc has pointed out, this name is extant and not too rare.
Second, although I have not been able to learn the meaning of this name, I doubt that it derives from the Old English (Anglo-Saxon) Aella.
Ella is a name that is extant in my home town (Hull, Yorkshire), and I put together the following notes to post elsewhere.ELLA Not much to say about this name, another that has avoided the attention of the experts. Perhaps these notes will attract the attention of the better informed.
It appears to be a Yorkshire name, though not a common one. I thought at first that it might derive from two linked place names of the Hull area, Kirkella and Westella. However, though 'kirk' and 'west' are later additions "Ella" alone is not recorded. Mediaeval 13th century spellings suggest that a version like Elveley or Elfley was then in use. "Kirkelley" is shown on Speed's map of 1601.
So the surname resists explanation.
A couple of Hull notices -
John Ella, son of Richard Ella, of Sculcoates, fishmonger, was apprenticed to Thomas Blanch, Humber pilot, 10th January 1812.
William Ella, "a poor boy" apparently of Welton Parish, aged 14, was apprenticed as a house servant and gardener to John Carrick, esquire, burgess, 22nd December 1815.
Both notices from the Hull Register of Apprentices (1809-20), in the city archives.
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Messages

The name Ella or Aella  ·  Mark Ella-Ford  ·  7/22/2014, 6:46 AM
Re: The name Ella or Aella  ·  Marc  ·  7/22/2014, 7:47 AM
Re: The name Ella or Aella  ·  Jim Young  ·  7/23/2014, 8:47 AM
Re: The name Ella or Aella  ·  Marc  ·  7/23/2014, 12:01 PM
Re: The name Ella or Aella  ·  Jim Young  ·  7/24/2014, 12:40 PM
Re: The name Ella or Aella  ·  Marc  ·  7/24/2014, 2:30 PM
Re: The name Ella or Aella  ·  Jim Young  ·  7/25/2014, 12:09 PM