Re: Hrezik [Slovak] Early origins and etymology
Thanks. I thought I'd check a couple of things you gave me some ideas on. It turned out that "a couple of things" turned into looking into 50 or 60 years of baptismal records, marrriage and death records. It looks like the name Kdovicsin was in the village for at least 3 decades and sometime around the mid 1840s a group of them changed their name to Hrezsik. But the name Kdovicsin continued to be used in the village for at least another 30 years. So while I thought that perhaps there might have been a new Hungarian in town that "forced" the change it obviously didn't change for all of them. There was another surname in the village, Hrehov, which is a lot closer to a derivative of Hrehor than Hrezsik is a derivative of Hrehor. I think that theory is unlikely. I think you may be right about the Ukrainian. There was also a curious absence of the name in the confirmation records when I knew the family was there, listed as Roman Catholic. Since they weren't in the confirmation records it could be they were originally of the Eastern Rite and converted to RC. Eastern Rite are "confirmed" at birth. If they converted would they get confirmed again or would they skip that sacrament? [Rhetorical question].Names can be frustrating.
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Messages

Hrezik [Slovak] Early origins and etymology  ·  Jim  ·  8/18/2009, 4:50 AM
Re: Hrezik [Slovak] Early origins and etymology  ·  HanaB  ·  8/30/2009, 10:35 AM
Re: Hrezik [Slovak] Early origins and etymology  ·  Jim Young  ·  9/2/2009, 11:34 AM
Re: Curious Czech names  ·  HanaB  ·  9/3/2009, 1:37 AM
Re: Curious Czech names  ·  Jim Young  ·  9/3/2009, 7:59 AM
Re: Curious Czech names  ·  HanaB  ·  9/4/2009, 8:20 AM
Re: Hrezik [Slovak] Early origins and etymology  ·  Jim Young  ·  8/21/2009, 6:44 AM
Re: Hrezik [Slovak] Early origins and etymology  ·  Jim  ·  10/4/2009, 7:28 PM
Re: Hrezik [Slovak] Early origins and etymology  ·  HanaB  ·  10/30/2009, 3:37 AM