Saturday, January 23, 2010

Scottish Family History Does Anybody Know The Family History Of The Surname 'Keil'?

Does anybody know the family history of the surname 'Keil'? - scottish family history

His Irish and Scots. Migrated When my grandparents, her name is misspelled "keel". It has since then. If you have no knowledge, nor where to find them, I would appreciate it.

6 comments:

Rustskip... said...

Hey D-Money

One of the best places, so you would go online, GenForum. You can send messages read by families as a wedge everywhere. And you submit to your own questions.

You can full-text search for the deaths of family records, census, family tree. There are 368 articles on this site. You have to spend the time.

You have the Irish and Scottish, below are some websites, here on the records in the United States, General Genealogy and the United Kingdom / Ireland / Scotland.

You can your 2nd Greats back to follow, even if you are unsure of the spelling errors. You can in several places of migrants who go most often the Ellis Iceland - the site is free and lists all sorts of excellent information. For fun, I wrote in the wedge and they found hundreds of entries. Registration is required, but as I said, it's free. You get clear of passengers, the port of departure, departure city, at the age of travel, passengers with big things.

Best of luck.

Ted Pack said...

http://www.ancestry.com/learn/facts/defa ...

Keil

German: Medium Wedge High German kil ',' wooden leg ', so possibly a metonymic name for a manufacturer of such a challenge or a wooden helicopter. Alternatively, a bad nickname or deformed (see Keidel), or a topographic name for someone who lives in or near a parcel shaped piece of land.

The spelling of the German Geil, geil, according to pseudo-Middle High German, "" evil "and" hot ".

Dictionary of American Family Names, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-508137-4

and

Kiel

German (in northern Germany near Hamburg joint): In some cases, a name lives in the city of Kiel in Schleswig-Holstein, but it's more of a topographic name for someone living in a long narrow bay or sheltered area of Water, corner of Middle Low German kil ', the word from which the city owes its name. Alternatively, you can use the same word as a nickname in order to obtain a roughSon.

North German: perhaps the name of a professional skipper, short for the lower keel German professor Kilmer (Middle Low German kil ',' boat '+ pattern Mester',''). Kilmer is attested as a name, near Rostock in the 13th Century.

German: from a pet form of personal name Kilian.

Dutch: from Middle Dutch beat Kidel-Iron ", hence the name metonymic work for someone who makes such garments or perhaps a nickname for someone who habitually wore one too.

Dutch: name of a place called home in Antwerp and the German city (cf. 1).

Jewish (Ashkenazic): variant of Kil.

Polish (Kiel), Kiel tooth "," catch ", hence the nickname given to a person with bad teeth or outgoing.

http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.c ...
Keil has 19 persons name and place of birth, and said: "Scotland", 0 BP with "Ireland". I have not checked "keel" or place of marriage or death or the abbreviation "Scotch" or & quot; Ireland, "because I have fun.

Ted Pack said...

http://www.ancestry.com/learn/facts/defa ...

Keil

German: Medium Wedge High German kil ',' wooden leg ', so possibly a metonymic name for a manufacturer of such a challenge or a wooden helicopter. Alternatively, a bad nickname or deformed (see Keidel), or a topographic name for someone who lives in or near a parcel shaped piece of land.

The spelling of the German Geil, geil, according to pseudo-Middle High German, "" evil "and" hot ".

Dictionary of American Family Names, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-508137-4

and

Kiel

German (in northern Germany near Hamburg joint): In some cases, a name lives in the city of Kiel in Schleswig-Holstein, but it's more of a topographic name for someone living in a long narrow bay or sheltered area of Water, corner of Middle Low German kil ', the word from which the city owes its name. Alternatively, you can use the same word as a nickname in order to obtain a roughSon.

North German: perhaps the name of a professional skipper, short for the lower keel German professor Kilmer (Middle Low German kil ',' boat '+ pattern Mester',''). Kilmer is attested as a name, near Rostock in the 13th Century.

German: from a pet form of personal name Kilian.

Dutch: from Middle Dutch beat Kidel-Iron ", hence the name metonymic work for someone who makes such garments or perhaps a nickname for someone who habitually wore one too.

Dutch: name of a place called home in Antwerp and the German city (cf. 1).

Jewish (Ashkenazic): variant of Kil.

Polish (Kiel), Kiel tooth "," catch ", hence the nickname given to a person with bad teeth or outgoing.

http://worldconnect.genealogy.rootsweb.c ...
Keil has 19 persons name and place of birth, and said: "Scotland", 0 BP with "Ireland". I have not checked "keel" or place of marriage or death or the abbreviation "Scotch" or & quot; Ireland, "because I have fun.

HistoryF... said...

Rootsweb.com saw the migration of people with the name of Keil Germany seems to be contained in the Hesse-Darmstadt, Germany, Thuringia. I have this link appears for an Adam Keil descendants still live in the area, where he
http://wc.rootsweb.com/cgi-bin/igm.cgi?o ...

GOOD LUCK!

brenbon1 said...

I know the name of wedges, and it is certainly of German origin.

Clay_Hoc... said...

not my head:)

a search on Google or Yahoo

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