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Dossier: 600933
Type: Heraldic Preview

Last name
Stoke

Nobility: Noble family - Knights - Lords
Nobles in:
England (England)
Language of the text: English

Heraldic Preview
Stoke

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English


Early records reveal that this surname originated in England. Stokes is a variation of the name Stoke. Etymology may be defined as the history of a word, revealed through the analysis of its parts, and by tracing its roots to past times and even to foreign languages. Such a study is of particular interest when applied to a name. Stokes belongs to the category of "topographic" names, or ones which had their roots in certain distinctive features in the landscape; in this case, a habitation name from any of the numerous places throughout England named "stoke" (Middle English) or the Old English "stoc". The earliest written references to persons bearing this surname pertain to Ricerus de Stochas (mentioned in a document from the year 1084), and later, a Cnut de Stoch (his name being recorded in a document dated 1166). An Ailwin de Stokes appears in a scroll written in the year 1195. Centuries ago, many families displayed mottoes - concise phrases which might express anything from a pun on the name to a religious or philosophical guiding principle - on scrolls, or below their coat of arms. The motto used by one branch of the Stokes family was "Vincit omnia Pertinax Virtux": "Stubborn Virtue Conquers All". Another line of the Stokes family employed the motto "Ire in adversa": "To Advance Against Adversity". Probably one of the first individuals bearing the surname Stokes to emigrate to America was a certain Grace Stokes, who at age 20 sailed from London to New England on a ship named Hopewell in the year 1635. According to the 1990 U.S. Census, Stokes is the 467th most common surname in the United States. There are approximately 54,000 people living in the United States today who have this surname.

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Blazon
Stoke

1. Coat of arms of family:
Stokes


46058/46058

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Blazon of family
Stokes

Ar. on a bend sable trhee dolphins or. Crest.-Out of a ducal coronet or, an arm embowed vested gu. cuffed ar. holding in the hand ppr. a staff also gu. thereon an imperial crown gold

Blazon Stokes from England

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2. Coat of arms of family:
Stoke


56436/56436

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Blazon of family
Stoke

Coat of arms of family Stoke from England

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  2. Variations of surnames are frequent and mainly derive from involuntary acts such as translation errors or dialectal inflections or from voluntary acts such as attempts to escape persecution or acquisition of titles and properties of other families
     
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