|
|
Dictionary of
Family Names
|
Origin and Etymology of the Surname ARMSTRONG,
ARMSTRANG.
|
|
From
A Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames, by C. W. E. Bardsley,
A. Bardsley, 1901, and,
An Etymological Dictionary of
Family and Christian Names, by William Arthur, M. A., 1857.
|
|
ARMSTRONG, ARMSTRANG.
A nickname meaning "arm-strong"; cf. Strongitharm. The name of a
familiar Border clan. This surname has ramified very strongly in the
States and Canada.
Arthur has: A name given for strength in battle. Historians relate the following
tradition:
This family was
anciently settled on the Scottish border; their original name was Fairbairn,
which was changed to Armstrong on the following occasion: An
ancient king of Scotland having had his horse killed under him in battle, was
immediately re-mounted by Fairbairn, his armor-bearer, on his own horse.
For this timely assistance he amply rewarded him with lands on the borders,
and to perpetuate the memory of so-important a service, as well as the manner
in which it was performed (for Fairbairn took the king by the thigh, and set
him on the saddle), his royal master gave him the appellation of Armstrong.
The chief seat of Johnnie Armstrong was Gilnockie, in Eskdale, a place of
exquisite beauty. Johnnie was executed by order of James V., in 1529, as
a "Border Freebooter." Andrew Armstrong sold his patrimony to
one of his kinsmen, and emigrated to the north of Ireland in the commencement
of the seventeenth century. The Armstrongs were always noted for their
courage and daring. In the "Lay of the Last Minstrel," when
the chief was about to assemble his clans, he says to his heralds:
"Ye need
not go to Liddisdale,
For when they see the blazing bale
Elliots and Armstrongs never fail."
|
|
|
|
Reference
Materials
|
|
|
|
| Etymology
Dictionary Index |
| A, B,
C, D, E,
F, G, H,
I, J, K,
L, M, N,
O, P, Q,
R, S, T,
U, V, W,
X, Y, Z
|
|
| Miscellany |
| Young
People's Bible History |
|
|
|
|