What is the name meaning of HABERSHAM. Phrases containing HABERSHAM
See name meanings and uses of HABERSHAM!HABERSHAM
HABERSHAM
Surname or Lastname
English (Yorkshire)
English (Yorkshire) : metonymic occupational name for a maker of habergeons, Middle English, Old French haubergeon. The habergeon was a sleeveless jacket of mail or scale armor, which was also worn for penance.Born in Beverley, Yorkshire, England, James Habersham emigrated to the infant colony of Georgia in 1738 with his friend George Whitefield. Together they established what is believed to be America’s first orphanage. Habersham was married in Bethesda, GA, in 1740 and had three surviving sons, all of whom were educated at Princeton and became ardent patriots.
HABERSHAM
HABERSHAM
Girl/Female
Australian, Finnish, French, German, Greek, Italian, Latin, Spanish, Swedish
Red Haired; Queen
Surname or Lastname
Irish
Irish : reduced form of McClinton.English : habitational name, either from Glympton in Oxfordshire, named as ‘settlement (Old English tūn) on the Glym river’, a Celtic river name meaning ‘bright stream’, or from Glinton in Cambridgeshire, recorded in 1060 as Clinton (named with an unrecorded Old English element akin to Middle Low German glinde ‘enclosure’, ‘fence’ + Old English tūn).Charles Clinton (born 1690 in Longford, Ireland) organized a group of colonists and founded the settlement of Little Britain, Ulster county, NY, in 1731. His son George Clinton (1739–1812) was governor of NY (1777–95), and they had many prominent descendants.
Boy/Male
Biblical
Breaking, hope.
Girl/Female
Afghan, American, Arabic, Australian, British, English, Hebrew, Latin, Muslim
Graceful; Intelligent; From Denmark; Form of Dana
Boy/Male
Muslim
Servant of the responsive, Servant of the answerer
Boy/Male
Indian
Victories, Conquests
Boy/Male
Tamil
Sangram | ஸஂகà¯à®°à®¾à®®
War
Male
Italian
Pet form of Italian Giovanni, GIANNINO means "God is gracious."
Boy/Male
Indian, Punjabi, Sikh
True Attraction
Surname or Lastname
English (mainly Norfolk)
English (mainly Norfolk) : from Middle English staf ‘rod’, ‘staff’; a nickname for a tall, thin person, or a metonymic occupational name for anyone who carried a staff of office, a reminder of his right to inflict physical discipline.
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