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Kettle Genealogy and Kettle Family History Information

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Profiles

  • ?? Lane (deceased)
    From Staffordshire pedigrees 1664-1700 based on the visitation of that county made by William Dugdale. v.63. Page 152 "Lane":>Thomas Lane of Bentley, Esq ob 1660 married to . . . dau of . . . Eardley, ...
  • Ann (Byrne) Kettle, Convict "Providence" 1811 (1782 - d.)
    Byrne was convicted at Dublin City in March 1809 for stealing lace. 7yr transportation sentence - to New South Wales per the ‘Providence’ 1810.Aged 30 yrs.Transferred to Port Dalrymple, Van Diemen’s La...
  • Anne (Kettle) Collier [Free Settler "Jupiter" 1823] (1815 - 1888)
    Ann KETTLE was born c1815 (daughter to Samuel KETTLE and Mary ICKE)Ann was baptised 20/1/1823 Liverpool, UKAfter Ann's father was transported to Australia, Georgiana and her mother and siblings arrived...
  • Brian Kettle
    Brian Kettle (born 22 April 1956) is an English former footballer who played as a left-back. Kettle began his career with Liverpool, signing professional forms in 1973. He was to remain at Anfield for...
  • Catherine L. Biddle (1844 - 1922)
    Catherine L. Kettell Biddle BIRTH 27 Sep 1844 New York, USA DEATH 15 Feb 1922 (aged 77) Elkton, Cecil County, Maryland, USA BURIAL Saint Stephens Episcopal Cemetery Earleville, Cecil County, Maryland, ...

About the Kettle surname

1

Last name: Kettle

This interesting surname is English but ultimately of pre 7th century Old Norse origins. One of the very first or possibly even the first surname ever to be recorded, it derives from the Scandinavian personal name "Ketill", often used as a short form of various compound names such as AsketillandArnkell. These names were composed of apparently disparate elements, although "ketill" itself has the unusual meaning of a sacrificial cauldron, whilst Asketill means "god-cauldron", from "oss", god, and Arnkell translates literally as "eagle cauldron", from "arn", eagle. Both are found in the modified surnames of today as Ashkettle, Haskell, Arkle and Arkley. The personal name Ketill is recorded in the Domesday Book of1086 and appears several times as Chetel, Chitel, Ketel and Kitel, whilst the early development of the surname includes: Roger Chetel of Northamptonshire in 1180; Edricus Keteles of Suffolk in 1188; and Hulf Ketel in Norfolk in 1190. The modern surname can be found as Kettle, Kettel, Kettell, Kittel, Kittle and the patronymic forms Kettles, Kettless, Kells and Kettelson. Amongst the early examples of the surname recording in Elizabethan times is that of Edmund Kettle, listed in the Register of the University of Oxford for 1582 -1583. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Grym Kytel. This was dated 972 a.d., in the famous "Anglo-Saxon Chronicles", during the reign of King Edgar of England, 959 - 975. Surnames became necessary when governments introduced personal taxation. In England this was known as Poll Tax. Throughout the centuries, surnames in every country have continued to "develop" often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling 0 - 20