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Welcome to '''Roots Unearthed'''!
Welcome to '''Roots Unearthed'''!


This website is dedicated to identifying, documenting and sharing the lives and details of the FORREST lines descended from [[William FORREST of Overgrange]]
This website is dedicated to identifying, documenting and sharing the lives and details of the FORREST lines descended from [[[[William FORREST (c1690-c1760)]]|William FORREST of Overgrange]]


The below link is the descendancy tree:
The below link is the descendancy tree:
[[Descendants of William FORREST (c1690)]]
[[Descendants of William FORREST (c1690)]]


'''Meaning of the surname FORREST''': Topographic name for someone who lived in or near a royal forest, or a metonymic occupational name for a keeper or worker in one. Middle English ''forest'' was not, as today, a near-synonym of ''wood'', but referred specifically to a large area of woodland reserved by law for the purposes of hunting by the king and his nobles. The same applied to the European cognates, both Germanic and Romance. The English word is from Old French ''forest'', Late Latin ''forestis'' (''silva''). This is generally taken to be a derivative of ''foris'' ‘outside’; the reference was probably to woods lying outside a habitation. On the other hand, Middle High German ''for(e)st'' has been held to be a derivative of Old High German ''foraha'' ‘fir’, with the addition of a collective suffix.  
'''Meaning of the surname FORREST''': Topographic name for someone who lived in or near a royal forest, or a metonymic occupational name for a keeper or worker in one. Middle English ''forest'' was not, as today, a near-synonym of ''wood'', but referred specifically to a large area of woodland reserved by law for the purposes of hunting by the king and his nobles. The same applied to the European cognates, both Germanic and Romance. The English word is from Old French ''forest'', Late Latin ''forestis'' (''silva''). This is generally taken to be a derivative of ''foris'' ‘outside’; the reference was probably to woods lying outside a habitation. On the other hand, Middle High German ''for(e)st'' has been held to be a derivative of Old High German ''foraha'' ‘fir’, with the addition of a collective suffix.
 
[[Descendants of Adam HORROCKS (1665)]]

Revision as of 17:01, 30 September 2009

Welcome to Roots Unearthed!

This website is dedicated to identifying, documenting and sharing the lives and details of the FORREST lines descended from [[William FORREST (c1690-c1760)|William FORREST of Overgrange]]

The below link is the descendancy tree: Descendants of William FORREST (c1690)

Meaning of the surname FORREST: Topographic name for someone who lived in or near a royal forest, or a metonymic occupational name for a keeper or worker in one. Middle English forest was not, as today, a near-synonym of wood, but referred specifically to a large area of woodland reserved by law for the purposes of hunting by the king and his nobles. The same applied to the European cognates, both Germanic and Romance. The English word is from Old French forest, Late Latin forestis (silva). This is generally taken to be a derivative of foris ‘outside’; the reference was probably to woods lying outside a habitation. On the other hand, Middle High German for(e)st has been held to be a derivative of Old High German foraha ‘fir’, with the addition of a collective suffix.