|  Home  |  About Us  |  Privacy  |  Store Policy  |  Surname Search  |  Celtic Radio  |  Contact  |

  


Search
Home
Surname
First Name

Popular Products
Coat of Arms
Clan Badges
Books & Gifts
Celtic Jewelry
Black Shirts
CD Music
Download

Design Gallery
Irish
Flags
Celtic
Tartans
Scottish
Claddagh
Surnames
Highlander
Celtic Radio

Research
History
Country
Families



We produce shirts for clans, organizations or websites! Expediated manufacturing and shipping is available for an additional charge. Our ever growing selections of designs includes family Coat of Arms, Scottish Clan Badges, Irish Claddagh Badges, Flags, Tartans, Surnames, Celtic, Irish and Scottish designs. Please contact us for a custom quote on bulk orders.




Celtic Beaded Bookmark
$10.00



Our Heraldry Database has thousands of Family histories to search. Visit Now!

MacNab


Coat of Arms


The name Macnab derives from the Gaelic ‘Mac an Aba’, ‘child of the abbot’. According to tradition, the progenitor of this great clan was Abaruadh, the Abbot of Glendochart and Strathearn, the younger son of King Kenneth Macalpine. Abaruadh, the Red Abbot, was descended from King Fergus of Dalriada and a nephew of St Fillan, founder of the monastery in Glendochart in the seventh century.


Heraldry Database: Caldwell

Caldwell







Surname:  Caldwell
Branch:  Caldwell
Origins:  Scottish
More Info:  Scotland

Background:  This interesting surname is of Anglo-Saxon origin, and is a locational name from any one of the places called Caldwell in North Yorkshire and Warwickshire, Cauldwell in Bedfordshire, Derbyshire and Nottinghamshire, and other places named with the same elements such as Chadwell and Chardwell. The place in Yorkshire is recorded as "Caldeuuella" in the Domesday Book of 1086, and shares with all the other places mentioned the same meaning and derivation, which is from the Olde English pre 7th Century "cald", "ceald", cold, with "well", "wella" a spring, stream or well; hence "cold stream". The surname is also found in Scotland, where it appears in the late 12th Century (see below). Richard de Coldewell is noted in the Yorkshire Poll Tax Returns (1379). There are a great many variants of the modern surname ranging from Caldwell, Cau(l)dwell and Cawdell to Couldwell and Cholwell. Recordings from London Church Registers include: the marriage of Robert Coldwell and Agnes Hanshawe on May 1st 1547, at the Church of St. Mary le Bow; and the christening of Nycolas Coldwell on October 10th 1555, at the Church of St. James's, Garlickhithe. A Coat of Arms granted to the Coldwell family is a blue shield with a silver cross moline. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Adam de Caldwella, which was dated 1195, in the "Pipe Rolls of Derbyshire", during the reign of King Richard 1, known as "The Lionheart", 1189 - 1199.


Motto:  Niti facere, experiri; To strive to do is to experience.
Arms:  Argent, three piles issuing from the Chief Sable and in base four bars wavy Gules and Vert.


View the Heraldry Dictionary for help.






The derivation of this name from the old English ‘cealdwielle’, meaning ‘cold stream’, makes it impossible to state a definite territorial origin for the name. Certainly, old lands of that name are found in Renfrewshire, and the oldest record of a family bearing this name coming to prominence is in that district. Black records William de Caldwell holding land in 1342. Nisbet states that the Caldwells of that Ilk wore on their coat of arms four bars wavy to show water related to the name. He states that ‘this family continued for many hundreds of years in good reputation, by inter marriage with many honourable families and ended of late in the person of John Caldwell of that Ilk, one of the commissioners for the shire of Renfrew about the year 1693’. A branch of the family had emigrated to County Fermanagh in Ulster, where they purchased a fine castle which they renamed Castle Caldwell. Sir James Caldwell fought for William of Orange in Donegal in 1690. The name was also carried by settlers to the New World. Caldwell, New Jersey was the birth place in 1837 of Grover Cleveland, President of the United States. Erskine Caldwell, who died in 1987, was one of Americas greatest novelists.

Name Variations:  Caldwell, Coldwell, Caldwill, Cauldwell, Cauldwill, Cawldwell, Guildwell, Calewell, Caldewell.

References:
One or more of the following publications has been referenced for this article.
The General Armory; Sir Bernard Burke - 1842.
A Handbook of Mottoes; C.N. Elvin - 1860.
Scottish Clans and Tartans; Neil Grant - 2000.
Scottish Clan and Family Encyclopedia; George Way of Plean and Romilly Squire - 1994.
Scottish Clans and Tartans; Ian Grimble - 1973.
World Tartans; Iain Zaczek - 2001.
Clans and Families of Scotland; Alexander Fulton - 1991.
Internet Surname Database: http://www.surnamedb.com/surname.aspx?name=caldwell






Discuss
Search




Sign-up for a Founders account and receive personalized
family heraldry service and much more!


Want to know more?
Click the Heart!



      Heraldry Database




|  Home  |  About Us  |  Privacy  |  Store Policy  |  Surname Search  |  Celtic Radio  |  Contact  |


© www.CoatOfArmsOnline.com 2024