Kirke Scarabe Consult

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Period Armorial for late period England - http://daten.digitale-sammlungen.de/~db/bsb00001647/image_1

Kirke Scarabe - late period English.

Period pronunciation video - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gPlpphT7n9s

Kirke - "grey period' English given name - Kirke Basteman 1637, Lincoln, England, Batch # C02690-1.

Scarabe - 1579 variation of scarab in O.E.D., earlier variants with same meaning (dung beetle) in M.E.D. with one in use as a surname - (1212) CRR(2) 6 331: Johannes Scarebot de Cattun'. Probably also Elizabeth Scarbat - married 1589 - Haddenham, Cambridge, England - IGI Batch M13816-1

Kirt - variation of Conrad

http://www.ellipsis.cx/~liana/names/database/alphalist.php?canonical=Conrad (esp. Dutch and German, also Conrad as English)

Snook

English IGI

Richard Snook - married 1619 - Bishops Caundle,Dorset,England - M00295-1

Flemish IGI

Remerus Snouck - christened 1647 - SAINT MICHEL, NAMUR, NAMUR, BELGIUM - C87028-3

German IGI

Henrick Snoeck - married 1640 - Katholisch, Rees, Rheinland, Prussia - M94289-1

Petronillam Snoek - christened 1619 - SANKT KUNIBERT KATHOLISCH,KOELN STADT,RHEINLAND,PRUSSIA - K96886-1

Dutch IGI

Aegedius Snoeck - married 1624 - Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands - M01225-2

Grietje Snoek - christened 1610 - Nieuwekerk, Amsterdam, Noord-Holland, Netherlands - C00826-2

Old Norse:

snúinbrók twisted-tartan

http://www.ellipsis.cx/~liana/names/norse/vikbynames.html

Scarab

Old Norse -

skarfr cormorant
skerjablesi skerry-blaze
vífill weevil, beetle

http://www.ellipsis.cx/~liana/names/norse/vikbynames.html

German IGI

Jacob Scraub - 1597 christening - EVANGELISCH, ULM, DONAUKREIS, WUERTTEMBERG - C91501-1

English IGI

Skrubby, Skerbourghe, Skerbe, Skirbure, Scaraib (but 1681)...

Elizabeth Scarbat - married 1589 - Haddenham, Cambridge, England - M13816-1

Middle English forms of scarab:

scarbot(e (n.) Also scarebod, scarbude, scharabot, charbote, cherubud, (in surname) scarebot & (error) starebode [OF escharbot(e, escarbot, scherbot, charabot; the -bod(e, -bud(e spellings may have been influenced by ME sharn-boude (s.v. sh

a macron breve

rn n.(b)).]

(a) A kind of beetle; also, a dung beetle; (b) as surname.

In the OED:

Forms: Also 15 scarabb(e, 15–16 scarabe, 16 scarrabscarubb.

Etymology: < French scarabée, scarabee n. (= Provençal escaravai , Spanish escarabajo ...(Show More)

1.=a. In early use, a beetle of any kind (chiefly referred to as supposed to be bred in and to feed upon dung). Now rare exc. (also scarab beetle) as applied to the scarabæid beetle,Ateuchus sacer, reverenced by the ancient Egyptians (cf. sense2).===

1579 S. Gosson f. 1v, The Scarabe flies ouer many a sweet flower, and lightes in a cowshard.

1615 G. Markham (1635) ii. 15 A hollow Cane in which he may put them [Maggots, etc.], and Scarrabs.

1.†b. transf. and fig. esp. as a term of abuse for a man. Obs.

1602 B. Jonson iv. vii. 44 They are the Moathes, and Scarabbes of a State.

c1604 (1938) ii. 32 But be assurd I am no Scarabb for a Castrells breakfast.

1612 B. Jonson i. i. sig. Bv, Fac. You might talke softlier, Raskall. Svb. No, you Scarabe, I'll thunder you, in peeces.

...

Original idea:

Per pale argent and azure, within an orle of chain counterchanged a scarab Or. Illegal because unadorned loop of chain reserved to knights.

Other ideas:

Per pale argent and azure, a scarab Or. Conflicts with (Fieldless) A scarab Or, marked sable.

Per pale Or and azure, a scarab argent. Conflicts with Per pale sable and azure, a cockroach argent.

Per pale argent and azure, three fleur-de-lys counterchanged (or counterchanged azure and Or) surrounding a scarab Or. Looks clear.

Ditto, three sets of three annulets interlaced counterchanged surrounding a scarab Or. Looks clear.