History of The Jews in Hungary - Family Names

Family Names

Most Jews did not have family names before 1783. Still, we have the following family names recorded:

  • 1050: Jászkonti,
  • 1263: Farkas,
  • 1350: Hosszú,
  • 16th century: Cseh, Jakab, Gazdag, Fekete, Nagy, Kis,
  • 1780: Bárány, Csonka, Horpács, Jónap, Kohányi, Kossuth, Kosztolányi, Lengyel, Lőrincz, Lukács, Szarvas, Szabó, Varga.

Emperor Joseph II wanted to facilitate the centralization of his empire by Germanization. He ordered the Jews to go in front of committees from 1783. There the Jews either had to choose or were given German family names, depending on the local circumstances.

The first wave of Magyarization of family names occurred between 1840 and 1849. This was stopped during the absolutist rule after the Hungarian revolution until 1867. After the Ausgleich, many Jews changed their family names from German to Hungarian.

A decree of the Hungarian Defense Ministry about "race validation" in 1942 complained that simply no Hungarian or German names were "safe" as Jews could have that name. Slavic names were deemed safer, but the decree listed 58 Slavic-sounding names Jews regularly had.

Read more about this topic:  History Of The Jews In Hungary

Famous quotes containing the words family and/or names:

    Govern a small family as you would cook a small fish, very gently.
    —(20th century)

    Every man who has lived for fifty years has buried a whole world or even two; he has grown used to its disappearance and accustomed to the new scenery of another act: but suddenly the names and faces of a time long dead appear more and more often on his way, calling up series of shades and pictures kept somewhere, “just in case” in the endless catacombs of the memory, making him smile or sigh, and sometimes almost weep.
    Alexander Herzen (1812–1870)