Thrale history
Name meaning and variations
Meaning
The name Thrale or Thrall indicates that the family were serfs.
Originating from the:
- old English term '
præl' or - old Norse term '
præll'
Meaning a:
These were all types of serfs who were required to work three or four days a week for the Lord of the Manor.1
Spelling
The earliest known spellings are1:- John
Thralin the 1309 Subsidy Rolls for Bedfordshire; and - William
le Thralin the 1332 Subsidy Rolls for Sussex.
However, since at least the 1600s, records show the principal spelling as
Thrale. Derivatives are speculated to have arisen mainly through non-standardised spellings of the same spoken surname, including:ThrallThrallsThralTrayleThrawl.
Common forenames
The most common Thrale male forenames are:- Ralph;
- Thomas;
- John; and
- William.
Of the 15 direct male ancestors of David Thrale - owner of this website:
- five were called Thomas;
- three were called Richard;
- two were called Robert; and
- one was called:
- Ralph;
- Kenneth;
- Herbert; and
- John.
Other common Thrale forenames include:
- Richard;
- Alban;
- Norman; and
- Peter.
Female genealogical records are less readily available. However, common Thrale female forenames include:
- Elizabeth;
- Anne;
- Sarah; and
- Mary.
Footnotes
- The Origins of English Surname. Percy Hide Reaney and Richard Middlewood Wilson. pp. 445 Fifth impression 1979. ISBN 0 7100 0353 6. ↩︎

