Chisholm (surname)

Chisholm
Family name
Meaning "cheese" + "piece of dry land in a fen"
Region of origin Scotland
Language(s) of origin Old English
Related names Siosal; Shiosal
Clan affiliations Clan Chisholm

Chisholm ( listen ) is a Scottish surname. It is derived from a habitational name from Chisholme, near Hawick, in the south of Scotland. The name is derived from the Old English elements cese, meaning "cheese"; and holm, meaning "piece of dry land in a fen". In the 14th century, members of the Chisholm family migrated into the Scottish Highlands and their name was Gaelicised.[1] The Scottish Gaelic form of the name is Siosal (masculine),[2] and Shiosal (feminine). Alternatively the name Chisholm is said to be derived from a Norman French word "chese" meaning "to choose" and the Saxon word "holm" meaning "meadow" as in "The chosen meadow" which accurately describes the initial clan area of Roxburgh near Kelso.

List of people with the surname

In Australia

In Canada

In the United Kingdom

In the United States

Elsewhere

Variant spellings

Chisum

Chisholme

Chisolm

References

  1. "Learn about the family history of your surname". Ancestry.com. Retrieved 25 September 2010. which cited Dictionary of American Family Names. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-508137-4. for the surname "Chisholm".
  2. Mark, Colin (2006), The Gaelic-English Dictionary, London: Routledge, p. 722, ISBN 0-203-22259-8
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