This article needs additional citations for
verification. (July 2009) |
The name Brompton is today mainly associated with locations and businesses, and less so as an actual surname.[ citation needed] Given the large number of places with the name, it is oddly surprising that it is so uncommon to come across a "Brompton."
Examples of place names include Potter Brompton in North Yorkshire (historically the East Riding of Yorkshire), Patrick Brompton, Brompton-on-Swale, as well as just Brompton on its own, all in North Yorkshire, Brompton Ralph in Somerset, and Brompton in Middlesex and Shropshire. [1]
Brompton can be traced back to the 7th century phrase "Brom-ton," meaning "Broom Village,"[ citation needed] which seems to suggest that Brompton originated as a placename, before it became a surname. The earliest example of Brompton used as a surname was found in the Pipe Rolls of Yorkshire in the year 1205, which mentions Geoffry de Brunton.[ citation needed] After this entry, another example is found over a hundred years later in the Devonshire County Letter Books for 1312, a William de Bromptone.[ citation needed]
People with the surname Brompton include:
This article needs additional citations for
verification. (July 2009) |
The name Brompton is today mainly associated with locations and businesses, and less so as an actual surname.[ citation needed] Given the large number of places with the name, it is oddly surprising that it is so uncommon to come across a "Brompton."
Examples of place names include Potter Brompton in North Yorkshire (historically the East Riding of Yorkshire), Patrick Brompton, Brompton-on-Swale, as well as just Brompton on its own, all in North Yorkshire, Brompton Ralph in Somerset, and Brompton in Middlesex and Shropshire. [1]
Brompton can be traced back to the 7th century phrase "Brom-ton," meaning "Broom Village,"[ citation needed] which seems to suggest that Brompton originated as a placename, before it became a surname. The earliest example of Brompton used as a surname was found in the Pipe Rolls of Yorkshire in the year 1205, which mentions Geoffry de Brunton.[ citation needed] After this entry, another example is found over a hundred years later in the Devonshire County Letter Books for 1312, a William de Bromptone.[ citation needed]
People with the surname Brompton include: