toritto's Blog

ehh....what town in Italy is your family from?

toritto

toritto
Location
tampa bay metro, Florida,
Birthday
September 10
Bio
I was born in year 4 of the reign of the Emperor Tiberius Claudius and raised on 66th Street and 13th Ave. in Brooklyn. And Coney Island, Traveled the world. Married my high school sweetheart and stayed together 40 years. Now a retired old widower crank living in Florida with my cat. Author of "Initial Verses" - a collection of poems on love, loss, poverty and war.

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Salon.com
FEBRUARY 14, 2012 1:08PM

My God! Are We Norse?

Rate: 11 Flag

1048

via Scarangella - Toritto 

I have an unusual last name.

Scarangello

Actually it was Scarangella.  It was changed by the bureaucrats at Ellis Island who mistook the cursive "a" for an "o".  So that became our name.  In Italy it is not found with an "o" at the end.

And our name is found in only one place in Italy.

Toritto.

Toritto is today a suburb of Bari, down by the heel of the Italian boot, perhaps where one might wear a stirrup if riding horses was your thing. Bari is a pleasant Southern Italian city right on the Adriatic with the well deserved reputation of speaking the worst Italian in Italy. It has a long history going back to pre-Roman times. It fell under Roman control in the third century      B. C.

Image Detail

Bari

After the fall of Rome it was ruled by Byzantines, Moors, French, Spanish etc. as part of Napoleon’s empire, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, the Kingdom of Naples. A long varied history indeed.

I have been able to trace our family history back centuries.  Bari was not destroyed during World War II and the town keeps excellent records. The family name is carried by over 120 families in Bari today.  A street, via Scarangella, can be found in the old city center.

The name is found virtually no where else in Italy and the persons usually living elsewhere can all trace their lineage back to Toritto / Bari.

I have been curious as to where this very Italian name originated.

Initially I thought the name involved an angel (angella) and perhaps a variation of the word "sacred" - sacra in Italian. Southern Italians do have a habit of dropping the first vowel. This however seemed much too simple.  And knowing some of the family I doubt that our surname came from something akin to "holy angel".

So I went a little deeper.  And was astonished,

Seems our last name is a "pet female variant" of Scaringi - old Norse, rooted in the Scandinavian name Ansigar - which translates to "God Spear"!

The origin of our name is Scandinavian?! Who us??

Apparently Ansigar is the old German / Scandinavian form of Ansgar - resulting in myriad forms of the first name Oscar and apparently the origin of our last name as well.   Seems"Scaringi" or "god spear" resulted in some little girl or comely young woman being call "scaringella", a nickname for a little girl or comely female Scaringi.

Now how did a name of Norse origin wind up in Southern Italy?

Well in 1067, one year after the Norman conquest of England, the Normans landed in Bari and took it from the Byzantines after a three year siege.

The family name has existed in Bari for centuries - and no where else.

I’m wondering if we had a Norman rascal in the family tree!!

:-)

 

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Comments

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Well, what a surprise for such a devoted Italian family!
Some Norman rascal who found the climate of weather and women, no doubt, so delightful...
The Normans "liberated" southern Italy from the Moors during the early medieval era, if I remember correctly and founded the "Kingdom of Sicily."
Such a completely interesting and surprising analysis of your last name! WOWOWOWOWOW! That is so amazing, a story as intricate as a faceted diamond!
Shake the family tree and you never know who might fall out!
Interesting, T. Have you tried the Mormon genealogy files in Salt Lake? Open to all.
GREAT story and it looks beautiful, there.


-R-
I love all things genealogical and southern Italian. Yes the Normans built a castle in our little Italian town (which I saw the remains of last year) and every Italian with the surname "Fastiggi" comes from that town. (Calitri/Campagna)
So on one of those Norman invasions........
I love this kind of detective work rummaging in history. Fascinating post.
R
Not such a rascal if he did the right thing and gave his name to his descendants! Those Norse got around. But, hey, before that the Italians were all over the place - the Romans, anyway. Euros are a mixed bunch.

Anyway, nice detective story.

I have been in Bari - caught a ship there to Greece. It was a nice place - we wandered around for a large part of the day.
What an incredible journey through times and places. I wish that I could so easily trace my ancestry. Unfortunately, we seemed to have a penchant for moving to different countries and changing our name to one that sounded appropriate to the country.

I can't even begin to guess what it started out as, but it probably meant something like, "you hang tomorrow at dawn, you despoiler of innocent daughters", before it was changed to one meaning, "that rascal has escaped again!"
.
The Normans had ADHD. They went everywhere.

Ever read about Robert de Guiscard? He was the Norman who was instrumental in the conquests of Calabria, Apulia, and Sicily. He buckled a lot of swash.
AHP - Robert de Guiscard was the very buckler of swash!

:-)