• Home
    • About the Guild
    • About one-name studies
    • Starting your ONS
    • Conducting ONS (videos)
    • Join Us
    • Guild Shop
  • Studies
    • Surnames A-Z
    • Recent Registrations
    • Study websites
    • Registered Societies
  • News
    • General News
    • Education News
    • Guild Public Newsletters
  • Forums
    • Facebook (public page)
  • Events
    • Calendar
    • Conference
    • Seminar events
    • Guild Webinars
  • Resources
    • DNA
    • Fun Zone
    • Guild Indexes
    • Guild Journal
    • Knowledge Zone – Presentations
    • Members’ Websites
    • Modern Surnames
    • Newspaper Index
    • Pharos ONS Courses
    • Speakers
    • Those Who Served
  • Help
    • Reset your password
    • Contact Us
  • Log In

Guild of One-Name Studies

One-name studies, Genealogy

Is your surname here?

    • 2,271 members
    • 2,164 studies
    • 7,660 surnames

Blaker One-Name Study

Page Views: 2,809

Study details

Study: Blaker   

Variants: Blacare, Blacker, Blacquierre, Blakere, Blakker

Category:  1 - A study where research using core genealogical datasets and transcriptions is in its early stages.

Website: www.blakerfamily.org

DNA website: www.familytreedna.com/public/blaker

Contact: Mrs Shirley Tutton


About the study

A study of the name 'Blaker' is being carried out by a group called The Blaker Society (TBS), in existence since 2009 as a not for profit association. Data is shown on a web site found at www.blakerfamily.org

The genealogy program selected is The Next Generation (TNG) and has about 7000 individuals listed.

The origin and maintenance of the name Blaker appears very much to be Sussex where all sources show a steady increase in so named people over the centuries; the earliest incidence of the name in Sussex was in 1276 whence it has increased steadily.

The two other points of origin for Blaker in England appear to be Wiltshire (with several generations of a single family), and Yorkshire where the name precedes The Conquest.

There are however early references to the name - usually 13th century, over several counties in England; but these instances are sole events.

Variant names

In Yorkshire, the names Blakere, Blacera and Blachera appear about 1050 -€“ 1065; the first as a Benedictine monk in Whitby, and the second two as alternative spellings for a moneyer to Edward the Confessor. There are four families of Blacre in Yorkshire in the Domesday Book.

"€œBlaker"€ is to be found in Norway and The Netherlands where there are parishes of this name.

The name may also be found -€“ extremely rarely -€“ in middle European nations with a Germanic history; but also in Eastern Europe, including Russia. Something to do with Vikings ? We have accumulated and put aside these instances for future review.

Blaker in England is very likely a variant itself; but of what other word or name is not clear. Following is a list of names which we know to have been written in parish registers and other documents and which were intended to be the name Blaker, but spelled according to the writer'€™s sense of the word:

Blacker, Blachar, Blacher, Blachere, Blacor, Blakar, Blackar, Blackcar, Blacor, Blakyr, Blacar, Blakcar, Blakers, Blakor, Blayker, Blakyer.

Renshaw lists as medieval variants:

Blakkr, Blacre (Domesday), le Blaker, le Bleechere, le Blackere, le Blackere, le Blakar, le Blakyere, le Blecstere, le Blekstere, le Blechere, Blakker, Blecher, Blakere, Blacher, Blachere, Blecker.

Name origin

The word Blaker almost surely originates in the words blaec and blac which are to be found in Old English, Old Norse, Old German, Old Scandinavian; in other words, in all the linguistic variants of the Germanic language as used 1000 to perhaps 1500 years ago.

Dependent on the length of the vowel when pronounced, the word can mean dark or black (blac), or alternatively, (blaec), white or pale.

One would thus assume that the name Blake represents the idea of a person who is fair of complexion, or light of skin, or of light coloured hair; while the word or name Blaker would presumably mean the person or thing which makes something else light or pale. It is from this reasoning that it has been concluded by some people that the word Blaker means "€œbleacher."€

There is a single problem with this theory: that despite extensive research into early and mid-medieval instances of the name, we have yet to find a single instance of a Blaker who was also a bleacher.

Historical occurrences of the name

There are two place names of that spelling: one in Norway, the other in The Netherlands. Research is proceeding as to the origin and time line of those names, with the relevant authorities and historians.

There was an Anglo Saxon Chief or King by the name of Blaecca, in the town of Lincoln, sometime in the 7th century; and its pronunciation is probably the closest yet found to the present Blaker. The habit of this King'€™s people was to name themselves and the areas they settled with his name, indicating their tribal origin.

Even more romantic is the story of Blacar, the Norse or Danish Viking who invaded and held Dublin about the year 942, and who made himself King thereof; but a year or so later the Celts drove him off, and his son -€“ known as Sitric McBlaker - took up residence on family lands in Yorkshire.

This story figures prominently in the family tradition of Blacker of Carrickblacker in Northern Ireland; but that genealogy ends around the usual early 1500s, and is replaced with hearsay back to the tenth century. Certainly, there are Blacker and Blaker people in Yorkshire; many fewer in the case of the spelling Blaker.

Given the above background, we have decided to pursue primarily the English Blakers.

Name frequency

 

Distribution of the name

 

Data

Collected data is being assembled and will be posted on to the website early 2013. It will be searchable.

The website address is: www.blakerfamily.org

Registration on the website is free but necessary for admission.

DNA

There is a DNA Blaker Project at Family Tree DNA. For access and information, please make contact with TBS on the website at www.blakerfamily.org or go to www.FTDNA.com

Links

www.blakerfamily.org

Contact Details

Mrs Shirley Tutton

General Search Results

Occurrences of the surname Blaker in the Guild Indexes
(Click on the number to view the search results in each index. Indexes marked by * are only accessible by logged in Guild members.)
  • Global Marriages (public)  154
  • Global Marriages (members)* 155
  • Modern Newspaper Index  2
  • Probate Index* 379

Other Guild Websites

You may find our other Guild websites of interest:

  • Members’ Websites Program
  • Surname Cloud
  • Guild Members’ records on FamilySearch
  • Guild Marriage Locator

Contact Us

Email: Guild General Contact
Postal address:
c/o Treasurer,
3 Windsor Gardens,
Herne Bay,
Kent, CT6 8FE. UK.
Call us free on:
UK: 0800 011 2182
US & Canada: 1-800-647-4100
Australia: 1800 305 184

Follow Us


  • Facebook

  • Twitter

  • YouTube

Guild of One-Name Studies Policies:    Privacy   CIO Membership and Registration Conditions   Sales   COVID-19 Impact

© 2013–2025 Guild of One-Name Studies CIO. Registered Charity in England and Wales, No. 1197944.