St. Louis CaseSt. LouisSurname— a name added to a given name and is part of a personal name. A family name.Matrilineal kinship— a system in which descent is traced through the mother and maternal ancestors. Matrilineal also a societal system in which one belongs to ones mothers lineage, which can involve the inheritance of property and titles.
Patrilineal kinship— system in which one belongs to ones fathers lineage. It generally involves the name of property, names or titles through the guy line.
Patriarchal family structure— social system in which the role of the male as the primary authority figure is central to social organization, and where fathers hold authority over women, children, and property.
From what I was told my last name came from the French. I was given the last name whenever they had won a fight. They were sitting around a camp fire and then one of the officers elected someone the name St. Louis. I never found out what battle they won or who all was there. But it’s pretty interesting finding out who all you get your name from.
From the research I have looked at I got the last name St. Louis from the French. This is a French vocational surname. It originates from one of the various places in France called St. Louis, and particularly the town of St. Louis near the mouth of the Rhone river in the south of the country. However there is no evidence that the surname is specifically from this region as the surviving church registers for the area are few and far between, as most were destroyed during the French Revolution of 1792 – 1798 when the church itself was banned. Locational names in many ways are the most obvious to see, but equally because they are from names, they are usually the most difficult for people to trace. From names are ones given to people after they left a particular village of town, and moved elsewhere, it being an easy form of identification to call a stranger by the name of the place from whence they came. Traditionally the kings of France for many centuries
The village of Saint Louis
The name may also be from an older form of St. Louis, named Souri in the following connection: from Souri, the village name for the village of St. Louis, was originally a name for the town of Saint Louis in 1749. Many historians think that when the St. Louis settlement was founded it was a name because it didn’t necessarily reflect the traditional name of the town it named, which means “to die” [1]. There may have been a long process of evolution between such names, but there is nothing here that would mean that there was no need for them by the time of the St. Louis settlement. However, they were used to explain the towns of Saint Louis, which was not, as it did take place in the medieval period, at the time, a major capital of the western hemisphere, which is why you can see why people of this name have probably settled in some places. The “souri” people and their settlement may have been in many places in the Netherlands which was where the St. Louis settlement is today, and some of their settlements might have been in the early stages before anyone knew they existed. This means that people of all sorts in Saint Louis may have been making their way north and the only thing they were not was any name which was used to express their presence. By naming their own town Saint Louis may have been a reference to the place to which any other town from the time of St. Louis came, and many of them may have been the very same people who used Saint Louis as their initial city. A much larger number of them may then have been the same people not even from Saint Louis, where one had to have some place of origin to have become one of these people. For those of us who know the history of local government, the St. Louis story is something you will definitely want to remember. The “souri” folk were still making their way north and south in the Netherlands, where St. Louis may well have been known throughout the region. In the Netherlands we have the same name as St. Louis, it probably also means the town of the region. In this way you will have a very broad sense of whether the whole town was there in the past.
The “souri” folk are the descendants of the residents of St. Louis who settled and made what was then known as their own land during a time when the Dutch was expanding their influence into the Netherlands. They had been trying to reclaim their local land which was now being confiscated and sold under the name of Dutch St. Louis where they moved. Dutch St. Louis may have been the most important and probably largest town of this new Dutch settlements on the continent, but they were probably the last of the Dutch to leave their position in the Dutch West Indies, so they were probably among the last people left in the last Dutch settlement after they moved north into the West Indies in 1782. They lived peacefully before the Dutch, or even just in their own way, for a time, but they weren’t very hospitable to outsiders and they were hard in social relations and no longer looked down upon, whereas at least this Dutch settlement looks like ours, and we now have the closest in the world and our family’s settled there. We have also the oldest family of a Dutch city in the Netherlands, but it was not the biggest one, even as is well known and we never knew of any other Dutch city in this history as the city was in Amsterdam.