Newmarch Surname
Approximately 787 people bear this surname
Newmarch Surname Definition:
This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Newmarch.' The opposite of Newland (which see), for this seems to be land lost instead of reclaimed from the marshes; v. Marsh. I suspect Newmark is German.
Adam de Neumarche, Lincolnshire, 1273.
Read More About This SurnameNewmarch Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 360 | 1:154,772 | 14,673 |
| Australia | 102 | 1:264,664 | 24,097 |
| Canada | 76 | 1:484,810 | 41,569 |
| United States | 76 | 1:4,769,196 | 247,034 |
| South Africa | 63 | 1:859,964 | 56,669 |
| Zimbabwe | 47 | 1:328,473 | 31,980 |
| New Zealand | 42 | 1:107,817 | 14,061 |
| Scotland | 6 | 1:892,303 | 28,047 |
| Wales | 6 | 1:515,755 | 23,171 |
| Singapore | 4 | 1:1,376,926 | 28,409 |
| Namibia | 2 | 1:1,204,700 | 16,113 |
| Ireland | 1 | 1:4,708,939 | 29,543 |
| Germany | 1 | 1:80,505,459 | 560,955 |
| Greece | 1 | 1:11,079,790 | 145,225 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 217 | 1:112,329 | 10,956 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 30 | 1:1,673,956 | 87,330 |
Newmarch Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Newmarch.' The opposite of Newland (which see), for this seems to be land lost instead of reclaimed from the marshes; v. Marsh. I suspect Newmark is German.
Adam de Neumarche, Lincolnshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.
1591. Buried — John, s. John Newmarch: St. James, Clerkenwell.
1785. Married — Matthias Newmarch and Mary Rouse: St. George, Hanover Square.
(English) Dweller at the New March [Old English níwe; and v. March] Adam de Neumarche.— Hundred Rolls Newmark in our directories is frequently an Anglicization of the corresp. German Neumark.
From the castle of Neumarché in Normandy, which, about 1060, was seized by Duke William, to the prejudice of its inheritor, Geoffrey de Newmarch. (Ord. Vitalis.) Geoffrey’s son Bernard was one of the Conqueror’s companions-at-arms, and witnesses one of his charters to Battle Abbey. He obtained his share of the spoil - a Welsh principality - by his own good sword; for, as Freeman expresses it, “he used a soldier’s licence to appropriate the territory of Brecknock.” The history of its conquest is thus narrated: “Bernard Newmarch came to this district, according to the Annales Cambriæ, in 1091, in pursuit of Rhys-ap-Tewdwr, ruler of the right hand part'—a phrase which is the exact equivalent of the old Welsh Deheu-barth—and at Brechenauc Rhys-ap-Tewdwr was slain. It is said that Maenarch had ruled Brycheiniog in peace, and that his son Bleddyn-ap-Maenarch was ruler when the Normans arrived. Fitz Hamon had just taken possession of Glamorganshire, and now Newmarch conquers Brycheiniog. He approaches Brychan’s stronghold, the Gaer, from the North, but, finding the place too strong, makes as if for the Eppynt Hills along a ridge parallel with the river Eskyr. The British troops were on the opposite side, where the lane called Heol-y-Cymry runs in the same direction.
“It is stated by Jones (History of Brecon) that Newmarch, unaware of the presence of the Welsh troops, crossed over through a wood, called after the event Cwm-gwern-gâd, now corrupted into Cwmgwingad, that the Welsh rushed upon them with fury, but that the Normans, with better discipline, stood firm against the onset, and in the end won the field. The Welsh were dispersed, the brave Rhys-ap-Tewdwr slain near a well called to this day Ffynon-pen-Rhys; and Bleddyn-ap-Maenarch also fell. With this defeat ended for ever the British lordship of Brycheiniog. Newmarch immediately settled down as lord of the district, adding one more to the redoubtable Lords Marchers. He moved the seat of government from the spot where Brychan and his successors had dwelt— the Gaer on the Eskir, now a knoll crowned with stately trees—and built his castle near the confluence of the Honddu and Usk, a place which probably even then was called Aberhonddu. Of the existence of a town or even of a village on this spot before Newmarch’s conquest we have no information, so that the town of Brecknock and its castle must be viewed as the creation of the Norman freebooter.”—Nichol’s Counties and County Families of Wales.
Bernard lost no time in parcelling out the lands of his new province among the followers that had helped him to win it; and established himself so firmly at Brecknock “that no efforts of the natives could dislodge him.” His position was further strengthened through an alliance with a Welsh princess, Nesta, the daughter of Griffin-ap-Llewelyn. “By marrying a Welsh wife he took the most likely course to reconcile his vassals to the rule and exactions of a foreigner. Crushed to the dust by the iron heel of the conqueror, robbed of their inheritance in kind to feed his pampered men-at-arms, subject to constant insult and frequent injury from a contemptuous and cruel soldiery of foreign speech and foreign manners, it was still some small consolation to the warm though sinking heart of the Welshman that in the frowning castle of Aberhonddu there was one lady of the blood of the Cymry, though it might be one of the line of Trahaern the Usurper, and herself of more than doubtful morals, she was still the descendant of Anarawd, son of that Rhodri the Great who, two hundred years before, was King of all Wales, and deemed ‘the pride and protector of the Cymry.’” —Ibid.
Yet it was through this same Welsh wife, whose Royal blood was to reconcile his unwilling subjects to their thraldom, that his son’s connection with Wales was severed. Her life was shamelessly profligate; and the son, Mael, as he grew to manhood, was stung by the sense of his mother’s dishonour. “For,” says Dugdale, “taking notice that his mother did play the Adultress; watching one night for her Paramour, he maimed him grievously, and then let him go with shame. And that this Act of his so enraged his Mother, that, in revenge thereof, she made her address to the King, and publickly took her Oath, that this Mael her Son was not begotten by her Husband, but by another with whom she had at that time private familiarity. Moreover, that the King thereupon took occasion to bereave him of his whole Inheritance; and caused Livery to be made of it to Sybil her Daughter, whom she affirmed to be the child of her Husband, and that he married her to a noble Knight of his Court, called Miles, the son of Walter Constable of Gloucester. Which Miles was afterwards by Maud the Empress advanced to the Earldom of Hereford.” Countess Sybil had five sons, but they all died s. p. and the county of Brecknock and Gower-land were conveyed by the second of her three co-heiresses to Philip de Braose.
It is satisfactory to know that Nesta had qualms of conscience. Her husband, whose confessor was a monk of Battle, had given some land and a ruined church near Brecknock to the Abbey; and she, “being sick,” added a part of her own inheritance in Herefordshire. With these and other contributions in lands and tithes, the church was restored, and a Priory founded as a cell to Battle Abbey, which in process of time became a flourishing community.
Adam de Newmarch, presumably a kinsman of Bernard’s, “though how allied to him,” says Dugdale, “I find not,” appears as a benefactor of Nostell Priory at its foundation in the time of Henry I., and held Whatton in Nottinghamshire and other lands in Yorkshire of the Honour of De Gand. Next comes another Adam (no doubt his son) for whose custody William de Newmarch paid ₤93 16s. in 1160. This William held a barony in Hampshire, which when “he afterwards fell into the infirmity of Leprosy,” was transferred in 1204 to Godfrey de St. Martin. His former ward was at that time a knight, and Lord of Whatton, where he was followed by four generations of successors, till, through the daughter of the last heir, they were amalgamated with another line seated at Bentley in Yorkshire. Of this latter house was a second Sir Adam, who was twice summoned to Parliament, first by Henry III. in 1260, and four years later by the insurgent barons. He had been taken prisoner w hen “advancing his Banner against the King at Northampton,” and deprived of his estates, those in Lincolnshire being granted to William de Gery, and those in Yorkshire to Robert Foliot. But the victory of Lewes retrieved his fortunes, and though again captured at Kenilworth, “yet had he the benefit of that favorable Decree called Dictum de Kenilworth." His son, in 1314, received a writ of military summons, and had free warren in all his Yorkshire demesne, where the next heir, Roger, obtained a weekly market and yearly fair at the capital manor, Wymersley. Roger’s son Ralph married Elizabeth de Newmarch, the heiress of Whatton, and was the father of the last male heir, Robert, whose daughter Elizabeth carried the whole inheritance to John Nevill of Althorpe in Lincolnshire. “The said Elizabeth, her grandmother, overliving her Son Robert, had,” says Thoroton, “a mind to disinherit her,” but did not succeed. These Newmarches bore Argent five fusils in fesse Gules: five fusils in fesse being, we are told, the coat of the Bec-Crespins and Grimaldis.
This by no means completes the list of collaterals. There was a William de Newmarch of Northumberland, dead before 1130 (Rot. Pip.) and a Henry de Newmarch, who held a barony of nearly seventeen knight’s fees in 1165 (Lib. Niger); and in one of his charters to the Monks of Bermondsey, speaks of his grandfather Winebald, and Winebald’s sons, Roger and Milo, as former benefactors of the Abbey. His brother James had succeeded him in 1204, but did not very long survive; as in 1215 the estates lying in Berkshire, Somersetshire, Dorsetshire, Wiltshire, and Gloucestershire, were divided between this last lord’s two daughters and co-heirs, Isabel, the wife of Sir Ralph Russell, and Hawise, first married to John de Botreaux, and then to Nicholas de Moels. Cadbury was the head of this barony.
One Bernard, a companion of the Conqueror, settled near Brecknock, and founded a priory there, which became a cell to Battel Abbey. He came from the place in Normandy now called Neuf-Marche, near Neufchatel, and formerly Novuis Mercatus, or the "new market." Ord. Vitalis.
A baronial family, from the Castle of Neumarche, Normandy. Turketil de Newmarch (Novus Mercatus) was slain in the civil wars of Normandy c. 1035 (Ord. Vit. 567). The Castle of Newmarch was seized c. 1060 by Duke William to the prejudice of its inheritor Geoffry de N. (Ord. Vit.). Hugh de Moriomonte, brother of the latter, was slain c. 1053 (Ibid.). Bernard de N., conqueror of Brecknock c. 1088, was son of Geoffry. Collateral branches are found in various parts of England. William de Newmarch of Northumberland was dead before 1130 (Rot. Pip.). Henry de N. held in 1165 a barony in Worcester and Gloucester (Liber Niger), consisting of nineteen knights’ fees. Adam de N. of Lincoln 1243 had writ of military summons, and was summoned to parliament as a baron 1260, 1264. Branches occur in Dorset and Wilts.
A Norman name: Neufmarché, local name
Newmarch: from the castle of Neumarche in Normandy. Bernard Newmarch was one of the Conqueror’s companions-at-arms, and obtained as his share of the spoil a Welsh principality won by his own good sword.
A Norman name: Neufmarché, local name
Newmarch Demographics
Newmarch Political Affiliation
in United States
United States
Average
Newmarch Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Newmarch Come From? nationality or country of origin
The last name Newmarch occurs in England more than any other country or territory. It can also appear as:. For other possible spellings of this surname click here.
How Common Is The Last Name Newmarch? popularity and diffusion
This surname is the 436,213th most frequently occurring surname globally, borne by approximately 1 in 9,259,906 people. The last name is primarily found in Europe, where 48 percent of Newmarch are found; 47 percent are found in Northern Europe and 47 percent are found in British Isles.
Newmarch is most commonly used in England, where it is carried by 360 people, or 1 in 154,772. In England it is primarily concentrated in: Lincolnshire, where 17 percent live, East Riding of Yorkshire, where 12 percent live and West Yorkshire, where 10 percent live. Without taking into account England this surname occurs in 13 countries. It also occurs in Australia, where 13 percent live and Canada, where 10 percent live.
Newmarch Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The frequency of Newmarch has changed through the years. In England the number of people carrying the Newmarch surname increased 166 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in The United States it increased 253 percent between 1880 and 2014.
Newmarch Last Name Statistics demography
In The United States those holding the Newmarch surname are 7.08% more likely to be registered Republicans than the national average, with 53.85% registered with the party.
The amount Newmarch earn in different countries varies greatly. In South Africa they earn 23.72% less than the national average, earning R 181,272 per year; in United States they earn 28.31% more than the national average, earning $55,365 USD per year and in Canada they earn 33.21% more than the national average, earning $66,184 CAD per year.
Phonetically Similar Names
| Surname | Similarity | Worldwide Incidence | Prevalency |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nemarch | 93 | 0 | / |
| Nemarich | 88 | 74 | / |
| Newmarsh | 88 | 18 | / |
| Nemarrich | 82 | 1 | / |
| Nemrych | 80 | 2 | / |
| Namarch | 80 | 1 | / |
| Nemrich | 80 | 1 | / |
| Nemerich | 75 | 96 | / |
| Nemerych | 75 | 88 | / |
| Nemirich | 75 | 86 | / |
| Nemyrych | 75 | 86 | / |
| Nemyrcha | 75 | 3 | / |
| Nemirych | 75 | 3 | / |
| Niemerch | 75 | 3 | / |
| Nemerche | 75 | 1 | / |
| Nemreche | 75 | 1 | / |
| Niumarch | 75 | 0 | / |
| Niemerich | 71 | 61 | / |
| Nemyrchyi | 71 | 12 | / |
| Nemirchiy | 71 | 2 | / |
| Nimarechy | 71 | 2 | / |
| Knemerich | 71 | 1 | / |
| Namarucha | 71 | 1 | / |
| Nem Rocha | 71 | 1 | / |
| Numrich | 67 | 502 | / |
| Numrych | 67 | 116 | / |
| Nimrich | 67 | 9 | / |
| Nmirich | 67 | 9 | / |
| Nyamarecha | 67 | 7 | / |
| Nyimarachi | 67 | 3 | / |
| Newmors | 67 | 0 | / |
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Footnotes
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- Similar: Names listed in the "Similar" section are phonetically similar and may not have any relation to Newmarch
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