Recorded as Falvie, Falvey, Falvoye, and Felvey, in the British Isles, and as Fauve, Fauvet, Falvy, Falvet, Fauvin, Fauvette and others in France, this was originally a surname of early French origins. According to the "Dictionnaire etymologique de Noms de France" it is a surname of ancient origins and refers to the colour of a horse, specifically fawn. Quite why anybody should should be called "fawn" after a horse, is far from clear, and the dictionary offers no explanation. In fact it confuses the situation by suggesting that there are other meanings, such as that it could refer to a maker or wearer of fawn coloured clothes, or that fawn was a colour used in Ancient Rome by the nobility or senate to show wisdom, and hence in later times may have been applied to a wise person.
The surname in England appears to be a 17th century introduction, and therefore is almost certainly a Huguenot refugee name. The Huguenots protestants fled France in the century and a half between 1580 and about 1740 to escape religious persecution. Many came to England, where their name voluntarily or otherwise, underwent some changes. Perhaps the earliest recordings is that of Anna Falvie, who married Richardus Price at St Martins in the Field, Westminster, on June 14th 1658.© Copyright: Name Origin Research 1980 - 2024
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