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TRIBAL AFFILIATION
Shabtau
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SURNAME HERITAGE
Origins Available: England Ireland

Blake History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
Etymology of Blake
What does the name Blake mean?
There art two possible origins of the Irish surname Blake. The first is that it originated from the Gaelic “O Blathmhaic,” which translates as “descendant of Blathmhac,” a personal name for the Gaelic “blath” meaning “flower”, “blossom”, “fame”, “prosperity.” The second was that the name could have been derived from the Old English word “blaec” meaning “dark” or “swarthy.”
Early Origins of the Blake family
The surname Blake was first found in Connacht (Irish: Connachta, (land of the) descendants of Conn), where the Blake family were one of the Tribes of Galway, descending from Richard Caddell (le Blac), sheriff of Connacht in 1303, who came to Ireland with Prince John in 1185, and used both the surnames Caddell and Blake. 1
The name Caddell is Welsh, and means “warlike.” It was not replaced completely by Blake until the 17th century, and for three hundred years, people with these surnames were referred to in municipal records by both names.
“The Blakes of Ireland descend from Richard Blake, who accompanied Prince John to that country in 1185, and settled in co. Galway.” 2 Richard Caddle was sheriff of Connaught in 1306 A.D. and was a tenant of Falway under Richard de Burgo (Burke), the Red Earl of Ulster.