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TRIBAL AFFILIATION
Seminole Moor
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SURNAME HERITAGE
England France Ireland
Gage History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
Gage is an ancient Norman name that arrived in England after the Norman Conquest of 1066. The Gage family lived person who worked as the local assayer, who would determine weights and measures. The surname has another occupational origin which suggests that the bearer worked as a money lender, which was taken from the Old French word gage, which literally means a pledge.
Early Origins of the Gage family
The surname Gage was first found in Gaugy, Normandy where Ralph de Gaugy was listed there in 1180. Various versions of the name were listed including Gauchi, Gaugi, and Gaacy in L’Aigle, Normandy about the same time. The first record on the name in England was Warin de Gaacy (Wacy) in Bedfordshire in 1140.
A few years later, Ralph de Gauchi (Gaugi) held a fief in Northumberland by marriage in 1165 and in the same year, Robert de Gaugi was Baron of Slesmouth, again in Northumberland. The latter’s brother, Roger de Gauchi was granted the ownership of Argentan Castle and Forest by King John in 1203. 1
The parish of Alciston in Sussex was another ancient family seat. “This manor was given, with others, to Battle Abbey by the Conqueror, whose grant was confirmed by Henry I.: on the surrender of the abbey, in 1539, the king became seised of the lordship, and gave it to Sir John Gage and Philippa his wife, to hold in capite by knight’s service. Alciston Place was occupied by an ancestor of the present Lord Gage in 1585.” 2
At one time, Burstow, Surrey was another stronghold of the family. “Burstow-Court Lodge became, in the 15th century, the property of the Gages, of whom was Sir John Gage, K. G., a distinguished military officer in the reigns of Henry VIII. and Edward VI.; the family sold the property in 1613.” 2