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TRIBAL AFFILIATION
Sharakhi/Choctaw
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SURNAME HERITAGE
England/Ireland
Holloway History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
Holloway is a name of ancient Anglo-Saxon origin and comes from a family once having lived as inhabitants at the hollow-way or holy way. 1
Holloway is a topographic surname, which was given to a person who resided near a physical feature such as a hill, stream, church, or type of tree. Habitation names form the other broad category of surnames that were derived from place-names.
John Halifax or Holywood (Latin: Johannes de Sacro Bosco) (fl. 1230), was an early English mathematician, probably born at Halifax in Yorkshire. “Holywood is said to have studied at Oxford, and to have afterwards settled at Paris about 1230. The remainder of his life was spent in Paris, where he died, either in 1244 or 1256.” 2
Early Origins of the Holloway family
The surname Holloway was first found in Middlesex at Holloway, a district in the parish of Islington, Finsbury division of the hundred of Ossulstone. 3
Today, it is part of Greater London. There are a few different possible origins of the place name but the generally accepted origin is from the Old English words “hol” + “weg” which evolved to mean “the road with a hollow.” 4 One of the first listings of the district was in 1307, when it was listed as Le Holeweye.
Richard de Holeweia was found in the Pipe Rolls for Devon in 1130 and later Hohn de la Holewete was found in the Assize Rolls for Somerset in 1275. John Holewey was in the Hundredorum Rolls for Oxford in 1279 and John del Hollewaye was in Yorkshire in 1308. A few years later, Hugh atte Holewey was listed in Devon in 1310. 5
There were two listings for the family in the Hundredorum Rolls of 1273: Johannes de Holeweye, Wiltshire; and William de Holeweye, Warwickshire. 6
In Somerset, William Holeweye was there 1 Edward III (during the first year of King Edward III’s reign). 7