DAN BERLADYN
Article 2019-10-24 04:59:54

Berladyn Surname; Articles of Study

Berladyn, Berlad, Berlada, Berladin, Berladnici, Berladian, Berladina, Berladn, Berladyna, Berladinova, Berlodina, Barladian, Berladyan, Berladean, Berladen, Berladyanova, Barladjan, Borlodean, Berledvan, Berlodean, Berlodvan, Byradyan, Birladean, Barladyan, Berladean, Berladynyk, Birlad, Birladyn, Bernadyn


Latin last name: BERLADIN

The surname Berladin in one third of cases is of Russian origin, there is also a small probability that the surname is of Belarusian or Ukrainian origin, in about a quarter of the surname comes from the languages of the peoples of Russia (Buryat, Mordovian, Tatar, Bashkir, etc.), it is also possible 20% have Jewish roots, 20% are Russified variants of Latvian surnames. Most likely, this surname comes from the nickname, name, or profession of the distant ancestor of its carrier, moreover, in most cases, along the male line. Although there are frequent cases when the surname Berladin occurs on the female side.

The surname Berladin is quite rare in the space of Russia and neighboring countries. In the well-known very old protocols that deserve attention, residents with this surname were important persons from the Russian Moscow bourgeoisie in the 17th-18th centuries, who had a good sovereign privilege. The initial evidence of the surname can be found in the census list of Ancient Russia during the reign of Ivan the Terrible. The Grand Duke had a certain register of respected and best names, which were awarded to the court only in case of special merit or award. As a result, the real surname has retained its own original meaning and is rare.

Source: http://onomastikon.ru/proishogdenie-familii-berladin.htm


The modern Russian surname Berladin dates back to 1856. Cardboard and fiber dyes are the profession from which the surname in the city of Lebedyan came from Lipetsk region. Female - the predominant gender of a given surname, this surname is quite popular, 86%. You can also read the report on the mention of the surname Berladin in social networks, we have prepared a summary report.

Source: https://familii.info/person/ru-surname/463575/berladin/


Version number 1

The surname Berladin is formed from the nickname Berladnik. It goes back to the name of the city of Berlad, located in Romania. Most likely, the ancestor of the owner of this surname lived in Berlada for a long time. It is known that the same nickname was worn by the grandson of the first prince of the Galician Volodar, Ivan Rostislavich. In 1144, he was soon driven out of Galich by Prince Vladimir, fled to Berlad, and then sought his inheritance from the Galician princes, serving either the great Kiev principalities, then Vsevolod Olgovich, Yuri Dolgoruky. The son of Ivan Rostislavovich, Rostislav Ivanovich received the same nickname.

Since toponymic surnames contained an indication not only of belonging to a specific family, but also of attitude to a specific geographical object, then initially they were adjectives with various formants: the surnames in - sky / -tsky and aninov / -yaninov belong mainly to the nobility and the nobility; last names in itov / -ichev, -inov, -tsev, - yaks / -akov, - nicknames, -in, -ih / s. As a result, the descendant of a man with the nickname Berladnik eventually got the name Berladin.

http://www.ufolog.ru/names/order/????????


Version number 2

It is prone to the fact that the surname Berladin is formed from the surname Barladean or Birladean, quite common in Moldova and Romania (the pronunciation is the same - Barladian) and come from the name of the city of Barlad, as mentioned above. In addition, in Moldova there is a village called Barladiani. Most likely there is no relation to Berladniki, since there were few (300 people), just the last name of Barladyan after the Russo-Turkish war and the transition of Bessarabia to Russia sometimes changed to the Russian style.

Source: http://www.ufolog.ru/names/order/????????


The distant ancestor of Berladin's surname was Moldavanin in 22% of cases, Estonian in 18%, Bengali in 18%, Altay in 13%, Lebanese in 9%, and Asian origin in 4%, was a citizen in 16% of cases Laos or Norway and Sao Tome and Principe. He bore the surname Bierladina, and the nickname of the ancestor was Berladin. The first mention of Berladin's name was recorded in the settlement of Muonio (Finland) in 1904.

Source: http://www.ufolog.ru/names/order/????????a


A study of the history of the origin of surnames opens forgotten pages of the life and culture of our ancestors and can tell a lot of interesting things about the distant past. Most likely, the surname Berladin comes from the oldest form of family nicknames, formed from the geographical name of the area, a native of which was one of the ancestors.

Russian surnames dating back to geographical names are among the most ancient, some of which can be traced back to the 15th century. Surnames of this type first appeared in a noble environment. For example, Volkonsky, Vyazemsky, Meshchersky. Having a family name was not only a matter of status and prestige; this was also due to the fact that there was a need to consolidate their right to own any estate, city.

Toponymic family names were widespread in other classes. Initially, they were a nickname or family name. As a rule, such nicknames contained information about the person's birthplace, his previous place of residence or service, for example, Baturinets, Kiyan, Ryazanovsky, Poltavets, Kostoromin. At a time when surnames did not exist, this type of nickname most clearly denoted a new person who appeared among local residents, therefore it was precisely this kind of naming that first of all began to play the role of family, that is, family names.

One of these names was the nickname of the ancestor of Berladin. It is interesting that the source of the earliest geographical nicknames, as a rule, is the name not of a city or village, but of a river, according to the current name of which one of the settlements located on it could be named. So, perhaps, the ancestor of the surname lived in one of the villages located on the navigable river Berlad flowing in the territories of Moldova and Romania. It has the city of the same name, known since the 11th century. In the 11th - 13th centuries, the city and the whole region on the lower Danube was called Berlad. The fugitives and refugees of different social strata of Kievan Rus settled there, mainly the southern lands, who left their homeland due to various kinds of oppression. They were called berladnikami. Perhaps the ancestor of the surname was a descendant of such immigrants.

Thus, this nickname was fixed as the inherited generic name without changes, since it ended in -in. This letter combination corresponded to the traditional family ending -in, with the help of which by the beginning of the XVII century the majority of surnames were formed. Then, when the meaning of the nickname itself was lost, the surname began to be perceived as being declined - again, thanks to the presence of the ending -in. Currently, the declined and non-declined surnames Berladin coexist.

Thus, the beautiful and sonorous surname Berladin, preserving the memory of the founder's homeland, who lived several centuries ago, testifies to the beauty and richness of the language and the variety of ways of forming surnames.

Sources: Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary, N. M. Tupikov Dictionary of Old Russian personal proper names, Dal V.I. Explanatory Dictionary of the Living Great Russian Language, Fasmer M. Etymological Dictionary of the Russian Language, in 4 volumes, Veselovsky SB Onomasticon, Unbegown B.O. Russian surnames.

Source: https://www.analizfamilii.ru/Berladin/


Barlad

Scholars continue to debate the origin of the city's name. The Hypatian Codex mentions a market town called Berlad, and some historians, influenced by a document Bogdan Petriceicu Hasdeu published in the 19th century, have tried to link this town and its inhabitants (variously considered Romanians, East Slavs or an amalgam) with the Moldavian Bïrlad. Ioan Bogdan demonstrated that the Hasdeu document was false, thus invalidating the hypothesis. Like Siret and Suceava, the medieval town took its name from the adjacent river, but nothing more can be said for certain. Constantin Cihodaru linked the name, of possible Hungarian origin, to a Slavic word (berlo "rod", "cottage" or birlo "swamp"), to which was added the Hungarian suffix -d, also found, for example, in the names Cenad, Arad, Tunad and T??nad. Supporting this notion is the historic presence of a significant Hungarian community, with traditions recalling the fight against the Tatars in the mid-14th century.[2]

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barlad


It is not clear when Slavic people apart from Brodnici and Berladniki started settling in the lower reaches of major rivers such as the Don and the Dnieper after the demise of the Khazar state. It is unlikely it could have happened before the 13th century, when the Mongolsbroke the power of the Cumans, who had assimilated the previous population on that territory. It is known that new settlers inherited a lifestyle that persisted there long before, such as those of the Turkic Cumans and the Circassian Kassaks.[19] However, Slavic settlements in southern Ukraine started to appear relatively early during the Cuman rule, with the earliest ones, like Oleshky, dating back to the 11th century.

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Cossacks

During the discussion on literacy, the question of whether it was fake or not overshadowed the main problem: what was the Principality of Berladas a predecessor of the Moldavian state. Writing letters BP Hasdeu wanted to enrich the history of the principality, but it turned out that he was questioned in general all the information about Berladskaya principality. Meanwhile, it existed and played a prominent role in the political life of the Carpathian region. He is repeatedly mentioned in Russian chronicles. It has been suggested that the city of Berlad, which was the capital of the principality, still exists today (the town of Barlad in Romania). Berladinka flows east of the Dniester River, the name of which also recalls the name of the Berlad land. In the Ipatiev Russian Chronicle it tells of the war in 1159 of Prince Yaroslav from Galich against his nephew Ivan Berladnik, about how the latter went away "... to a half and a hundred in the cities of the Danube ... And I came to him with half the mennies and the berladniks from them atone (gathered. - I. M .) 6000 23. Here they impeded trade on the Dniester. In 1161, the berladniks seized the port of Oleshye (now the city of Tsuryupinsk at the mouth of the Yuzhny Bug River - N.M.), which caused great damage to the sea trade of Kiev merchants.

As can be seen from the record of the chronicler of 1174, Berlad land was not considered proper Russian. In that year, Prince Andrei Bogolyubsky, having expelled David Rostislavich, said to him: "... and you will go to Berlad, and in the Russian land you will not be free to,...". Consequently, the city of Berlad Andrei Bogolyubsky did not consider it Russian land (in the narrow sense of the word). The name of Prince Ivan Rostislavich Berladsky is repeatedly mentioned in Russian chronicles between 1144 and 1162. He appeared and acted in many cities of the Russian state, including in Galich, on the Black Sea, and was associated with the Polovtsy.

From such fragmentary reports it can be concluded that the Berlad lands were well aware in Russia, that the berladniks were closely connected with the Trans-Danubian cities, and participated in feudal feuds of the Galician princes. This exhausts our knowledge of the principality. Attempts by archaeologists of the Socialist Republic of Romania to find the ancient Berlad have not been successful so far, only the remains of the settlements of those times have been discovered. We have no data on the ethnic composition of the population of the Berlad principality, but there is no doubt that it consisted of Slavs and Polovtsians. Polovtsy in these lands are mentioned both before the XII century, and in subsequent centuries . It is possible that here lived and Volohov (see below for more details). Berlad land should be considered one of the direct predecessors of the Moldavian state.

Source: http://lenuta.ru/leanka/berladniki-i-brodniki-i-falsifikacija-istorii


The chronicle says that Ivan Rostislavovich Berladnik in 1159 was one hundred in the cities of the Danube; and beat two cubars and all the goods are many in them. "VV Mavrodin explains that we are talking about the pirate seizure of sea lodges of Galician merchants - Kubar. Who are the hawkers? In the lower Danube in the XI-XII centuries.there was a large Slavic population, which is associated with Kievan Rus, and primarily with the Galician land, the lower reaches of the Dniester and the Danube were given the name "berlad"; Slavic freedoms are hawkers, otherwise Podunays, otherwise the Galician racers were brave fishermen, sailors, farmers, hunters who did not submit to the princes. They often attacked merchant ships. Perhaps the forerunners of the berladniks were the Dromite Rus, a Slavic-Varangian freemen who lived in the lower reaches of the Dnieper and on the Black Sea coast. In 904 g.,Taking advantage of the absence of the main Byzantine fleet near Constantinople, which fought the Leo Tripolitansky fleet in the Arab fleet, the Dromit-headed Russ rode on ships along the Bulgarian coast, attacked the suburbs of Constantinople and looted them. The Byzantine fleet, led by John Radin, burned some of the dromite ships at Cape Trifefal with Greek fire, the rest slipped away. Drome in Greek is running. The robbers were able to escape from regular troops. These data are given by L.N. Gumilyov. They relate not to state wars, but to attacks by the freemen, that is, actually piracy. * The Kiev annals describe the well-known campaign of Prince Oleg in Constantinople in 907. In Greek sources this campaign is not mentioned.In this regard, V. D. Nikolaev expresses an unlikely version as to that this particular raid of Rus-Dromites is described as an invasion of Russia led by Oleg. The version of V. D. Nikolaev contradicts the surviving text of the agreement between Oleg and Byzantium.Apparently, the Rus-Dromite raid is still an action of a pirate free-rein. The fact of existence in the X century permanently living at the mouth of the Dniester of the Russian population, associated with the population of the future Galician principality, is unquestionable. So, in an agreement with Byzantium in 945, the Rusich undertook not to harm Christian fishermen. The clashes of interests between Rus and Khersonesites are indicated precisely: the mouth of the Dnieper, the White Coast (the Achilles Row), now Tendra, and the island of St. Elpherius (according to Academician V.V. Latyshev - the Kinburn Spit).Berladniki captured in 1159 in Kievan Rus a large stronghold of Oleshye (modern Tsyurupinsk) at the end of the water route from the Varangians to the Greeks. The great princes of Kiev could not tolerate this. Voyevoda Yuri Nesterovich defeated the hawkers a year later and pursued them by sea to the lower reaches of the Danube, where he was taken up and beaten. The interests of Russia were not alien to the Berladniks. They gathered a large army in 1223 to support the princes of Kievan Rus in the battle of Kalka. Wary of the Tatar scouts watched the appearance on the Dnieper of a huge fleet of lodges, because their number reached thousands. It was a major sea trip to the lower reaches of the Dnieper from the mouth of the Danube. The population in the lower Danube, Dniester, Dnieper was considerable. In the XIII century. Berladniks, among which the courts judged Yaroslav Osmomysl, closed the Danubes gates - they actually blocked shipping. They have already become a significant factor in international politics, having returned the throne to the Bulgarian Tsar Ivan Asen II (1218-1241).Lit .: Dangerous Black Sea / E.F.Shnyukov, L.I.Mitin, A.A.Forceps

Source: http://krimea.info/piraty-chernogo-morya/berladniki-kto-zhe-takie-berladniki.html


Berladniki in Ancient Russia in the 12th century. deaths and representatives of other segments of the population who were fleeing feudal oppression and settling in the lower Danube, mainly in Berlada (now Birlad). They are first mentioned in the Ipatiev Chronicle under 1159 in connection with the attack of a 6,000-strong detachment led by Prince-rogue Berladnik on the cities of the Galician principality. In 1160, the mines were acquired in the lower Dnieper of Oleshya, but near Dzynin they were defeated by the Kiev army. book. Rostislav Mstislavich. Since the 13th century. B. sources are not mentioned.

Source: http://leksika.com.ua/15280128/ure/berladniki


For example, in 1159 (still in the MONGOL period) Oleshye attacked such deacons (at that time they called themselves "berladniki" or "rovedom" and without a doubt) for serious trade. The Prince of Kiev, Rostislav Stlysavichic, Governor Georgy Nesterovich and Yakunin came down with a military park to return to Ossetia.

Source: https://vk-spy.ru/mn/kultura/cossacks-who-they-are-and-where-who-are-the-cossacks/


AD 1142 - 1349 Halychyna (Galicia) / Halych-Volynia (Galicia-Volhynia)

The collapse of the Kievan Rus created a host of minor principalities across the territories formerly controlled by Kiev, and Halych proved to be one of the most important of these, along with Novgorod and Vladimir-Suzdal. In 1142, Volodymyrko Volodarovych (1104-1152), a descendant of Vladimir I of Kiev, united the principalities of Przemysl, Terebovlya, and Zvenyhorod into a single state called Halychyna (Galicia) which included a sizeable part of western Ukraine in its territory. He transferred the capital from Zvenyhorod to Halych, where he and his first Rurikid dynasty expanded the settlement.

Some sources claim a date of 1189 for the formation of the principality, but this may just be when it was first officially recognised by other powers. The name Galicia is mirrored in the name of the city which formed its capital, Halych (Ukrainian), or Galych (Russian), next to the modern city of the same name on the Dniester in Ukraine. However, Galicia itself was a much older name, one which referred to Celts who had long ago settled the region (see Galatia for an explanation).

A remote connection between the Slavic Antes tribe and the narrative of The Russian Primary Chronicle may be established through the latter's mention of the Slavic tribe of the Dulebians being oppressed by the Avars. This tribe apparently had its seat upon the River Bug, in Volynia (Volhynia). Mas'iidi, an Arabic writer of the tenth century, mentions the tradition that in ancient times the Volhynians dominated the rest of the Slavic tribes. These accounts would therefore seem to point to the existence of a Slavic federation centered in Volynia which disintegrated in the face of the violent advance of the Avars towards the beginning of the seventh century.

(Additional information by Michael Hickson, from The Russian Primary Chronicle (Laurentian Text), Samuel Hazzard Cross & Olgerd P Sherbowitz-Wetzor (Eds and translators, Mediaeval Academy of America), and from External Link:The Balts, Marija Gimbutas (1963, previously available online thanks to Gabriella at Vaidilute, but still available as a PDF - click or tap on link to download or access it).)

Source: https://www.historyfiles.co.uk/KingListsEurope/EasternGalicia.htm


1142 - 1152 Volodymyrko Volodarovych, Son of Volodar Rostislavich.
1145 - 1162 Ivan 'Berladnik', Prince of Zvenyhorod. Poisoned in 1161.