The surname is in no way connected with our southern neighbors, because no shahs, thank God, ruled over Russia. Shah- this nickname was given in ancient times to a skilled craftsman who weaved particularly ingenious fishing nets. The fish easily entered their sleeves, but there was no way back. Besides, Shah- stake for drying nets.
Related surname - Shakhovskaya.
Shakhovskoy Semyon Ivanovich (? - 1654 or 1655) - prince, writer. Participant in the political struggle of the early 17th century, Russian-Polish war 1632-34 Shakhovskoy - author of church works, messages, “land paintings” Eastern Siberia, autobiographical notes and stories about contemporary events: “The Tale of the Book of Sowing from Former Years”, etc.

Version 2. History of the origin of the Shakhov surname

From the Persian shah (sovereign), which penetrated into the Russian language not only as a common noun, but also as a personal name. The first of the Shakhovsky princes bore the loud nickname Shah. (F) “The family of the Shakhovsky princes,” as indicated in the genealogy, “comes from the Yaroslavl princes... Grand Duke Vladimir Vsevolodovich Monomakh (1113-1125) had a great-great-grandson like the blessed prince Theodore Rostislavich, named Cherny, who inherited Mozhaisk, and then he reigned in Yaroslavl. This Holy Prince Theodore's grandson, Prince Vasily Davydovich, was in the reign of Yaroslavl. His son, Prince Gleb Vasilyevich, had a third son, Prince Konstantin Shakhovsky, whose descendants, the princes Shakhovsky, served Russian throne in noble ranks and were granted estates by the sovereigns.” The surname Shakhovskaya is based on the word of Iranian origin, Shah Persian, borrowed through the Turkic language. “Shah, Tsar, Monarch” “This word, added to common nouns,” as L. Budagov notes, “determines the superiority of the objects they signify compared to others.” Coming from the nickname shah and the possessive form of shah from the word shah, shakhovo, which could serve as the name of a property that belonged to a person who had the nickname shah, the surname Shakhovskaya was formed through the suffix -skoy. The origin of this surname from a nickname is confirmed by the absence of heraldic features usually found in the coats of arms of clans genetically associated with the East. (B) Unbegaun attributes the surname Shakhov to a group formed from terms related to fishing: shah - stake for drying a net. In Veselovsky's Onomasticon: Shah, Shakhov Prince Ivan Vasilyevich Shah Chernyatipsky, mid-16th century, Peter Selyanin Shakhov, clerk, executed in 1570, Novgorod Shakhovsky, princes: Konstantin Glebovich Shah, Yaroslavl, end of the 14th century. Shah-merezhka, ventor with wings (Dal) - fishing tackle. Shakhnyuk - Ukrainian surname, apparently also derived from the nickname Shah.

Version 3

Most likely, the surname Shakhov is derived from the eastern name Shah, which translated from Persian means “king, monarch.” By calling their son this, his parents wished that in the future he would become as powerful and rich as the Shah.

According to another, less plausible hypothesis, the surname Shakhov is derived from the nickname Shah. This is how in some dialects they meant a stake for drying a fishing net. Accordingly, the nickname Shah could indicate the person’s occupation.

In “Onomasticon” S.B. Veselovsky recorded: book. Ivan Vasilyevich Shah Chernyatinsky, mid-16th century; Pyotr Selyanin Shakhov, clerk, executed in 1570, Novgorod.

How to spell the surname Shakhov in English (Latin alphabet)

SHakhov

When filling out a document in English, you should first write your first name, then your patronymic in Latin letters, and then your last name. You may need to write the name Shakhov in English when applying for a foreign passport, ordering a foreign hotel, when placing an order in an English online store, and so on.

Your version of the meaning of the surname Shakhov

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Shah is a nickname or non-canonical name that allows for several possible explanations based on different meanings of the common noun shah: 1) “Persian monarch”, from New Persian “king, shah”, Old Persian. “lord” (Vasmer); goes back to the ancient Iranian title khshayatya - “ruler, king,” as Darius I called himself (Gafurov, p. 148); 2) in Turkic languages ​​- “branch”; “bulls, curls” (Radlov); 3) vlad., tamb. “hemming, large venter with wings, several knees, mesh behind mesh; and the wing is placed in such a way that the fish, moving up and down, turns into a check” (Dal); tobol “a stake for drying a fishing net” (Fasmer); cf.: shakhis - “stakes with a fork at the end, mainly used for drying the seine” (SRGSU).

Researchers explain the surname in different ways: “From the Persian shah (sovereign), which penetrated into the Russian language not only as a common noun, but also as a personal name” (Fedosyuk. P.252); “The surname is in no way connected with our southern neighbors, because no shahs, thank God, ruled over Russia. Shah - this nickname was given in ancient times to a skilled craftsman who weaved particularly ingenious fishing nets. The fish easily entered their sleeves, but there was no way back. In addition, the check is a stake for drying nets” (Grushko, Medvedev. P.469); from shah - “a stake for drying a net” (Unbegaun. P. 156), “a hem, a venter with wings” (Veselovsky I). Listing all these meanings, Yu.I. Chaikina also points to the possibility of forming a surname from the derivative form of the canonical name Alexander (Chaikina. P. 114).

Historical examples: “Book. Ivan Vasilyevich Shah Chernyatinsky, mid-16th century; Pyotr Selyanin Shakhov, clerk, executed in 1570, Novgorod" (Veselovsky I); “Shah, Hetman of Zaporozhye, 1577; Fyodor Shah, Velikolutsk elector, 1610; Warrior Shakhov, Tobolsk boyar son, 1639; Kiryanko Shakhov, archer in Pereyaslavl Ryazan, 1690" (Tupikov); Shakhov Andrey, clerk, second half of the 17th century; Shakhovs, three clerks, XVI-XVII centuries. (Veselovsky II). The Shakhovs have been known in Vologda since 1671 (Chaikin).

In Siberia, the surname was documented in the 17th century: “The Shakhov surname was common in Berezovo, Tyumen, Krasnoyarsk, but especially among the servicemen of Tobolsk. The energetic Tobolsk boyar son Warrior Shakhov is known, who founded the first Russian winter quarters on the Vilyui River. He died in 1642 in distant Yakutia during the uprising of the yasak peoples” (Rezun. P.232). About Warrior Shakhov, see also: Bakhrushin I. P. 151,152,255.

In the village of Chetkarinsky, the surname was borne by a soldier, in the villages - by peasants.

The surname is recorded in Kamensky, Pyshminsky districts, in Nizhny Tagil, Yekaterinburg (Memory; T 1974).

18.1. Chetkarinskoye village, parish of the Baptist Church, Chetkarina village (1719), from 1766 - Chetkarinskoye village, Chotkarinskoye village (1923), Chetkarino (1928)

18.2. Rusakova village, parish of the Baptist Church

18.9. Nalimova village, parish of the Baptist Church, also known as Palimova (1869)

The text is quoted from the book by Alexey Gennadievich Mosin “Dictionary of Ural Surnames”, publishing house “Ekaterinburg”, 2000. All copyrights reserved. When quoting the text and using it in publications, a link is required.

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The owner of the surname Shakhov, without a doubt, can be proud of his surname, since it is a most interesting monument of national literature and culture.

Probably, the surname Shakhov belongs to a common type of surnames that originate from Turkic speakers, namely people from the Golden Horde: either from the Pechenegs or from the Polovtsians. Accordingly, the Shakhov surname goes back to the 15th-17th centuries.

The penetration of foreign national foundations into the composition of Russian surnames, and, in particular, into the composition of the Shakhov surname, was facilitated by historical fact, that many nobles in Russia were non-Russian in origin. Coming from other countries, they served in the Russian army, were baptized, married Russians, and after several generations they completely “Russified”, retaining only foreign language basis your last name. There were also interethnic marriages in other social groups (merchants, peasants).

If the surname Shakhov is Muslim in origin, then it was formed from the Persian “shah (sovereign)”, which penetrated into the Russian language not only as a common noun, but also as a personal name. The first of the Shakhovsky princes bore the loud nickname Shah.

There is another version about the origin of the family name Shakhov. Unbegaun classified the Shah surname as a group derived from terms related to fishing. Shah - this nickname was given in ancient times to a skilled craftsman who weaved particularly ingenious fishing nets. The fish easily entered their sleeves, but there was no way back. In addition, a check is used for drying nets.

It is also possible to assume that the surname originated from the possessive form Shakhovo, which could serve as the name of a property that belonged to a person who had the nickname Shakh. The village of Shakhovo is, for example, in the Nizhny Novgorod and Kaluga regions.

Already in the 15th-16th centuries, surnames began to be fixed and passed on from generation to generation, indicating a person’s belonging to a specific family. These were possessive adjectives with the suffixes -ov / -ev, -in, initially indicating the father's nickname.

Veselovsky's Onomasticon mentions: Prince Ivan Vasilyevich Shah Chernyatipsky, mid-16th century; Pyotr Selyanin Shakhov, clerk, executed in 1570, Novgorod; Shakhovskys, princes: Konstantin Glebovich Shah, Yaroslavl, end of the 14th century. The origin of the last surname from a nickname is confirmed by the absence of heraldic features usually found in the coats of arms of clans genetically associated with the East.

Thus, the surname Shakhov, as a wonderful monument of folk literature and culture, has its own unique history and etymology. But we should not forget that surnames, passed down from generation to generation, have long lost their internal form and connection with the nickname of a distant ancestor, so it is possible to definitively talk about the exact place and time of the emergence of the Shakhov family only on the basis of genealogical research.


Sources: Russian surnames (Unbegaun B.O.), Russian surnames of Turkic origin (Baskakov I.A.), Encyclopedia of Russian surnames: Secrets of origin and meaning (Vedina T.F.), Muslim names. Dictionary-reference book, Leo and Cypress: about eastern names (Gafurov A.G.).

SHAKHNYUK SKY
From the Persian shah (sovereign), which penetrated into the Russian language not only as a common noun, but also as a personal name. The first of the princes bore the loud nickname Shah. (F) “The family of princes,” as indicated in the genealogy, “comes from the princes of Yaroslavl... Grand Duke Vladimir Vsevolodovich Monomakh (1113-1125) had a great-great-grandson like the saints of the blessed prince Theodore Rostislavich, named Cherny, who inherited Mozhaisk , and then he was in the reign of Yaroslavl. This Holy Prince Theodore's grandson, Prince Vasily Davydovich, was in the reign of Yaroslavl. His son, Prince Gleb Vasilyevich, had a third son, Prince Konstantinsky, whose princely descendants served the Russian throne in noble ranks and were granted estates by the sovereigns.” The surname is based on a word of Iranian origin, Shah Persian, borrowed through the Turkic language. ““Shah, Tsar, Monarch” “This word, added to common nouns,” as L. Budagov notes, “determines the superiority of the objects they mean compared to others.” Derived from the nickname Shah and the possessive form of Shah from the word Shah, Shakhovo, which could serve as the name of a property that belonged to a person who had the nickname Shah, the surname skoy was formed through the suffix -skoy. The origin of this surname from the nickname is confirmed by the absence of heraldic features usually found in the coats of arms of clans genetically associated with the East (B) Unbegaun attributing the surname to. group formed from terms related to fishing: shah - stake for drying a net. In Veselovsky's Onomasticon: Shah, Prince Ivan Vasilyevich Shakh Chernyatipsky, mid-16th century, Peter Selyanin, clerk, executed in 1570, Novgorod, princes: Konstantin. Glebovich Shah, Yaroslavl, late 14th century. Shakh-merezhka, ventor with wings (Dal) - fishing tackle Shakhnyuk - a Ukrainian surname, apparently also derived from the nickname Shah.


View value Shakhov in other dictionaries

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