Colon coat of arms: Colon Name Meaning, Family History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
Colon Name Meaning, Family History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
- Origins Available:
- England
- Spain
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Early Origins of the Colon family
The surname Colon was first found in Valencia, on Spain’s Mediterranean coast.
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Early History of the Colon family
This web page shows only a small excerpt of our Colon research. Another 235 words (17 lines of text) covering the years 1094, 1099, 1102, 1238, 1691, 1492, 1492, 1651, 1710, 1675, 1679, 1680, 1696, 1701, 1706 and 1708 are included under the topic Early Colon History in all our PDF Extended History products and printed products wherever possible.
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Colon Spelling Variations
Spelling variations of this family name include: Colom, Colomer, Colombe, Colomb, Colomi, Colomo, Colomé, Coloma, Colomas, Colombi, Colomina, Colominas, Colombara, Colombare, Colombaro and many more.
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Early Notables of the Colon family (pre 1700)
Prominent among members of the family was Cristóbal Colón (Christoper Columbus), the famed navigator and discoverer of the Americas in 1492; and Pedro Manuel Colón de Portugal, 7th Duke of…
Another 29 words (2 lines of text) are included under the topic Early Colon Notables in all our PDF Extended History products and printed products wherever possible.
Colon Ranking
In the United States, the name Colon is the 423rd most popular surname with an estimated 67,149 people with that name. [1]
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Colon migration to the United States +
Some of the first settlers of this family name were:
Colon Settlers in United States in the 16th Century
- Nicasio Colon, who arrived in Nombre de Dios, Panama in 1535
Colon Settlers in United States in the 17th Century
- William Colon, who arrived in Virginia in 1665 [2]
- Michael Colon, who landed in Maryland in 1682 [2]
Colon Settlers in United States in the 19th Century
- Patrick Colon, aged 22, who landed in America in 1822 [2]
- Nicasio Colon, who arrived in Nombre de Dios, Panama in 1835 [2]
- Martin Colon, aged 34, who arrived in New Orleans, La in 1851 [2]
- Martin Colon who arrived in New Orleans in 1851
- Juan Ramon Colon who settled in Puerto Rico in 1860
- .
.. (More are available in all our PDF Extended History products and printed products wherever possible.)
Colon migration to West Indies +
The British first settled the British West Indies around 1604. They made many attempts but failed in some to establish settlements on the Islands including Saint Lucia and Grenada. By 1627 they had managed to establish settlements on St. Kitts (St. Christopher) and Barbados, but by 1641 the Spanish had moved in and destroyed some of these including those at Providence Island. The British continued to expand the settlements including setting the First Federation in the British West Indies by 1674; some of the islands include Barbados, Bermuda, Cayman Island, Turks and Caicos, Jamaica and Belize then known as British Honduras. By the 1960’s many of the islands became independent after the West Indies Federation which existed from 1958 to 1962 failed due to internal political conflicts. After this a number of Eastern Caribbean islands formed a free association. [3]
Colon Settlers in West Indies in the 17th Century
- Nicholas Colon, aged 19, who arrived in Barbados in 1635 [2]
Contemporary Notables of the name Colon (post 1700) +
- José E. Colón, Puerto Rican politician, acting Governor of Puerto Rico in 1939
- Míriam Colón (1936-2017), Puerto Rican actress
- Rafael Hernández Colón (b. 1936), American politician, Member of Puerto Rico senate, 1969-72; Governor of Puerto Rico, 1973-77, 1985-93 [4]
- Willie Colon (b. 1983), American football offensive guard for the New York Jets
- Luis Alfredo Colón (b. 1916), American lawyer and politician, New York State senator
- Ismael Amador Colón (b. 1894), American chemist
- William Anthony Colon (b. 1950), Puerto Rican salsa music icon
- Bartolo Colon (b. 1973), Major League Baseball starting pitcher from Dominican Republic
- Carlos Edwin Colon Sr. (b. 1948), American professional wrestler from Puerto Rico
- Luisette Cabañas Colon, American Democratic Party politician, Delegate to Democratic National Convention from Puerto Rico, 2004, 2008; Puerto Rico Democratic Party vice-chair, 2008 [5]
Related Stories +
Suggested Readings for the name Colon +
- The Ancestry and Descendants of Christopher Columbus by Charles Maduell.
The Political Graveyard: Alphabetical Name Index. (Retrieved 2015, November 11) . Retrieved from http://politicalgraveyard.com/alpha/index.html
- Origins Available:
- England
- Spain
- Ireland
- Nicasio Colon, who arrived in Nombre de Dios, Panama in 1535
- William Colon, who arrived in Virginia in 1665 [6]
- Michael Colon, who landed in Maryland in 1682 [6]
- Patrick Colon, aged 22, who landed in America in 1822 [6]
- Nicasio Colon, who arrived in Nombre de Dios, Panama in 1835 [6]
- Martin Colon, aged 34, who arrived in New Orleans, La in 1851 [6]
- Martin Colon who arrived in New Orleans in 1851
- Juan Ramon Colon who settled in Puerto Rico in 1860
- … (More are available in all our PDF Extended History products and printed products wherever possible.)
- Nicholas Colon, aged 19, who arrived in Barbados in 1635 [6]
- José E.
Colón, Puerto Rican politician, acting Governor of Puerto Rico in 1939
- Míriam Colón (1936-2017), Puerto Rican actress
- Rafael Hernández Colón (b. 1936), American politician, Member of Puerto Rico senate, 1969-72; Governor of Puerto Rico, 1973-77, 1985-93 [8]
- Willie Colon (b. 1983), American football offensive guard for the New York Jets
- Luis Alfredo Colón (b. 1916), American lawyer and politician, New York State senator
- Ismael Amador Colón (b. 1894), American chemist
- William Anthony Colon (b. 1950), Puerto Rican salsa music icon
- Bartolo Colon (b. 1973), Major League Baseball starting pitcher from Dominican Republic
- Carlos Edwin Colon Sr. (b. 1948), American professional wrestler from Puerto Rico
- Luisette Cabañas Colon, American Democratic Party politician, Delegate to Democratic National Convention from Puerto Rico, 2004, 2008; Puerto Rico Democratic Party vice-chair, 2008 [9]
- The Ancestry and Descendants of Christopher Columbus by Charles Maduell.
The Political Graveyard: Alphabetical Name Index. (Retrieved 2015, November 11) . Retrieved from http://politicalgraveyard.com/alpha/index.html
Colon Name Meaning, Family History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms, English
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The history of the Colon name began with the ancient Anglo-Saxon tribes of Britain. The name is derived from the personal name Nicholas. A common diminutive of the name Nicholas was Colin. [1]
Saint Collen was a 7th-century monk who gave his name to Llangollen, Denbighshire which translates from the Welsh as «church of the hazel-wood.»
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Early Origins of the Colon family
The surname Colon was first found in various counties throughout old Britain. By example, the Hundreorum Rolls of 1273 list William de Colince or Colunce as holding lands at Chadlington, Oxford, and Hugh de Culunce had custody of Pont Orson temp. King John, c. 1200. Ernis de Coulonces married a daughter of William de Warrenne, Earl of Surrey, temp. Henry I. and Hugh de Colonches in 1165, held a barony of four fees. Adam de Coulnce paid a fine to the King in Oxfordshire 1203, and Hugh de Coulnce confirmed lands to Mottisfont Priory [2]
We must look to Somerset to view an early entry for an early phonetic match to the more popular spellings of today. For it is there that John Colyngs was listed as holding lands, 1 Edward III (during the first year of the reign of King Edward III.) [3]
Down in Cornwall, the Halset manor in Lesnewth, «belonged to the family of Colyn but in the reign of James I. it was the property of Thomas Southcott, Esq. and Mr. Humphrey Brown.» [4]
Again in Cornwall, «the manor of Luxulian was in the family of Collins in the reign of Elizabeth, after which it became the property of the Kendalls.» [4]
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Early History of the Colon family
This web page shows only a small excerpt of our Colon research. Another 105 words (8 lines of text) covering the years 1500, 1576, 1651, 1624, 1711, 1618, 1667, 1623, 1690, 1625, 1683, 1653, 1705, 1697, 1660, 1172 and are included under the topic Early Colon History in all our PDF Extended History products and printed products wherever possible.
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Colon Spelling Variations
Sound was what guided spelling in the essentially pre-literate Middle Ages, so one person’s name was often recorded under several variations during a single lifetime. Also, before the advent of the printing press and the first dictionaries, the English language was not standardized. Therefore, spelling variations were common, even among the names of the most literate people. Known variations of the Colon family name include Collins, Collin, Collings, Colling, Collis, Caullins, Caulling, Caullings, Caullis, Colins, Colings, Coliss and many more.
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Early Notables of the Colon family (pre 1700)
Distinguished members of the family include Samuel Collins (1576-1651), an English clergyman and academic, Regius Professor of Divinity at Cambridge and Provost of King’s College, Cambridge; and his son, John Collins (1624-1711), an English academic and politician; Abraham Cowley (1618-1667), an English poet born in the City of London; John Collinges (1623-1690), an English Presbyterian theologian, participant in the Savoy Conference, ejected minister, and prolific writer; John Collins (1625-1683), an…
Another 70 words (5 lines of text) are included under the topic Early Colon Notables in all our PDF Extended History products and printed products wherever possible.
Colon Ranking
In the United States, the name Colon is the 423rd most popular surname with an estimated 67,149 people with that name. [5]
Migration of the Colon family to Ireland
Some of the Colon family moved to Ireland, but this topic is not covered in this excerpt.
Another 72 words (5 lines of text) about their life in Ireland is included in all our PDF Extended History products and printed products wherever possible.
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Colon migration to the United States +
For political, religious, and economic reasons, thousands of English families boarded ships for Ireland, the Canadas, the America colonies, and many of smaller tropical colonies in the hope of finding better lives abroad. Although the passage on the cramped, dank ships caused many to arrive in the New World diseased and starving, those families that survived the trip often went on to make valuable contributions to those new societies to which they arrived. Early immigrants bearing the Colon surname or a spelling variation of the name include :
Colon Settlers in United States in the 16th Century
Colon Settlers in United States in the 17th Century
Colon Settlers in United States in the 19th Century
Colon migration to West Indies +
The British first settled the British West Indies around 1604. They made many attempts but failed in some to establish settlements on the Islands including Saint Lucia and Grenada. By 1627 they had managed to establish settlements on St. Kitts (St. Christopher) and Barbados, but by 1641 the Spanish had moved in and destroyed some of these including those at Providence Island. The British continued to expand the settlements including setting the First Federation in the British West Indies by 1674; some of the islands include Barbados, Bermuda, Cayman Island, Turks and Caicos, Jamaica and Belize then known as British Honduras. By the 1960’s many of the islands became independent after the West Indies Federation which existed from 1958 to 1962 failed due to internal political conflicts. After this a number of Eastern Caribbean islands formed a free association. [7]
Colon Settlers in West Indies in the 17th Century
Contemporary Notables of the name Colon (post 1700) +
Related Stories +
Suggested Readings for the name Colon +
Interesting facts about Armenia — Fact Museum
New facts can now be read on Telegram, Instagram and Twitter.
On the territory of which state is Mount Ararat located?
Mount Ararat, which is the symbol of Armenia and is depicted on the coat of arms of the country, is not located in Armenia. The territory of the mountain was ceded to Turkey in 1921. According to some sources, People’s Commissar for Foreign Affairs Chicherin rejected Turkey’s protest over the coat of arms of the Armenian SSR, stating that the Turkish flag depicts a crescent moon, but the moon is not part of Turkey.
Source: Wikipedia / Ararat
Ararat Armenia geography heraldry mountains Moon symbols of the USSR Turkey flags
In which language does the dot function as a colon, and the colon functions as a dot?
Armenian writing not only has a special alphabet, but also its own punctuation, in many respects different from other European writing systems, in which only commas and quotation marks coincide with the signs we are used to. At the end of a sentence, Armenians put a colon, both instead of a period and instead of question and exclamation marks. And instead of the usual colon, on the contrary, they use a period. The Armenian question mark ՞ is placed after the last vowel of the interrogative word, and the exclamation mark ՜ is placed above the last vowel of the word, which intonation is an exclamation.
Source: Wikipedia / Armenian punctuation
Armenia punctuation languages
Which countries are mentioned in the poem that formed the basis of the Armenian anthem?
The text of the Armenian anthem is based on Mikayel Nalbandian’s poem «Song of the Italian Girl» about the struggle of the Italian people against the Austrian occupation. Only in the anthem, the references to Italy are replaced by Armenia, the word «Austria» is replaced by «enemies», and the line about the tricolor is left, since the flag of Armenia is also tricolor.
Source: Wikipedia / Anthem of Armenia
Austria Armenia hymns Italy flags
What fruits are known to Europeans as Armenian apples?
Many fruits are named after their place of origin or the countries they came from. For example, dates from Phoenicia, peaches from Persia. But apricots in Europe have long been called Armenian apples or Armenian plums, since they spread there from Armenia. Genetic studies have shown that apricots were domesticated independently three times in Central Asia and China.
Source: Wikipedia / Apricot
apricots Armenia Europe China names peaches Persia dates Phenicia fruits
Which country was the first to adopt Christianity as a state religion?
The first country to adopt Christianity as a state religion was Armenia — this happened in 301. The Christianization of the Roman Empire did not begin until 313, when Emperor Constantine issued an edict on freedom of religion.
Source: Wikipedia / Christianity
Armenia state Constantine I the Great religion Roman Empire Christianity
Which village is the birthplace of two marshals and twelve generals?
The village of Chanlibel located in Azerbaijan was called Chardakhlu until 1991 and had an Armenian population that left these places during the Karabakh conflict. During the Great Patriotic War, 1250 people went to the front from the village. Of these, two became marshals, twelve — generals, seven — Heroes of the Soviet Union.
Source: Wikipedia / Chanlibel
Azerbaijan Armenia army World War II heroes of the village officers of the USSR
Where and when was the person who committed the murder in front of witnesses fully acquitted?
In 1921 in Berlin, Soghomon Tehlirian, who was born in the Ottoman Empire, shot a man in front of many witnesses and immediately surrendered to the police. His victim was the former Interior Minister of the Ottoman Empire Talaat Pasha, known as one of the organizers of the Armenian genocide. Given this, the court fully acquitted Tehlirian, recognizing his actions as committed in a state of passion, and released the killer from custody.
Source: Wikipedia / Tehlirian, Soghomon
Armenia genocide Germany ministers Ottoman Empire crimes murder court
Which world record holder saved 20 people from a trolleybus at the cost of a sports career?
On September 16, 1976, a trolley bus broke into Yerevan Lake. Just at that time, the world champion and multiple world record holder in scuba diving Shavarsh Karapetyan with his brother and coach were doing a morning jog. Seeing the accident, they immediately set about rescuing people — Shavarsh, at a depth in conditions of zero visibility, broke the glass of a trolley bus and got people already unconscious, one for each dive. In total, the brothers managed to save 20 people out of 92, after which Shavarsh was seriously ill for more than a month with pneumonia, complicated by sepsis due to numerous cuts. After recovering, he began to train again and even set his 11th world record, but in the end he was forced to leave his sports career due to injuries.
Source: Wikipedia / Karapetyan, Shavarsh Vladimirovich, Shavarsh Karapetyan’s official website
accidents Armenia swimming rescue sports USSR trolleybuses
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Just copy the picture and paste it anywhere.
Nikolay Kashin : Nikolajs Kašins
Cepešmuiža (dīvāns. trokšņsveces i rolling stones. romance)
in winter and flowing with bitter juice
to the torn earth like the voice of
icicles meeting spring and
a boulder erased by snow and nights
boils under the weight of a titmouse she
tries to peck a coat of arms from a coin left
blind, or at least
but something like our hands
with such soft palms her
most delicate fluff made
clog up like juice in the roots that finally
grew together in the presence of flowering splinter
⁂
(on the health of your beloved)
ⅰ
Habitaic harmonica Silence in the Snow
Break with a delight of warm news
and treat the Titon with invaluable gifts
from the Gilgamesh Garden
on the third after the flood
and on the deployment of river herbs to guess the 9000 ⅱ
pour the aquarium flue larches
behind a dark hedge, either cisterns
or dictionaries where roofing felt is similar to parchment
in gems of marginals woven from
ink or graphite where only 9 survived0115 solid-cast emptiness
Ⅲ
and on the development of eternal grasses
lay a tracing paper of awakening like beads
lay out the tarot card
a spider capable of connecting Bavarian words
with the flow of a river that does not freeze in any way
in which feathers of fish and 15 scales seem possible
volcanic tears swirling in a haystack
in which either the water with its density
goes into the ricercar or the shadow all that water
and the marble of the embankment traces the light
when I cuddle up to you and he is
is sad from its Suprematism
crawls out and turns out with an esculap
when even Asmode drops tears trying
claws to bother the crosses and choirs
ⅳ
and the wind with snow burdocks drives
untouched sprouts and the voice of the sadness of
15 and the voice of the sadness of
11 a puzzle on the
bent by the night frost shine of the reverse of the window
in which the mirror shines and everything is calm
Ⅵ
where the palms again rise to the surviving choirs
⁂
eināram peelšam
Lightning points to lace
lungs are
Silence lines are circled
in the light hiasma
Tips Konda to winter
Lasted in detail
Subtle brocade of the roots
Cafism of the body are sorted out
THE TREE OUTSIDE THE WINDOW
K. A.
yes yes exactly and maybe even more tenderly
barely touching barely moving and not breathing
touching is easier than talking to your beloved
thinking about even the simplest things
is lighter than the wind and they say it touches the water surface
it touches more easily than any water strider but
is capable of
so indignant that her eyes will flash
as if from wine and her teeth will flash white exactly from
milk and will throw a boat from the shore
with an old man and trembling souls
will soar to clouds and will drown the dead
there will be no one else and nothing else to transport
to the other side where now
your grandchildren charon drive carefully with an oar
look at the deserted and unfamiliar surface of the water
how terns sort out something that has surfaced with mud
it sways with its back to the clouds
the sun has not seen anything for a long time the notes of the forest
and they huddled under the stave turn
into coal
remember that expression involuntarily and
agree and add the name according to water
a burning trickle of oil with a trident is written because
the heavy dark sky will soon spill
but until this happens, eliminating
all sources of sounds noises like people you know
wandering around the bed like you are sick
deviating from them having switched off
run the palm along the walls along the floor
leaving pollen like runes like glosses
fingerprints
erasing the dust the memory and silence of her
the same and continuing
how many possible options here will have to be used
over time
the ceiling is also beautiful it can’t be reached
but that doesn’t mean that the prints won’t reach it
but that doesn’t mean that the prints aren’t like
cells that being thrown like
the anchor stays like
corals with new gothic polyps that
so full of fairy tales and miracles is formed
a cultural layer then an island on it natives
then they die their tattoos
pass
to butterflies
and we sail after many years and stay
you know it’s easy to live on it
prints will bend prints will bring
fruits will bud
new ones already draw but without mutations and other
liberties like wood lice crawling to the ceiling
filling the visible space with the network of the gothic vault
stopping colonization
it is impossible to continue with concentration
without saying anything without letting anyone in, but as
with respect to everything, simply not perceiving
but there is no one to enter
but not letting everything into the emerging world
clearly exactly beautiful except for thoughts before
they disappear for a while
locked and empty
now the air is supposedly so empty here
annoyed as if
more airtight only books taken out with
furniture out of the brackets
only light and glimmering from thoughts
and destructive
moisture of breathing with white paint is now full
the room is slow breathing it thinks and no it is so good
now that no one is stroking it
stroking itself
and all that should have taken
digested calm came
what kind of white paint of the cloud is only
whiter and the body of Lesistrata remembers it that
they talk about him from the dark
Middle Ages teeth are compared with garlic
a heart with an acorn
a mountain standing above the sea, opened to the gaze
therefore shrink shrink into a
cicada having finished enjoying a pleasant itch
in the body from thoughts as pure as a vacuum
shrink shrink and fly out
into a clean world big bright and clear
it will definitely contain lin find find one
yes lin it will definitely be possible to read
at night Akkadian
metaphor love lyrics hiding
with ashen figures
drowning in the gold of her soft palms
chattering to her and comparing this sound
especially when the head hurts with
flickering of pollen in the light by the fireplace
near the windows and just between the trunks
huge oak trees branches
their mandibles
wrenches with which I hold attention
when translating
verses from blue handwriting into strict
times new roman
yes, to fly being small
and remain in everything like qi
when she was when she was remembered
remain in everything and nowhere and absorb everything
and leave nothing
continue striving to continue being
light to shrink with everything into light, that is, the world in the spirit of national romanticism
compose compose yes
there should be such
gothic tunnels in our three-room apartment
let them connect three
these rooms let
walls with their books
will be packed and before going to bed
I will remind you in your diary about
a rib vault of bones
this is not a dream about three naves in each corridor
about the fact that in the large hall there is which
did not want to accept as a Kutub column
let the bone all dinosaur gothic and
other mixed styles glare of that
light but this pillar-stay this bunch of columns
being
more than real doge more than a portrait
of Joyce
is a proof of reality, although
once dreamed
you know better how to tell me about it
to be fully prepared as through a hole in
a raindrop in the vault in a sentence
not filled with a pebble of brackets
a hole in a sieve to seep to the constellations
capricorn fish stove
COLONS ANSWERS:
1. What languages do you write in?
the main part of the case is still in Russian. but there are other kinds of texts.
often — pasta. others are added to Russian. Latvian, English ꝛc.
Code mixing is free. English, German, Greek and others —
are more occasional.
2. Is one of them learned or have you mastered both since childhood?
learned Latvian since childhood. Russian appeared in life earlier.
3. When and under what circumstances did you start writing on each of them?
5 (6?) years ago I started writing.
because of the inability to not-write?
4. What motivated you to write in your second (third, fourth…) language?
I use other languages if necessary. I do not share Russian and Latvian.
one unit. the rest are different. I often think, read, communicate ꝛc in Latvian.
5. How is the language chosen in each specific case?
different reasons for switching. each text requires something different. I write a lot.
situation, sound, memory, conversation-before-text dictates the language of the text.
6. Is the writing process different in different languages? Do you feel like a different person/poet as you move from language to language?
when switching from Russian to Latvian or any other, nothing changes.
any kunshtuk (palindrome, leaf-turner, …) can come out in Russian. maybe on the other.
at least until today it has been so.
may not always have confidence. but there is always a corrector.
7. Do you ever experience a lack of a word/concept that exists in a language in which you are not currently writing?
no.
8. Does your attitude to some phenomenon/concept/object change depending on the language in which you think/write about it?
in my case I can’t answer this question.
9. Do you translate yourself from language to language? If not, why not?
if I understood the question correctly: I do not translate my texts from “language” to “language”.