[Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Kaminski ethnicity

Mike McHenry maurmike1 at verizon.net
Sun Feb 18 08:48:46 PST 2007


My German dictionary says the stem Kamin means fireplace. I don't see
anything like it in the polish one.

                                        Mike

-----Original Message-----
From: ger-poland-volhynia-bounces at eclipse.sggee.org
[mailto:ger-poland-volhynia-bounces at eclipse.sggee.org] On Behalf Of Gary
Warner
Sent: Sunday, February 18, 2007 2:47 AM
To: Hal and Jan Kamm; ger-poland-volhynia at eclipse.sggee.org
Subject: Re: [Ger-Poland-Volhynia] Kaminski ethnicity

Hal,

Welcome to our mail list.   I hope you get as much from it as the rest of
us.

I am by no means an expert on the subject(s) you raise, but perhaps 
my two cents will start the ball rolling and elicit some more 
discussion from the experts on this list.

You would appear to be on the correct mail list, because the rest of 
us are equally confused by our ancestry, at least the part about 
knowing what to call our ancestors.   I trust I am not stating 
something incorrectly when I say that the rest of the people on this 
list are all related to Germans who lived in Poland or Volhynia 
(essentially the western part of the Ukraine).   Your Kaminski name 
would seem to indicate that you also are German, since according to 
Oskar Kossmann's "Die Deutschen in Polen", printed in 1978, Kaminski 
is the Polish version of the name Koberstein.   This may not be the 
absolutely correct German version of the name, however, since some 
people also think that Steinke is an alternate to 
Kaminski.   Evidently the root of the word Kaminski has some 
equivalence to the German word Stein or Steinke.  Only some detailed 
research by you will enlighten you further about who your ancestors 
really were.   To answer your question about name changes, the answer 
is yes, they did change, but not necessarily for everyone.   It seems 
that they changed when there was an equivalent name in the language 
used where they lived (like Schwarz becoming Czarnecki, since one 
name means black in German ,and the other means black in 
Polish).   Names also changed when the name was difficult to say in 
the language where our ancestors lived, much like they did when our 
ancestors came to North America.

My grandparents were born in Poland and later moved to Volhynia where 
they were married and where their first child was born.    Both of my 
grandparents were definitely descended from Germans, but they were 
born in an area that is today Poland but was owned by Russia at the 
time.    So, in the 1900s, when Poland again resumed its own national 
identity, my grandparents were Germans who could claim that they were 
also Poles and Russians.

May I suggest that you give SGGEE a one year trial membership to see 
what you can discover in our databases, and especially you should 
submit at least your pedigree, if not additionally data on your 
cousins who are also likely German to see if we can link your data to 
any of the names in our databases.

Guessing at a correct place name is not possible without more data 
than you have supplied, but yes, there is a Rypin that is often 
mentioned in the databases that we have.

Gary Warner
SGGEE

At 02:25 PM 2/17/2007, Hal and Jan Kamm wrote:
>This is my first post on this list.
>
>I am a grandson of Arthur Kaminski, who arrived in US in 1907 listed
>as Russian nationality, but German ethnicity. The ship manifest noted
>Ripen as the town of origin. I cannot find a town named Ripen, but
>there is one called Rypin in Kujawsko-Pomorskie, Poland.
>
>I am confused about the German ethnicity versus Russian/Polish
>nationality. I had heard stories years ago about the family working
>as millers of grain across northern Europe. Would names be changed
>temporarily, during one generation or less, depending on where they
>were living?
>
>Any help would be appreciated.
>Thanks
>
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