Start your family tree now Is your surname Wise?
There are already 644 users and over 20,190 genealogy profiles with the Wise surname on Geni. Explore Wise genealogy and family history in the World's Largest Family Tree.

Wise Genealogy and Wise Family History Information

‹ Back to Surnames Index

Create your Family Tree.
Discover your Family History.

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!
view all

Profiles

  • Abigail Wise (1652 - 1725)
  • Abigail Wise (1657 - d.)
  • Abigail Cogswell (1666 - 1729)
  • Adam Wise, I (1761 - 1839)
    Find A Grave Memorial 142793063approximate birth and death dates.likely burial given three children buried in cemetery, many early unmarked graves and church once named Weiss.m Barbara Pfeifferchildren...
  • Adam Wise, Jr. (1763 - 1842)
    A Patriot of the American Revolution for PENNSYLVANIA with the rank of PRIVATE. DAR Ancestor # A126804

About the Wise surname

origin

From the book Col. John Wise of England and Virginia (1617-1695): His Ancestors and Descendants by Jennings Cropper Wise, published 1918 by The Bell Book and Stationery Co., Inc, Richmond, VA, for the Virginia Historical Society:

The Wises are a Saxon race who were in the west of England before the Norman Conquest, at which period, one Oliver Wise, Gewis, or Gwiss, is stated in their pedigree to have been living at Greston. (Documents at the College of Heralds. See also Burke's "Landed Gentry." Vol. II., p. 1768.)

Various efforts have been made to connect the Wise family with the Norman family of Guisse or Guise, of which there are descendants in France to-day, and the frequent use of the name Wise by Jews has been cited as evidence that the Wises of England were of continental origin. The answer to this argument is that the early Saxon name of Geweiss, or Geweis, which in the British Isles became Gewis or Gwiss. became Weiss or Weis on the continent, and has been anglicized by the German Jews into Wise. The name Weiss or Weis is a common one among the Jews of America. Geweiss or Geweis is a derivative of the German verb, to know, from which come the nouns, knowledge and wisdom, and the adjective, wise. It is most natural, there fore, that the Teutonic word should have arrived at the same form among the Anglo-Saxons and the anglicized German Jews, and it is not necessary to seek a Latin origin for it. The Norman Guisse and French Guise may have come from the Teutonic root as well as the English name Wise. (Danish Wis.)
==other versions of this surname==