Porcarius

Porcarius (French: Porcaire or Porchaire) is the Latin word for "swineherd" and was occasionally used as a masculine given name in the early Middle Ages. Since porcarii were often slaves, "only elite couples [named their children Porcarius], and they probably did it ironically." In the 7th-century hagiography Martyrium Prisci et sociorum, for example, the aristocratic landowner Porcarius is introduced while boar hunting. The Spanish name Suarius may have a similar origin.[1]

Known bearers of the name include;

  • Porcarius I (fl. c. 490), abbot of Lérins
  • Porcarius of Poitiers (d. c. 600), abbot of Saint-Hilaire-le-Grand
  • Porcarius II (d. c. 732), abbot of Lérins, martyr
  • Porcarius (fl. 1150), brother of Peter Abelard and monk of Buzay Abbey

References

  1. Jamie Kreiner, Legions of Pigs in the Early Medieval West (Yale University Press, 2020), pp. 122 and 249 n9.
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