Mejía is a Spanish surname dating back to the early 1500s. Its origin comes from Spanish Jews forced to convert to Catholicism also known as Marranos or Sephardic Jews. In Spain, the surname is predominantly found in Galicia and Toledo. It is also common in several Latin American countries, particularly Mexico, Honduras, and Colombia.

Mejia
Origin
Word/nameSpanish
Meaningpossibly from the word mesía meaning messiah[1][2]
Other names
Variant form(s)Mejías, Megía/Megías, Mexía/Mexia/Mexías

Etymology edit

The first written record of the surname being used is in the marriage of a Galician man named García Sánchez de Mejías to the daughter of Juan Sánchez de Mendoza, brother of Don Lope de Mendoza, Archbishop of Compostela.[3]

The surname may have originated as a toponym for the towns of either Mesía or Muxía in Galicia.[4][5]

According to "El Blasonario de la Consanguinidad Ibérica" (The Armorial of the Iberian Consanguinity) by genealogists Ampelio Alonso de Cadenas and Don Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent, Mejia is described as having been brought to Galicia and León by Sevillians who escaped to the mountainous northern provinces amidst the Moorish invasions of southern Spain, Prior to this, the bearers of the name had lived in Seville since Visigoth and Roman times. After the Reconquista, some returned to Seville.[6]

Another common theory is that the name may have Sephardic origins, from when the Spanish Kingdom forced Jewish settlers to change their surname to Castillian. The basis for this theory is that the literal translation of the word for "Messiah" is "Mesía".[7] However, others have argued that the name could have simply been assigned at baptism by a priest who chose to use a biblical word, rather than as a result of translation.[8] In addition, Spaniards with any Jewish or Muslim ancestry were not allowed to emigrate to the New World colonies, and so this theory might not account for the extensive popularity of the surname in Latin America today.

Finally, it is theorized that the word "Mexia" used to mean "medicine" in an old variant of Spanish.[citation needed]

Note that Mexía is the older Spanish spelling of the name. In the modern orthography of Spain, the spelling is Mejía, though in Mexico the older orthography is still considered correct. Similarly, until recently Spaniards rendered the country name Méjico rather than México, though this has reversed in recent decades out of deference to Mexico.

Geographical distribution edit

As of 2014, 23.7% of all known bearers of the surname Mejía were residents of Mexico (frequency 1:450), 16.2% of Colombia (1:253), 14.4% of Honduras (1:53), 8.0% of Guatemala (1:172), 6.5% of the Dominican Republic (1:138), 6.3% of the United States (1:4,915), 6.3% of El Salvador (1:86), 4.7% of Peru (1:583), 2.9% of Ecuador (1:475), 2.8% of Nicaragua (1:185), 2.5% of the Philippines (1:3,461), 2.0% of Venezuela (1:1,266) and 1.8% of Bolivia (1:510).

In Spain, the frequency of the surname was higher than national average (1:5,678) in the following autonomous communities:

In Honduras, the frequency of the surname was higher than national average (1:53) in the following departments:[9]

Popularity in Colombia edit

The surname is a popular last name in Colombia, especially its Paisa region. According to the book "Genealogies of Antioquia and Caldas" by Gabriel Arango Mejía, the first Spaniard to bring the name to Colombia was a man named Don Juan Mejía de Tobar Montoya.[10]

People edit

Mejía, Mejia edit

Mejías, Mejias edit

Mexía, Mexia edit

  • Alvaro Mexia, a 17th-century Spanish explorer and cartographer of the east coast of Florida
  • José Antonio Mexía (1800–1839), Mexican politician
  • Pedro Mexía, a 16th-century Spanish Renaissance writer, humanist and historian
  • Ynés Mexía (1870-1938), Mexican American botanist and explorer

References edit

  1. ^ "Mejia Coat of Arms / Mejia Family Crest".
  2. ^ http://www.ancestry.com/facts/Mejia-family-history.ashx [user-generated source]
  3. ^ "Mejía". Blasonari.
  4. ^ "Mejia surname".
  5. ^ "Mejia Name Meaning, Family History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms". January 2000.
  6. ^ Ampelio Alonso de Cadenas, Don Vicente de Cadenas y Vicent (1979). El Blasonario de la Consanguinidad Ibérica. Ediciones Hidalguia. ISBN 9788400044039.
  7. ^ "Apellidos Sefarditas | PDF | Asuntos multirraciales | Superpoderes".
  8. ^ Mejia, Vincente. "Re: Mejia as a Sephardic name". Genealogy.com.
  9. ^ Mejía surname distribution
  10. ^ Gabriel Arango Mejía (1973). Genealogícas de Antioquía y Caldas: 3. ed. Bedout.