Purell Family History
Purell Surname Meaning
A variant of Purl (see Pearl) features an intrusive vowel between -r- and -l. For comparison, George Pearl (1809) and John Purrell (1817) are noted in
Another variant may be linked to Porrill, possibly a reduced form of a place-name starting with Pir-, followed by well or hill. Purwell (Mill) in Hitchin (Herts) is derived from the Old English pirige, meaning ‘pear-tree’, combined with wielle, meaning ‘stream’, and is known to have resulted in a Herts surname.
Purwell (Farm) in Cassington (Oxon) likely shares the same etymology as Purwell in Herts; however, there are no medieval spellings for this place-name, and it is unclear whether it gave rise to a surname. The ancient hundred name Pirehill in Staffordshire, recorded as Pirehel, Pereholl in 1086, and Pirhill in 1199, may have been derived from an Old English term for a look-out (related to Middle English peren, meaning ‘to peer’) combined with hyll, meaning ‘hill’.
Unfortunately, no surname from this area is listed in
Source: The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Family Names in Britain, 2021
