Crake — This name, with variant spellings Crake and Creyk, is of northern English locational origin from a place in the North Riding of Yorkshire called Crayke. Recorded as Crec in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle, dated 685 A.D. and as Creic in the Domesday… … Surnames reference
Oryx and Crake — … Wikipedia
Crack — Recorded as Crack, Crake, Crayke, Creyk, Cracker, Craker, and possibly others, this is an English surname which is also associated with Scotland. There are two possible origins. The first is that it is a nickname surname from the word crayke ,… … Surnames reference
Cracker — Recorded as Crack, Crake, Crayke, Creyk, Cracker, Craker, and possibly others, this is an English surname which is also associated with Scotland. There are two possible origins. The first is that it is a nickname surname from the word crayke ,… … Surnames reference
Craiker — Recorded as Crack, Crake, Crayke, Creyk, Craiker, Crayker, Cracker, Craker, and possibly others, this is an English surname which is also associated with Scotland. There are two possible origins. The first is that it is a nickname surname from… … Surnames reference
Craker — Recorded as Crack, Crake, Crayke, Creyk, Craiker, Crayker, Cracker, Craker, and possibly others, this is an English surname which is also associated with Scotland. There are two possible origins. The first is that it is a nickname surname from… … Surnames reference
Crayker — Recorded as Crack, Crake, Crayke, Creyk, Craiker, Crayker, Cracker, Craker, and possibly others, this is an English surname which is also associated with Scotland. There are two possible origins. The first is that it is a nickname surname from… … Surnames reference
Crayke — This early surname, with spellings Crake, Crack, Crayke, and Creyk, is usually English and now Scottish, and almost certainly of locational origins from a place in the North Riding of Yorkshire called Crayke. Recorded as Crec in the Anglo Saxon… … Surnames reference
Crayk — This name, with variant spellings Crake and Creyk, is of northern English locational origin from a place in the North Riding of Yorkshire called Crayke. Recorded as Crec in the Anglo Saxon Chronicle, dated 685 A.D. and as Creic in the Domesday… … Surnames reference
William de Lancaster I — William de Lancaster I, or William Fitz Gilbert, was a nobleman of the twelfth century in Northwest England. He was possibly also referred to as William de Tailboys (de Taillebois) when younger. He is the first person of whom we have any record… … Wikipedia