Jenkin, of Franconian origin, is translated in English as "Little John" or more literally "John the little."
Forename History
Jen/Jean being a diminutive of Jehan/Jehannes* followed by kin/ken meaning little creating Jenkin or Jenken. * The name "Jenkin" or "Jenken" first use in England is seen as early as 1086 as a diminutive of the English form of John. It was often translated from the Dutch/French as "John the younger" or seen as "John Jenken." The non-diminutive Jehan/Jehannes was also translated into English as John. When Jen/Jean is present, usually given to a younger child, Jehan/Jehannes is listed as "John the elder" but, never translated as "Big John." Confusion can arise when the sire is listed as John, a son is John and another son is John. Today, in English the term John, Senior is used for the father, while the names of John can use Junior or numeric designation. "Jon" the phonetic of John is sometimes seen but only in males as is the younger male nickname of "Johnny." The name "Jean" once pronounced "Jon" in English and once a male name has become since the 16th century a female name in English from the French Jeanne.
Surname History
Jenkin is a surname variant of Jenkins commonly seen in Welsh, Cornish and in English ancestry. Its translation is "Little John" or more literally "John the little." It first was found in Monmouthshire in the Domesday Book of 1086 and some say earlier than 1066 and the Norman Conquest of England. Its common English use, eventually becoming a surname, may have come as a generic and now obsolete nickname as the "Little Johns." This may have been a 12th Century reference to the Welsh and Cornish people because of their relative smaller stature or more likely as a derogatory for the subjects or illegitimate offspring of King John of England, Earl of Cornwall and Gloucester. Jenkin or Jenkins and its surname variants should not be confused as a shortened Jenkinson and its variants which refers to the son of "Little John."