House of Gold! Become Lord or Lady of Gold
House of Gold! Become Lord or Lady of Gold
PREMIUM PRINTED GIFT FOLDER including:
- certificate
- personalized with your name and our Dorothea von Beringen, make a noble crest
- certificate of title on official parchment
- luxury gift package with all your documents
Personalized gift package: personalized documents to show off your new status. Fast shipping! Available to everyone. Available to all ages and nationalities.
Description
The House of Gold
The House of Gold is a prestigious European noble family that can trace its lineage back to the 13th century.
Become a Lord or Lady of Gold
The House of Gold is now offering the opportunity for individuals to become a Lord or Lady of Gold. This is a unique opportunity to be part of one of the most prestigious noble families in Europe. By becoming a Lord or Lady of Gold, you will be granted a title of nobility and will be able to use the family's coat of arms and other heraldic symbols.
The surname "Gold" is of English and German origin. It is derived from a metonymic occupational name for someone who worked with gold (from the Old English, Old High German word "gold") and means refiner, jeweler or glider. It is also derived from the English and German nickname for someone with bright yellow hair, in reference to the color of the metal. It is also a derivation of the Old English personal name "Golda" (or the feminine "Golde"), which was retained as a first name into the Middle Ages. The name was partly an epithet of "Gold" and partly a short form of the various names with that first element. In the United States, it is often a short form of one of the variants. Public and civil registry archives confirm that the Gold surname and/or its variants date back to the 13th century. It originated in the county of Oxfordshire in England and was recorded in the hundred lists in 1273. Historical archives have not clearly established the exact period of settlement in North America, but it is believed that the ancestors of this surname were part of the exodus of immigrants that followed the peace treaty signed in Paris in 1763, when Great Britain took possession of all of North America east of the Mississippi River, except for New Orleans. The main reasons for the emigration of the working class were poor crop yields, high unemployment and the misconception that America was a land of golden opportunity. It is estimated that after 1769, about 20,000 people emigrated from the British Isles to America every year. Today, "Gold" is the "one thousand two hundred and ninety-first" most common surname in North America.