Aridas or Mihalakakos?

My paternal grandmother, Hariklia Aridas (Χαρικλεια Αριδας), was born in the village of Agios Ioannis (St. Johns), just outside Sparta. As I began my research, people would comment that Aridas was an unusual Greek name — one they had not come across in the past. My curiosity was raised, especially when I received a Town Register from St. Johns that listed an Aridas family and saw that one of the names in this family was Konstandinos Mihalakakos (see below). I just assumed that Konstandinos was a relative who was living with the family.

Until… sometime later, I connected online with another Aridas descendant who sent me an email with the following: “As for Kosta Mihalakakos, that is Kosta Aridas. My uncle wrote my mother back in the late 940’s that he had uncovered the real name for Aridas as Mihalakakos. He said that one of the ancestors had long legs (αριβας) which is what Aridas translates to from arida (leg). It was a nickname that stuck.”

Well, that is fascinating information but now I’m really stumped. Who knows how far back the name was changed, and in which village the family was living when it was changed? Did all of the family change their name, or only the descendants of the “ancestor with the long legs?”

So, where do I go from here? Do I look for both Mihalakakos and Aridas names? I think that’s a good start. There are few digitized online records through the Greek Archives (http://arxeiomnimon.gak.gr/index.html). I looked at the 1872 Electoral Rolls from Agios Ioannis, and there is no Aridas or Mihalakakos listed. Not a good sign. For now, I’m stumped. Stay tuned…

My Grandparents

I have added Family Group Sheets and basic information about my grandparents and their children under the heading, “My Grandparents.” I am truly blessed to have been able to know each of them, except for my maternal grandfather, Louis Pappas, who died before my mother was married. I have fond memories of happy times in the home of Yiayia and Papou Kostakos in Brooklyn. It was a large, sunny home on a lovely double-lot in Brooklyn,with many nooks and crannies for my cousins and me to explore. In her later years, my maternal grandmother, Angelia Eftaxias Pappas, divided her time between my parents’ in home in Kensington, Maryland, and my Aunt Bertha & Uncle Nick Pouletsos’ home in Pt. Jefferson Station, Long Island, New York. I am looking forward to adding family stories, histories and photos of these wonderful people whom I love dearly.