Ancient to the English and Scottish WYSEMAN and WYSE surname, and its English variants, are the modern derivatives of the ancient Jute names of Gewiss, Gwiss, Guisse, Gviss, Weis, Weisa, Weiss, Wis, Wiss, Wys, Wysman, Wyt, Wythe, Wyz, and Wyza. The surname in England, Scotland, and Ireland stems from the Ancient Scandinavian and pagan Kingdoms of Saxony, Jutland, and Anglia. Moreover, over the centuries people with this name and its variants propagated throughout Scandinavia, the Netherlands, Germany, northern Europe, England, Scotland, and Ireland. Also, if true, Scandinavian mythology and legend avows that medieval descendants bearing the name WYSEMAN, its shortened variant WYSE and any of its original relation, trace back to the ancient Jute Kings Gewiss (aka: Guise), Wyt (aka: Wyth, Wythe), and Woden (aka: Wodan, Oden, Odin) -- who according to Scandinavian mythology, legend, and genealogy descend from vanquished Trojan warrior tribes who fled, fought, and migrated across northern Europe after the Trojan Wars circa 1300-1200 B.C., i.e., from the destroyed Kingdom of Troy, to the Kingdom of Thrace (European Turkey and northern Bulgaria), across northern Germania (N. Europe), and who primarily colonized within Teutonic tribal Kingdoms and sub-Kingdoms of ancient Saxony, Jutland, Anglia, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, Netherlands, etc., with some smaller Saxon tribes inhabiting in what we now know as Belgium, Bavaria, Luxemburg, Austria, and Germany