AHC: Patronymic surnames in the Anglosphere

In both the Nordic countries and Russia, patronymics are quite common (e.g. Leif Eriksson = Leif son of Erik the Red; Tsar Pavel Petrovich = Tsar Paul, son of Peter III).

Make it so that with any POD after 793 the Anglosphere uses patronymics in naming such that say, the Duke of Cambridge would be William Charles-son or such to the paparazzi.
 
Well, some well-known English surnames were patronymic e.g. Robinson, Jefferson, Johnson,...

Also quite a few matronyms given the medieval practice of giving them to posthumous (not illegitimate!) children - Beaton, Custer, Izzard, Marriott, Madison...

But to have actual patronyms (as opposed to patronymic family names, a different thing entirely) you need two things: the Normans using patronyms instead of family names, and no poll taxes (which are easier to administer if fathers and sons have the same surname).
 
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Didn't the Normans use Fitz for son of? Maybe have them use patronymics and surnames so you have Richard "the Lionheart" FitzHenry Plantagenet for example.
 
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