Fitzharris may refer to:
Occupation commonly refers to:
Third person, or third-person, may refer to:
Jamwal is a toponymic surname for a Dogra Rajput clan of the same name from Jammu, in Jammu and Kashmir, India. They claim descent from the traditional founder of Jammu, Jambu Lochan, and there at one time some of their members were rulers of the princely state of Jammu and Kashmir, often referred to as the Dogra dynasty.
Swedish or svensk(a) may refer to:
Fitzhenry is an Irish Hiberno-Norman surname. It is patronymic as the prefix Fitz- derives from the Latin filius, meaning "son of". Its variants include the alternate forms "Fitz-Henry", FitzHenry and ‘’Fitz Henry’’, and the given name turned surname Henry. Another Irish variant is Fitzharris, and the surnames were often used interchangeably within the same family. Fitzhenry is rare as a given name, but may indicate that the person was descended from a female Fitz(-)henry, or that the person's father had Henry as a first forename.
Hanratty is a surname, and may refer to:
Gaming may refer to:
Ibn Mubarak is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Mchedlishvili (მჭედლიშვილი) is a Georgian language occupational surname literally meaning "blacksmith's son", and may refer to:
Sean Fitzharris is a Scottish footballer who plays for East Kilbride in the Lowland Football League. Fitzharris came through the youth academies of both halves of the Old Firm, Rangers and Celtic.
Kovalevich is a Slavic surname used in Russian and Ukrainian, Belarusian, and Polish cultures.
The German-language surname Schmieden or its nobility form von Schmieden may refer to:
O'Beirne may refer to:
Marchesini is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
The Archdeacon of Doncaster is a senior ecclesiastical officer within the Diocese of Sheffield, responsible for the disciplinary supervision of the clergy within the six area deaneries: Adwick-le-Street, Doncaster, Snaith & Hatfield, Tankersley, Wath and West Doncaster.
Kovalik is a Slavic language occupational surname derived from the occupation of smith (koval).
Kavalyow or Kavaliou, or Kavalyova, Kavaliova, is a common Belarusian surname, an equivalent of the English "Smith" and Russian "Kovalyov".
The Austrian surname Schmitzer is related to the surname Schmitz. The Czechized form is Šmicer. It may refer to:
Covali is the Romanian form of the name Kowal, meaning "forger" or "blacksmith" in Slavic languages. The surname may refer to:
Covali is the Romanian form of the Russian surname Kovalyov derived from the occupation of "forger" or "blacksmith".