Schelling is a surname. Notable persons with that name include:
Schröder (Schroeder) is a German surname often associated with the Schröder family. Notable people with the surname include:
Fischer is a German occupational surname, meaning fisherman. The name Fischer is the fourth most common German surname. The English version is Fisher.
Cramer is an English surname and the Anglicized version of Dutch and Low German Kramer, or German Krämer. Both refer to the profession of traveling merchants in the Late Middle Ages. The meaning later changed to "merchants trading with different, rather small things.
Schlegel is a German occupational surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Löffler is a German language surname. It is often anglicised as Loeffler. In most cases, the name originates from people who produced and/or traded spoons. Notable people with the surname include:
The German word Müller means "miller". It is the most common family surname in Germany, Switzerland, and the French départements of Bas-Rhin and Moselle and is the fifth most common surname in Austria. Other forms are "Miller" and "Möller". Of the various family coats of arms that exist, many incorporate milling iconography, such as windmills or watermill wheels.
Hoffmann is a German surname.
Schmidt is a common German occupational surname derived from the German word "Schmied" meaning "blacksmith" and/or "metalworker". This surname is the German equivalent of "Smith" in the English-speaking world.
Haas, also de Haas, is a German and Dutch surname, also Jewish (Ashkenazic), usually from Hase or de Haas, the German and Dutch words for "hare". Notable people with the surname include the following:
Mohr is a surname of German origin. Notable people with the surname include:
Huth is a surname. People with this surname include:
Münch or Muench is a German surname, meaning "monk". Notable people with this surname include the following:
Schmid is a German surname that is a cognate of "Smith", an occupational surname for a blacksmith. The spelling is more common in Switzerland than Schmidt or Schmitt. Notable people with the surname include:
Vischer is a surname, and my refer to:
The surname Meyer is an English, Dutch, German, and Jewish surname. With its numerous variants, it is the most common German surname. Its original meaning in Middle High German mei(g)er is "manager ", derived from Latin maior domus, i.e. "headman of a household", later on also simply meaning "tenant" or "(free) farmer". It is therefore a rough equivalent of the English Steward which has also frequently been turned into a surname.
Baumann is a German surname, and may refer to:
Rehberg is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Dorr and Dörr are surnames of German origin. Notable people include:
The surname Benda may refer to:
Hofmann is a German surname. Notable people with the surname include: