Selz [1] [2] and its variant Seltz [3] [4] is a South German, Alsatian and Ashkenazic habitational surname for a person living in the originally Swabian and now French settlement Seltz (German spelling: Selz) and may refer to:
Slaný or Slany is a Czech and Slovak surname. It is derived from the Czech–Slovak word slaný for "salty." It may be a metonymic occupational name for a producer or seller of salt or an habitational name for a person from the Czech town of Slaný. Notable people with the name include:
Kelm is either a German language topographic or a habitational surname, in the first case denoting a person who lived near a hill or in the second case someone who came from Chełm in eastern Poland or from any of several similar named smaller settlement. Notable people with the surname include:
Schlecht is a German surname belonging to the group of family names based on a personal characteristic, in this case derived from a nickname originally used for a straightforward person. Like the variant Schlicht it arose before the semantic change of s(ch)le(c)ht/s(ch)li(c)ht from the rather positive "straight", "plain", "simple", "well" to present-day "bad", "evil", "wicked" in the 15th century and may also be habitational in origin, stemming from several small settlements with that name .
Notable people with the name include:
Gerth is a German language surname. It stems from a reduced form of the male given name Gerhardt – and may refer to:
Kolker is either a German-language occupational surname for a lime burner or a Jewish habitational name for someone from Kolki in Ukraine. Notable people with the surname include:
Brenneis is a German language occupational surname for a blacksmith and may refer to:
Capano is a variant of the more numerous Italian surname Capuano. It is most prevalent in the southeastern regions of Calabria and Campania and is also to be found among the American, Brazilian and Argentinian Italian diaspora. Notable people with the surname include:
Vorpahl is a Low German dwelling/habitational surname for a person who lived at a boundary marker. Notable people with the name include:
Leuzinger and its diaspora variant Leutzinger is a Swiss German habitational surname denoting a person originally living in the Swiss hamlet of Leuzingen in the former municipality of Netstal in the Canton of Glarus and may refer to:
Horning is a German language surname. Like the related Hörning and Hornung it may either be derived from the term hornung and in this case be used as a nickname for someone with a relationship to the month of February or derived from Middle Low German hornink and then used for a person born out of wedlock or a topographic name referring to the hornlike shape of a property.
Notable people with the surname include:
Brenman is a German and Ashkenazi Jewish surname. As a Yiddish spelling variant of German Brennemann it is probably a variant of the family name Brenner. Notable people with the surname include:
Waldvogel and its Ashkenazic variant Waldfogel is a Swiss German surname from a nickname denoting a carefree, easy-going person and may refer to:
Hammarlund is a Swedish language habitational surname denoting a person originally living near a grove on or near a cliff or crag and may refer to:
Heidelberger is a German language habitational surname denoting a person originally living in any one of several settlements named Heidelberg and may refer to:
Gagel is a German habitational surname for a person from Gagel in the Altmark region of northern Saxony-Anhalt and may refer to:
Schlicht is a German surname belonging to the group of family names based on a personal characteristic, in this case derived from a nickname originally used for a straightforward, artless person. It is the chiefly Low German variant of Schlecht and like it arose before the semantic change of s(ch)le(c)ht/s(ch)li(c)ht from the rather positiv "straight", "plain", "simple", "well" to present-day "bad", "evil", "wicked" in the 15th century and may also be habitational in origin, stemming from several small settlements with that name .
Notable people with the name include:
Skau is a Norwegian and Danish habitational surname from several small places or farmsteads situated in or near a forest. Notable people with the surname include:
Ludorf is a German language habitational surname denoting a person originally living in Ludorf and may refer to:
Spreitzer is a German surname belonging to the group of family names based on a personal characteristic, in this case from a nickname for someone who spread his/her legs when walking. Notable people with the name include:
Berberich is either a habitational surname for a person from a place with the syllable "-ber-" and the ending "-berg" or an occupational name for a "barber" and may refer to:
Approximately 1,476 people bear this surname. Most prevalent in: Germany; Highest density in: Germany.
South German: habitational name from any of several places so named.
Approximately 1,286 people bear this surname. Most prevalent in: United States; Highest density in: France.
German: habitational name from a place so named in Pomerania.