People and fictional characters with the name Temple include:
William Temple may refer to:
John Moore may refer to:
Coulson is both a surname and a given name. Notable people with the name include:
Piers is an old English given name and surname, and has the same origins as Peter. Its meaning is 'rock, stone'.
Lucas is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Langton is a surname. Notable persons with that surname include:
Reynolds is a surname in the English language. Among the earliest recorded use of the surname is from the early 11th century.
Baldwin is an Old Germanic and Anglo-Saxon name. It may either derive from Bealdwine, or the Old German equivalent Baldavin, meaning 'brave, bold friend'. Baldwin is known in Old French as Baudouin and Latin as Balduīnus, from Proto-Germanic *Balþawiniz, "bold friend." In Arabic sources the name is called بالدوين (Bāldwīn).
Stark and Starke are German and English surnames; in the German language stark means "strong" or "powerful". Notable people with the surname include:
Lang is a surname of Germanic origin, closely related to Lange, Laing and Long, all of which mean "tall".
Townsend is a topographic surname of Yorkshire and Norfolk origin, indicating residence at the extremity of a city or burgh Popular variants are Townshend, and Townend.
Potter is an English surname that originally referred to someone who made pottery. It is occasionally used as a given name. People with the name include:
Crawley is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Sumner is a surname. It originates from the English-language word that is spelt, in modern English, summoner, denoting a person who serves a summons. In Geoffrey Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales, one of the characters is a summoner ; a Middle English spelling is Somonour. Other spellings include Sumpner, Somner, and Summoner.
De Neville, later Neville, is an English masculine given name, toponymic surname and the name of several places. All are derived from "new town" in Norman and French word. As a given name, it is chiefly used in the United Kingdom, Canada, Australia, South Africa, and Ireland.