Arundell Surname
Approximately 1,263 people bear this surname
Arundell Surname Definition:
This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Arundel,' a parish in the Diocese of Chichester, Sussex, ten miles from Chichester.
John Arundel, Somerset, 1 Edward III: Kirby's Quest.
William de Arundell, Salop, 1273.
Read More About This SurnameArundell Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 574 | 1:97,070 | 10,302 |
| Australia | 451 | 1:59,857 | 7,258 |
| United States | 101 | 1:3,588,702 | 200,455 |
| Canada | 65 | 1:566,855 | 47,218 |
| Wales | 16 | 1:193,408 | 12,484 |
| Zimbabwe | 13 | 1:1,187,557 | 68,998 |
| New Zealand | 9 | 1:503,147 | 33,029 |
| Thailand | 7 | 1:10,091,192 | 512,203 |
| Northern Ireland | 6 | 1:307,506 | 12,899 |
| Scotland | 6 | 1:892,303 | 28,047 |
| Saint Lucia | 3 | 1:59,594 | 2,472 |
| Germany | 3 | 1:26,835,153 | 452,368 |
| South Africa | 1 | 1:54,177,704 | 343,732 |
| Taiwan | 1 | 1:23,444,746 | 93,622 |
| Singapore | 1 | 1:5,507,703 | 47,049 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 1 | 1:1,363,975 | 22,013 |
| United Arab Emirates | 1 | 1:9,162,273 | 135,437 |
| Portugal | 1 | 1:10,418,241 | 25,048 |
| France | 1 | 1:66,422,722 | 504,397 |
| Brazil | 1 | 1:214,074,332 | 1,693,628 |
| Ireland | 1 | 1:4,708,939 | 29,543 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 6 | 1:738,311 | 21,113 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 352 | 1:69,248 | 7,797 |
| Scotland | 9 | 1:415,913 | 11,811 |
| Wales | 5 | 1:313,683 | 10,604 |
| Guernsey | 1 | 1:32,656 | 2,283 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 23 | 1:2,183,421 | 107,224 |
Arundell (47) may also be a first name.
Arundell Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Arundel,' a parish in the Diocese of Chichester, Sussex, ten miles from Chichester.
John Arundel, Somerset, 1 Edward III: Kirby's Quest.
William de Arundell, Salop, 1273. Hundred Rolls.
John de Arundell, Cornwall, 20 Edward I: Placita de Quo Warranto, temp. Edward I-III.
Roger de Arundell, Somerset, ibid.
Adam de Arondel, Salop, Henry III— Edward I: Testa de Nevill, sive Liber Feodorum, temp. Henry III-Edward I.
Gilbert de Arundell, rector of East Wrotham, Norfolk, 1321: History of Norfolk.
1612. Gregory Arundell and Elizabeth Smithe: Marriage Lic. (London).
1765. Married — William Arundale and Ann Barnes: St. George, Hanover Square.
(English) belonging to Arundel (Sussex), the Domesday Arundel popularly supposed to mean the 'Dell of the (River) Arun’; but Arun is a bogus river-name, and Arundel is perh. for Arndel = Eagle-Dell. [Old English e)arn, eagle + dell]
“Rogerius Arundel” holds a Somersetshire barony of twenty- eight manors in Domesday. No one precisely knows who he was; but the generally received opinion is that he was a kinsman of Roger de Montgomeri: Collinson, in his ‘Somerset,’ even asserts that he was the Earl’s son, and according to another authority, “probably Castellan of Arundel,” from whence he is credited with having derived his name. Like the town, he bore allusive arms; arondelles (swallows or martlets), which are also the bearing of the county of Sussex. A rondelle is the older form of the modern French hirondelle. Thus Rémy Belleau writes in 1585: “Ces arondelles qui vont Et qui sont Du printemps les messagères.”
But it seems certain that Roger de Arundel did not take his name from any place in England, for in the ‘Recherches sur le Domesday,’ we find that the Arundels were a family of very ancient standing in Normandy, and flourished there for nearly two centuries after the Conquest. Eight or nine of the name are found in the Chartulary of Mont St. Michel, and the church of St. Nicolas d’Arundel, in the département of the Arne, is also mentioned. William d’Arundel was Treasurer of the diocese of Lisieux about 1202; and Emma, his daughter, in a deed of gift dated 1259, speaks of the mill of Arundel, near the mouth of the river Guines. Robert de Fontaine (probably her husband) ceded to Henry, Bishop of Bayeux, his fisheries at Arundel. Their castle is believed to have stood near the mill, on the banks of the Guines; but all trace of its site is completely lost, and it is only remembered in the ritournelle of an old ballad still chanted by the young girls of the neighbouring villages as a dance measure. It is the complainte of a peasant, whose ass has been devoured by a wolf, and who thus laments the useful back that bore his flour-sacks: “Échine, povre échine, Plus ne portras farine Au château d'Arundel.”
The tradition of this descent was preserved till Leland’s time by the Cornish Arundells, for he received from one of them the following account (giving the name of another of their Norman castles): “Humfre Arundale told me that he thought that he cam of the Arundales in Base Normandy that were Lordes of Culy Castelle, that now is descendid to one Mounseir de la Fontaine, a French man by Heire General.
“This Arundale gyvith no part of the Armes of great Arundale of Lanheran by S. Columbes. . . . and is caullid Arundale of Trerise by a difference from Arundale of Lanheran.”
But in later times it seems to have utterly disappeared. “Sir John Arundell, the last possessor of Lanherne, told me he could never understand there was any such local place in France as Arundell, though he lived long in that country, and made strict enquiry after it.”—Gilbert's Cornwall.
Roger Arundel’s son Wido, or Guy, held under him Pourton, Dorset (Domesday). His grandson was another Roger, and the barony passed through a female heir to Gerbert de Percy in 1165.—Hutching's Dorset. John Arundel is mentioned, temp. Henry I., and Ralph Arundel, 15 Stephen. It must have been the latter, who, according to Sir John Gilbert, about the middle of the twelfth century, made the match with the heiress of Trembleth that first transplanted the family into Cornwall. Their principal seat was at Lanherne, acquired, in the reign of Henry III., through an heiress of the Pincernas or Butlers: Trerice, the home of a younger branch, came to them, temp. Edward III. There were also Arundels of Tolverne and of Trevithic, as well as in Devonshire, where the name is kept by Morchard-Arundel, Hempston-Arundel, and Yewton- Arundel, “the land that hath had longest continuance in that name within this county.” There is also a Somersetshire manor—Samford-Arundel, named from them. But their home was in Cornwall, where, says Carew, “the country people entitle them ‘the Great Arundells,’ and greatest for love, living, and respect in the country heretofore they were.” The last of the old Lanherne stock, Sir John, died in 1701, having settled his estates on his daughter’s son, Richard Billinge, with the condition that he should take the name and arms of Arundell. Richard had an only daughter and heir, who married Henry, seventh Lord Arundell of Wardour, and brought him the whole property, most of which was sold by their son, “thus severing the very ancient connexion of his family with the county of Cornwall.”
Lord Arundell represented a younger branch that had been seated in Wiltshire since 1527. “The first of the Arundells who established himself in Wilts,” says Sir Richard Hoare, “was Sir Thomas, second son of Sir John Arundell of Lanheme, by the Lady Elizabeth Grey, daughter of Thomas, second Marquess of Dorset, to whom his father, 18 Henry VIII., granted lands in Somerset and Dorset (amongst them Osmond, one of the manors granted by the Conqueror to Roger Arundel).” In 1547 he purchased of Sir Fulke Greville the Castle of Wardour, where the family have remained seated to the present day. His wife, Margaret Howard, was the sister of Henry VIII.’s fifth Queen; and, as the co-heir of her father, Lord Edmund, third son of Thomas Duke of Norfolk, “brought an ample estate to the family.” But, like most of those that owned any connection with Royal blood, on whom a curious fatality seemed to rest, he died on the scaffold, executed in 1552 with Sir Michael Stanhope, Sir Ralph Vane, and Sir Miles Partridge, for complicity in the Duke of Somerset’s real or supposed plot against John Dudley Duke of Northumberland. They had been staunch adherents of the Protector, and two of them were connected with him by family ties (Sir Michael was the brother, and Sir Thomas the half-brother of his Duchess): but all died protesting their innocence with their last breath, and Vane added that “his blood would make Northumberland’s pillow uneasy.”
Thomas, the grandson and namesake of this “famous knight,” as he is styled on the monument in Tisbury Church, was the first Lord Arundell of Wardour.
Towards the end of the sixteenth century, this Thomas, then quite a young man, went over to Germany, entered the Imperial army as a volunteer, and served a campaign in Hungary against the Turks, “bearing himself manfully in the field.” At the assault of the Water Tower at Gran, he took one of the enemy’s standards with his own hand, and for this and other services was created a Count of the Holy Roman Empire by Rodolph II. in 1595. The Emperor, with whom he was high in favour, further made him several offers of employment, but young Arundell would not be detained abroad, and returned home the following year. He found his countrymen little disposed to acknowledge his new honours, and a warm dispute arose among the peers as to whether he should be allowed place and precedence, or any other privilege of rank. Queen Elizabeth on being appealed to, at once decided against him. She maintained there was a close tie of affection between the prince and subject, and that as chaste wives should have no glances but for their own spouses, so should faithful servants keep their eyes at home, and not gaze upon foreign crowns: and that she, for her part, did not care her sheep should wear a stranger’s mark, nor dance after the whistle of every foreigner. She consequently wrote herself to the Emperor, announcing that she had forbidden her subjects to give either place or precedence to the new- made Count. King James, however, created him Baron of Wardour two years after his accession. The second lord was the husband of Lady Blanche Somerset, daughter of the Earl of Worcester, the gallant lady who with a mere handful of followers, held Wardour Castle for the King during nine days against the rebel army under Hungerford and Ludlow. “Not less valiant was the Lady Arundel, who in the year 1643, with only twenty-five men, made good this Castle for a week against thirteen hundred of the Parliament forces, from whom (contrary to the Articles of Surrender), the Castle and Parks received great damage.”—Camden. She only consented to yield it at last on the promise of honourable terms, but they were not observed, and when Lord Arundell returned to find his house occupied by the enemy, he ordered a mine to be sprung under it—thus dislodging them by the destruction of his own castle, a fine building which had been decorated by his father at a great expense. But this was far from being the only sacrifice he made to the Royal cause, which indeed cost him the better part of his fortune. He commanded a regiment of horse, raised at his sole charge, in the King’s army: and died of a wound he received in the battle of Lansdown, where his thigh was broken by a brace of pistol bullets. Wardour Castle was never rebuilt till the middle of the last century.
One of the Arundells of Trerice Sir John Arundel, Sheriff of Cornwall in 1471, “being forewarned that he would be slain on the sands, forsook his house at Elford, as too maritime, and removed to Trerice, his more inland habitation in the same county; but he did not escape his fate, for being Sheriff of Cornwall in that year, and the Earl of Oxford surprising Mount Michael for the house of Lancaster, he had the king’s commands, by his office, to endeavour the reducing of it, and lost his life in a skirmish on the sands thereabouts.” —Carew's Survey of Cornwall. commanded the Royal garrison of Pendennis Castle, and though then nearly fourscore years old, and besieged both by sea and land, held out bravely till 1646. Four of his sons were in the Royal army, two of whom lost their lives in the service: and the elder, Richard, was created Baron Arundell of Trerice after the Restoration. This barony expired with the fourth lord in 1773.
Roger de A., who took his name from the Sussex town, was a tenant-in-chief at the making of Domesd., and ancestor of the Lords A., of Wardour. Dudg. Bar. ii, 422. Kelham, 157.
Local From a town in Sussex, England, on the river Arun; a corruption of Arundale—"the dale on the Arun."
A location name in Sussex.
Arundell: not in Leland. In Domesday, Roger Arundell held a barony of twenty-eight manors. Name not taken from Arundel in Sussex.
Amongst the ancient and distinguished Cornish names now scantily found in the county are those of Arundel and Bellot.
Arundell Demographics
Average Arundell Salary in
United States
$45,891 USD
Per year
Average Salary in
United States
$43,149 USD
Per year
View the highest/lowest earning families in The United States
Arundell Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Arundell Come From? nationality or country of origin
The last name Arundell is found in England more than any other country or territory. It may also occur as a variant:. Click here for other possible spellings of this name.
How Common Is The Last Name Arundell? popularity and diffusion
This surname is the 300,866th most frequently occurring last name throughout the world It is held by approximately 1 in 5,770,028 people. The last name is predominantly found in Europe, where 48 percent of Arundell are found; 48 percent are found in Northern Europe and 48 percent are found in British Isles. Arundell is also the 1,467,136th most commonly held first name worldwide, borne by 47 people.
The surname Arundell is most frequent in England, where it is held by 574 people, or 1 in 97,070. In England it is mostly concentrated in: Greater London, where 10 percent are found, Kent, where 7 percent are found and Essex, where 7 percent are found. Other than England this surname occurs in 20 countries. It is also common in Australia, where 36 percent are found and The United States, where 8 percent are found.
Arundell Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The frequency of Arundell has changed through the years. In England the number of people bearing the Arundell last name expanded 163 percent between 1881 and 2014; in The United States it expanded 439 percent between 1880 and 2014; in Wales it expanded 320 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Scotland it decreased 33 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it decreased 83 percent between 1901 and 2014.
Arundell Last Name Statistics demography
The religious adherence of those bearing the last name is principally Catholic (83%) in Ireland.
In The United States those bearing the Arundell surname are 26.56% more likely to be registered with the Republican Party than the national average, with 73.33% registered with the party.
The amount Arundell earn in different countries varies marginally. In United States they earn 6.35% more than the national average, earning $45,891 USD per year and in Canada they earn 2.05% more than the national average, earning $50,702 CAD per year.
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Footnotes
- Surnames are taken as the first part of an person's inherited family name, caste, clan name or in some cases patronymic
- Descriptions may contain details on the name's etymology, origin, ethnicity and history. They are largely reproduced from 3rd party sources; diligence is advised on accepting their validity - more information
- Name distribution statistics are generated from a global database of over 4 billion people - more information
- Heatmap: Dark red means there is a higher occurrence of the name, transitioning to light yellow signifies a progressively lower occurrence. Clicking on selected countries will show mapping at a regional level
- Rank: Name are ranked by incidence using the ordinal ranking method; the name that occurs the most is assigned a rank of 1; name that occur less frequently receive an incremented rank; if two or more name occur the same number of times they are assigned the same rank and successive rank is incremented by the total preceeding names
- Ethnic group cannot necessarily be determined by geographic occurrence
- Similar: Names listed in the "Similar" section are phonetically similar and may not have any relation to Arundell
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