Burdett Surname

42,838th
Most Common
surname in the World

Approximately 12,151 people bear this surname

Most prevalent in:
United States
Highest density in:
England

Burdett Surname Definition:

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Burdet.' Invariably without prefix, with one exception. But this one instance is valuable. Probably, as Hugh and Robert Burdet occur in Domesday, the family hail from some spot in Normandy, and 'came in with the Conqueror.

Read More About This Surname

Burdett Surname Distribution Map

PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States5,4421:66,6047,769
England4,1371:13,4681,986
Australia1,0121:26,6763,631
Canada7771:47,4205,782
New Zealand2411:18,7903,301
South Africa1411:384,23934,295
Wales1061:29,1942,998
Scotland521:102,9586,964
Ecuador361:441,82910,328
Ireland351:134,5416,387
Zimbabwe251:617,53046,943
Spain191:2,460,63358,585
Thailand171:4,155,197336,594
Singapore131:423,66918,211
Philippines91:11,248,691221,039
Northern Ireland71:263,57711,625
France71:9,488,960336,266
Brazil71:30,582,047441,004
Honduras71:1,259,4925,127
Netherlands61:2,814,529101,176
Malaysia51:5,898,845196,803
Germany51:16,101,092397,699
Malawi41:4,279,77724,060
United Arab Emirates41:2,290,56860,372
Hong Kong41:1,833,8716,220
Israel31:2,852,545113,505
Sweden31:3,282,252190,759
Serbia21:3,572,47432,645
China21:683,660,78330,601
Italy21:30,578,344160,757
Switzerland21:4,106,458122,336
Japan21:63,922,14662,827
Argentina21:21,371,707253,176
Ghana11:27,020,69223,742
Chile11:17,616,47493,597
Zambia11:15,849,92253,989
Estonia11:1,321,80440,178
Vietnam11:92,646,0548,382
Afghanistan11:32,153,18360,828
Turkey11:77,821,422191,047
Taiwan11:23,444,74693,622
Jersey11:99,2026,620
Russia11:144,123,056881,408
Qatar11:2,357,99976,403
Pakistan11:178,643,885213,220
Mexico11:124,126,205103,776
Maldives11:404,1727,269
Madagascar11:23,649,8379,420
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Ireland161:276,86711,455
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
England2,0941:11,6411,774
Wales111:142,5835,610
Scotland41:935,80421,348
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States2,3641:21,2432,670

Burdett (244) may also be a first name.

Burdett Surname Meaning

From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Burdet.' Invariably without prefix, with one exception. But this one instance is valuable. Probably, as Hugh and Robert Burdet occur in Domesday, the family hail from some spot in Normandy, and 'came in with the Conqueror.'

Nicholas Burdet, Lincolnshire, Henry III-Edward I: Testa de Nevill, sive Liber Feodorum, temp. Henry III-Edward I.

Peter Burdet, Leicestershire, ibid.

John de Burdet, Isle of 'Gerneseye,' 20 Edward I: Placita de Quo Warranto, temp. Edward I-III.

Almeric Burdet, Lincolnshire, ibid.

William Burdet, Leicestershire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.

Stephen Burdet, Lincolnshire, ibid.

Nicholaus Burdet, franktllyn, 1379: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.

Gilbertus Burdet, faber, 1379: ibid.

Clement Burdett, or Burditt, 1536: Register of the University of Oxford.

1788. Samuell Burditt and Rebecca Burditt: St. George, Hanover Square.

1804. Samuel Burdett and Charlotte Burdett: ibid.

A Dictionary of English and Welsh Surnames (1896) by Charles Wareing Endell Bardsley

(Anglo-French-Teut.) the French Bourdet, Bordet = 1 the O.L.Ger. pers. name Bord- = Shield the French diminutive suff. -et. [O.L.Ger. bord, lit. ‘board,' fig.

'shield'] 2 belonging to Bourdet, Bordet-a Small Farm, Cottage [Old French horde, Low Latin borda, of the same Teutonic orig. as the foregoing + the French diminutive suff. -et] Burdet occurs in the copies of the Roll of Battle Abbey.

William Burdet.—Hundred Rolls

Surnames of the United Kingdom (1912) by Henry Harrison

(English, French) Descendant of Bordet (little shield); dweller near the border; dweller on a rented farm,

Dictionary of American Family Names (1956) by Elsdon Coles Smith

(English) Descendant of little Borda (shield); one who came from Bourdic, the name of two places in France.

Dictionary of American Family Names (1956) by Elsdon Coles Smith

Bourdet on the Dives Roll. Two brothers of this name came to England at the Conquest, Robert and Hugh, who both appear in Domesday as sub-tenants in Leicestershire, where Hugh held considerable estates of the Countess Judith. The wife and son of Robert are also on the list of land-owners. “The first of this name,” says Dugdale, “of whom I have found mention is Robert Burdet, one of the witnesses of that notable Charter made by Geoffrey de Wirce to the monastery of St. Nicholas at Angiers, which beareth date at Monks Kirby, in Warwickshire, in the twelfth year of King William the Conqueror’s reign. Whether the said Robert was paternal ancestor to those of this family of whom I am to speak, I cannot certainly affirm; but the next that I meet with, viz. William, who flourisht in Henry II.’s time, undoubtedly was.” He held of the Earl of Warwick, and founded Ancote Priory in 1159. “The said William Burdet being both a valiant and devout man, made a journey to the Holy Land for subduing of the Infidells in those parts; and his Steward, whilst he was thus absent, solicited the Chastitie of his Ladye, who resisted these his uncivil attempts with much scorn; whereupon he grew so full of envie towards her, that so soon as he had advertisement of his Master’s arrivall again in England, he went to meet him, and to shadow his own foul crime, complained to him of her looseness with others, which false accusation so enraged her husband, that when he came home, and that she approacht to receive him with joyful embraces, he forthwith mortally stab’d her; and to expiate this same unhappy Act, after he understood it, he built this Monastery.” She was, it is said, buried in Seckington Church, where her monument remained in Dugdale’s time, “a very ancient thynge, and her statue excellently cut out of free stone.” If, however, it in reality represents the murdered wife of the crusader, it must have been placed there long after her demise, for Seckington was not acquired by the Burdetts till the time of her great great grandson.

She left two sons: Hugh, whose line expired in the next generation, and Richard, who died in 1223, and was the father of Sir William Burdett, a commissioner for assessing the tillage upon all the King’s demesnes in Warwick and Leicestershire in 1251. “He bore for his Armes az. two barrs or, within the compass whereof the Cressant and Star are put, as a badge of his service in the Holy Land.” Sir William had four sons: 1. Richard, of Loseby and Newton Burdett in Leicestershire; 2. Robert, died s. p.; 3. William, of Shepey and Cosby; and 4. Hugh, married to Elizabeth Tuchet, the ancestor of the existing family. The two elder branches both died out during the reign of Edward III. Richard had a son, slain at Dundee in 1311 during the Scottish wars, whose grand-daughter Elizabeth carried Loseby to the Ashbys; and William’s last heir male died in 1338. Thus, of the four brothers, the posterity of Hugh alone endured.

His successor, Sir Robert, found a richly-dowered bride in Elizabeth, daughter and sole heiress of Sir Gerard de Camville, who brought him, with Arewe, &c., Seckington, in Warwickshire, where he took up his abode. It passed to their second son, Sir Gerard; while the elder brother held Huncote, also in the right of his mother; but in this case, again, the senior line soon collapsed, and its possessions were transferred through an only daughter to Sir Humphrey Stafford in 1400.

Of the surviving younger branch, being third in descent from Sir Gerard Burdett of Seckington, was Sir Nicholas, Great Butler of Normandy, who in 1427 “had a command under the Duke of Somerset, and laid waste the towns on the coast of Brittany.” He was slain in that country, at the battle of Pontoise, in 1439, leaving by his wife Joan Bruyn (who brought him Bramcote in Warwickshire) a son named Thomas. “This Thomas,” says Dugdale, “having in 17 Ed. IV. incurred the King’s displeasure for his good affection to the Duke of Clarence, so strict were the eyes and ears that were set over him, that an advantage was soon taken to cut off his Head; for, hearing that the King had killed a white Buck in his Parke at Arewe” (Arrow), “which Buck he set much store by, passionately wishing the Hornes in his Belly that moved the King so to do: being arraigned and convicted of high Treason for these Words, upon inference made that the meaning was mischievous to the King himself, he lost his life for the same, his Body being buried in the Chapell of All Saints within the Grey Friers Church near Newgate, with this memoriall in their Martyrologie, viz. that he was valens Armiger Dominii Georgii Ducis Clarenciæ.” Stowe, in his Annals, states that poor Thomas was attainted “for Poysoning, Sorcery, and Inchantment; which agreeth with what Mr. Trussel saith, that 17 Ed. IV. Richard Duke of Gloucester, in order to attaining the Crown after his Brother Ed. IV., began to withdraw the King’s Affections from his Brother George Duke of Clarence, and to that purpose whispered unto him that some of Clarence’s followers were Sorcerers and Necromancers.” It seems plain that the heedless words “spoken and so wrested were but the colour of his death, for the true cause was the hard conceit and opinion which the King had of him, for that he had ever been a faithful friend and true counsellor to George Duke of Clarence his brother, between whom there had been bitter enmity.”—Burton. He was beheaded at Tyburn, declaring his innocence with these parting words, “Ecce morior, cum nihil horum fecerim;” and “patiently and cheerfully took his death, affirming that he had a bird in his bosom (his own good conscience) that sung comfort to him.”

He was twice married, and had a son by each wife; but it was again through the younger, Sir John, who was restored in blood in 1510, that the Succession was carried on. “The said Thomas (by licence from the Crown) had alienated his lands to his younger son, of which he became afterwards so sensible, that, as he was drawn from the Tower to the place of his execution, espying his eldest son in Westcheap, over against St. Thomas Beckett’s hospital, he caused himself to be staid, and then asked his said son forgiveness, and acknowledging the wrong he had done him, concluded that to be the cause of God’s vengeance against him.”—W. Betham. The mother of this first-born son had been divorced from him “for nearness of kindred” in 1464. He contested the property with his younger brother, and obtained Arrow and some other lands, which passed through his daughter Anne to the Conways. But on the accession of Henry VIII., Sir John, finding himself “in no small favour” at Court, petitioned the King for their restoration; and a tedious succession of costly lawsuits ensued, which long out-lasted his own life. At length they were closed by a division of the disputed property. The next heir, Thomas, had a bitter quarrel with Thomas Cockayne of Poley, near Polesworth, “who so irritated him that Burdett killed him in Polesworth churchyard.” Sixth in descent from him was another Thomas, who received a baronetcy in 1618. His wife, Jane Fraunceys, brought him Formark, in Derbyshire, since the chief residence of the family, where her son, Sir Francis, built and endowed a church. She was an accomplished woman, the correspondent of some of the most eminent divines of the day: “particularly the famous Archbishop Sheldon, who found an agreeable sanctuary at Bramcote during the exile of King Charles II.” Sir Robert, the fourth baronet, married the heiress of Sir Charles Sedley of Nuthall, Notts., and lost both his sons in early life. The elder, Sedley, who had inherited a large fortune from his mother, was drowned with young Lord Montague in 1793, in a fool-hardy attempt to shoot the falls of the Rhine at Laufenberg.—(See Browne.) Francis, the younger, was the father of the well-known Sir Francis Burdett, “the pride of Westminster, and England’s glory,” who succeeded his grandfather in 1797, and for many years represented Westminster and Middlesex in Parliament. He used to say that he had spent ₤90,000 on his Middlesex elections alone. As a politician he was intrepid, zealous, and uncompromising—not to say violent. “In 1809 he revived the question of Parliamentary Reform. Only fifteen members supported his motion; and a reference to the House of Commons in a pamphlet which he subsequently published, as ‘a part of our fellow-subjects collected together by means which it is not necessary to describe,’ was met by his committal to the Tower, where he remained till the prorogation of Parliament.” —Green. He married Sophia, daughter of the rich banker, Mr. Coutts, by whom he had one son, Sir Robert, who died unmarried, and five daughters. The youngest, Angela, inherited her grandfather’s great fortune under the will of his widow, Harriet (afterwards Duchess of St. Albans), and added the name of Coutts to her own. Thirty-four years afterwards—in 1871—she was created Baroness Burdett Coutts, of Highgate and Brookfield, in Middlesex, in recognition of the princely beneficence and public spirit with which she dispensed her wealth. Her cousin, Sir Francis, seventh baronet, now represents, as head of the house, the ancient and honourable name that has been upheld, in unbroken male succession, from the time of the Conquest to our own.

But there is yet another existing line, which branched off from the parent stock at so early a period that the date is obliterated. Wotton commences its pedigree with John Burdet of Hasilthorpe, in Lincolnshire, whose posterity removed to Yorkshire. His descendant in the fourteenth generation, Francis Burdett of Burthwaite, in that county, received a baronetcy from Charles II. in 1665. Their arms are differenced with a band Gules bearing three martlets Or.

The Bordets, or Burdetts, were Barons of Cuilly in Normandy. For some account of the family in their native Duchy, see Cuilly.

The Battle Abbey Roll (1889) by Catherine Lucy Wilhelmina Powlett

Hugh Rurdet, and Robert Burdet, occur as tenants in Domesd. The former, who was ancestor of the baronets of Bramcote, was settled in co. Leicester. The baronets of Burthwaite seem to be of another family, and bear different arms. The origin of the name is unknown; that it is not local is shown by the non-existence of the territorial Be in the earliest records.

Patronymica Britannica (1860) by Mark Antony Lower

A little bird, ett signifying young, small, tender.

An Etymological Dictionary of Family and Christian Names (1857) by William Arthur

This family descends from the Bordets, Lords of Cuilly, Normandy, of whom Robert Bordet I., with his son Robert II., witnessed a charter of the Count of Anjou before the Norman Conquest. Robert II. and his brother Hugh were seated in England at the Conquest. From the former descended the house of De Cuilly (see Colley-Wellesley), and from the latter the Burdetts Baronets and Baroness Burdett-Coutts.

The Norman People (1874)

From the French, Bourdet; a personal name Burdet in Roll of Battell Abbey and in the Domesday Book, William Burdet in Rotuli de Oblatis et Finibus, King John

British Family Names: Their Origin and Meaning (1903) by Henry Barber

A Norman name: From the Domesday Book, Burdet .

British Family Names (1894) by Henry Barber

Burdett: is from Bourdet.

Family Names And Their Story (1913) by Sabine Baring-Gould

Burdett Last Name Facts

Where Does The Last Name Burdett Come From? nationality or country of origin

The last name Burdett occurs most in The United States. It may be found in the variant forms:. For other potential spellings of this surname click here.

How Common Is The Last Name Burdett? popularity and diffusion

This surname is the 42,838th most frequent surname world-wide. It is borne by approximately 1 in 599,749 people. Burdett occurs predominantly in The Americas, where 37 percent of Burdett live; 37 percent live in North America and 37 percent live in Anglo-North America. It is also the 571,890th most prevalent forename internationally, borne by 244 people.

It is most frequently held in The United States, where it is borne by 5,442 people, or 1 in 66,604. In The United States it is primarily found in: Texas, where 13 percent reside, Florida, where 5 percent reside and Utah, where 4 percent reside. Other than The United States this last name is found in 47 countries. It also occurs in England, where 34 percent reside and Australia, where 8 percent reside.

Burdett Family Population Trend historical fluctuation

The occurrence of Burdett has changed through the years. In The United States the number of people bearing the Burdett last name increased 230 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it increased 198 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Wales it increased 964 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Scotland it increased 1,300 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it increased 219 percent between 1901 and 2014.

Burdett Last Name Statistics demography

The religious devotion of those carrying the surname is predominantly Anglican (88%) in Ireland.

In The United States those holding the Burdett surname are 19.03% more likely to be registered with the Republican Party than The US average, with 65.8% registered to vote for the political party.

The amount Burdett earn in different countries varies significantly. In South Africa they earn 18.43% less than the national average, earning R 193,836 per year; in United States they earn 6.66% more than the national average, earning $46,024 USD per year and in Canada they earn 1.18% less than the national average, earning $49,097 CAD per year.

Phonetically Similar Names

SurnameSimilarityWorldwide IncidencePrevalency
Burdette9316,636/
Bourdett93166/
Burddett932/
Burrdett932/
Baurdett932/
Burdetts931/
Burdgett931/
Burdetth931/
Burdeett930/
Burdiett930/
Burdet922,120/
Bourdette881,416/
Bourdetth881/
Burrdette881/
Bourdet865,379/
Burditt861,999/
Bordett8640/
Burdete8610/
Burdeth869/
Vurdett862/
Burdets861/
Baurdet861/
Burdiet860/
Burdeet860/
Burde832,746/
Bourdeth8077/
Burditte8035/
Burrditt801/
Burddete801/
Bourdete801/
Vurdette801/
Buirditt800/
Bordet776,291/
Burdge772,508/
Burdea77821/
Burdey77436/
Burder77391/
Bourde77292/
Burdie77218/
Burdej77184/
Burdei77142/
Burdes7779/
Burdeţ7758/
Burdeu7750/
Burdit777/
Burdee777/
Burded776/
Bhurde775/
Baurde772/
Burdez772/
Burdhe771/
Burhde771/
Beurde771/
Burdeľ771/
Burdje770/
Burdess71623/
Bourdes71406/
Bourdie71207/
Bourdeu71195/
Burdeha71107/
Butrdee71105/
Bourdit7117/
Bourdeh7114/
Bourdey7112/
Bourdje719/
Bordiet717/
Bourdez715/
Vurditt714/
Bourder714/
Burdeas712/
Bourdée712/
Bourdee712/
Burtdee712/
Burdiht711/
Bourdge711/
Bourdei711/
Baurdes711/
Burddee711/
Burdith710/
Burdite710/
Burrdes710/
Burderr710/
Beurder710/
Baurder710/
Borde6728,170/
Burda6721,871/
Burdi677,452/
Burdy673,250/
Bourdess67120/
Bourdiot6714/
Bourdyot6712/
Bürde679/
Buttrdee677/
Bourdoit676/
Burdj672/
Burdaite672/
Burdeová671/
Bourdied671/
Burdá671/
Burdé671/
Burdaitė671/

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Burdett Reference & Research

Burdett One-name Study - A profile of the Burdett surname with contact details for a researcher who collects any information pertaining to it.

Burkett DNA Website - A web page dedicated to the genetic research of those who bear the surname and its variants.

Burditt FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.

Burkett FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.

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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 Burdett
  • To find out more about this surname's family history, lookup records on Family​Search, My​Heritage, FindMyPast and Ancestry. Further information may be obtained by DNA analysis