Cuming Surname

208,031st
Most Common
surname in the World

Approximately 1,989 people bear this surname

Most prevalent in:
Australia
Highest density in:
Jersey

Cuming Surname Definition:

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'de Comines'. This is the customary Norman derivation. I find no positive evidence in favour of the view. William Cumine, Lord Chancellor of Scotland, temp. David I, is said to have laid the foundation of what became one of the most influential houses in Scotland (Lower's Patronymica Britannica).

Read More About This Surname

Cuming Surname Distribution Map

PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Australia7451:36,2364,763
England4501:123,81812,430
United States2301:1,575,908106,190
Canada2111:174,62417,463
New Zealand1621:27,9534,881
Philippines1001:1,012,38286,556
Jersey191:5,2211,083
Northern Ireland131:141,9267,751
Scotland131:411,83217,291
Indonesia131:10,173,015372,576
Wales71:442,07621,198
South Africa61:9,029,617189,736
Mexico41:31,031,55163,627
Italy21:30,578,344160,757
Chile21:8,808,23765,417
Germany21:40,252,730481,636
Ireland11:4,708,93929,543
Brazil11:214,074,3321,693,628
France11:66,422,722504,397
Thailand11:70,638,3451,175,915
Tanzania11:52,941,613123,716
Spain11:46,752,036156,870
India11:767,065,3821,851,717
Norway11:5,142,286129,201
Nicaragua11:6,021,0908,768
Isle of Man11:85,8224,091
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Ireland1011:43,8603,889
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
England3031:80,4478,644
Scotland451:83,1834,503
Wales71:224,0598,079
Jersey61:8,6471,503
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States3131:160,44314,661

Cuming (70) may also be a first name.

Cuming Surname Meaning

From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'de Comines'. This is the customary Norman derivation. I find no positive evidence in favour of the view. William Cumine, Lord Chancellor of Scotland, temp. David I, is said to have laid the foundation of what became one of the most influential houses in Scotland (Lower's Patronymica Britannica). Whatever be the origin, all the forms here given are variants of the surname Comyn.

Admund le Comyn, Norfolk, 14 Edward II: History of Norfolk.

Florentina Comin, Oxfordshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.

Peter Comyn, Wiltshire, ibid.

Stephen Comyng, Essex, ibid.

Thomas Comyn, Gloucestershire, ibid.

Alexander Comyn, Oxfordshire, 20 Edward I: Placita de Quo Warranto, temp. Edward I-III.

David Comyn, Northumberland, Henry III-Edward I: Testa de Nevill, sive Liber Feodorum, temp. Henry III-Edward I.

William Cumyn, Wiltshire, ibid.

1642. Baptised — Sarah, d. Christopher Cummins: St. James, Clerkenwell.

1698. Robert Comins and Mary Henley: Marriage Lic. (London).

1708. John Comyns and Elizabeth Court, hope: ibid.

1764. Married — Thomas Hendy and Mary Comming: St. George, Hanover Square.

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

The once powerful family of Comyn or Cumyn are believed to have come from the town of Comines near Lille on the frontier between France and Belgium, though there is no positive evidence in favor of this view. The name is always written without 'de' in early Scots records. Andrew of Wyntoun's account of the origin of the name is quaint and amusing if not trustworthy. He tells us that of

", thre breber of Normondy,

Faire joung men and rycht ioly,

In Scotland baid be joungest brober,

William wes his proper name

Thus duelt he with be King Williame,

The quhilk saw him a faire persoune;

Forthy in gret effectioun

The king ban had bis, ilk manStolen from Fore-bears

For vertu he saw in him ban,

He maid him, for he wes stark and sture,

Kepare of his chalmer dure

Na langage couth he speke clerely,

Bot his avne langage of Normundy;

Neuerbeles jit quhen bat he

Wald opin be dure to mak entre,

'Cum III, cum III,' ban wald he say,

As he herd ober bid perfay

Be bis oiss bai callit him ben

William Cumyn with all men."

Wyntoun, book VIII, c. cxxxix

The first of the name connected with Scotland is Willelmus Comyn, a churchman, chancellor to David I. He was promoted to the bishopric of Durham by the Empress Matilda, but had many controversies with his clergy. Later he was poisoned by some of their number who mixed poison with the wine of the Sacrament and give it to him to drink. Richard Cumyn, second of the name in Scotland, made a gift of the church of Lyntun-ruderic (Linton-Roderick) to the Abbey of Kelso for the weal of the souls of Earl Henry (d. 1152) and his own son, John (Kelso, 274). He also witnessed charters by William the Lion after 1165 (REM., I, 2). By his marriage with Hextilda, granddaughter of Donald Bane, king of Scots, he had a son, William, who became chancellor and great justiciary of Scotland. William married Marjory, daughter and heiress of Fergus, the last Celtic earl of Buchan between 1211—24, and in right of his wife became earl of Buchan. Through other fortunate marriages the family "obtained, for a time, the earldoms of Angus and Athole, so that, by the middle of the 13th century, there were in Scotland 4 earls, 1 lord, and 32 belted knights of the name of Comyn. Within seventy years afterwards this great house was so utterly overthrown that, in the words of a contemporary chronicle, 'there was no memorial left of it in the land save the orisons of the monks of Deer' (founded as a Cistercian monastery by William Comyn, earl of Buchan, in 1219)" (Chambers's Encyclopedia, s. v. Comyn). Simon Comyn, a native of Coldingham, had letters of denisation in England, 1463 (Bain, IV, 1336).

In the time of Gilbert Cumin, lord of the lands of Glenchearnach, it is said that many of the oppressed people from neighboring districts sought his protection. These he adopted as clansmen by a form of baptism using the stone hen-trough which stood near the casde-door. Cumins so created were called Cuminichclach-nan-cearc, or 'Cumins of the hen-trough' to distinguish them from the Cumins of blue blood.

A Gaelic rhyme anent the Cummings runs:

Fhad's bhios maide anns a' choill

Cha bhi Cuimearuich gun fhoill

(So long as there is a stick in the wood

There will not be a Cumming without treachery.)

Which the Cummings have rendered:

Fhad's bhios maide anns a' choill

Cha bhi foill an Cuimeanach

So long as there is a stick in the wood

There will not be treachery in a Cumming.)

(Wardlaw, p. 68n.).

The Surnames of Scotland (1946) by George Fraser Black (1866-1948)

CUMMING, Cummings, Cuming, Cumine, Cummine: The once powerful family of Comyn or Cumyn are believed to have come from the town of Comines near Lille on the frontier between France and Belgium, though there is no positive evidence in favor of this view. The name is always written without 'de' in early Scots records. Andrew of Wyntoun's account of the origin of the name is quaint and amusing if not trustworthy. He tells us that of

", thre breber of Normondy,

Faire joung men and rycht ioly,

In Scotland baid be joungest brober,

William wes his proper name

Thus duelt he with be King Williame,

The quhilk saw him a faire persoune;

Forthy in gret effectioun

The king ban had bis, ilk man

For vertu he saw in him ban,

He maid him, for he wes stark and sture,

Kepare of his chalmer dure

Na langage couth he speke clerely,

Bot his avne langage of Normundy;

Neuerbeles jit quhen bat he

Wald opin be dure to mak entre,

'Cum III, cum III,' ban wald he say,

As he herd ober bid perfay

Be bis oiss bai callit him ben

William Cumyn with all men."

Wyntoun, book VIII, c. cxxxix

The first of the name connected with Scotland is Willelmus Comyn, a churchman, chancellor to David I. He was promoted to the bishopric of Durham by the Empress Matilda, but had many controversies with his clergy. Later he was poisoned by some of their number who mixed poison with the wine of the Sacrament and give it to him to drink. Richard Cumyn, second of the name in Scotland, made a gift of the church of Lyntun-ruderic (Linton-Roderick) to the Abbey of Kelso for the weal of the souls of Earl Henry (d. 1152) and his own son, John (Kelso, 274). He also witnessed charters by William the Lion after 1165 (REM., I, 2). By his marriage with Hextilda, granddaughter of Donald Bane, king of Scots, he had a son, William, who became chancellor and great justiciary of Scotland. William married Marjory, daughter and heiress of Fergus, the last Celtic earl of Buchan between 1211—24, and in right of his wife became earl of Buchan. Through other fortunate marriages the family "obtained, for a time, the earldoms of Angus and Athole, so that, by the middle of the 13th century, there were in Scotland 4 earls, 1 lord, and 32 belted knights of the name of Comyn. Within seventy years afterwards this great house was so utterly overthrown that, in the words of a contemporary chronicle, 'there was no memorial left of it in the land save the orisons of the monks of Deer' (founded as a Cistercian monastery by William Comyn, earl of Buchan, in 1219)" (Chambers's Encyclopedia, s. v. Comyn). Simon Comyn, a native of Coldingham, had letters of denisation in England, 1463 (Bain, IV, 1336).

In the time of Gilbert Cumin, lord of the lands of Glenchearnach, it is said that many of the oppressed people from neighboring districts sought his protection. These he adopted as clansmen by a form of baptism using the stone hen-trough which stood near the casde-door. Cumins so created were called Cuminichclach-nan-cearc, or 'Cumins of the hen-trough' to distinguish them from the Cumins of blue blood.

A Gaelic rhyme anent the Cummings runs:

Fhad's bhios maide anns a' choill

Cha bhi Cuimearuich gun fhoill

(So long as there is a stick in the wood

There will not be a Cumming without treachery.)

Which the Cummings have rendered:

Fhad's bhios maide anns a' choill

Cha bhi foill an Cuimeanach

So long as there is a stick in the wood

There will not be treachery in a Cumming.)

(Wardlaw, p. 68n.).

The Surnames of Scotland (1946) by George Fraser Black (1866-1948)

This ancient family claim descent from the great house of Comines in France. They seem to have come into Britain at the Conquest, though they do not appear eo nomine in Domesd. Holinshed's list shows the name of Comin, and Leland's that of Comyn. According to the Scotch genealogists, Robert Cumine was earl of Northumberland by gift of the Conqueror, and acted vigorously against the Saxon insurgents. His descendant, William C. was lord-chancellor of Scotland temp, king David I., who ascended the throne in 1124, and he laid the foundation of what became one of the most influential and wealthy houses in Scotland. Courthope's Debrett. Other authorities claim for the family a Celtic original, chiefly, it would appear, on the strength of there having been an abbot of Icolmkill in the VI. cent. called Cummine, and another in the VII. named Comineas Albus. Dixon.

Patronymica Britannica (1860) by Mark Antony Lower

A corruption of Comeyn, anciently de Comminges, from Comminges in France. The badge of the family is the cumin-plant, and their arms are azure three garbs of cumin or. They are descended from John Cumyn, Lord of Badenoch, temp. Robert Bruce.

The Origin and Signification of Scottish Surnames (1862) by Clifford Stanley Sims (1839-1896)

The Cumings have their home in Exeter and its neighbourhood. Comyn is the early form of the name, and as such it was represented in Tiverton in the 16th century (D.). Comyns was the name of an old gentle family of Huish Champflower, Somerset, in the 17th and 18th centuries. Comyn was a name found in Wiltshire and Gloucestershire in the 13th century (H. R.).

Homes of Family Names in Great Britain (1890) by Henry Brougham Guppy

Cuming Last Name Facts

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

The surname Cuming is carried by more people in Australia than any other country/territory. It can also be rendered in the variant forms:. Click here to see other possible spellings of this last name.

How Common Is The Last Name Cuming? popularity and diffusion

It is the 208,031st most widespread surname on a worldwide basis, held by around 1 in 3,663,925 people. The last name is mostly found in Oceania, where 46 percent of Cuming are found; 46 percent are found in Australasia and 46 percent are found in Australia and New Zealand. Cuming is also the 1,162,016th most frequently held forename on earth. It is borne by 70 people.

It is most widely held in Australia, where it is carried by 745 people, or 1 in 36,236. In Australia it is mostly found in: Victoria, where 57 percent are found, New South Wales, where 27 percent are found and Queensland, where 5 percent are found. Besides Australia it is found in 25 countries. It is also found in England, where 23 percent are found and The United States, where 12 percent are found.

Cuming Family Population Trend historical fluctuation

The occurrence of Cuming has changed through the years. In England the number of people who held the Cuming last name increased 149 percent between 1881 and 2014; in The United States it contracted 27 percent between 1880 and 2014; in Scotland it contracted 71 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it contracted 99 percent between 1901 and 2014.

Cuming Last Name Statistics demography

The religious adherence of those holding the surname is principally Presbyterian (54%) in Ireland.

In The United States Cuming are 1.44% more likely to be registered Democrats than the national average, with 51.79% being registered to vote for the political party.

The amount Cuming earn in different countries varies greatly. In South Africa they earn 49.84% less than the national average, earning R 119,208 per year; in United States they earn 21.72% more than the national average, earning $52,523 USD per year and in Canada they earn 11.57% more than the national average, earning $55,429 CAD per year.

Phonetically Similar Names

SurnameSimilarityWorldwide IncidencePrevalency
Cumming9222,074/
Cumings921,163/
Couming9229/
Chuming927/
Cuiming925/
Cumingh920/
Ceuming920/
Cumin911,967/
Cummings86143,888/
Chumming8647/
Cumimngs862/
Chauming862/
Chouming862/
Coumings861/
Cuumings861/
Cheuming861/
Cummming860/
Cuimming860/
Cuminngs860/
Cummingg860/
Coming831,114/
Cummin83344/
Cumina83188/
Kuming83143/
Suming8373/
Juming8355/
Coumin8311/
Zuming838/
Cusmin834/
Cuimin831/
Cumion830/
Cumien830/
Cutmin830/
Cumminngs8010/
Cummingss805/
Cumn805/
Cummimngs803/
Coummings801/
Cummmings800/
Cuimmings800/
Ckummings800/
Kumming7771/
Kuiming7738/
Comming7726/
Zhuming7724/
Cummngs7721/
Kauming7714/
Kumiong7712/
Jauming7711/
Cummimg776/
Zouming774/
Sauming772/
Chumeng772/
Cumminn771/
Giuming771/
Tzuming771/
Tsuming771/
Keuming771/
Kouming771/
Cheumin771/
Caumina771/
Cuimeng771/
Cumincs771/
Jouming771/
Summing770/
Jumings770/
Cumimgs770/
Cumminc770/
Cumnngs770/
Cummina770/
Comin738,546/
Kumin731,493/
Cumiñ731,046/
Cumim7379/
Cumyn7325/
Cumen7316/
Sumng731/
Kummings7151/
Cummimgs7125/
Zhouming7119/
Djeuming713/
Cumminks712/
Zhuiming712/
Chumyong712/
Khumingh711/
Cummengs711/
Djouming711/
Chaumeng711/
Chooming711/
Khumming711/
Juimings710/
Commin67682/
Kumina67333/
Koming67216/
Comien6776/
Kaumin6763/
Sumeng6756/
Kummin6748/
Kumeng6729/
Khumin6729/
Koumin6729/
Kuimin6722/
Comijn6719/
Comeng6719/
Jumeng6715/
Choomming672/
Cummen671/
Coomin671/
Cummim671/
Zoming671/
Kumuin671/
Kumion671/
Tcheumeng671/
Coumnt671/
Com'in671/
Cument671/
Khummingh671/
Cumeen670/
Cutmen670/
Jumngs670/

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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 Cuming
  • 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