Eliot Surname
Approximately 5,860 people bear this surname
Eliot Surname Definition:
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of Elias'; from Elye (Eng. Elias), diminutive Elyot. One reason why Elliott is so largely represented in our directories is that it has absorbed nearly all our Elletts or Ellots, who are descended from Ellen; v.
Read More About This SurnameEliot Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| France | 1,393 | 1:47,683 | 6,148 |
| Philippines | 1,335 | 1:75,834 | 13,099 |
| United States | 1,053 | 1:344,216 | 30,957 |
| Malawi | 549 | 1:31,182 | 4,677 |
| Nigeria | 276 | 1:641,822 | 30,209 |
| England | 246 | 1:226,496 | 18,955 |
| Australia | 146 | 1:184,902 | 18,557 |
| Cuba | 137 | 1:84,107 | 2,751 |
| Egypt | 122 | 1:753,572 | 38,342 |
| South Africa | 98 | 1:552,834 | 43,423 |
| Canada | 76 | 1:484,810 | 41,569 |
| Papua New Guinea | 70 | 1:116,482 | 15,803 |
| Zimbabwe | 57 | 1:270,846 | 28,330 |
| Peru | 44 | 1:722,366 | 16,614 |
| United Arab Emirates | 30 | 1:305,409 | 20,323 |
| New Zealand | 18 | 1:251,574 | 23,165 |
| Wales | 16 | 1:193,408 | 12,484 |
| Austria | 14 | 1:608,245 | 54,975 |
| Singapore | 13 | 1:423,669 | 18,211 |
| Germany | 13 | 1:6,192,728 | 213,814 |
| Syria | 12 | 1:1,608,418 | 8,291 |
| Uganda | 12 | 1:3,253,273 | 85,117 |
| Lebanon | 10 | 1:563,708 | 13,499 |
| Brazil | 8 | 1:26,759,292 | 405,030 |
| India | 8 | 1:95,883,173 | 728,828 |
| Tanzania | 7 | 1:7,563,088 | 70,659 |
| Jordan | 7 | 1:1,263,205 | 16,935 |
| Belgium | 7 | 1:1,642,378 | 98,400 |
| Qatar | 6 | 1:393,000 | 55,922 |
| Malaysia | 6 | 1:4,915,704 | 170,578 |
| Thailand | 5 | 1:14,127,669 | 603,945 |
| Netherlands | 5 | 1:3,377,435 | 111,911 |
| Scotland | 4 | 1:1,338,454 | 35,497 |
| Denmark | 4 | 1:1,411,179 | 60,800 |
| Sweden | 3 | 1:3,282,252 | 190,759 |
| Spain | 3 | 1:15,584,012 | 120,866 |
| Mexico | 3 | 1:41,375,402 | 71,397 |
| China | 3 | 1:455,773,855 | 21,925 |
| Pakistan | 3 | 1:59,547,962 | 132,569 |
| Poland | 2 | 1:19,004,374 | 199,659 |
| Cameroon | 2 | 1:10,384,534 | 165,830 |
| Romania | 2 | 1:10,038,935 | 80,612 |
| Bulgaria | 2 | 1:3,489,452 | 64,958 |
| Liberia | 2 | 1:2,204,268 | 40,131 |
| Ivory Coast | 2 | 1:11,535,616 | 61,806 |
| Israel | 2 | 1:4,278,817 | 136,311 |
| Sudan | 1 | 1:37,510,195 | 14,259 |
| Switzerland | 1 | 1:8,212,915 | 156,297 |
| Turkey | 1 | 1:77,821,422 | 191,047 |
| Madagascar | 1 | 1:23,649,837 | 9,420 |
| Iran | 1 | 1:76,782,524 | 277,718 |
| Afghanistan | 1 | 1:32,153,183 | 60,828 |
| Algeria | 1 | 1:38,631,551 | 130,422 |
| Argentina | 1 | 1:42,743,414 | 282,706 |
| Botswana | 1 | 1:2,186,929 | 30,250 |
| Dominican Republic | 1 | 1:10,432,932 | 36,508 |
| DR Congo | 1 | 1:73,879,570 | 260,543 |
| Ghana | 1 | 1:27,020,692 | 23,742 |
| Greece | 1 | 1:11,079,790 | 145,225 |
| Indonesia | 1 | 1:132,249,194 | 811,426 |
| Solomon Islands | 1 | 1:580,029 | 22,243 |
| Jamaica | 1 | 1:2,869,947 | 13,896 |
| Japan | 1 | 1:127,844,293 | 73,547 |
| Jersey | 1 | 1:99,202 | 6,620 |
| Kenya | 1 | 1:46,179,900 | 103,372 |
| Kuwait | 1 | 1:3,800,694 | 27,187 |
| North Macedonia | 1 | 1:2,101,472 | 31,546 |
| Ireland | 1 | 1:4,708,939 | 29,543 |
| Mauritius | 1 | 1:1,293,417 | 16,552 |
| Senegal | 1 | 1:14,579,342 | 11,705 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 10 | 1:442,987 | 15,290 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 153 | 1:159,316 | 13,825 |
| Scotland | 10 | 1:374,322 | 10,959 |
| Wales | 2 | 1:784,208 | 16,349 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 823 | 1:61,019 | 6,703 |
The alternate forms: Éliot (1) are calculated separately.
Eliot (27,001) may also be a first name.
Eliot Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of Elias'; from Elye (Eng. Elias), diminutive Elyot. One reason why Elliott is so largely represented in our directories is that it has absorbed nearly all our Elletts or Ellots, who are descended from Ellen; v. Eliot.
Elyot ad Cap' Ville, Cambridgeshire, 1273.
Henry Ell'ot, Buckinghamshire, ibid.
Thomas Elvot, Cambridgeshire, ibid.
Eliottus de Balliol. Rotuli Litterarum Clausarum in Turri Londinesi.
Richard Eliot, 1307. Writs of Parliament.
Adam Elyotson, 1379: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.
Thomas Elyott, rector of Dickleburgh, Norfolk, 1303: History of Norfolk.
1607. Married — Thomas Eliot and Margaret Waite: St. Michael, Cornhill.
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of Elliot,'
The early form of this well-known Border name was Elwald or Elwold, for the full Old English AElfwald, and until the end of the fifteenth century the spelling of the name was fairly regular. Elwald and Elwold were common in Old English times and the name continued in use as a Christian name down to the period when surnames became common. It was a common name on the Borders, the original home of the Elliots. The form Elliot is used by the Minto family and most of the others on the Border, and Eliott is used by the family of Stobo. The four forms of the name are thus referred to in an old rhyme:
"The double L and single T
Descend from Minto and Wolflee,
The double T and single L
Mark the old race in Stobs that dwell,
The single L and single T
The Eliots of St. Germains be,
But double T and double L
Who they are, nobody can tell."
-Annals of a Border Club, p. 172Stolen from Fore bears
As very often happened in other Instances Elwald' as a Christian name became extinct, but survived as a surname. One of the earliest and most curious variants of the name was Elwand, which appears as early as 1502 (Trials, I, p. 32). The uniformity in the way of writing this name, which was, as already mentioned, maintained to the end of the fifteenth century, gave way in the sixteenth to a rich variety of spellings, of which Armstrong (Liddesdale, I, p. 178) gives no less than seventy examples, a number which really does not exhaust the list. Armstrong's list is reproduced here, with a few additions, as an illustration of the labor and difficulty encountered by one seeking for information on surnames at first hand:
Singular: AElwold, Allat, Dalliot, Eellot, Eleot (1624), Elewald, Eliot, Eliott, Eilat, Elleot (1655), Ellet, Ellett, Elltte, Elliott, Elliot, Ellioti, Elliswod, Eliot, Ellote (1639), Eliott, Elluat, Ellwald, Ellwod, Ellwodd, Ellwold, Ellwood, Elnuand, Elnwand, Eluand, Eluat (1556), Eluwand, Elvand, Elwaird, Elwald (1561), Elwalde (1494), Elwat, Elwod, Elwold, Elwood, Elwoold, Elyot, Elyoth, Hellwodd, Illot, Ilwand, Eleot, Elwet, Elwett, Elwoode, Helewald. Plural: Aylewoodes, Aylewoods, Elioats, Eliots, Ellattis, Elliottes, Ellotes, Eliots, Ellottes, Ellottis, Eliotts, Ellwoods, Eluottis (1570), Elwades, Elwaldes, Elwets, Elwaldis, Elwalds, Elwalls, Elwandis, Elwarths, Elwaths, Elwodds, Elwoldis, Elwolds, Elwoodes, Elwoods, Elwoolds, Eylewoodz, Ellyots, Elwatts, Elwottis, Eylwittes.
French diminutive of Elsas, q.v. [Elie + the diminutive suff. -ot] ... an harper that highte Eliot.—Morte d'Arthur, X. xxvii.
(English) Descendant of little Elijah or Elias (Jehovah is my God).
A name of doubtful origin. A William Aliot came into England with the Conqueror, and the name seems to be connected with Alis and Ellis. But Hals, speaking of the Eliots (Lord St. Germain's family), says: "These gentlemen I take to be of Scots original and so denominated from the local place of Eliot, near Dundee." D. Gilbert's Cornwall, ii. 66. The name, though very widely spread, certainly seems in most instances to have come from N. Britain, where a great clan so called existed.
The family are descended from Sir William de Aliot, who came to England with the Conqueror; his arms were, azure, a canton or; crest, an arm and sword; motto, "Par Saxa, per ignes, fortiter et recte." His descendants settled at the village of Elliot in Forfarshire, and some generations later, in the seventeenth century, were seated on the border, in Liddisdale.
Supposed to signify the son of Elias; Heliat, Welsh and Cornish-British, a huntsman, a pursuer.
N. Eliot occurs in Normandy 1195, and as the son of Anschar Elyot in 1198 (Magni Rotuli Scaccarii Normanniae); Eliot Fitz-William occurs in England 1198 (Rotuli Curiae Regis); Reginald, Robert, William Eliot of England, c. 1272 (Rotuli Hundredorum). From this Norman family descended the Eliots Earls of St. German’s, the Elliotts Earls of Minto, Scotland, and the renowned Lord Heathfield, the defender of Gibraltar.
Elliott,Elliot. —This name has three principal centres— one in the north of England, in the counties of Durham and Northumberland, and over the border in Roxburghshire and the neighbouring Scottish counties, another in Derbyshire, and the third in Bucks, Berks, and Sussex, whence it has extended into the other south - coast counties, excluding Kent. The scanty representation, or the absence of this name in the eastern coast counties from Kent northward to the borders of Durham, is remarkable.
The Elliots or Elliotts of the north of England and the Scottish border counties belong to an old Scottish border clan, and in fact the name still has its principal home in the Hawick district of Roxburghshire.
DNA analyses reveal that the salient haplogroup among Eliots (all spellings) is Celtic-Brittonic. The name is a variant of the Breton Halgoet, and access to French (Breton) registers of birth show clearly that many variants of Halgoet (the name of the pre-Conquest Viscount of the Halegouet or Halgoet, Judicael, a Breton, who was given the honour of Totnes subsequent to repulsion by a mainly Breton army, also led by the Breton, Brien de Penthievre, of the invasion mounted from Ireland by King Harold's son's. Brien was the younger brother of Count Alain of Richmond, also given vast lands, but in Yorkshire, by the Conqueror. Corrupted by Norman French, the Halgoet variants started with the letter 'H', 'A' or 'E'. The Elliots came from the Morbihan, while the Alliots from the Pays Nantais in the Loire Atlantique. Both names are found today in higher concentrations in those French departements. Elligott, for example, is the English corruption of yet another Breton variant, Elegoet, found mainly in Finistere, the old homelands of the Halgoet tribe, dispersed during the Viking wars.
User-submitted Reference
Elligott, Ellacott, Ellicott, McElligott are all variants of Elliot (all spellings) a French corruption of an old Breton tribal name Halegoet or Halgoet, also spelt as Allegoet and Elegoet. Alliot, Allott, which predominate in Loire Atlantique were alternative medieval scribal preferences for Elliot. All their ancestors were in the Breton contingent of William the Conqueror's invasion army of 1066. The name is notorious among Breton historians for its many variants. Y-chromosome research now confirms this. See also the French websitewww.geopatronyme. It is almost certain that the first places of settlement were in the Devon and Cornish lands in which several Breton magnates were awarded lands for military service, principally the south-west, when Cornwall was given to the Conqueror's Breton cousin Brien, count of Brittany, and in Yorkshire and Lincolnshire, where the scribal preferences Allott and Alliott are found, part of the extensive honour of Richmond with its lands in eleven counties. The English corruption Elligott and its Breton parent Elegoet, sound very much the same when they are pronounced.Recent research, and the discovery of 16th-early 18th century maps held in the National Library of Scotland, have confirmed the suspicion that the anglicised name Elwald, later Elwood and the misspelling Elwand, was accepted by or forced on the Elliots when they were transplanted from the Eliot barony of The Brae in Perthshire, to Liddesdale, Scotland by Robert the Bruce, to effect his seizure of the lordship following treason committed by its lord, William de Soules in 1320. A careful reexamination of surviving documents shows that both names existed side by side for many years, with Elwald treated only as a charter name. Documents show that just as soon as Elliot chieftains became literate and were able to sign documents unaided, they signed their names as Ellott. The 'i' was reinserted during the early 17th century. Y-Chromosome research has confirmed the Breton origin of the Elliots, and the Breton source of a number of its variant names like Elligott, Ellacott and Ellicott, d erived from the Breton variant Elegoet. Like many knights of Norman, Flemish and Breton extraction, Elias d'Alliot (var.d'Elliot or d'Eliot) was awarded the barony of The Brae near to the foot of Glen Shee by William I (the Lion, 1165-1214) probably during the 1170s, before Elias's name appeared as a witness in a charter of 1189.Ulliott has long been recognized as a variant of Elliot - a name with some seventy variants, vide G MacDonald-Fraser, 'The Steel Bonnets'. Most have not survived.
- anonymous submissionEliot Demographics
Eliot Political Affiliation
in United States
United States
Average
Eliot Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Eliot Come From? nationality or country of origin
Eliot (Arabic: إليوت, Bengali: এলিয়ত) is found in France more than any other country or territory. It may also occur in the variant forms: Éliot. Click here to see other potential spellings of this last name.
How Common Is The Last Name Eliot? popularity and diffusion
The surname Eliot is the 82,665th most numerous last name throughout the world. It is borne by approximately 1 in 1,243,609 people. The surname is primarily found in Europe, where 29 percent of Eliot live; 24 percent live in Western Europe and 24 percent live in Gallo-Europe. Eliot is also the 30,204th most commonly held first name worldwide, borne by 27,001 people.
The last name is most frequently held in France, where it is carried by 1,393 people, or 1 in 47,683. In France it is most prevalent in: Normandy, where 47 percent are found, Île-de-France, where 17 percent are found and Brittany, where 12 percent are found. Besides France this last name is found in 69 countries. It also occurs in The Philippines, where 23 percent are found and The United States, where 18 percent are found.
Eliot Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The occurrence of Eliot has changed over time. In The United States the share of the population with the surname grew 128 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it grew 161 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Wales it grew 800 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Scotland it contracted 60 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it contracted 90 percent between 1901 and 2014.
Eliot Last Name Statistics demography
The religious adherence of those holding the Eliot surname is chiefly Presbyterian (80%) in Ireland and Melkite Greek Catholic (43%) in Lebanon.
In The United States Eliot are 7.28% more likely to be registered Republicans than The US average, with 54.05% registered to vote for the party.
The amount Eliot earn in different countries varies greatly. In Peru they earn 2.67% less than the national average, earning S/. 18,868 per year; in South Africa they earn 52.77% more than the national average, earning R 363,036 per year; in United States they earn 22.35% more than the national average, earning $52,791 USD per year and in Canada they earn 24.59% more than the national average, earning $61,899 CAD per year.
Phonetically Similar Names
Eliot Name Transliterations
| Transliteration | ICU Latin | Percentage of Incidence |
|---|---|---|
| Eliot in the Bengali language | ||
| এলিয়ত | eliyata | - |
| Eliot in the Arabic language | ||
| إليوت | alywt | - |
| اليوت | alywt | - |
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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 Eliot
- To find out more about this surname's family history, lookup records on FamilySearch, MyHeritage, FindMyPast and Ancestry. Further information may be obtained by DNA analysis