Gaunt Surname
Approximately 11,052 people bear this surname
Gaunt Surname Definition:
Nick 'the gaunt,' thin, slender; compare Bigg, Little, Thick, &c.
Hugh le Gant, Oxfordshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.
John le Gant, Oxfordshire, ibid.
Gilbert le Gaunt, Cambridgeshire, ibid.
Robert le Gaunt, Lincolnshire, ibid.
Read More About This SurnameGaunt Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 5,328 | 1:10,458 | 1,548 |
| United States | 3,325 | 1:109,010 | 11,904 |
| Australia | 1,078 | 1:25,042 | 3,414 |
| Canada | 532 | 1:69,259 | 7,942 |
| Scotland | 149 | 1:35,932 | 3,496 |
| New Zealand | 148 | 1:30,597 | 5,323 |
| Wales | 141 | 1:21,947 | 2,330 |
| South Africa | 100 | 1:541,777 | 42,852 |
| Northern Ireland | 55 | 1:33,546 | 3,341 |
| Spain | 33 | 1:1,416,728 | 44,772 |
| France | 33 | 1:2,012,810 | 168,616 |
| Netherlands | 15 | 1:1,125,812 | 68,885 |
| Malaysia | 12 | 1:2,457,852 | 95,442 |
| Sweden | 10 | 1:984,676 | 73,605 |
| United Arab Emirates | 9 | 1:1,018,030 | 36,884 |
| Russia | 8 | 1:18,015,382 | 436,635 |
| Poland | 7 | 1:5,429,821 | 146,768 |
| Germany | 7 | 1:11,500,780 | 305,602 |
| Switzerland | 7 | 1:1,173,274 | 69,697 |
| Israel | 4 | 1:2,139,408 | 95,907 |
| Laos | 4 | 1:1,647,081 | 888 |
| Brazil | 4 | 1:53,518,583 | 632,670 |
| Italy | 3 | 1:20,385,563 | 143,117 |
| Denmark | 3 | 1:1,881,572 | 67,227 |
| Thailand | 3 | 1:23,546,115 | 908,588 |
| Mexico | 3 | 1:41,375,402 | 71,397 |
| China | 2 | 1:683,660,783 | 30,601 |
| Norway | 2 | 1:2,571,143 | 95,402 |
| Croatia | 2 | 1:2,114,302 | 85,143 |
| Ireland | 2 | 1:2,354,470 | 19,715 |
| Turkey | 1 | 1:77,821,422 | 191,047 |
| Barbados | 1 | 1:287,448 | 2,772 |
| Argentina | 1 | 1:42,743,414 | 282,706 |
| Bulgaria | 1 | 1:6,978,905 | 86,260 |
| Cayman Islands | 1 | 1:63,893 | 2,384 |
| Nigeria | 1 | 1:177,142,758 | 748,972 |
| Malawi | 1 | 1:17,119,109 | 34,144 |
| Ecuador | 1 | 1:15,905,846 | 50,210 |
| Guernsey | 1 | 1:64,439 | 2,137 |
| Hong Kong | 1 | 1:7,335,483 | 16,643 |
| Isle of Man | 1 | 1:85,822 | 4,091 |
| Japan | 1 | 1:127,844,293 | 73,547 |
| Jersey | 1 | 1:99,202 | 6,620 |
| Kenya | 1 | 1:46,179,900 | 103,372 |
| Macau | 1 | 1:601,630 | 1,582 |
| Portugal | 1 | 1:10,418,241 | 25,048 |
| Malta | 1 | 1:430,272 | 3,380 |
| Monaco | 1 | 1:37,066 | 4,748 |
| Namibia | 1 | 1:2,409,401 | 19,676 |
| Nepal | 1 | 1:28,480,956 | 22,413 |
| Oman | 1 | 1:3,687,971 | 14,390 |
| Papua New Guinea | 1 | 1:8,153,717 | 181,784 |
| Philippines | 1 | 1:101,238,223 | 404,861 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 3 | 1:1,476,622 | 29,385 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 2,925 | 1:8,333 | 1,266 |
| Scotland | 22 | 1:170,146 | 6,794 |
| Wales | 7 | 1:224,059 | 8,079 |
| Isle of Man | 1 | 1:54,269 | 2,077 |
| Jersey | 1 | 1:51,882 | 3,898 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 923 | 1:54,408 | 6,113 |
Gaunt (16) may also be a first name.
Gaunt Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
Nick 'the gaunt,' thin, slender; compare Bigg, Little, Thick, &c.
Hugh le Gant, Oxfordshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.
John le Gant, Oxfordshire, ibid.
Gilbert le Gaunt, Cambridgeshire, ibid.
Robert le Gaunt, Lincolnshire, ibid.
Thomas le Gaunt, Somerset, 1 Edward III: Kirby's Quest.
(2) Local, 'of Ghent." Shakespeare has several puns on 'gaunt,' in which both interpretations are involved; v. Gant.
Henry de Gaunt, Somerset, 1273. Hundred Rolls.
Maurice de Gaunt, Somerset, ibid.
Simon le Gaunt, temp. 1300. Writs of Parliament.
Willelmus Gaunte, 1379: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.
Petrus de Gaunt. 1379: ibid.
1538. Richard Good and Alice Gaunt: Marriage Lic. (London).
1646. Baptised — George, s. George Gaunt: St. James, Clerkenwell.
1711. Married — Edward Loder and Elizabeth Gant: St. Michael, Cornhill.
= Gant, q.v.
Few among the Conqueror’s companions of arms were so splendidly rewarded as Gilbert de Gand, who held one hundred and seventy-two English manors; yet there is much doubt - or at least much difference of opinion - as to who he really was. Dugdale, and after him Sir Henry Ellis and others, have called him a younger son of Baldwin, Earl of Flanders, and consequently the nephew of Queen Matilda; but this opinion appears to be now altogether exploded. Mr. Freeman discards it as “an amazing piece of genealogy,” and promptly dubs him “a Flemish adventurer,” without stooping to explain how or why it was that a mere soldier of fortune received so vast a grant of territory. On the other hand, the author of The Norman People furnishes him with a lineage more consonant with his fortunes, tracing his direct descent from Witikind, the renowned opponent of Charlemagne in the eighth century. “When, after many years of resistance, Witikind was compelled to submit, c. 780, he was invested with the Dukedom of Angria (L’Art de Verifier les Dates, xvi. 145). Ludolphus, one of his descendants, was Duke of Saxony, and died in 864, leaving by his wife (a daughter of Eberhard, Duke of Friuli), Bruno Duke of Saxony. He married a daughter of the Emperor Arnold, and declined the Imperial throne. Bruno had two sons, 1, Henry the Fowler, Emperor in 919, father of the Emperor Otho, who succeeded 936; 2, Wickman. Wickman was created Count of Gand 940, by the Emperor Otho, his nephew, and had two sons: 1, Theodoric, Count of Gand, ancestor of the Counts of Gand and Guisnes; 2, Adalbert, father of Ralph, father of Baldwin de Gand, Count of Gand or Alost, ancestor of the Counts of Alost, whose younger brother, Gilbert de Gand, became Baron of Folkingham in England.” Gilbert was, if not the nephew, the cousin of Queen Matilda; and could claim our great King Alfred as one of his ancestors. “He was sixth in male descent from Wickman, ‘Count of the Castle of Gand,’ who had married Leutgarde, granddaughter of Elfthryth, Countess of Flanders, the daughter of Alfred.” - A. S. Ellis.
Gilbert, among his other possessions, received the broad lands of Ulf the Constable, lying chiefly in the counties of Nottingham and Lincoln, and chose his predecessor’s capital manor, Folkingham, near Grantham, as the head of his barony.
The first mention of him is in 1068, when the Conqueror, after the surrender of the city of York, placed it under the joint command of William Malet, Robert FitzRichard, and Gilbert de Gand; and he and Malet were still in charge when, in the follow ng year, the Danes landed in England, besieged and captured the city, and put the garrison to the sword. Only Malet, with his wife and two children, Gilbert and a few others, were spared for ransom or exchange. He died during the reign of Rufus, and was buried in Bardney Abbey, which he had refounded and re-endowed about 1086-89. It had lain in ruins for more than three centuries, having been destroyed by the Danes under Inguar and Hubba.
“He had by Alice his wife, daughter of Hugh de Montfort, Lord of Montfort- sur Risle, and eventually heiress of her brother, 1, Gilbert de Gand, who died without issue in his lifetime; 2, Hugh, who inheriting the extensive fief of his mother’s family in Normandy, took the name of Montfort, and was ancestor of the lords of that place and Coquainvilliers. He married Adeline, sister of Waleran, Count of Mellent, and being soon after drawn with him into the revolt in Normandy in favour of William Clito in 1123, was taken prisoner, and Ordericus, writing apparently in 1135, says “he has now groaned in fetters for thirteen years”; 3, Walter de Gand, ancestor of the Earls of Lincoln; 4, Robert de Gand, most probably another son, Provost of Beverley under the celebrated Thomas à Beckett, Dean of York, and Chancellor to King Stephen; 5, Ralph de Gand, perhaps another son, besieged in the castle of Montfort-sur- Risle by Henry I. in 1123; and three daughters at least: 1, Emma, married to Alan de Percy; 2, (Agnes?) wife of William Fitz Nigel, Constable of Chester to Earl Hugh; and 3, * * * * married to Ivo de Grentemesnil (Ord. Vit. VIII. xvi).” - A. S. Ellis.
Walter de Gand succeeded to all his father’s English possessions, and founded Bridlington Priory, in Yorkshire, besides granting fresh endowments to Bardney. “A person,” says Dugdale, “of great Humanity and Piety, who, when he was an aged Man, and near his death, Commanded a brave Regiment of Flemings and Normans in that famous Battle against the Scots, commonly called Bellum Standardiwhere “his eloquent speech and prudent conduct”are highly commended. His wife was Maud, daughter of Stephen, Earl of Brittany and Richmond, who brought him all Swaledale as her marriage-portion; and at his death in 1138 he left three sons: Gilbert, Robert, and Geoffrey.
Gilbert II., according to the Baronage, was promoted to an Earldom by an inconceivable stroke of fortune. “In his youth, being with King Stephen in that fatal Battle of Lincoln, he was with him taken Prisoner, and thereupon compelled by Ranulfe, Earle of Chester, to marry his Niece, viz. Rohais (or as some call her Hawise), daughter and Heir of William de Romare, Her Christian name was certainly Rohais, for in the chartulary of Kirkstead there is a charter of “Rohais, wife of Gilbert Earl of Lincoln;” but some doubt exists as to her surname. From the chevrons on her seal, she is conjectured to have been a De Clare. Earle of Lincolne; Whereby he had the title of Earle of Lincoln, in her Right.”
This statement is in flagrant contradiction with the acknowledged custom of the time. The hand of a great heiress - always at the sole disposal of the Sovereign, was, under the most favourable circumstances, only granted on payment of a large sum of money; and the tax thus levied on each fortunate bridegroom formed a considerable portion of the Royal revenue. That a Countess in her own right, the niece of one of the greatest potentates in the realm, should have been freely proffered - nay, more, forced upon the unwilling acceptance of a prisoner taken in arms for a hostile cause, exceeds all bounds of credibility. The following is at least a probable account. “There appears to be some reason to suspect that William de Romare was deprived of his Earldom by Stephen when he regained his ascendancy, and that Gilbert de Gant, who was a steady adherent of the King, was rewarded with it. The Priory of Rufford was founded by the latter in 1146 or 1148: in his foundation charter he styles himself Earl of Lincoln.” - Bowles’ History of Lacock Abbey. The title, however obtained, died with him in 1156, when he left two daughters - Alice, the wife of Simon de St. Liz, Earl of Huntingdon, and Gunnora, who was childless. Like his antecessors, he had been a great benefactor of the Church; for, in addition to this new foundation at Rufford in Nottinghamshire, he transferred the monks of Biham from Lincolnshire to Yorkshire, where they built Vaudy (Vallis Dei) Abbey on an estate he had given them at the Pope’s desire.
Contrary to the received practice, his great inheritance did not devolve upon his daughters, but passed to his brother Robert, then the father of two sons; a third Gilbert, surnamed the Good, and Stephen. Both were probably very young when they were left orphans in 1162; but I was rather taken aback by the dates given by Dugdale, according to which Gilbert was still a minor, in ward of Robert de Stuteville, as late as 1197 - exactly thirty-five years after his father’s death! In the latter years of King John’s reign, he joined the insurgent barons that invited Louis of France to reign over England, and received in recompense his uncle’s Earldom of Lincoln. “So far, however, was he from having ‘succeeded’ his uncle, as stated by some works on the peerage, that it was after an interval of sixty years; and he held his title for a period still shorter than the former. If the first was introduced by the sovereign will of Stephen, overruling the ordinary laws of inheritance, the second was obtruded by a still less competent authority - the invader Louis of France. This was in the last year of the reign of John; and the next year, 1216, he was taken prisoner at the battle then fought at Lincoln, and his brief career as an Earl thereupon closed; the dignity being transferred to Ranulph Earl of Chester, the great grandson of the first Ranulph and the Countess Lucia, who was evidently then considered its heiress.” - Ibid. He had served Louis well, for he and Robert de Ropesby had overrun and subjugated the whole district of Holland, captured the city of Lincoln, and besieged its castle. Then followed the disastrous rout in which he was taken prisoner; but he appears to have been soon restored to liberty, and to his great barony (he had answered for sixty-eight knight’s fees in 1211); and to have dropped the title of Earl of Lincoln -”a fleeting honour”that no man recognized, of his own accord. But as Gilbert the Good, the beloved friend and comforter of the poor, his memory has not been blotted out by the changeful course of six hundred years. In the town of Hunmanby, part of his East Yorkshire barony, it remains unforgotten to the present day, for a doggerel rhyme in his honour is still familiar in men’s mouths, and was formerly chanted round the market cross every year on Shrove Tuesday: - “Gilbert of Gant Left Hunmanby Moor To Hunmanby poor, That they might never want.” Another scrap of ancient verse, picked up in the town, is preserved by Longstaffe: “Gilbert de Gant - And in those days good women were scant, Some said there were few, and some said there were many, But in the days of Robert Coultas, One was sold at the market cross for a penny.” Heckington Church, in Lincolnshire, long retained in one of its windows these grateful words: “The Lord love De Gant.”
He died in 1241, and was followed by Gilbert IV., twice summoned to parliament as a baron, once by Henry III. in 1260, and again in 1264 by Simon de Montfort and the confederate barons with whom he had cast in his lot. He was taken prisoner the same year at Kenilworth, and mulcted of 3000 marks fine. His heir was his second son, Gilbert V. - Robert, the eldest, having died s. p. in his lifetime - who fought in Edward I.’s foreign wars, and followed him successively to Wales, Flanders, and Gascony. He, too, was a baron by writ in 1295, but left no successor, and with him the great Flemish house was brought to a close. His wife, Lora de Baliol, had remained childless, and he constituted the King heir to Folkingham, Barton-upon-Humber, and the greater part of his barony, reserving only Swaledale and a portion of Skendelby. On his death in 1297, this remnant of his former possessions was divided between his three sisters, viz. Margaret, the wife of Sir William de Kerdeston; Nichola, the wife of Peter de Mauley; and Julian, who remained unmarried, and bestowed her share on the nuns of Nun-Cotum.
Another branch of this house had ended somewhat earlier. Robert, the fourth son of the first Gilbert de Gant, was, as has been said, King Stephen’s Chancellor, and married Alice, the widow of Richard de Courcy, who brought him the great fief of her father, William Paynell. They had two daughters, Juliana, and Alice, or Adeline, the wife of Robert FitzHardinge, and the mother of Maurice, named after his grandfather De Gant, and of Emma, his eventual heiress. Maurice held land in eight different counties, and “in 15 John covenanted to serve the King, at his own charge, with twenty Knights, himself accounted one; in consideration that he might marry the Daughter of Henry de Oilli.” Within the next two years, he was in arms against the Crown, and all - or nearly all - his estates seized and given to Philip de Albini; whereupon he, very sensibly, “addressed himself to the King to make his peace.” He died s. p. in 1229, and the son of his sister Emma, Robert de Gournay, was his heir.
No others of the name are mentioned by Dugdale; yet it is hard to believe that some of the numerous younger sons of the baronial line should not have left descendants. “An existing family of Gaunt, in Staffordshire claims, though only by ancient and uniform tradition, descent from Gilbert de Gant and the Earls of Lincoln, and bears their arms, Barry’ of six, Or and Azure, a bend Gules" - A. S. Ellis. Their first recorded ancestor was John Gaunt, a clergyman, living in 1530.
Like John, fourth son of Edward III., some families of this surname evidently derive it from the town of Gaunt, now Ghent, in Flanders. De Gaunt and Le Gaunt are both found in the H.R.; the latter form is probably from the personal peculiarity of the first bearer. Shakspeare makes John of Gaunt play upon his own name in Richard H. in this sense: —
A Norman name: From the Domesday Book, de Gand, Flemish Gand; a local name
Gant: a man of Ghent.
Gaunt: from Ghent, but perhaps a misprint for Graunt.
Gaunt is an ancient Lincolnshire name, which had its principal home in the county six centuries ago, when it was very frequent; at the same time there were also a few of the name in Cambridgeshire, Somerset, and other counties (H. R.). The Lincolnshire Gaunts were a powerful family from the 11th to the 13th century (T.).
Gaunt Demographics
Average Gaunt Salary in
United States
$44,722 USD
Per year
Average Salary in
United States
$43,149 USD
Per year
View the highest/lowest earning families in The United States
Gaunt Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Gaunt Come From? nationality or country of origin
Gaunt (Arabic: جونت, Russian: Гаунт) occurs more in England more than any other country or territory. It may also be rendered in the variant forms:. Click here for other potential spellings of this name.
How Common Is The Last Name Gaunt? popularity and diffusion
The last name is the 46,884th most commonly held last name on a worldwide basis. It is borne by around 1 in 659,387 people. This last name is mostly found in Europe, where 53 percent of Gaunt reside; 52 percent reside in Northern Europe and 51 percent reside in British Isles. It is also the 2,786,762nd most frequent given name world-wide, held by 16 people.
This last name is most frequently held in England, where it is carried by 5,328 people, or 1 in 10,458. In England Gaunt is most prevalent in: West Yorkshire, where 19 percent reside, Derbyshire, where 9 percent reside and Greater London, where 8 percent reside. Outside of England this last name exists in 52 countries. It also occurs in The United States, where 30 percent reside and Australia, where 10 percent reside.
Gaunt Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The incidence of Gaunt has changed over time. In England the number of people who held the Gaunt last name rose 182 percent between 1881 and 2014; in The United States it rose 360 percent between 1880 and 2014; in Scotland it rose 677 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Wales it rose 2,014 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it fell 33 percent between 1901 and 2014.
Gaunt Last Name Statistics demography
The religious adherence of those bearing the last name is chiefly Anglican (67%) in Ireland.
In The United States those holding the Gaunt last name are 17.36% more likely to be registered Republicans than the national average, with 64.13% registered to vote for the party.
The amount Gaunt earn in different countries varies greatly. In South Africa they earn 145.32% more than the national average, earning R 582,984 per year; in United States they earn 3.65% more than the national average, earning $44,722 USD per year and in Canada they earn 6.15% more than the national average, earning $52,738 CAD per year.
Phonetically Similar Names
Gaunt Name Transliterations
| Transliteration | ICU Latin | Percentage of Incidence |
|---|---|---|
| Gaunt in the Russian language | ||
| Гаунт | gaunt | - |
| Gaunt in the Arabic language | ||
| جونت | jwnt | - |
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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 Gaunt
- 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