Goldsmith Surname

13,291st
Most Common
surname in the World

Approximately 42,085 people bear this surname

Most prevalent in:
United States
Highest density in:
Isle of Man

Goldsmith Surname Definition:

This surname is derived from an occupation. 'the goldsmith,' generally Latinized in Norman-the Frenchregisters.

Geoffrey Aurifaber, Salop, 1273. Hundred Rolls.

Walter Aurifaber, Oxfordshire, ibid.

Richard le Goldsmythe, Somerset, 1 Edward III: Kirby's Quest.

Read More About This Surname

Goldsmith Surname Distribution Map

PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States23,5651:15,3811,949
England9,3461:5,962854
Australia4,1981:6,431943
Canada1,2881:28,6073,766
New Zealand8621:5,253848
South Africa5761:94,05911,495
Israel4801:17,8282,653
Wales2411:12,8401,418
Jamaica1601:17,9371,640
Northern Ireland1561:11,8271,765
Scotland1481:36,1743,513
France1271:523,01472,224
Ireland1161:40,5943,174
Isle of Man951:903137
Chile811:217,4876,777
Thailand641:1,103,724164,273
India541:14,204,914239,375
Afghanistan501:643,0647,334
Dominican Republic391:267,5119,432
Spain351:1,335,77243,485
Sweden321:307,71121,451
United Arab Emirates301:305,40920,323
Germany251:3,220,218147,383
Mexico241:5,171,92529,601
Denmark181:313,59522,770
Italy181:3,397,594101,426
Russia171:8,477,827301,506
Switzerland161:513,30736,405
Brazil161:13,379,646256,605
Netherlands151:1,125,81268,885
Singapore131:423,66918,211
Nigeria131:13,626,366237,812
Qatar121:196,50026,891
Egypt91:10,215,08448,153
Estonia81:165,22626,217
Norway81:642,78647,258
Zimbabwe81:1,929,78092,581
China71:195,331,65210,124
Philippines71:14,462,603238,248
Japan61:21,307,38248,838
Belgium61:1,916,107103,447
Panama51:782,45211,059
Jersey51:19,8403,614
Hong Kong51:1,467,0975,611
South Korea51:10,248,0511,694
Malaysia51:5,898,845196,803
Mauritius41:323,35410,053
Pakistan41:44,660,971115,884
Portugal41:2,604,56016,079
Sri Lanka41:5,202,14012,146
Guernsey41:16,1101,225
Ghana41:6,755,17315,406
United States Virgin Islands31:36,7924,502
Kenya31:15,393,30077,493
British Virgin Islands21:15,797839
Finland21:2,748,35172,663
Oman21:1,843,9869,590
Cambodia21:7,743,57311,959
Yemen11:26,425,29455,147
Greece11:11,079,790145,225
Cyprus11:884,87613,055
Bulgaria11:6,978,90586,260
Costa Rica11:4,780,06913,345
Taiwan11:23,444,74693,622
Cameroon11:20,769,068227,406
Bhutan11:616,0391,715
Albania11:2,914,05529,474
Uruguay11:3,431,75838,295
Turks and Caicos Islands11:34,329862
Ukraine11:45,522,696503,646
Angola11:26,989,21411,853
French Polynesia11:280,8057,211
Grenada11:108,5351,793
Guam11:160,1214,893
Guatemala11:16,082,66812,169
Honduras11:8,816,4429,272
Hungary11:9,816,27773,288
Indonesia11:132,249,194811,426
Iran11:76,782,524277,718
Georgia11:3,745,54547,852
Bahamas11:391,7512,737
Czechia11:10,633,469206,023
Laos11:6,588,3231,961
Malta11:430,2723,380
Namibia11:2,409,40119,676
Nepal11:28,480,95622,413
Azerbaijan11:9,649,12247,873
Peru11:31,784,12364,452
Poland11:38,008,749231,653
Bangladesh11:159,356,77326,077
Armenia11:2,930,18022,770
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Ireland491:90,4056,033
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
England4,5141:5,400824
Isle of Man1061:51295
Scotland241:155,9676,425
Wales131:120,6475,000
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States4,9291:10,1881,325

Goldsmith (119) may also be a first name.

Goldsmith Surname Meaning

From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history

This surname is derived from an occupation. 'the goldsmith,' generally Latinized in Norman-the Frenchregisters.

Geoffrey Aurifaber, Salop, 1273. Hundred Rolls.

Walter Aurifaber, Oxfordshire, ibid.

Richard le Goldsmythe, Somerset, 1 Edward III: Kirby's Quest.

Thomas Goldsmyth, goldsmyth, of Wakefield, 1370: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.

Johannes fil. Gallridi, goldsmych: ibid.

Hugo Goldsmyth, ibid.

Agnes Goldsmvche, ibid.

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

From the occupation of "goldsmith." In early Latin records Aurifaber. William Aurifaber witnessed a gift of land to the Hospital of Soltre c. 1250—66 (Soltre, p. 32). Ewgenius (Ewen) aurifaber was one of an inquest at Dumbarton in 1271 (RMP., p. 191), and Martin Aurifaber appears as burgess of Aberdeen in 1281 (REA., II, p. 278). Walter Aurifaber, burgess of Roxburgh in 1285 (Kelso, 219) is doubtless "Walter the goldsmith, burgess and alderman of Roxburgh," who rendered homage in 1296 (Bain, II, p. 197). Rogier le orfeure French orfevre) of Berwick, also rendered homage in 1296 (ibid., II, p. 213). John Goldsmith (aurifaber) was bailie of Edinburgh in 1342 and rendered to Exchequer the accounts of the city (ER., I, p. 489,623). Gilbert Goldsmyth held a tenement in Irvine in 1426 (Irvine, I, p. 130). Johannes dictus Goldsmyth was prebendary of Crowdan (Cruden) in 1427 (REA., I, p. 228), Micael Goldsmyt was bergess of Dumfries in 1453 (Edgar, p. 226), Johannes Goldsmyth or Goldsmyt appears as a notary public in Glasgow in 1472 and 1488 (REG., p. 420,463), and possessed a land there in 1494. Andrew Goldsmyth was member of a committee in Aberdeen in 1481 (CRA., p. 41). Goldsmicht 1493, Gouldesmyth 1549.

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

(English) Worker in Gold, Jeweller [Middle EnglishO.E. goldsmith]

Surnames of the United Kingdom (1912) by Henry Harrison

(English, German) One who made or sold gold articles, a jeweler, later a banker.

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

The great value of the commodity in which the medieval goldsmith dealt rendered him a person of consequence. No less than three tenants-in-chief under the Conqueror arc entered in Domesday under the name of Aurifaber. One of these, Otto Aurifaber, held in Essex, and his descendants, under the surname of Fitz-Otho, appear to have been hereditary mint-masters to the crown for two centuries, becoming extinct in 1282. Kelham. Ellis, Introd. The equivalent French Orfevre, and the German Goldschmid, are well-known surnames.

Patronymica Britannica (1860) by Mark Antony Lower

A name of trade; formerly in England, a banker.

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

Geoffry, Roger, William, Nicholas. Gerard Aurifaber (Goldsmith) of Normandy 1180-95, three more in 1198 (Magni Rotuli Scaccarii Normanniae); John, Robert, Hamo, Hugh, Jordan, William A. of England, 1194-9 (Rotuli Curiae Regis).

The Norman People (1874)

Entire books have been written about the great English name of Smith. In origin this is an occupational name and comes from the Old English word ‘smith’ meaning ‘a metal-worker’. In this form it has remained unchanged for over 1,000 years, apart from the spelling variations of Smyth or Smythe. However, occasionally the name Smythe will in fact be a location name, deriving from Smithy. Thus it would mean ‘dweller at the smithy’.

The surname Smith has also frequently become double-barrelled, as for example in Robinson-Smith. The partner name in this case would have its own entirely separate deri­vation; it would usually be adapted from an indirect female line. Other variations on this name derive from specific trades-such as Brownsmith (meaning ‘copper or brass-smith’), or Greensmith (for ‘coppersmith’-the green referring either to the patina of copper, or to the colour of the flame when it is worked), Arrowsmith and Goldsmith. London’s borough of Hammersmith is named after a forge-a ‘hammer-smithy’.

Besides being easily the most popular name in England, Smith is also the most popular in Scotland, and in the United States (where the name will frequently have been anglicised from foreign sources, such as the German Schmidt). In Wales, however, Smith comes second to its greatest rival, Jones.

Besides the previously mentioned German form, there are also many other foreign versions of Smith. Some of the most widespread of these are Lefèvre (the French form), Kovac (in Slavonic languages), Haddad (in Hebrew), or Faber (from the Latin). Once again, these are only the simple forms and, like our English Smith, they also have their compound forms. The lesser-known examples are the French Orfèvre (goldsmith) and the German variation Messerschmidt (knifesmith).

Early examples of the name Smith were sometimes Latinised in the records to Faber. This name appears in the records from the 1066 Domesday Book onwards. However, the surname Smith has appeared in all records from the very earliest times and pre-dates the Domesday Book. The first reference comes in the Annals for Durham in AD 975, where one Ecceard Smith is mentioned.

One enterprising branch of the Smith family have blazoned the name on hundreds of British high streets. W.H. Smith (1792—1865) took over his father’s small news-stand in 1816 and later, helped by his son-also named William Henry (1825—91), expanded the business into the largest such enterprise in Great Britain, with over 300 outlets and 20,000 employees. The younger W.H. became an MP in 1868 and served as, amongst other things, First Lord of the Admiralty (1877). He was affectionately nicknamed ‘Old Morality’ by Punch and was the butt of the famous line, ‘Now I am the ruler of the Queen’s Nav-ee’ in Gilbert and Sullivan’s 1878 operetta HMS Pinafore.

Fiery-tempered British general, Sir Harry Smith (1787—1860), was Governor of Cape Colony and High Commissioner of South Africa from 1847 to 1852. During his colourful career he took part in the Peninsular War, witnessed with horror the burning of Washington DC during the War of 1812, and fought at Waterloo. Transferred to Cape Colony during the Cape Frontier War, he made an historic ride, galloping the 600 miles from Cape Town to Grahamstown in under six days, to tell terrified colonists that help was on the way. It is his wife whose memory is recalled by the town of Ladysmith in Natal.

The massive Smithsonian Institution in Washington DC was founded by the bequest of over £100,000 ‘to the United States of America for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men’ by English scientist James Smithson (1765— 1829), illegitimate son of Hugh Percy, Duke of Northumberland. He apparently made the bequest out of bitterness, writing, ‘My name shall live in the memory of man when the title of the Northumberlands are extinct and forgotten.’ One of the best-known of all Smiths was Sydney Smith (1771—1845). Lord Macaulay called him the ‘Smith of Smiths’, Abraham Lincoln quoted him frequently, Charles Dickens named a son after him, and even Queen Victoria found him amusing. Clergyman, wit and essayist, Smith was lauded in his lifetime as the greatest master of trenchant ridicule since Jonathan Swift and Voltaire, although he lacked their vitriol. For a quarter of a century he deflated pomposity and exposed hypocrisy as he fought for parliamentary reform and for emancipation of Catholics. Eventually made a canon of St Paul’s, he invented the still-common expression for a misfit: ‘a square peg in a round hole’. This master of quotable quotes once summed up his life by saying he had spent it like a razor, ‘in hot water or a scrape’.

The geographical centre of the United States lies in Smith County, Kansas.

Joseph Smith (1805—44), founder of the Mormon Church, claimed that an angel had presented him with golden plates and a book written in hieroglyphics which he translated with the aid of magic stones and had published as The Book of the Mormon. Having led his followers from New York State to Illinois, Smith claimed personal divinity and ruled with an iron hand until his plans to introduce polygamy caused violence and led to his arrest. While in goal he was killed by an angry mob.

London’s major meat market, Smithfield, north of St Paul’s, was long famous for its cattle sales. In the time of Mary Tudor it was the place where heretics were burnt at the stake. It takes its name from the Old English word smethe, meaning ‘smooth’.

Donald Alexander Smith, Baron Strathcona and Mount Royal, served as High Commissioner for Canada from 1896 and at one time controlled both the Great Northern and the Canadian Pacific railways.

English-born Assyriologist George Smith (1840—76) achieved world-wide fame in 1872 by his translation of fragments of Chaldean tablets in the British Museum which described The Flood. Public interest ran so high that a London paper financed an expedition to search for the missing fragment. On the fifth day of digging Smith found it-an almost miraculous stroke of luck. His Chaldean Account was a nineteenth-century best-seller.

Smith-related places and geographic features are popular but not nearly as dominating as the surname itself. The United Kingdom has 6 towns with related names-Smith Green, Smithsfield, Smithincott, Smithston, Smithstown and Smithy Houses. Canada has a Smith, a Smithers and a Smithtown; Australia a Smithton; South Africa a Smithfield; and there’s a Smith in Argentina. The United States has 26 related-name towns-all are relatively small. Related-name geographic features are common.

With about 837,000 namesakes Smith is the most popular surname in England and Wales. There are over 69,000 Smiths in Scotland where it is also the most popular name. In Ireland it is estimated that with about 36,000, Smith is the 5th most popular surname. Smith is notably popular in and around Leicester where an estimated one in about 55 families bears the name. In descending numerical order Nottingham, Birmingham and Coventry are other Smith strongholds. Around the world Smiths are most common in Durban (one in 109 families), Sydney (one in 110) and Auckland (one in 133).

The United States has more Smiths than the entire population of West Yorkshire-an estimated total of just over 2,501,000 makes this their most popular surname.

— Peter Verstappen

Goldsmith Last Name Facts

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

The last name Goldsmith (Hindi: गोल्डस्मिथ) occurs more in The United States more than any other country/territory. It can be rendered as:. Click here for further possible spellings of this name.

How Common Is The Last Name Goldsmith? popularity and diffusion

It is the 13,291st most frequently occurring last name in the world It is held by approximately 1 in 173,163 people. This last name occurs predominantly in The Americas, where 53 percent of Goldsmith reside; 52 percent reside in North America and 52 percent reside in Anglo-North America. Goldsmith is also the 856,040th most frequently held first name throughout the world. It is borne by 119 people.

This last name is most prevalent in The United States, where it is borne by 23,565 people, or 1 in 15,381. In The United States Goldsmith is most frequent in: California, where 11 percent are found, New York, where 11 percent are found and Florida, where 7 percent are found. Besides The United States Goldsmith occurs in 90 countries. It also occurs in England, where 22 percent are found and Australia, where 10 percent are found.

Goldsmith Family Population Trend historical fluctuation

The prevalency of Goldsmith has changed through the years. In The United States the number of people who held the Goldsmith surname grew 478 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it grew 207 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Wales it grew 1,854 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Scotland it grew 617 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it grew 237 percent between 1901 and 2014.

Goldsmith Last Name Statistics demography

The religious devotion of those carrying the last name is primarily Anglican (47%) in Ireland.

In The United States those holding the Goldsmith surname are 38.65% more likely to be registered with the Democratic Party than the national average, with 91.88% being registered to vote for the party.

The amount Goldsmith earn in different countries varies greatly. In Norway they earn 101.89% more than the national average, earning 698,695 kr per year; in South Africa they earn 11.56% more than the national average, earning R 265,116 per year; in United States they earn 6.77% more than the national average, earning $46,072 USD per year and in Canada they earn 10.67% more than the national average, earning $54,985 CAD per year.

Phonetically Similar Names

Goldsmith Name Transliterations

TransliterationICU LatinPercentage of Incidence
Goldsmith in the Hindi language
गोल्डस्मिथgoldasmitha-

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Goldsmith Reference & Research

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

Goldsmith 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 Goldsmith
  • 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