Hussey Surname
Approximately 26,131 people bear this surname
Hussey Surname Definition:
This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Hussey.' Probably Heusse" in the department of La Manche. This surname is strongly represented in Southwest England.
Geoffrey Husey, Wiltshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.
Reginald Husey, Wiltshire, ibid.
Read More About This SurnameHussey Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 12,481 | 1:29,041 | 3,602 |
| England | 5,443 | 1:10,237 | 1,512 |
| Canada | 2,486 | 1:14,821 | 2,171 |
| Ireland | 1,407 | 1:3,347 | 603 |
| Australia | 1,221 | 1:22,110 | 3,054 |
| Ghana | 901 | 1:29,990 | 3,547 |
| Jamaica | 485 | 1:5,917 | 750 |
| New Zealand | 384 | 1:11,793 | 2,045 |
| Wales | 278 | 1:11,131 | 1,238 |
| Israel | 143 | 1:59,844 | 7,631 |
| South Africa | 138 | 1:392,592 | 34,819 |
| Scotland | 93 | 1:57,568 | 4,778 |
| Northern Ireland | 78 | 1:23,654 | 2,695 |
| Thailand | 72 | 1:981,088 | 150,124 |
| Zimbabwe | 58 | 1:266,177 | 28,032 |
| Argentina | 56 | 1:763,275 | 51,263 |
| United Arab Emirates | 33 | 1:277,645 | 19,302 |
| Philippines | 33 | 1:3,067,825 | 142,207 |
| Singapore | 30 | 1:183,590 | 7,666 |
| India | 28 | 1:27,395,192 | 354,286 |
| Spain | 21 | 1:2,226,287 | 55,801 |
| Jersey | 20 | 1:4,960 | 981 |
| Germany | 18 | 1:4,472,526 | 177,866 |
| Switzerland | 16 | 1:513,307 | 36,405 |
| Malaysia | 15 | 1:1,966,282 | 78,777 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 13 | 1:104,921 | 6,882 |
| Brazil | 13 | 1:16,467,256 | 295,032 |
| Nigeria | 12 | 1:14,761,896 | 248,185 |
| France | 12 | 1:5,535,227 | 269,324 |
| Qatar | 12 | 1:196,500 | 26,891 |
| Sweden | 11 | 1:895,160 | 66,831 |
| Afghanistan | 11 | 1:2,923,017 | 17,932 |
| Swaziland | 9 | 1:144,244 | 719 |
| Peru | 7 | 1:4,540,589 | 34,489 |
| Pakistan | 7 | 1:25,520,555 | 84,222 |
| Hong Kong | 6 | 1:1,222,580 | 5,222 |
| Chile | 6 | 1:2,936,079 | 35,997 |
| Denmark | 6 | 1:940,786 | 47,603 |
| Mexico | 4 | 1:31,031,551 | 63,627 |
| Czechia | 4 | 1:2,658,367 | 127,801 |
| China | 4 | 1:341,830,392 | 16,990 |
| Italy | 4 | 1:15,289,172 | 132,955 |
| Iraq | 4 | 1:8,755,414 | 23,373 |
| Finland | 3 | 1:1,832,234 | 57,803 |
| Russia | 3 | 1:48,041,019 | 639,186 |
| Isle of Man | 3 | 1:28,607 | 3,614 |
| Montserrat | 3 | 1:1,649 | 224 |
| Iran | 3 | 1:25,594,175 | 224,183 |
| Norway | 2 | 1:2,571,143 | 95,402 |
| Barbados | 2 | 1:143,724 | 1,981 |
| Poland | 2 | 1:19,004,374 | 199,659 |
| United States Virgin Islands | 1 | 1:110,375 | 6,934 |
| Vietnam | 1 | 1:92,646,054 | 8,382 |
| Costa Rica | 1 | 1:4,780,069 | 13,345 |
| Gambia | 1 | 1:1,923,451 | 1,043 |
| South Korea | 1 | 1:51,240,256 | 8,015 |
| Bangladesh | 1 | 1:159,356,773 | 26,077 |
| Bahamas | 1 | 1:391,751 | 2,737 |
| Egypt | 1 | 1:91,935,754 | 132,737 |
| Dominican Republic | 1 | 1:10,432,932 | 36,508 |
| Albania | 1 | 1:2,914,055 | 29,474 |
| Dominica | 1 | 1:75,891 | 912 |
| Togo | 1 | 1:7,247,768 | 12,049 |
| Gibraltar | 1 | 1:33,954 | 1,660 |
| Tanzania | 1 | 1:52,941,613 | 123,716 |
| Guam | 1 | 1:160,121 | 4,893 |
| Iceland | 1 | 1:380,090 | 11,096 |
| Indonesia | 1 | 1:132,249,194 | 811,426 |
| North Macedonia | 1 | 1:2,101,472 | 31,546 |
| Belgium | 1 | 1:11,496,644 | 167,539 |
| Saudi Arabia | 1 | 1:30,855,817 | 63,028 |
| Portugal | 1 | 1:10,418,241 | 25,048 |
| Panama | 1 | 1:3,912,258 | 17,195 |
| Niger | 1 | 1:19,192,017 | 110,060 |
| Cayman Islands | 1 | 1:63,893 | 2,384 |
| Netherlands | 1 | 1:16,887,176 | 156,465 |
| Malta | 1 | 1:430,272 | 3,380 |
| Japan | 1 | 1:127,844,293 | 73,547 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 914 | 1:4,847 | 816 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 2,898 | 1:8,411 | 1,278 |
| Wales | 84 | 1:18,672 | 1,092 |
| Scotland | 44 | 1:85,073 | 4,558 |
| Isle of Man | 10 | 1:5,427 | 530 |
| Jersey | 3 | 1:17,294 | 2,528 |
| Guernsey | 1 | 1:32,656 | 2,283 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 3,405 | 1:14,749 | 1,884 |
Hussey (148) may also be a first name.
Hussey Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Hussey.' Probably Heusse" in the department of La Manche. This surname is strongly represented in Southwest England.
Geoffrey Husey, Wiltshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.
Reginald Husey, Wiltshire, ibid.
Hugo de Hussey, Rutland, 20 Edward I: Placita de Quo Warranto, temp. Edward I-III.
Elizabeth Hussey, 1538: Reg. Broad Chalke, Wiltshire.
Henricus Huszey, 1542: ibid.
1663. John Evans and Judith Husee: Marriage Lic. (Canterbury).
(Anglo-French-Teut.) belonging to (La) Houssay(e (Normandy) = the Holly-Grove [French houssaie-Old French hous, mod. houx, holly (O.H.Ger. hulis) + a deriv. of the Latin ‘plantation’ suff. -et-um] This name is sometimes for the Irish O ’h-Eoghusa.
Ó hEodhusa A bardic family attached to the Maguires. In Kerry and Meath Hussey is a Variant of de Hosey, q.v. IF 184; Map Fer-Tyr (O’Hussey), (de Hussey) Meath
Ó hEodhusa A bardic family attached to the Maguires. In Kerry and Meath Hussey is a Variant of de Hosey, q.v. IF 184; Map Fer-Tyr (O’Hussey), (de Hussey) Meath
(English, Scottish) One who wore hose; one who came from Houssay (holly grove), in Normandy, or from Housay, in Scotland.
Sir Richard Hoare, in his History of Wilts, gives the following pedigree of this family, taken from an ancient MS. said to have been found among the muniments of Glastonbury Abbey. It derives them (in the female line) from Duke Rollo, fantastically described as “un Sarazin” (then probably the generic term for all heathens) “qi vient hors de Denemarche en ffrance.”
“Richard le tierce, Duke de Normandie fuist le filz Richard le quinte Duke, q’l Richard avoit issue Rob’t le sisme Duke et Elene, Countasse Husees. William Bastard fuist le filz Rob’t, et le septisme Duke de Normandie, et cest William Bastard fuist conquer’ d’ Englete’. La dite Elene file Richard le quint’ Duke et frere Rob’t le sisme Duke avoit issue Hubert Husee, qi fuist le premer q’vient en Englete’ avec le Conquer’ soun cosyn germayn, et icestuy Hubert fuist counstable del hoste le Roy William Conquer’ et mult ayda et soverayment p’sta en la conquest al Roy soun dit cosyn, et icestuy Hubert le premier engendra William Husee. William engendra William Husee. William engendra Geffrey Husee, q’ mult avea, et sovaynement p’fita a soun cosyn Emprice Maude, et a Henry filz Maude en lour querelle encountre le Roy Stevene. Geffrey Husee engendra Henry et Hubert Husee, Roy d’Aubegeys, et eisne frere Saintz William le bon moigne, et X autres fils qui totent fuerunt chivalers, prus et errantz en armes. Henry, eisne frere Roy Hubert, engendra James Husee. James engendra Hubert, q’ fuist marie a la file le Counte de Warwyk, qi avoit issue James Husee et III autrez filz et II files. James engendra Renaud Husee. Renaud engendra Edmund Husee. Edmund engendra Johane q’ fuit mariez a Thomas Hungerford, chivaler, et Maude, q’ fuist mariez a Philip de la Mare.
“Icestuy Hubert Husee Roy d’Aubegeys, fuist tre noble chivaler, et vaillant. Icestuy Hubert al temps qil fuist en jeouene chivaler, a une tornament a arne blanc tomea al Roy de Ffraunce et sakka le Roy de Ffraunce hors de son chival; le graunt feraunt enporta le Roy entre ces bras hors del tornement a son estaundard, et la conq’st se dit Hubert p’ covenant p’ entre le Roy de Ffraunce, et luy p’ devaunt fait le bon cheval le graunt feraunt qi le Roy de Ffraunce fuist montes, et cink mil florenes d’or, et puis icestuy Hubert p’ bataille et champestre conquest, et tua le Duke haine de Antioche a Antioche, et illoq’s conquist le goupyl d’or pour quoi il fuist appelle Sr Hubert Husee le goupil. Et puis icestuy Hubert conquist le isle d’Aubegeys s’ les Sarazins, et c’y p’ g’unt fortz, et g’unt batailles, oue graunte ayde de les vaillantz chivalers ses ffrere, et de soun frere William le bon moigne, le dit Hubert devaunt son departes fuist coronez Roy d’Aubegeys, et plusours auns apres le Roy Hubert vient en Engletere, et oue gunt noblesse p’ estre venu en la pais dont il estoit ne, et come fortune luy voudroit mourust en Engletere, et fuist enterez a Baa (Bath); et icestuy Roy Hubert fist mult des autres preves, et quientises en armes dyvers pais passaunt totes altres chivalers en son temps. Et dauntz William, le bon moigne de Glastonbirie, frere a Roy Hubert, fuist fort et vaillant, et de honeste conversacion, et combata al Soudan de Babyloyne corps a corps a un graunt bataille, q’ fuist entre eux assiz, et le bon moigne occis le Soudan et les Sarazins ove graunt prees et noumbre de peple fauusement encountre lour pinysse, environnerent le bon moigne, et luy tuerent et martizirent, et les oos de luy p’ graunt raunson donez a les Sarazyns de part les freres, et altres del sanke le bon moigne, fuerent emportez a Glastonbiri, et alleq’s enterez,” &c. &c. &c.
I fear we must admit that the element of romance is predominant in this composition. The Lord Constable of England under the Conqueror was, according to Dugdale, not Hubert Hussey, but Walter, the father of Milo, Earl of Hereford; This Milo of Gloucester had succeeded to the office in the time of Henry I.; and his eldest co-heiress, Margery, conveyed it, with the Earldom of Hereford, to the Bohuns. no daughter of any Earl of Warwick is mentioned as having married a Hussey; nor can I even suggest what island in the Mediterranean is disguised under the name of Aubegeys. The Norman princess Ellen, Countess Hussey, sounds equally apocryphal. But the story of the gallant knight-errant crowned King of an unknown kingdom; and the valiant monk, who fought the Soldan single-handed and slew him; with their ten brave brothers, “all of them knights;” has the true ring of the chivalrous age in which it was written.
“The Husseys came from a place a mile North of Rouen, which is now called ‘le Houssel.’ La Houssaie is still a common name in Normandy.”—Lower’s Sussex. They certainly date from the time of the Conquest in this country. Gautier Heusé is on the Dives Roll, and was either the same “Walterius Hosatus” who witnessed a charter of John Bishop of Bath in 1106, or his father. In Domesday, William Hosed or Hosatus held Charlcomb, in Somersetshire, of Bath Abbey, as well as other manors in the county: and the first lords of Bath-Eaton were of this family. They had afterwards estates in Wiltshire and in Sussex, where Harting appears to have been their principal residence; though “one of these lords built much at Shockerwicke, in Somersetshire, and the manor from thence was in succeeding times called the manor of Husei's Court”—Collinson’s Somerset. Standen-Huse retains their name in Wiltshire. Later in the twelfth century, we find two brothers, Henry and Geoffrey, the sons of Henry de Hoese. Geoffrey was Sheriff of Oxfordshire in 1181, and one of the Justices Itinerant in 1182. He held under Adam de Port in Berkshire, with several manors in Wiltshire, and died in 1200, probably leaving no son, as 1 Ric. I. he had paid a fine of £23 i6s. ‘‘that he might enjoy his Lands in Peace during his own Life, and dispose of them afterwards to whom he should think fit.” The eldest brother, Henry, held four knight’s fees at Harting and Chithurst, Sussex; and founded a hospital for lepers at Harting, and Dureford Abbey, also in Sussex, in 1163. Henry his son succeeded in 1214. “After him,” says Dugdale, “came another Henry, but not his son;" probably his nephew, who also inherited Geoffrey de Hoese’s property, and was the grand-father of Henry de Hoese, who took part in the Barons’ War, and “had license to enclose, fortify, and crenellate with a wall of stone and lime, his place of Harting.” In the next generation, “Henrico Husee” attended Ed. I. in his wars, and was a baron by writ in 1295. His son succeeded, and died in 1349, leaving a grandson his heir, but “neither he, nor any of his descendants, were ever summoned to parliament” The year before this last baron died, another of the family—but how nearly related we are not told - Roger de Hoese or Husee of Beechworth in Surrey, who also served with distinction in the Scottish wars, had summons as Lord Hoese of Beechworth. This second barony became extinct at his death in 1361. A third followed in 1534, when Sir John Hussey, Chief Butler of England, received the title of Lord Hussey of Sleford. Again we are left in the dark as respects his genealogy. He was the son of Sir William Hussey, Lord Chief Justice of England in 1478, whose coat of arms, with his name “William House” may still be seen in the circular or bay window in Grays’ Inn Hall. Lord Hussey had ample estates in Lincolnshire, and built a grand house at Sleford; but forfeited the whole of his possessions after the celebrated Pilgrimage of Grace. “At that time,” says Froude, “the nobleman who had to answer for the peace of Lincolnshire was Lord Hussey.” At first “he sat still at Sleford: he would give no orders - he would remain passive - waiting to see how events would turn:” and sending messengers to enquire the intentions of the rebels. “He had not the manliness to join the rising— he had not the loyalty to assist in repressing it. He stole away and left the county to its fate.” For thus deserting his post, he was tried by his peers, found guilty of high treason, and beheaded at Lincoln in 1537. In his dying confession he declared he “was never traitor, nor of none counsel of treason against his Grace:” but he admitted that he had spoken against the new religion. Three years before when he, Lord Darcy, and Sir Robert Constable “sate at the board, Lord Darcy said, in good sooth I will be none heretic; and so said I, and likewise Sir Robert Constable; for we would die Christian men.” Though his children were restored in blood by Elizabeth, neither the estate nor honour were granted to his heir. From one of Lord Hussey’s brothers descended the Husseys of Yorkshire; from another Sir Edward Hussey, who received a baronetcy (now extinct) from James I. The arms they bore were not those of the baronial Husseys.
There were many more collateral branches. One of these - claimed by the Glastonbury pedigree as the elder line - ended in the fourteenth century with Reginald Hussey, one of whose daughters became the wife of Philip De La Mare, and the mother of the great De La Mare heiress married to William Paulet, ancestor of the Marquess of Winchester. Another - the Husseys of Shapwick and Tedworth - ended in the seventeenth century. A third was established in Ireland as early as the time of Henry II. About 1171, Sir Hugh Husee there married the daughter of Theobald Fitz Walter, the first Butler of the kingdom, and obtained large grants in Meath from Hugh de Lacy, whose heiress became his son Walter’s wife. From him descended Sir John Husee, one of the King’s council, summoned to parliament as Baron of Galtrim in 1374; and, more remotely, James Hussey, the younger son of one of these barons (living in the seventeenth century) and the ancestor of Edward Hussey of Westown, who achieved his fortune in 1743 by marrying the widowed Duchess of Manchester. She was the eldest of the co-heirs of John, Duke of Montague; and on the death of his father-in-law, Edward Hussey assumed the name and arms of Montague, and was created, first Baron Beaulieu in 1762, and then Earl Beaulieu in 1784. The heiress brought him a son and a daughter; but both of them died unmarried; and his brother Richard—the last heir male—who succeeded to Westown, did the same.
Sir Bernard Burke tells us that two branches of the family still continue; the Husseys of Lyme and Marnhull, in Dorset, and the Husseys of Scotney Castle, in Kent.
According to Stapleton's Rotuli Scaccarii Normanniae, Osbert de H., who was living in 1180, was so named from le Hozu, a fief in the parish of Grand Quevilly near Rouen. And one Henry de la Hosse or Heuze held, inter alias, the lands of Hosse. Ibid. Will, de Hosa occurs as witness to a deed of King Stephen soon after his accession. Ibid. In an old account of the Hussey family, the name is said to be "quasi de Hosa-from a boot or buskin," and the crest borne was a boot. Inf. Edw. Hussey, Esq., M.A. The ordinary latinization is Hosatus, 'hosed or booted,' but this is merely a pun, for the head of the family, who in the XII. cent. founded the abbey of Durford, co. Sussex, was otherwise written De Hoese-a plain proof that the name was of local origin.
Is found written De la Hossé or Heuzé, De Hosa, and De Hoese; and according to Stapleton's Rot. Scacc. Norm, was named from le Hozu, a fief in the parish of Grand Quevilly, near Rouen; and Lower says there is a place now spelt Heussé, dep. La Manche. The local name is without doubt from the French houssaie, a place where much holly grows, a holly grove.
From the French, Houssaye; from the North French, de Hossé or de Heuzé; a personal name.
Hussey is an ancient name in Somerset and Wilts, and further particulars concerning its origin will be found under "Wiltshire." Laurance Hussey of Wellington was one of the sufferers in the Monmouth rebellion of 1685: he was transported for ten years to Barbadoes (H.), and let us hope that he returned to witness the triumph of the Protestant cause.
Hussey is a very old surname both in Wilts and Somerset, having been represented in those counties in the 13th century by Husey and Huse (H. R.). From the mediæval Huse probably come the Wiltshire name of Howse and the Somerset name of House. However, the Husseys of Wilts were a powerful family during the 14th century, and traced their ancestry back to the Husees, of whom it is said that the original ancestor came over with the Conqueror. In Collinson's "Somerset" it is stated that in the beginning of the 17th century a family of gentry of the name of Hussey lived at Edmondham in Dorset.
User-submitted Reference
This surname comes from the word, hussy, meaning 'housewife' or 'home-dweller'. It was misspelt when immigrant ancestors came through Ellis Island. The elaborate cursive used in the day meant that for two Ss in a row, the first looped far above which resembled an L enough to be misread and adopted by future generations.
- jenn_the_magnificentHussey Demographics
Hussey Religious Adherence
in Ireland
Religious Adherence
in Ireland
Hussey Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Hussey Come From? nationality or country of origin
The last name Hussey (Arabic: هاسي) has its highest incidence in The United States. It may also be rendered as a variant:. For other possible spellings of this surname click here.
How Common Is The Last Name Hussey? popularity and diffusion
It is the 20,885th most widespread family name in the world It is held by approximately 1 in 278,885 people. It occurs predominantly in The Americas, where 59 percent of Hussey are found; 56 percent are found in North America and 56 percent are found in Anglo-North America. It is also the 757,758th most numerous first name worldwide, held by 148 people.
Hussey is most commonly occurring in The United States, where it is held by 12,481 people, or 1 in 29,041. In The United States it is most frequent in: North Carolina, where 9 percent reside, California, where 7 percent reside and Florida, where 7 percent reside. Besides The United States it occurs in 77 countries. It also occurs in England, where 21 percent reside and Canada, where 10 percent reside.
Hussey Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The frequency of Hussey has changed over time. In The United States the number of people carrying the Hussey last name expanded 367 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it expanded 188 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Ireland it expanded 154 percent between 1901 and 2014; in Wales it expanded 331 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Scotland it expanded 211 percent between 1881 and 2014.
Hussey Last Name Statistics demography
The religious devotion of those bearing the last name is principally Catholic (95%) in Ireland.
In The United States those holding the Hussey last name are 4.57% more likely to be registered with the Republican Party than the national average, with 51.34% being registered with the political party.
The amount Hussey earn in different countries varies greatly. In Peru they earn 380.75% more than the national average, earning S/. 93,193 per year; in South Africa they earn 0.78% less than the national average, earning R 235,788 per year; in United States they earn 3.76% more than the national average, earning $44,772 USD per year and in Canada they earn 1.91% more than the national average, earning $50,634 CAD per year.
Phonetically Similar Names
Hussey Name Transliterations
| Transliteration | ICU Latin | Percentage of Incidence |
|---|---|---|
| Hussey in the Arabic language | ||
| هاسي | hasy | - |
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Hussey Reference & Research
Hosey FamilyTree DNA Group - A group collating DNA test results for those who bear the surname, includes results of DNA tests and discussions.
Hersey FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.
Hosey 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
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- 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
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- 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 Hussey
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