Mandeville Surname

84,659th
Most Common
surname in the World

Approximately 5,705 people bear this surname

Most prevalent in:
United States
Highest density in:
Barbados

Mandeville Surname Definition:

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Mandeville.' I quote from Lower: 'Goisfrid de Mandeville was a Domesday chief tenant in many counties. His descendants were the famous Earls of Essex, extinct in the 13th cent. From a younger branch probably sprang the famous traveller, Sir John M.

Read More About This Surname

Mandeville Surname Distribution Map

PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States3,7401:96,91410,815
Canada9481:38,8674,872
England3821:145,85914,056
France3201:207,57132,261
Belgium1011:113,82816,895
Barbados441:6,533641
Australia191:1,420,82673,129
Panama161:244,5166,353
Netherlands151:1,125,81268,885
South Africa131:4,167,516132,322
Hungary121:818,02342,199
Scotland111:486,71119,179
Wales101:309,45316,869
Trinidad and Tobago91:151,5538,353
Saint Vincent and the Grenadines81:14,082855
Denmark61:940,78647,603
Mexico61:20,687,70153,861
Norway51:1,028,45761,363
United States Virgin Islands41:27,5943,273
Hong Kong31:2,445,1619,595
Indonesia31:44,083,065698,220
New Zealand31:1,509,44147,971
Thailand21:35,319,172966,191
Germany21:40,252,730481,636
Ireland21:2,354,47019,715
Japan21:63,922,14662,827
Finland21:2,748,35172,663
India21:383,532,6911,645,216
Senegal11:14,579,34211,705
Singapore11:5,507,70347,049
Malaysia11:29,494,225409,885
Spain11:46,752,036156,870
Taiwan11:23,444,74693,622
Macau11:601,6301,582
Philippines11:101,238,223404,861
United Arab Emirates11:9,162,273135,437
Italy11:61,156,688199,583
Israel11:8,557,634182,558
Venezuela11:30,204,07785,459
Moldova11:3,561,36878,271
China11:1,367,321,56651,149
Austria11:8,515,435118,036
Nicaragua11:6,021,0908,768
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Ireland491:90,4056,033
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
England1621:150,46513,283
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States6461:77,7388,246

Mandeville (32) may also be a first name.

Mandeville Surname Meaning

From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'of Mandeville.' I quote from Lower: 'Goisfrid de Mandeville was a Domesday chief tenant in many counties. His descendants were the famous Earls of Essex, extinct in the 13th cent. From a younger branch probably sprang the famous traveller, Sir John M., in the 14th cent. In charters "de Magna Villa" and "de Mandaville." Magneville is near Valognes, in Normandy; and there are two places called Mandeville, one near Louviers, and another in the arrondissement of Bayeux.' Manvell is a manifest variant.

Nigel de Mantlerville, Berkshire 1271. Hundred Rolls.

Ernald de Maundevtlle, Suffolk, ibid.

Walter de Maundeviil, Kent, 20 Edward I: Testa de Nevill, sive Liber Feodorum, temp. Henry III-Edward I.

John de Maundeville, 33 Edward I. Calendarium Genealogicum: Henry III-Edward I.

Ricardus Maunvil, 1379: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.

1667. Married — George Mandevell and Elizabeth Clinch: St. James, Clerkenwell.

1751. — Peter Nott and Elizabeth Mandeville: St. George's Chapel, Mayfair.

1757. Baptised — Elizabeth Maria, d. Robert Mandeville: St. Peter. Cornhill.

1766. Married — Richard Manvell and Ann Richbell: St. George, Hanover Square.

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

(French-Latin) belonging to Mandeville (Normandy) =the Great Estate [corruption of Latin Magna Villa] Both Mandeville, Eure, and Mandeville, Calvados, occur as Magna Villa in the 12th cent.

Cp. Manville

Surnames of the United Kingdom (1912) by Henry Harrison

“Magnaville, one of the proudest honours of the Côtentin; altered by habit of speech into Mandeville.” So says Sir Francis Palgrave; but opinions are divided as to the place from whence the name of this great house was derived. M. le Prévost also considers it to have been Magneville, near Valonges; “while M. Delisle reports that it was Mandeville le Trevières: the Norman estates of the Magnavilles, Mandevilles, or Mannevilles, as they were indifferently called, lying partly in the neighbourhood of Creuilli, and the rest round Argentan, where, at a later period, they held the honour of Chamboi.” - Planché. They were, it is said, derived from Manno, or Magnus, a Northern Viking, who gave his name to the fief in the tenth century. Geoffrey, the “Sire de Magnavile” mentioned by Wace as rendering great aid in the battle of Hastings, was one of the chief grantees after the Conquest, and held lands in ten different counties. Walden, in Essex, was the head of his barony, and remained the principal seat of his descendants. This “famous Souldier” was one of the great potentates of his day. The Conqueror appointed him Constable of the Tower of London, and he held the Shrievalties of London, Middlesex, and Hertford. He founded a Benedictine monastery at Hurley in Berkshire, as a cell of Westminster Abbey, and desired to be laid in the Abbey, “giving, in return for his burial, the manor of Eye, then a waste morass, which gave its name to the Eye Brook, and under the names of Hyde, Eyebury (Ebury) and Neate, contained Hyde Park, Belgravia, and Chelsea,” - Dean Stanley. William de Mandeville, his successor, married Margaret de Rie, heiress of the great Eudo Dapifer, and their son Geoffrey was in her right Hereditary Steward of Normandy. This second Geoffrey received from King Stephen the Earldom of the county of Essex, but was bribed to desert his service by two other more ample charters from the Empress Maud, of which the second, dated from Westminster and re-conferring the Earldom, “is,” says Dugdale, “the most antient Creation Charter which hath been ever known.” Both are remarkable for the privileges and concessions they contain. She granted him all the lands, forts and castles that his father and grandfather had held; the Tower of London, “with the little Castle under it,” to strengthen and fortify at his pleasure; the Hereditary Shrievalties of London, Middlesex, and Hertfordshire, with the trial of all causes in those counties; all the lands granted to him by Stephen, with twenty additional knight’s fees; the whole of Eudo Dapifer's Norman estates, with his office of Steward, and covenanted that “neither the Earl of Anjou (her Husband) nor herself, nor her children, would ever make peace with the Burgesses of London, but with the consent of the said Geoffrey, because they were his mortal Enemies.” She constituted him Earl of Essex, with the third penny of the pleas of the Shrievalty, “as an Earl ought to enjoy in his Earldom,” gave him the Hereditary Shrievalty of the county, and made him and his heirs Chief Justices of Essex for ever. His adherence had been valued at no contemptible price; but, great as were the powers and dignities conferred upon him, he did not long enjoy them. No sooner was Stephen firmly established on the throne, than he had his recreant liegeman seized at the Court of St. Albans. The Earl, a violent and headstrong man, did not submit without a sharp struggle; “they had a bloody fight, in which the Earl of Arundel (though a stout Soldier), being thrown into the Water with his Horse, escaped drowning very narrowly.” He was securely lodged in prison, and only set free after surrendering the Tower of London, with his own castles of Walden and Plesscy; and thus bereft of his strongholds, and maddened by rage and disappointment, he betook himself to the savage life of an outlaw.

“He was to weete, a stoute and sturdie theefe, Wont to robbe churches of their ornaments.”

He collected a band of determined followers, and foraged the country in every direction for spoil; first invading the King’s own demesne lands, and “wasting them miserably. Likewise, having married his sister Beatrix to Hugh Talbot of Normandy, he caused her to be divorced, and wedded to William de Say, a stout and warlike Man; and with his aid, he went on in Plunder and Rapine everywhere, without mercy; making use of divers cunning Spies, whom he sent from door to door, as Beggars, to discover where any rich men dwelt; to the end he might surprise them in their Beds; and then keep them in hold, till they had with large sums of Money purchased their liberty. And being highly transported with wrath, he at length grew so savage, that by the help of this William de Say, and one Daniel, a counterfeit Monk, he got by Water to Ramsey; and entring the Abbey very early in the morning, surprised the Monks (then asleep, after their nocturnal offices) and expelling them thence, made a Fort of the Church; taking away their Plate, Copes, and other Ornaments, and selling them for Money to reward his Soldiers.” For this last outrage he was publicly excommunicated in 1144, and not long after, while besieging the castle of Burwell, “he put off his helmet (it being Summer), on account of the heat,” and going bare-headed with shield and lance, he was shot in the head with an arrow, and mortally wounded. “Whereupon, with great contrition for his sins, and making what satisfaction he could, there came at last some of the Knights Templars to him; and putting on him the habit of their Order, with a Red Cross, carried his dead Corps into their Orchard, at the Old Temple in London; and Coffining it in Lead, hanged it on a crooked Tree. Likewise, that after some time, by the industry and expences of the Prior of Walden, his Absolution was obtained from Pope Alexander the Third, so that his Body was received amongst Christians, and Divine Offices celebrated for him; But, that when the Prior endeavoured to take down the Coffin, and carry it to Walden; the Templars being aware of the design, buried it privately in the Porch before the West door of the New Temple.” This is a striking story; all the more striking, perhaps, because it reminds us that this spoliator and outcast had been in his younger days a benefactor of the Church. The Prior who interceded for his absolution was the Superior of the Abbey that he had founded near his Essex castle; “placing it upon a meeting of four Road­ways, and in angle of two Waters, that the Monks should of necessity be charitable to Poor-people and hospitable to Passengers.” It had been conse­crated in 1136, but apparently not over richly endowed; for his successor Geoffrey III.—evidently himself unwilling to increase its income, “advised the Prior to be content with a small Church, and little Buildings.”

Geoffrey III., the second of his three sons by Rohese de Vere (the elder, Ernulph, had died in banishment), was again created Earl of Essex by Henry II., and received back his forfeited lands, certifying to one hundred and three knight’s fees. He was “an elegant man of speech, much noted for his abilities in secular affairs,” and was sent with the Justiciary Richard de Lucy against the Welsh in 1167; but, falling sick at Chester, " it hapned that his servants being all gone to dinner, and nobody left with him, he died.” He left no children, having been early divorced from his wife Eustachia—a kinswoman of the King’s; and his brother William, who succeeded him, proved the last of his race. This third Earl, “of sharp wit, prudent in council and a stout Soldier, did not much verse himself amongst his own relations, but spent his youthful time, for the most part, with Philip Earl of Flanders,” and only came home after his brother’s death. He was much employed in military service, chiefly in Normandy, where he had the custody of several castles; and joined with Hugh Pudsey, Bishop of Durham, as Justiciary of England during Cœur de Lion’s absence in the Holy Land. He was twice married; first to Hawise, the heiress of William le Gros, Earl of Albemarle, with whom, by the King’s gift, he had the whole county of Albemarle, “antiently assigned to guard the Borders of Normandy;” and secondly to Christian, daughter of Robert Lord Fitzwalter, but had no heirs, and his Earldom expired with him. He died in 1190 at Rouen, and when “drawing near his end, called together his Kindred and Servants; and gave them charge (with his hands lifted up on high) to convey his Body to Walden in England, there to be buried. But Henry de Vere, his Kinsman, standing by, told him, That the difficulty of the passage was such, that it could not be done. To whom he replied, 'If you cannot, it is because you have no mind to effect, what I, a dying man, desire; then take my Heart, and carry it thither.’”

The great Mandeville inheritance reverted to his father’s sister Beatrix, the wife of the same William de Say who had helped the outlawed Earl to surprise Ramsey Abbey. She was the mother of two sons and two daughters; William, who died in his father’s life-time; Geoffrey; Beatrix, married to Geoffrey Fitz Piers; and Maud, married to William de Boeland Though then very aged and decrepit, she lost no time in establishing her claim; and despatched her surviving son Geoffrey, whose right to the barony seemed beyond dispute, to the King, “to transact the Business, for Livery, of that great heritage.” But the younger Beatrix had married one of the most potent nobles in the kingdom, an able and ambitious man, “skilful in the Laws,” who insisted that it belonged to his wife; and hotly and persistently contested it. Geoffrey de Say, however, had friends at court, and obtained an instrument under the King’s seal for the whole barony, on promising to pay 7,000 marks into the Treasury. But this, at the time appointed, he neglected to do; and Fitz Piers, “rich in money and everything else,” seized upon the opportunity, proffered the sum demanded in his stead, and procured the King’s confirmation of his title. At the coronation of John, he was girt by the King with the sword as Earl of Essex. He had been appointed by Cœur de Lion Justiciary of England in 1197; and “ruled the reins of government,” says Matthew Paris, “so that after his death, the Realm was like a Ship in a Tempest, without a Pilot.” Dugdale adds that “he was allied to all the Great Men of England, cither in Blood or Friendship, so that the King feared him above all Mortals.”

His children by Beatrix de Say (he had afterwards another wife) all took the name of Mandeville, which ended with them. There were, besides a daughter, three sons; the youngest was a clerk in holy orders, and Dean of Wolverhampton; and the two others were successively Earls of Essex, and died s. p. Both were men of mark amongst the barons who wrested Magna Charta from King John; and the elder, who was also Earl of Gloucester in right of his wife, was one of the twenty-five lords chosen to enforce its observance. The second died in the flower of his age in 1227; and the Earldom devolved on their sister Mary, the wife of Robert de Bohun, Earl of Hereford; while the lands passed to their half-brother, John Fitz Piers, the son born of the great Justiciary’s second marriage. His grandson, John Fitz John, was summoned to parliament in the time of Henry III.

There was a branch of this house seated in Dorsetshire, where they held the honour of Merstwood, consisting of 14½ knight’s fees, which Robert de Mandeville recovered from Henry de Tilly in the first years of King John’s reign. It was an old suit, begun in his grandfather’s time, and in 1211 “he accounted to the King £183 6s. and 8d., 5 Palfreys, and 3 Norway Goshawks for it” His brother Geoffrey succeeded, and the line ended with Geoffrey’s son.

Several manors continue to bear this long defunct name; such as Kenton- Mandeville and Hardington-Mandeville in Somersetshire; Sutton-Mandeville in Wiltshire; Stoke-Mandeville in Buckinghamshire, &c.

The Battle Abbey Roll (1889) by Catherine Lucy Wilhelmina Powlett

Goisfrid de M. was a Domesday chief-tenant in many counties. His descendants were the famous Earls of Esses, extinct in the XIII. century. From a younger branch probably sprang the famous traveller, Sir John M. in the XIV. cent. In charters, De Magna Villa and De Mandavilla. Magneville is near Valognes in Normandy, and there are two places called Mandeville, one near Louviers, and another in the arrondissement of Bayeux.

Patronymica Britannica (1860) by Mark Antony Lower

From the Latin De Magna villa, that is, of or from the great town.

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

Or Manneville, from Manneville in the Cotentin, Normandy, a well-known baronial house, Barons of Mersewood, Earls of Essex. This family probably derives from Manno, a Northman viking, who gave his name to the fief, c. 930. It appears that the family of De Sottevast was a branch (Wiffen, Hist. Russell, i. 6, 7). That of De Vere also appears from the arms (which are those of Magneville, with a mullet for difference) to have been a branch. Geoffry de Magnavilla was one of the greatest grantees, t. William I.; and his descendants were numerous and powerful both in England and Leland.

The Norman People (1874)

Mandeville: for Magnaville, from a place near Creuilly. Geoffrey, Sire de Magnaville, is mentioned by Wace, and was given estates in many counties. Hence Manville.

Family Names And Their Story (1913) by Sabine Baring-Gould

Mandeville Last Name Facts

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

Mandeville is found in The United States more than any other country or territory. It can appear as:. Click here for other possible spellings of this surname.

How Common Is The Last Name Mandeville? popularity and diffusion

This surname is the 84,659th most commonly held last name globally. It is borne by approximately 1 in 1,277,396 people. The last name is predominantly found in The Americas, where 84 percent of Mandeville live; 82 percent live in North America and 71 percent live in Anglo-North America. Mandeville is also the 1,840,253rd most common first name at a global level. It is borne by 32 people.

Mandeville is most widely held in The United States, where it is carried by 3,740 people, or 1 in 96,914. In The United States Mandeville is primarily found in: Massachusetts, where 12 percent reside, California, where 8 percent reside and Michigan, where 6 percent reside. Besides The United States it is found in 42 countries. It is also found in Canada, where 17 percent reside and England, where 7 percent reside.

Mandeville Family Population Trend historical fluctuation

The prevalency of Mandeville has changed through the years. In The United States the number of people carrying the Mandeville last name rose 579 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it rose 236 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it contracted 96 percent between 1901 and 2014.

Mandeville Last Name Statistics demography

The religious devotion of those bearing the Mandeville last name is principally Catholic (71%) in Ireland.

In The United States those holding the Mandeville surname are 4.75% more likely to be registered with the Democratic Party than The US average, with 57.98% being registered with the political party.

The amount Mandeville earn in different countries varies greatly. In Norway they earn 40.95% more than the national average, earning 487,801 kr per year; in South Africa they earn 57.02% less than the national average, earning R 102,144 per year; in United States they earn 12.09% more than the national average, earning $48,366 USD per year and in Canada they earn 12.71% less than the national average, earning $43,366 CAD per year.

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Mandeville Reference & Research

Mandeville 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 Mandeville
  • 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