Marten Surname
Approximately 17,286 people bear this surname
Marten Surname Definition:
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of Martin'; v. Martel. This once popular font-name, coming as it did in the hereditary surname period, has swelled our 19th century directories enormously.
Martin de Littlebyr, Close Rolls, 42 Henry III.
Read More About This SurnameMarten Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Germany | 7,201 | 1:11,180 | 1,425 |
| United States | 3,819 | 1:94,909 | 10,650 |
| Indonesia | 1,633 | 1:80,985 | 8,573 |
| England | 650 | 1:85,720 | 9,391 |
| Cuba | 555 | 1:20,762 | 1,286 |
| India | 544 | 1:1,410,047 | 54,053 |
| Canada | 328 | 1:112,334 | 11,995 |
| Australia | 252 | 1:107,126 | 11,994 |
| Dominican Republic | 216 | 1:48,301 | 2,508 |
| Egypt | 214 | 1:429,606 | 25,756 |
| France | 168 | 1:395,373 | 58,261 |
| Malaysia | 161 | 1:183,194 | 10,967 |
| Netherlands | 107 | 1:157,824 | 23,373 |
| Italy | 106 | 1:576,950 | 54,562 |
| Russia | 105 | 1:1,372,601 | 96,503 |
| Brazil | 98 | 1:2,184,432 | 68,273 |
| Costa Rica | 91 | 1:52,528 | 1,172 |
| Mexico | 64 | 1:1,939,472 | 18,543 |
| Ecuador | 62 | 1:256,546 | 8,537 |
| Ireland | 55 | 1:85,617 | 4,914 |
| New Zealand | 55 | 1:82,333 | 11,809 |
| Chile | 55 | 1:320,300 | 9,085 |
| Poland | 51 | 1:745,270 | 61,215 |
| Argentina | 50 | 1:854,868 | 55,754 |
| Papua New Guinea | 48 | 1:169,869 | 23,574 |
| Greece | 45 | 1:246,218 | 37,554 |
| Philippines | 41 | 1:2,469,225 | 130,198 |
| Wales | 40 | 1:77,363 | 6,557 |
| Belgium | 39 | 1:294,786 | 34,540 |
| South Africa | 38 | 1:1,425,729 | 75,291 |
| Switzerland | 30 | 1:273,764 | 22,252 |
| Spain | 30 | 1:1,558,401 | 47,033 |
| Sweden | 28 | 1:351,670 | 24,678 |
| Estonia | 27 | 1:48,956 | 9,235 |
| Nigeria | 21 | 1:8,435,369 | 179,591 |
| DR Congo | 21 | 1:3,518,075 | 145,665 |
| Northern Ireland | 20 | 1:92,252 | 5,957 |
| Belarus | 18 | 1:527,837 | 48,523 |
| Ukraine | 16 | 1:2,845,168 | 170,459 |
| Thailand | 14 | 1:5,045,596 | 363,835 |
| Denmark | 14 | 1:403,194 | 27,097 |
| Czechia | 12 | 1:886,122 | 73,425 |
| Qatar | 12 | 1:196,500 | 26,891 |
| Pakistan | 11 | 1:16,240,353 | 64,496 |
| Saudi Arabia | 9 | 1:3,428,424 | 32,607 |
| Zimbabwe | 8 | 1:1,929,780 | 92,581 |
| Scotland | 8 | 1:669,227 | 23,443 |
| United Arab Emirates | 7 | 1:1,308,896 | 51,006 |
| Panama | 6 | 1:652,043 | 10,051 |
| Kazakhstan | 6 | 1:2,947,083 | 107,736 |
| Venezuela | 6 | 1:5,034,013 | 43,431 |
| Norway | 5 | 1:1,028,457 | 61,363 |
| Liberia | 5 | 1:881,707 | 33,815 |
| Sudan | 4 | 1:9,377,549 | 8,207 |
| Singapore | 4 | 1:1,376,926 | 28,409 |
| Malawi | 4 | 1:4,279,777 | 24,060 |
| China | 4 | 1:341,830,392 | 16,990 |
| Namibia | 4 | 1:602,350 | 12,421 |
| Bulgaria | 3 | 1:2,326,302 | 54,089 |
| Georgia | 3 | 1:1,248,515 | 28,066 |
| Luxembourg | 3 | 1:193,514 | 7,046 |
| Austria | 3 | 1:2,838,478 | 93,604 |
| Moldova | 2 | 1:1,780,684 | 55,103 |
| Syria | 2 | 1:9,650,511 | 17,817 |
| Finland | 2 | 1:2,748,351 | 72,663 |
| Libya | 1 | 1:6,243,974 | 6,186 |
| Turkmenistan | 1 | 1:5,489,112 | 11,427 |
| Turkey | 1 | 1:77,821,422 | 191,047 |
| Aruba | 1 | 1:103,477 | 2,586 |
| Zambia | 1 | 1:15,849,922 | 53,989 |
| Albania | 1 | 1:2,914,055 | 29,474 |
| Barbados | 1 | 1:287,448 | 2,772 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 1 | 1:1,363,975 | 22,013 |
| Taiwan | 1 | 1:23,444,746 | 93,622 |
| Cameroon | 1 | 1:20,769,068 | 227,406 |
| Curaçao | 1 | 1:157,247 | 1,313 |
| Cyprus | 1 | 1:884,876 | 13,055 |
| Solomon Islands | 1 | 1:580,029 | 22,243 |
| Rwanda | 1 | 1:11,364,978 | 5,947 |
| Romania | 1 | 1:20,077,870 | 89,414 |
| Dominica | 1 | 1:75,891 | 912 |
| Peru | 1 | 1:31,784,123 | 64,452 |
| Paraguay | 1 | 1:7,236,746 | 16,511 |
| Hong Kong | 1 | 1:7,335,483 | 16,643 |
| Lebanon | 1 | 1:5,637,083 | 32,436 |
| Mauritius | 1 | 1:1,293,417 | 16,552 |
| Maldives | 1 | 1:404,172 | 7,269 |
| Liechtenstein | 1 | 1:38,378 | 1,726 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 62 | 1:71,449 | 5,226 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 887 | 1:27,481 | 3,744 |
| Scotland | 49 | 1:76,392 | 4,290 |
| Wales | 4 | 1:392,104 | 12,338 |
| Jersey | 1 | 1:51,882 | 3,898 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 2,760 | 1:18,195 | 2,302 |
The alternate forms: Märten (399), Martén (57) & Martèn (1) are calculated separately.
Marten (37,758) may also be a first name.
Marten Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of Martin'; v. Martel. This once popular font-name, coming as it did in the hereditary surname period, has swelled our 19th century directories enormously.
Martin de Littlebyr, Close Rolls, 42 Henry III.
William fil. Martin, Cambridgeshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.
Mariota fil. Martini, Huntingdonshire, ibid.
Martin le Cordwaner, Close Rolls, 9 Edward II.
Johannes Martynson, 1379: Poll Tax of Howdenshire.
It is interesting to notice that Martinson still lives, although it does not now appear in the London Directory.
1797. Married — Thomas Martinson and Sarah Burrows: St. George, Hanover Square.
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of Martin,' which see. Strictly speaking the Dutch form, but sometimes merely an English variation.
1541. Buried — Thomas Marten, a priest: St. Peter, Cornhill.
This surname is perhaps from three sources: (1) from the personal name; (2) a shortened form of St. Martin which see, the name of a once great family in East Lothian; and (3) possibly a curtailed form of Macmarttn, which see. Martin, clerk to the chancellor of William the Lion, appears in Angus, c. 1189-99 (RAA., 1, 80), and Martin, medicus Willelmi regis, is mentioned within the same period (ibid., I, 8). Walter Martyn was burgess of Edinbergh, 1380 (Egidii, p. 23), and Laurence Martyn, a native of Jedeworth, had letters of denisation in England, 1463 (Bain, IV, 1335). Robert Martyne was vicar of Garwok, 1497 (RAA., II, 377), Florentyne Martyn of Gybles-toune was juror on assize at Cupar, 1520 (SCHF., p. 187), and there was an old family of the name in St. Andrews in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries (Macfarlane, II, p. 183-198), of which was George Martine (163-1712), secretary to Arch Dishop Sharp. The Martins of Marshadder are descended from Martin, eldest son of Aonghas na Gaoithe (Clan Donald, III, p. 567). Abraham Martin "dit l'Ecossais" (d. 1664), was the first king's pilot on the St. Lawrence river, Canada; the Plains of Abraham, the scene of the battle in 1759, are named from the grant of the land which he received in 1617. Mairtein and Martein 1585, Mairtene 1646, Mairtin 1650, Mairton 1663, Marttine 1660, Mertaune and Mertoune 1607, Merteine 1592, Mertene 1604, Mertine 1509, Mertn 1687, Mertyne 1537, Mirtine 1688.
(Anglo-French-Latin) for Martin, q.v. (Anglo-French-Teut.) a nickname from the Marten or Weasel [for martern, Middle English Old French martrin, of marten’s fur; Middle English Old French martre, Low Latin (pl.) martures; of Teutonic origin]
(French, English) Descendant of Martinus (belonging to Mars, the god of war).
The Martens of Sussex are stated to have come from the "province of Aquitaine, in France, and lived there Anno 1386." Kent's Grammar of Heraldry, 1716.
From the personal name, rendered illustrious by St. Martin, the apostol of the Gauls. Many places in Normandy were dedicated to him, and from one of these sprang the great family who came hither at the Conquest under the name of De Sancto Martino. Both as a personal designation, and a surname, it is very widely spread in all the countries of western Europe. At Paris it is amongst the very commonest of all family names, answering to our own Smith for frequency. Its derivatives are Martins and Martinson. Martineau is well naturalized here, and Martinelli, Martinez, Martini, and other foreign forms are becoming so. The name of the Saint was perhaps derived from the Latin martius, warlike.
This name may be derived from the Latin martius, warlike, from Mars, the God of War. In the Gaelic, mor is great, and duin, a man. Morduin, a chief, a warrior.
Originally MacGiolla Martin, 'the Son of Martin's Servant'.
St. Martin of Tours is said to have been St. Patrick's uncle. He died a.d. 448.
Martin. —Distributed over the whole of England and possessing several homes, the two principal being in the south - west, in Cornwall, and in the south - east, in Sussex and Kent. Less important centres are in Worcestershire and Staffordshire, where the Martins of the midlands mainly reside, and in Northumberland, which is the home of the north country Martins, who also extend across the border into the southern half of Scotland.
The surname Martin derives from the popular first name. The first name Martin has ancient origins which start at the same source as the first name Mark. Both these first names derive from the Latin name Martius, which means ‘of Mars’. Mars was a pagan god of war, and thus Martius was a common name for a warrior. Strictly speaking, Martin is a diminutive of Martius.
Martin owes its popularity as a Christian name to the fourth-century Saint Martin, who was originally a soldier but finally ended up as Bishop of Tours in France. His best- known act was tearing his cloak in two and giving one half to a beggar.
Occasionally, the surname Martin derives from a place name. There are in fact villages called Martin or Marten in six English counties; and from this source the surname would mean ‘a person from Martin (or Marten)’. The place name means ‘a place near a mere or lake’.
The most widespread variations on Martin are Marten, Martyn and Martell. The last of these is a double diminutive (though occasionally it is an occupational name coming from the same Old French word, which means a hammer). The name Martinsmith, which looks occupational, is actually a corruption of the medieval Martinsmough, ‘Martin’s brother- in-law’. The same development is seen in Hudsmith (Hud’s-i.e. Hugh’s-brother-in-law), while the original form remains in Watmough, ‘Walter’s brother-in-law’, and Hitchmough, ‘Richard’s brother-in-law’. Martinson or Martenson, as well as Martins or Martens, are also derivatives of Martin. In other languages the name appears as Martine, Martines, Martinez, Martineau, Martinelli, Martini, Martino and Martinuzzi.
The first name Martin appears in its Latinised form Martius in the Domesday Book records for 1066. However, the surname does not appear until a century later, the first mention being in the Red Book of the Exchequer for Cambridgeshire. Here in 1166 Walter and Helewis Martin are listed.
Martin brothers have on several occasions made major names for themselves in the decorative arts. In the eighteenth century Robert, Julien, Guilhaume and Étienne-Simon Martin invented and perfected the application of a special lacquer for furniture and furnishings. Known as vernis-Martin, this was extensively used at Versailles.
Admiral Sir William F. Martin was renowned in the Royal Navy for having his men arrested (‘pinched’) for even the slightest offence. Ever since, any Martin joining the Navy picks up the nickname ‘Pincher’.
Simon Manfritie de Borton (1210—85) ascended the papal throne in 1281 calling himself Martin IV, under the mistaken assumption that there had already been Popes Martin II and III. His entire short reign was marred by similar ineptitudes, and he was driven from Rome by a popular uprising in 1285.
Glen Luther Martin (1886—1955) was a pioneer aviator and aircraft manufacturer. He made the first flight over the ocean, a short hop from Newport Beach to Santa Catalina Island. Later he formed a large aeroplane manufacturing company, which was responsible for producing such epoch- making craft as the B-26 bomber and the PBM Marina flying boat. Both of these played a major part in the World War II bombing of Germany.
Martins are members of the swallow family. The mud martin is so named because it makes its nest of sticks, straw and mud. Martens are weasel-like carnivores found in Canada, the northern US, Europe and the Far East. The soft, thick fur of these creatures is much valued.
In all, 8 towns in the United Kingdom are Martin-related. There are 17 in the United States including 5 Martins and 5 Martinsburgs. South Africa has a Martindale while New Zealand has a Martinborough. Because of the Saint Martin connections, related town and geographic names are widespread and notably prevalent in Latin-language areas.
With about 185,000 namesakes Martin is the 29th most popular surname in England and Wales. There are over 17.000 Martins in Scotland where it is 36th in popularity. In Ireland it is estimated that with about 15,000, Martin is the 38th most popular surname. The name is notably popular in and around Glasgow where an estimated one in about 269 families bears it. In descending numerical order Edinburgh, Nottingham and Leicester are other Martin strongholds. Around the world Martins are most popular in Canberra (one in 377 families), Ottawa (one in 417) and Sydney (one in 432). The United States counts Martins, Martinsons and Martinez’s together-an estimated total of just over 1.179.000 makes this group their 8th most popular surname.
Marten Demographics
Average Marten Salary in
United States
$46,846 USD
Per year
Average Salary in
United States
$43,149 USD
Per year
View the highest/lowest earning families in The United States
Marten Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Marten Come From? nationality or country of origin
The last name Marten (Bengali: মর্তেন, Georgian: მარტენ, Hindi: मार्टेना, Marathi: माटन, Russian: Мартен) is borne by more people in Germany than any other country/territory. It may appear in the variant forms: Märten, Martén or Martèn. For other possible spellings of this name click here.
How Common Is The Last Name Marten? popularity and diffusion
It is the 30,889th most widely held surname on a worldwide basis, held by approximately 1 in 421,587 people. It occurs predominantly in Europe, where 51 percent of Marten are found; 44 percent are found in Western Europe and 43 percent are found in Germanic Europe. Marten is also the 23,309th most frequent given name throughout the world. It is borne by 37,758 people.
The last name is most commonly occurring in Germany, where it is carried by 7,201 people, or 1 in 11,180. In Germany Marten is mostly concentrated in: North Rhine-Westphalia, where 22 percent live, Schleswig-Holstein, where 15 percent live and Lower Saxony, where 14 percent live. Aside from Germany it is found in 87 countries. It also occurs in The United States, where 22 percent live and Indonesia, where 9 percent live.
Marten Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The incidence of Marten has changed over time. In The United States the share of the population with the last name expanded 138 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it decreased 27 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Ireland it decreased 11 percent between 1901 and 2014; in Wales it expanded 1,000 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Scotland it decreased 84 percent between 1881 and 2014.
Marten Last Name Statistics demography
The religious adherence of those carrying the Marten surname is principally Catholic (58%) in Ireland and Orthodox (83%) in Russia.
In The United States those bearing the Marten last name are 12.73% more likely to be registered Republicans than the national average, with 59.5% registered to vote for the party.
The amount Marten earn in different countries varies somewhat. In South Africa they earn 7.04% more than the national average, earning R 254,376 per year; in United States they earn 8.57% more than the national average, earning $46,846 USD per year and in Canada they earn 3.78% less than the national average, earning $47,804 CAD per year.
Phonetically Similar Names
Marten Name Transliterations
| Transliteration | ICU Latin | Percentage of Incidence |
|---|---|---|
| Marten in the Georgian language | ||
| მარტენ | marten | - |
| Marten in the Bengali language | ||
| মর্তেন | martena | - |
| Marten in the Hindi language | ||
| मार्टेना | martena | 50 |
| मार्टेन | martena | 50 |
| Marten in the Marathi language | ||
| माटन | matana | 50 |
| मारटेन | maratena | 25 |
| मारटीन | maratina | 25 |
| Marten in the Russian language | ||
| Мартен | marten | - |
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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 Marten
- 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