Mountford Surname

62,949th
Most Common
surname in the World

Approximately 7,964 people bear this surname

Most prevalent in:
England
Highest density in:
Bermuda

Mountford Surname Definition:

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'de Montfort.' Lower, in his Patr. Brit, says that there are two places in Normandy called Montfort, one situated near Argenlan, the other near Pont-Audemer. The latter is a fortified town.

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Mountford Surname Distribution Map

PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
England5,0391:11,0571,631
United States1,0011:362,09732,264
Australia8631:31,2814,161
Canada3751:98,25510,681
New Zealand1541:29,4055,152
Wales1471:21,0512,237
South Africa1041:520,93941,780
Scotland871:61,5385,001
France411:1,620,066149,911
Argentina331:1,295,25574,988
Zimbabwe251:617,53046,943
Malaysia91:3,277,136121,952
Thailand81:8,829,793476,604
Bermuda71:9,3261,286
Brazil61:35,679,055486,536
United Arab Emirates61:1,527,04651,993
Hong Kong61:1,222,5805,222
Spain61:7,792,006100,283
Norway61:857,04855,549
Greece51:2,215,95891,893
Jersey31:33,0674,675
Denmark31:1,881,57267,227
Ireland21:2,354,47019,715
Northern Ireland21:922,51818,701
Chile21:8,808,23765,417
China21:683,660,78330,601
Czechia21:5,316,734169,646
Netherlands21:8,443,588136,641
Dominican Republic11:10,432,93236,508
Liberia11:4,408,53547,110
Belgium11:11,496,644167,539
Malta11:430,2723,380
Mexico11:124,126,205103,776
Costa Rica11:4,780,06913,345
Cyprus11:884,87613,055
Uruguay11:3,431,75838,295
Japan11:127,844,29373,547
Italy11:61,156,688199,583
Turkey11:77,821,422191,047
Finland11:5,496,70284,025
Iceland11:380,09011,096
India11:767,065,3821,851,717
Indonesia11:132,249,194811,426
Qatar11:2,357,99976,403
Philippines11:101,238,223404,861
Panama11:3,912,25817,195
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
Ireland81:553,73317,655
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
England2,6221:9,2961,394
Wales391:40,2162,129
Scotland111:340,29210,329
PlaceIncidenceFrequencyRank in Area
United States1031:487,56034,505

Mountford Surname Meaning

From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history

This surname is derived from a geographical locality. 'de Montfort.' Lower, in his Patr. Brit, says that there are two places in Normandy called Montfort, one situated near Argenlan, the other near Pont-Audemer. The latter is a fortified town. (2) Local, 'of Montford,' a parish five miles from Shrewsbury, Salop.

Simon de Monteforte, Nottinghamshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.

Petronilla de Monteforti, Wiltshire, ibid.

Henry de Monteforti, Somerset, ibid.

Henry Mounfort, Somerset, t Edward III: Kirby's Quest.

Reginald de Monte Forti, Somerset, 1 Edward III: ibid.

1586. John Mountford, Warwickshire: Register of the University of Oxford.

1602. Buried — John Mounford: St. Antholin.

1621. Married — Frederic Steward and Abigail Mondeford, of Mondeford, in Norfolk: St. Michael, Cornhill.

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

= Montford = Montfort, q.v.

Surnames of the United Kingdom (1912) by Henry Harrison

From Montfort-sur-Rille, near Brionne, in the arrondissement of Pont Audemer. The site of their castle can still be traced near the present town. This great baronial house derived from a common ancestor with the Bertrams, Oslac, Baron de Briquebec, who lived in the tenth century. His son Thurstan de Bastenberg was the father of Hugh Barbatus—Hugh with the beard —whom both Dugdale and Sir Henry Ellis believe to have been the companion of the Conqueror. But Wace expressly tells us that he had been slain in a private quarrel soon after William became Duke of Normandy—in those early and evil days “when the feuds against him were many, and his friends few; when the barons warred upon each other, and the strong oppressed the weak. A mighty feud broke out between Walkelin de Ferrières, and Hugh Lord of Montfort; I know not which was right and which wrong; but they waged fierce war with each other, and were not to be reconciled; neither by bishop nor lord could peace or love be established between them. Both were good knights, bold and brave. Once upon a time they met, and the rage of each against the other was so great that they fought to the death. I know not which carried himself most gallantly, or who fell the first, but the issue of the affray was that Hugh was slain, and Walkelin fell also; both lost their lives in the same affray, and on the same day.” This combat is mentioned by William de Jumièges. It was therefore another Hugh—his son Hugh II., who furnished fifty ships and sixty knights for the expedition to England, and was the “Constable” spoken of by Ordericus at the battle of Hastings; for the De Montforts were hereditary Marshalls of Normandy. He had gained his reputation in arms twelve years before, when he had been one of the leaders at the famous battle of Mortemer. Wace describes how he helped to save William Malet’s life (see p. 262) and “he is one of the four knights named by Guy, Bishop of Amiens, as the mutilators of the body of Harold at the close of the conflict; but I need only here repeat my utter disbelief in so improbable a statement, supported by no other contemporary writer.”—Planché. He received a barony of one hundred and thirteen English manors, with a large proportion of Romney Marsh, and “was one of the barons intrusted by the Conqueror with the administration of justice throughout England, under Bishop Odo and William Fitz Osbern in 1067; and by the Bishop himself, Hugh de Montfort was made Governor of the Castle of Dover, the chief fortress in Odo’s own Earldom, and the key of the kingdom. His absence on other duties with the Bishop south of the Thames was taken advantage of by the Kentish malcontents, and led to the assault of the Castle by the Count of Boulogne. The attempt failed, through the loyalty of the Royal garrison and the personal hostility to Eustace entertained by the townsmen from the recollection of the fatal affray in 1051.”—Ibid.

This second Hugh de Montfort died a monk in the Abbey of Bec, but at what date is not exactly known. He had been twice married, and left two sons; but both were childless, and his daughter Alice was his heir. The elder, Hugh III., died on pilgrimage. The second, Robert, who in 1099 commanded the Norman army in Maine, took part with Robert Curthose against Henry I., and being “called in question for his infidelity,” begged permission to go to the Holy Land, and joined the Crusaders under Bohemund, receiving a hearty welcome and a high command as Strator Normanici exercitus hereditario jure. He never returned home, and had perforce left the whole of his possessions in the King’s hands. They must, however, have been given back to his sister Alice— perhaps because she was the wife of the King’s cousin, Gilbert de Gant; for “by reason of her being so great an Inheritrix,” their son bore her name of Montfort, and was styled Hugh IV. He joined in the rebellion of Waleran Earl of Mellent, whose daughter he had married, and spent fourteen years of his life in prison— “no man,” says Dugdale, “interceding for his enlargement, in regard what he had done was without any provocation.” Fourth in descent from him comes Peter de Montfort, who, “puffed up with ambition,” took a leading part in the Baron’s War, and was one of the council of nine authorized to exercise regal power after the victory of Lewes. More than this; in the Commission soon after appointed “to reform and settle the Kingdom, there was a more especial power given to this Peter than any of the rest, viz.: That whatsoever he should swear to do, the King must be obliged to it During the time of his continuance in power, certain it is, that he did much mischief;” but his reign and his life ended together in the disastrous rout of Evesham, when the Prince of Wales “came down upon those rebellious Barons like terrible Thunder,” and he fell by the side of his great namesake, Simon Earl of Leicester:— “le fleur de pris Qui taunt savoit le guerre!” This famous Earl was in no wise connected with the baronial De Montforts. His father, Simon the Bald, who first came to England in King John’s time, and achieved his fortune by marrying Amicia de Beaumont, the eldest co-heiress of the Earl of Leicester (sec Beaumont) was the great-grandson of an illegitimate son of Robert, King of France, who had the town of Montfort by gift of his father, and thence assumed his surname. “In him this family was in the Meridian of its glory, which thenceforward daily faded.” Yet his son was “in no whit abridged of his ancient Patrimony,” being admitted to grace by the Dictum of Kenilworth, though he, too, had been in arms with the barons, and taken prisoner at Evesham. The next heir, John, who went to the wars of Gascony with Edward I., had summons to parliament in 1295, and was succeeded in his barony by his two sons. The youngest, Peter, was in priest’s orders when his elder brother died, but “was so dispensed with that he took to the World and became a Knight,” married Margaret de Furnivall, and, as we shall presently see, still further emancipated himself from the austerity of his earlier years. His wife brought him an only son, named Guy, between whom and Margaret de Beauchamp, daughter of Thomas Earl of Warwick, a marriage was arranged “for the better founding of a firm league of friendship between them and their Posterities, in regard that many Suits had been betwixt their Ancestors, by reason that their Lands, in divers places, lay continuous.” There was an additional compact, which settled these questions to the Earl’s advantage, for it so happened that the young heir died before his father, and left no posterity. Failing issue by Guy and Margaret, Montfort’s castle and estate of Beldesert in Warwickshire, with many other lands, were to go to the said Thomas, Earl of Warwick, on Sir Peter’s death. “But all this while Sir Peter was living, and having had issue by an old Concubine, Lora de Ullenhalle, took care for their advancement, as may appear by those Lands they enjoyed.” These illegitimate descendants flourished at Coleshill, co. Warwick, till the attainder of Sir Simon Montfort in the time of Henry VII.

The name is kept by Wellesbourne Montford in Warwickshire.

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

A Norman name: Montfort; a local name Domesday Book de Montfort.

British Family Names (1894) by Henry Barber

In the 16th century the distinguished family of Mountford owned the manor of Aldrich (E.). The name is also represented in Herefordshire.

Homes of Family Names in Great Britain (1890) by Henry Brougham Guppy

Mountford Last Name Facts

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

The surname Mountford is most common in England. It may also be found as a variant:. For other possible spellings of this surname click here.

How Common Is The Last Name Mountford? popularity and diffusion

This surname is the 62,949th most prevalent family name throughout the world, held by around 1 in 915,061 people. It is mostly found in Europe, where 67 percent of Mountford are found; 66 percent are found in Northern Europe and 66 percent are found in British Isles.

This last name is most commonly occurring in England, where it is held by 5,039 people, or 1 in 11,057. In England Mountford is most common in: Staffordshire, where 29 percent reside, West Midlands, where 9 percent reside and Greater London, where 6 percent reside. Not including England this last name is found in 45 countries. It is also found in The United States, where 13 percent reside and Australia, where 11 percent reside.

Mountford Family Population Trend historical fluctuation

The occurrence of Mountford has changed through the years. In England the share of the population with the last name expanded 192 percent between 1881 and 2014; in The United States it expanded 972 percent between 1880 and 2014; in Wales it expanded 377 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Scotland it expanded 791 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it declined 75 percent between 1901 and 2014.

Mountford Last Name Statistics demography

The religious adherence of those bearing the Mountford last name is chiefly Anglican (100%) in Ireland.

In The United States those holding the Mountford last name are 17.14% more likely to be registered Republicans than the national average, with 63.91% registered with the political party.

The amount Mountford earn in different countries varies notably. In South Africa they earn 0.05% less than the national average, earning R 237,516 per year; in United States they earn 20.64% more than the national average, earning $52,053 USD per year and in Canada they earn 24.28% more than the national average, earning $61,746 CAD per year.

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Mountford Reference & Research

Mumford 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 Mountford
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