Pigot Surname
Approximately 2,102 people bear this surname
Pigot Surname Definition:
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of Pigot' or 'Picot'; v. Pickett. The personal name Pigot without surname occurs in the Hundred Rolls; no doubt a variant of Picot.
'De dono Pigoti et Reginaldi': Hundred Rolls.
Read More About This SurnamePigot Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| France | 1,598 | 1:41,566 | 5,216 |
| Suriname | 96 | 1:5,756 | 1,347 |
| England | 79 | 1:705,292 | 39,851 |
| Ireland | 69 | 1:68,245 | 4,322 |
| Australia | 57 | 1:473,609 | 36,415 |
| Netherlands | 50 | 1:337,744 | 38,500 |
| United States | 48 | 1:7,551,228 | 341,161 |
| Canada | 40 | 1:921,140 | 70,350 |
| Argentina | 16 | 1:2,671,463 | 118,579 |
| Belgium | 7 | 1:1,642,378 | 98,400 |
| Scotland | 6 | 1:892,303 | 28,047 |
| Uruguay | 6 | 1:571,960 | 26,877 |
| Thailand | 2 | 1:35,319,172 | 966,191 |
| Switzerland | 2 | 1:4,106,458 | 122,336 |
| Mexico | 2 | 1:62,063,102 | 83,384 |
| Brazil | 2 | 1:107,037,166 | 1,031,150 |
| South Africa | 2 | 1:27,088,852 | 277,613 |
| Poland | 2 | 1:19,004,374 | 199,659 |
| Sweden | 1 | 1:9,846,757 | 347,448 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 1 | 1:1,363,975 | 22,013 |
| New Caledonia | 1 | 1:276,223 | 10,363 |
| Senegal | 1 | 1:14,579,342 | 11,705 |
| Russia | 1 | 1:144,123,056 | 881,408 |
| Philippines | 1 | 1:101,238,223 | 404,861 |
| Panama | 1 | 1:3,912,258 | 17,195 |
| New Zealand | 1 | 1:4,528,323 | 55,372 |
| Japan | 1 | 1:127,844,293 | 73,547 |
| Indonesia | 1 | 1:132,249,194 | 811,426 |
| India | 1 | 1:767,065,382 | 1,851,717 |
| Hong Kong | 1 | 1:7,335,483 | 16,643 |
| Germany | 1 | 1:80,505,459 | 560,955 |
| Finland | 1 | 1:5,496,702 | 84,025 |
| Cuba | 1 | 1:11,522,716 | 17,380 |
| China | 1 | 1:1,367,321,566 | 51,149 |
| Cameroon | 1 | 1:20,769,068 | 227,406 |
| Andorra | 1 | 1:83,838 | 2,381 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 30 | 1:147,662 | 8,013 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 143 | 1:170,457 | 14,424 |
| Scotland | 8 | 1:467,902 | 12,875 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 78 | 1:643,829 | 42,510 |
Pigot Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
This surname is derived from the name of an ancestor. 'the son of Pigot' or 'Picot'; v. Pickett. The personal name Pigot without surname occurs in the Hundred Rolls; no doubt a variant of Picot.
'De dono Pigoti et Reginaldi': Hundred Rolls.
Astin Pigot, Yorkshire, 1273. Hundred Rolls.
Richard Pigot, Lincolnshire, ibid.
Robert Pigod, Salop, ibid.
The parish of Framlingham Pigot, Norfolk, is in Brome- field's History of Norfolk (v. 435) headed Framlingham Picot.
Thomas Pygot, or Picot, Norfolk, 1434: History of Norfolk.
The popular form in Norfolk is Pickett, which see.
1561. Richard Piggotte: Register of the University of Oxford.
This well-known English name, often spelt with two Gs and/or two Ts, is derived, as also is Pickett, from a form of the Christian name Peter. It has been fairly prominent in Ireland since the sixteenth century: the first Pigot * I have met with is Nicholas Pigote who was appointed govenor of Dublin Castle in 1546 (another of the name filled the same post in Elizabeth I's reign). Another was an alderman in 1591 and since then there have always been Pigots in Dublin. In 1563 John Pigot obtained a grant of I the lands of Dysert and other places in Co. Leix and since that time the Pigot or Pigott family (they spell it both ways) have been associated with Queens Co. (Leix) as extensive landowners and sheriffs of the county. -The “census” of 1659 and the list of Poll Money Commissioners which accompanies it contain many Piggotts, mainly in Queens Co., not only as tituladoes but actually among the “principal Irish names” in the barony of Maryborough. The others mentioned in that document were of Cork or Limerick; and modern statistics show that more than half the Pigots of the present day came from Cos. Cork and Limerick or Dublin.
Though many of the Pigots mentioned in Irish records were soldiers or ofiicials working in the English interest, the classing of Piggot as an Irish name in the “census” of 1659is not without some justification for (apart from the affiliation of early Picots) we find many Pigots obtaining “pardons”, beginning with David Ro Pigot of Ballyclohy, Co. Cork, in 1573; later on two Piggotts were among the outlawed Jacobites; and in the last century there was John Edward Pigot (1822-1871) poet and Young Irelander, who was the son of a Cork man, Judge David Richard Pigot (1797-1873). The name is also ingloriously associated with the Parnell forgeries case.
*The obsolete from Picot occurs frequently in mediaeval records: one in the Justiciary Rolls of 1306 relating to Co. Limerick is of special interest here because Simon Picot appears (on a charge of robbery and murder) with fifteen other men all of whom bore Mac or O names.
1 the French Pigot, Pigat, Piguet, denoted individuals whose faces were spotted or pitted [from Old French pigue, pockmarked, freckled, etc., with diminutive suff. -ot, -at, -et] 2 for Picot: v. under Picket(t.
Pygot occurs in Leland’s supposed copy of the Roll of Battle Abbey; Pigot in Holinshed’s copy; and Pigot is the usual form in the Hundred-Rolls.
A 15th-cent. Thomas Pygot, of Norfolk, was also known as Picot.
Well known in Ireland since the sixteenth century this name has been located in many parts of the country and has been conspicuous on both sides in the centuries long struggle between Ireland and England. SIF 123
This name is seven times registered in Domesday; though probably in more cases than one as a duplicate. Among the tenants-in-chief, we find: Picot, Hants, 50 b. Yorksh. 309 b.
Picot de Grentebrige, Cambr. 200.
As under-tenants: Picot, Surr. 35, 35 b. ter. 44 b. 50 b. 151 b. Heref 187. Cambr. 190,190 b. bis. 191,194 bis. 195,197 ter. 200,201 b. 202 passim. 202 b. Northampt. 227. Stafford. 247,255 b. Shropsh. 258 passim 258 b. ter. Yorksh. 309 b. passim. 310 b. 321 b. 322 b. 328 b. Essex, 67, 68.
Picot, homo Alani comitis, Yorksh. 310 b. Linc. 347 ter. (see Vol. 2, p. 208).
Picot, Rogerus, Chesh. 264 b.
Picot Vicecom. de Exesse, Cambr. 201 b.
Picotus, Sussex, 25. Cambr. 190 passim 193 b. Essex, 3 b.
Of these, the greatest landowner was Picot de Say, who held twenty-nine lordships in Shropshire alone, and whose real name was Robert de Say, Ficot or Picot having originally been a sobriquet. (See Say.) “Picot (called Miles to distinguish him from his suzerain) who held of him in his barony of Clun” (Eyton), was probably his relative. Another Picot held of Roger Fitz Corbet in Worthin; and his descendant Ralph Fitz Picot (living 1180) acquired Aston, now Aston-Pigot, in that vicinity, through his wife. Others of the name were contemporary with Ralph (Ibid.).
The Sussex Picots were benefactors of Battle Abbey. About the end of the twelfth century, Gilebert, the son of Fulk, the son of Warine, whose father had come over with the Conqueror, gave “a piece of land in a field E. of the windmill” (a windmill is still to be found on the same site); and “Adam his brother, William and Petronilla, children of Laurence; Adam the son of Adam; and Stephen (whose deed is dated 1304) son of the second Adam,” all occur in its chartulary. They appear to have been seated in its immediate neighbourhood.
“Picot de Grentebrige,” the other Domesday Baron, was Sheriff of Cambridgeshire, and had very large possessions in different counties. “Picot bore rule in Cambridge, and Eustace in Huntingdon; and the amount of wrong wrought at their hands seems to have far surpassed the ordinary measure of havoc. Among the other sins of Picot, the Survey charges him with depriving the burgesses of Cambridge of their common land. Yet he too appears as an ecclesiastical benefactor. A church and monastery of regular canons arose at his bidding in honour of St.Giles within the bounds of the old Camboritum, and strangely as the building has been disfigured in later times, some small relics of the work of the rapacious Sheriff still survive. The foundation for a Prior and six regular Canons was made in 1092 at the prayer of his wife Hugolina de Gernon.” - Freeman. The head of his Honour was at Brunne, where the moat of his castle, with a few other traces of the building, yet remain.
His son, Robert Fitz Picot, forfeited the barony by conspiring against Henry I., by whom it was granted to Pain Peverel, said to be the husband of Robert’s sister. Robert, we are told, had a younger brother, “Saher de Say, who is stated to have taken refuge in Scotland, and obtained grants from Alexander I., named after him Sayton. Alexander, his son, was a baron of Sayton and Winton (Chalmers, Cal.I.517; Douglas, Peerage). From him descended the Lords Seyton or Seton, Earls of Winton and Dunfermline, Viscounts Kingston, and (under the name of Gordon) Marquesses of Huntley and Dukes of Gordon.” - The Norman People. In the genealogy given by Burke, this Saer, the ancestor of one of the most illustrious houses in Scotland, is called the son of Dougall, whose father first assumed the name of Seyton in the time of Malcolm Canmore. But when I find that Dougall, living in the reigns of Edgar and Alexander I. (1098-1124) is married to a daughter of De Quinci, Earl of Winchester, Constable of Scotland, I may surely be permitted to doubt! Saier de Quinci received his Earldom from King John about 1210, and it was his second son, who, by marrying the Princess Helen, became in her right Constable of Scotland.
Saer’s descendant Christopher, the brother in-law of Robert Bruce, is distinctly stated to have been of English lineage, v. Ridpath’s Border History. Yet no family was ever more thoroughly Scottish in heart and deed, or suffered more cruelly from the English invasion. Christopher himself was hanged, drawn, and quartered as a traitor in 1306 at Dumfries; his brother John underwent the same fate at Newcastle; and Sir Alexander Seton, Governor of Berwick in 1333, saw his son Thomas—”a comely and noble-looking youth”—hanged before his own eyes at the gates of the town! But it is with Picot, or Pigot, that we have here to do. Though many families have borne and still bear the name (twenty-three coats of arms are assigned to it in Burke’s Armoury), one only of them can trace a descent from a Domesday tenant This was Roger Picot, tenant in fee of Broxton, co. Chester, in 1086: whose line has been carried on uninterruptedly to the present time. Gilbert, his grandson, acquired several other Cheshire manors through his wife Margaret, daughter and heir of Robert de Rullos; and for many generations their descendants were Lords of Butley, and great benefactors of Chester Abbey. John Pigott, Justice in Eyre, who was Justiciar of Chester in 1401, and Serjeant-at-Law for the counties of Chester and Flint 1400-9, married another heiress, Agnes de Wetenhall, and left two surviving sons: John, Lord of Butley; and Richard, seated at Chetwynd in Shropshire, the immediate ancestor of the existing family. John’s posterity continued at Butley till the time of Edward VI., when the last heir died, and the place was sold by his three daughters. “A junior branch, seated at Bonisall in Cheshire, and afterwards at Fairsnape, Lancashire, was still extant in 1746”—Ormerod's Cheshire.
Richard had been transplanted into Shropshire by his marriage with Joan, daughter and co-heir of Sir Richard de Peshale of Chetwynd. From him descended a long line of wealthy squires, who constantly occur as Sheriffs of the county, and held Chetwynd for twelve generations. Richard Pigott, who sold his inheritance in 1774, it is said “for an old song,” and afterwards lost a great part of the purchase money abroad, was the graceless youth that made the wager recorded in Burrow’s Reports under the title of “The Earl of March versus Pigott” He and the son of Sir William Codrington, sitting one evening over their wine at Newmarket, “agreed to run their father’s lives one against the other, Sir William being a little turned of fifty, and Mr. Pigott upwards of seventy.” But it turned out that poor Mr. Pigott had died in his distant home in Shropshire at two o’clock in the morning of that very day; his hopeful son being altogether unacquainted with the state of his health. On this, young Pigott refused to pay the five hundred guineas he had staked; but found that he had to reckon with the notorious Duke of Queensberry (then Lord March), who, having taken Mr. Codrington’s bet, brought an action against him for the amount, and recovered it “Lord Mansfield decided that the impossibility of a contingency is no bar to its becoming the subject of a wager, provided the impossibility is unknown to both the parties at the time of laying it”—Burke. Mr. Pigott died at Toulouse in 1794, having survived both his foreign wife and his son, and was succeeded by his uncle William, Rector of Chetwynd and Edgmond. A branch of these Pigotts is seated at Doddingshall in Buckinghamshire.
Two other families, now either extinct or lost dated from the time of Henry I.; and though both seated in the same county, appear, as far as I am able to judge, to have been entirely distinct Sir Ralph Picott, living under Richard I. and King John, who has left his name to two manors in Essex still called Picotts, “descended from a Picott who was Sewer to Alberic de Vere in Henry I.’s time. Sir Ralph’s son Sir William in the reign of Henry III. held of the King in capite by the service of keeping one spar-hawk in the King’s court at the King’s cost Sir Ralph, his son, obtained in addition 'that the King was to find him maintenance for three horses, three boys or grooms, and three greyhounds; and the said Ralph was to change the Spar-hawk at his own charge.’ He had two sons, William and Robert, which last was of Pateswic, and dying in 1334 was buried in Dunmow Priory of which he was a benefactor. John, son of William, was his heir, and sold the estate in 1349.”—Morant's Essex.
The other Picots—sometimes called De Heydon—held Kingston and Ratcliffe-on-Soar, in Nottinghamshire, of Henry I. in capite by the Serjeantry of keeping his hawks. (I may observe, that this coincidence of tenure is the one point of contact between the families.) Peter Picot, in the reign of Henry II., held Heydon in Essex by Grand Serjeantry; " that is, by the Lords of it serving or waiting at the Coronation of the Kings of England with a bason and towel, to wash the King’s hands before dinner, and to have for fee the Bason, Ewer, and Towel.” He was followed by John; by Peter; by Thomas, who had free-warren in Kingston and Ratcliffe 37 Hen. III.; and lastly by Sir Peter Picot, who survived both his sons, and died in 1313, leaving as his heirs his sister Isabella Touke and his nephew Simon de Seneville.
Old French, picote, the small-pox; picote, pock-marked or freckled. This is Camden's derivation, and I can find none that is less objectionable, for this widely diffused and very ancient name, to which our heraldric dictionaries assign above thirty different coats. The Pigotts of Edgmond, co. Salop, sprang from Prestbury, co. Chester, in the XIV. century.
Pitted with the small—pox, spotted in the face, from the French Picotê.
Or Avenel. See Avenel. C. 1030 Osmeline Avenel, Lord of Say, made grants to St. Martin’s, Seez, which were confirmed by Picot Avenel, his son, and Robert and Henry, his sons (Gall. Christ. xi. 152,153). This Osmeline was probably a brother of Hervey A. Baron of Biars 1035. Picot de Say or A. had great grants in Salop. One of his younger sons, Picot Miles, obtained from him the barony of Clun. His younger son William Picot or De Say held one fee in Salop from De Ver 1165 (Lib. Niger), which Ralph P. also held before 1180. His son Robert was living 1200-1260. From this time the P.s have been seated in Salop, and from them descend the baronets Pigot in England and Ireland, and the Lords Pigot of Ireland.
(English), Picot (French), Pitted with the small-pox.
Lincolnshire, whilst Pigot also occurred in Shropshire. Lower says that the Pigotts of Edgmond, Salop, came from Prestbury, Cheshire, in the 14th century. According to the same authority Picot occurred as a personal name in Domesday times in Cambridgeshire and Hants. There was a John Pigot, gent., of Aviton, Cambridgeshire, in 1443 (Carter). At present the Pigotts of this county have their home in and around Cambridge.
Piggott is a name that has been represented amongst all classes in this county for many centuries, its early form in the 14th. century being sometimes Picot or Picote. Further particulars concerning the past and present distribution of this ancient name are given under the Pigotts of Cambridgeshire.
Pigot Demographics
Pigot Political Affiliation
in United States
United States
Average
Pigot Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Pigot Come From? nationality or country of origin
Pigot occurs in France more than any other country/territory. It can also occur in the variant forms:. Click here for other possible spellings of Pigot.
How Common Is The Last Name Pigot? popularity and diffusion
The last name is the 198,841st most widely held family name throughout the world, borne by around 1 in 3,466,958 people. The surname is mostly found in Europe, where 86 percent of Pigot are found; 79 percent are found in Western Europe and 76 percent are found in Gallo-Europe.
Pigot is most widely held in France, where it is borne by 1,598 people, or 1 in 41,566. In France Pigot is most frequent in: Île-de-France, where 26 percent are found, Occitanie, where 18 percent are found and Hauts-de-France, where 13 percent are found. Apart from France Pigot exists in 35 countries. It also occurs in Suriname, where 5 percent are found and England, where 4 percent are found.
Pigot Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The occurrence of Pigot has changed through the years. In England the number of people bearing the Pigot last name contracted 45 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Ireland it rose 230 percent between 1901 and 2014; in The United States it contracted 38 percent between 1880 and 2014 and in Scotland it contracted 25 percent between 1881 and 2014.
Pigot Last Name Statistics demography
The religious devotion of those holding the Pigot last name is chiefly Catholic (80%) in Ireland.
In The United States Pigot are 13.23% more likely to be registered with the Republican Party than The US average, with 60% registered to vote for the party.
The amount Pigot earn in different countries varies markedly. In United States they earn 24.92% more than the national average, earning $53,900 USD per year and in Canada they earn 15.82% less than the national average, earning $41,822 CAD per year.
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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 Pigot
- 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