Stewart Surname
Approximately 651,966 people bear this surname
Stewart Surname Definition:
1723. Baptised — John, s. Robert and Edy Steward: St. James, Clerkenwell.
1725. — Jane, d. Robert and Ede Stewart: ibid.
Read More About This SurnameStewart Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 402,074 | 1:901 | 54 |
| England | 51,750 | 1:1,077 | 108 |
| Canada | 50,758 | 1:726 | 27 |
| Australia | 46,244 | 1:584 | 35 |
| Scotland | 36,608 | 1:146 | 7 |
| Jamaica | 17,699 | 1:162 | 21 |
| South Africa | 7,582 | 1:7,146 | 922 |
| Northern Ireland | 7,564 | 1:244 | 10 |
| New Zealand | 6,108 | 1:741 | 20 |
| Ireland | 3,030 | 1:1,554 | 312 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 2,170 | 1:629 | 73 |
| Thailand | 1,619 | 1:43,631 | 4,912 |
| Liberia | 1,579 | 1:2,792 | 361 |
| Wales | 1,578 | 1:1,961 | 193 |
| Tanzania | 1,127 | 1:46,976 | 5,292 |
| Swaziland | 834 | 1:1,557 | 174 |
| Guyana | 736 | 1:1,036 | 154 |
| Saudi Arabia | 676 | 1:45,645 | 6,666 |
| Nigeria | 657 | 1:269,624 | 15,370 |
| Zimbabwe | 619 | 1:24,941 | 3,789 |
| Spain | 607 | 1:77,021 | 6,705 |
| Panama | 600 | 1:6,520 | 700 |
| Iran | 555 | 1:138,347 | 12,462 |
| Germany | 542 | 1:148,534 | 17,848 |
| Dominican Republic | 408 | 1:25,571 | 1,591 |
| Brazil | 366 | 1:584,903 | 21,828 |
| Bahamas | 359 | 1:1,091 | 207 |
| France | 338 | 1:196,517 | 30,555 |
| Costa Rica | 331 | 1:14,441 | 604 |
| Honduras | 312 | 1:28,258 | 960 |
| Morocco | 307 | 1:112,300 | 19,480 |
| Malaysia | 279 | 1:105,714 | 7,158 |
| Argentina | 274 | 1:155,998 | 13,175 |
| Grenada | 233 | 1:466 | 86 |
| Cayman Islands | 231 | 1:277 | 44 |
| Netherlands | 231 | 1:73,105 | 12,407 |
| Philippines | 183 | 1:553,214 | 62,319 |
| Chile | 181 | 1:97,329 | 3,686 |
| Sweden | 175 | 1:56,267 | 4,361 |
| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 170 | 1:663 | 145 |
| Barbados | 162 | 1:1,774 | 345 |
| Vanuatu | 157 | 1:1,677 | 485 |
| Japan | 149 | 1:858,015 | 18,698 |
| Denmark | 147 | 1:38,399 | 4,009 |
| Switzerland | 143 | 1:57,433 | 7,281 |
| Portugal | 132 | 1:78,926 | 3,983 |
| Mexico | 131 | 1:947,528 | 12,750 |
| India | 128 | 1:5,992,698 | 140,682 |
| Fiji | 126 | 1:7,098 | 1,425 |
| Isle of Man | 123 | 1:698 | 93 |
| Bahrain | 118 | 1:11,429 | 2,102 |
| Indonesia | 117 | 1:1,130,335 | 81,024 |
| Jersey | 110 | 1:902 | 104 |
| Norway | 105 | 1:48,974 | 7,020 |
| Venezuela | 105 | 1:287,658 | 6,746 |
| Italy | 90 | 1:679,519 | 59,064 |
| China | 84 | 1:16,277,638 | 944 |
| Guatemala | 81 | 1:198,551 | 3,805 |
| Paraguay | 81 | 1:89,343 | 2,161 |
| Russia | 75 | 1:1,921,641 | 121,498 |
| Uruguay | 74 | 1:46,375 | 5,218 |
| Peru | 72 | 1:441,446 | 13,396 |
| Ecuador | 71 | 1:224,026 | 8,184 |
| Belgium | 69 | 1:166,618 | 22,787 |
| Papua New Guinea | 69 | 1:118,170 | 16,048 |
| Greece | 68 | 1:162,938 | 26,592 |
| Estonia | 65 | 1:20,335 | 3,530 |
| Suriname | 64 | 1:8,635 | 2,172 |
| Hong Kong | 63 | 1:116,436 | 2,358 |
| Guernsey | 59 | 1:1,092 | 205 |
| Finland | 58 | 1:94,771 | 9,814 |
| United States Virgin Islands | 58 | 1:1,903 | 315 |
| Puerto Rico | 56 | 1:63,395 | 1,281 |
| Israel | 55 | 1:155,593 | 16,202 |
| Malta | 54 | 1:7,968 | 513 |
| Antigua and Barbuda | 53 | 1:1,871 | 313 |
| Guam | 49 | 1:3,268 | 415 |
| Iraq | 47 | 1:745,142 | 10,632 |
| Bermuda | 39 | 1:1,674 | 273 |
| Czechia | 35 | 1:303,813 | 38,544 |
| Belize | 33 | 1:10,772 | 1,358 |
| Botswana | 33 | 1:66,271 | 11,607 |
| Gibraltar | 32 | 1:1,061 | 232 |
| Malawi | 31 | 1:552,229 | 19,485 |
| United Arab Emirates | 31 | 1:295,557 | 19,854 |
| Kuwait | 29 | 1:131,058 | 14,967 |
| Aruba | 28 | 1:3,696 | 529 |
| South Korea | 23 | 1:2,227,837 | 484 |
| Saint Lucia | 19 | 1:9,410 | 1,001 |
| Singapore | 17 | 1:323,983 | 13,856 |
| Afghanistan | 16 | 1:2,009,574 | 14,441 |
| Kenya | 16 | 1:2,886,244 | 37,784 |
| Cyprus | 15 | 1:58,992 | 5,768 |
| Nicaragua | 15 | 1:401,406 | 3,386 |
| Poland | 15 | 1:2,533,917 | 108,409 |
| Curaçao | 14 | 1:11,232 | 389 |
| Falkland Islands | 14 | 1:224 | 38 |
| Vietnam | 13 | 1:7,126,620 | 2,551 |
| Hungary | 12 | 1:818,023 | 42,199 |
| Qatar | 12 | 1:196,500 | 26,891 |
| American Samoa | 11 | 1:5,069 | 1,123 |
| Northern Mariana Islands | 11 | 1:4,962 | 486 |
| Austria | 10 | 1:851,544 | 67,454 |
| Oman | 10 | 1:368,797 | 5,193 |
| Belarus | 9 | 1:1,055,673 | 72,859 |
| East Timor | 9 | 1:135,103 | 179 |
| Ghana | 9 | 1:3,002,299 | 11,581 |
| Monaco | 9 | 1:4,118 | 434 |
| Samoa | 9 | 1:21,534 | 479 |
| Uganda | 9 | 1:4,337,698 | 99,715 |
| Colombia | 8 | 1:5,971,759 | 20,087 |
| Cuba | 8 | 1:1,440,340 | 7,824 |
| Taiwan | 8 | 1:2,930,593 | 17,989 |
| British Virgin Islands | 7 | 1:4,513 | 453 |
| Cambodia | 7 | 1:2,212,449 | 7,503 |
| Tunisia | 7 | 1:87,232 | 13,677 |
| Turkey | 7 | 1:11,117,346 | 139,182 |
| Dominica | 6 | 1:12,648 | 426 |
| Egypt | 6 | 1:15,322,626 | 62,302 |
| Saint Kitts and Nevis | 6 | 1:9,200 | 695 |
| Sudan | 6 | 1:6,251,699 | 8,174 |
| Ukraine | 6 | 1:7,587,116 | 277,111 |
| Zambia | 6 | 1:2,641,654 | 34,188 |
| Bangladesh | 5 | 1:31,871,355 | 17,304 |
| Haiti | 5 | 1:2,136,781 | 15,037 |
| Jordan | 5 | 1:1,768,487 | 19,843 |
| Kazakhstan | 5 | 1:3,536,499 | 118,599 |
| Montserrat | 5 | 1:989 | 156 |
| Myanmar | 5 | 1:10,387,597 | 1,301 |
| Brunei | 4 | 1:104,683 | 2,048 |
| El Salvador | 4 | 1:1,585,972 | 4,802 |
| Ethiopia | 4 | 1:24,386,566 | 19,165 |
| Lithuania | 4 | 1:758,647 | 25,175 |
| Sri Lanka | 4 | 1:5,202,140 | 12,146 |
| Syria | 4 | 1:4,825,256 | 12,827 |
| Uzbekistan | 4 | 1:7,732,286 | 43,643 |
| Angola | 3 | 1:8,996,405 | 11,732 |
| Bolivia | 3 | 1:3,538,811 | 11,393 |
| Cook Islands | 3 | 1:6,060 | 1,122 |
| Ivory Coast | 3 | 1:7,690,411 | 57,263 |
| Mozambique | 3 | 1:9,087,190 | 7,315 |
| Pakistan | 3 | 1:59,547,962 | 132,569 |
| Bhutan | 2 | 1:308,020 | 1,264 |
| Bulgaria | 2 | 1:3,489,452 | 64,958 |
| Cameroon | 2 | 1:10,384,534 | 165,830 |
| Croatia | 2 | 1:2,114,302 | 85,143 |
| Georgia | 2 | 1:1,872,772 | 35,618 |
| Iceland | 2 | 1:190,045 | 6,825 |
| Lebanon | 2 | 1:2,818,542 | 25,087 |
| Libya | 2 | 1:3,121,987 | 6,135 |
| Mongolia | 2 | 1:1,412,644 | 16,950 |
| Romania | 2 | 1:10,038,935 | 80,612 |
| Serbia | 2 | 1:3,572,474 | 32,645 |
| Turks and Caicos Islands | 2 | 1:17,164 | 627 |
| Albania | 1 | 1:2,914,055 | 29,474 |
| Algeria | 1 | 1:38,631,551 | 130,422 |
| Andorra | 1 | 1:83,838 | 2,381 |
| Armenia | 1 | 1:2,930,180 | 22,770 |
| Azerbaijan | 1 | 1:9,649,122 | 47,873 |
| Benin | 1 | 1:10,335,602 | 103,742 |
| Burundi | 1 | 1:9,804,852 | 2,349 |
| Cape Verde | 1 | 1:529,642 | 6,792 |
| Chad | 1 | 1:13,592,199 | 13,092 |
| DR Congo | 1 | 1:73,879,570 | 260,543 |
| Gabon | 1 | 1:1,889,194 | 6,814 |
| Guinea | 1 | 1:11,833,817 | 3,268 |
| Laos | 1 | 1:6,588,323 | 1,961 |
| Luxembourg | 1 | 1:580,542 | 15,155 |
| Macau | 1 | 1:601,630 | 1,582 |
| Madagascar | 1 | 1:23,649,837 | 9,420 |
| Marshall Islands | 1 | 1:51,821 | 2,326 |
| Mauritius | 1 | 1:1,293,417 | 16,552 |
| Moldova | 1 | 1:3,561,368 | 78,271 |
| Namibia | 1 | 1:2,409,401 | 19,676 |
| Nepal | 1 | 1:28,480,956 | 22,413 |
| New Caledonia | 1 | 1:276,223 | 10,363 |
| Seychelles | 1 | 1:92,393 | 1,532 |
| Slovakia | 1 | 1:5,336,450 | 140,422 |
| Slovenia | 1 | 1:2,487,675 | 31,128 |
| Solomon Islands | 1 | 1:580,029 | 22,243 |
| Tonga | 1 | 1:107,313 | 791 |
| Yemen | 1 | 1:26,425,294 | 55,147 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 8,721 | 1:508 | 64 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scotland | 34,806 | 1:108 | 8 |
| England | 12,081 | 1:2,018 | 282 |
| Wales | 209 | 1:7,504 | 479 |
| Isle of Man | 34 | 1:1,596 | 208 |
| Jersey | 12 | 1:4,324 | 761 |
| Guernsey | 8 | 1:4,082 | 713 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 71,500 | 1:702 | 45 |
Stewart (135,266) may also be a first name.
Stewart Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
Sharpened forms of Steward and Stuard, which see. The following entries manifestly refer to the same parents:
1723. Baptised — John, s. Robert and Edy Steward: St. James, Clerkenwell.
1725. — Jane, d. Robert and Ede Stewart: ibid.
In Old English the original sense of the word stiward (from older - stigeweard, 'sty-warden') was one who looked after the domestic animals; hence by extension of meaning, one who provides for his master's table. The vowel change of y is due to the following w, and the earliest instance of the final letter of the name being t instead of d occurs in the Armorial de Gelre (c. 1370-88). By the eleventh century the word had come to mean one who superintended the household affairs of another, and was therefore a title of honor. In Scotland the steward was not only chief of the royal household, but his power extended to the collection and management of the crown revenues, to the administration of justice, and in time of war he took first place in the army next to the king. (For development of meaning compare the names Constable and Marshall. ) in early charters and kindred documents steward, seneschal (from a lost Gothic word - sinaskalks, meaning 'old servant'), and dapifer ('food bringer') are practically synonymous terms. There are four ways of spelling the surname-Stewart, Steuart, Stuart, and Steward, besides the borrowed Gaelic form Stiubhard. The fame of Mary, queen of Scots (who speller her name Stuart, after the French manner, there being no w in that language) and of the Young Pretender has made the French form more popular. The Scottish royal family of Stewart descended from a family of Breton nobles, who were hereditary seneschals of Dol. The first recorded is Alan Dapifer , who flourished about the middle of the eleventh century. See Allan. His son, also named Alan, appears several times in Breton history. A grandson of this second Alan, also named Alan, became lord of Oswestry and appears as witness to a grant by Henry I of England to the monks of Marmoutier, c. 1100-08. Walter, one of the four sons of this Alan, was the first of his family in Scotland. He first appears in 1142 when he attests a charter of David I, the 'soir sanct for the crown' to Melrose Abbey (Metros, p. 4). He also appears as witness in other royal charters, and King David before his death in 1153 made a grant to this Walter of the office of Steward of Scotland. No original record of this grant now exists, but its bestowal is proved by a charter of Malcolm IV, granted to Walter in 1157 confirming to him and his heirs the donation which King David gave him, namely, the lands of Renfrew, Paisley, etc., and also gives to him and his heirs the royal stewartry (senescallia) as 'King David gave the same.' Walter the sixth Steward fought at Bannockburn, 1314, and in 1319 he successfully defended Berwick against the English led by Edward in in person, and was one of the signers of the Scottish Declaration of independence in 1320. In 1315 he had married Marjory, daughter of King Robert the Bruce, who bore to him a son, Robert, afterwards Robert II, first of the royal line of Stewart, crowned in 1371. Many people imagine that all persons bearing the name Stewart (or its variants) are of royal descent, but it must be borne in mind that there were stewards and stewards, as King James the Sixth emphasized when he said that all Stewarts were not 'sib' to the king. Every bishop, every earl had his steward, who in his own particular domain was simply 'John the steward.' Thus, for example, in a charter of Richard, bishop of St. Andrews, granted between 1163-73, among the witnesses we find 'Galfridus dapiferus episcopi' and 'Odone senescallus Gospatrici de Rirais' (Archaeologia Scotica, I, p. 113). Phelippe Sty ward of Roxburghshire and William le £z le Stywarde of the counte of Berewyk rendered homage, 1296 (Bain, II, p. 199,203). John Stywarde was one of an inquest at Roxburgh, 1357, Richard Stiward was in the king of England's service, 1371, and John Stywarde of Ennermethe (Invermeath) was a knight of Scotland (ibid., IV, I, 191,771). Steuarde 1442, Steuart 1504, Steuarte 1448, Stevarde 1506. Stevarte 1498, Stiuard 1424, Stuard 1421, Stuarde 1508 Stuerd 1490 Stuart 1429, Stuerd 1490 Stuward 1415, Stwyarde 1328. To the Gaels the Stewarts are known as "The race of kings and tinkers," Stiubhairtaich cinne nan righ 's nan ceàrd. Robert Stuart (1785-1848), American explorer and "friend of the Indians," was born in Callander. In the seventeenth century an East Anglia family named Styward put forward a story that they were originally Stewarts. Oliver Cromwell's mother was one of them, and on the strength of this it was claimed that Cromwell was descended from the royal family.
(Eng;) Seneschal; lit. and orig. Sty-Ward [Middle English styward, sti- ward, steward, stuard, etc.; Old English stiw(e)ard (= Old Norse stiuarð-r)-stigu, sty, animal-enclosure + w(e)ard, guardian, keeper] Hugh le Stiward.—Hundred Rolls But, shortly, from the castel on a nyght, The lordes styward,- God yeve [give] him meschance! —...
Came into the ship allone.—Chaucer, Cant. Tales, B 913-16.
Schyr Eduuard, that had sic valour, Wes ded, and Johne Steward alsua.— Barbour, The Bruce, xviii. 108-9.
It was not till after several generations that the Fitz-Walters and Fitz-Alans took that name [Stewart], destined to become so illustrious, from their office of steward of the royal household.—C. Innes, Some Scotch Surnames, p. 34.
In the baptismal registers of St. James's, Clerkenwell, a.d. 1723-5, the same parents are called both Steward and Stewart.
This Scottish name is one of the most numerous non-indigenous names in Ireland. More than 90 per cent of the families so called are located in Ulster. Bibl; MIF 282*
(English, Scottish) Keeper of the sty, pen or hall, later manager of a household or estate; one who had charge of a king's, or important noble's, household.
Banquo, Thane of Lochabyr, was Steward to Duncan I; the descendants of his grandson, Walter, who was created by Malcolm Canmore, Lord High Steward of Scotland, assumed the surname of Stewart or Stuart.
Walter, the son of Fleance, and grand—son of Banquo, was created, by Malcom III. Lord High Steward of Scotland, from which office his family afterward took and retained the name of Stewart, and from them descended the royal family of Stuart.
Or le Seneschal. Hugo and Nicholas Senescallus, Normandy 1198 (Magni Rotuli Scaccarii Normanniae); Roger, Tebald, William, Alan, Bernard, Nicholas, Roger Senescallus, Engl. c. 1198 (Rotuli Curiae Regis). Nicholas is mentioned in Hertford. The office of Seneschal or High Steward was a chief feudal dignity in each earldom and barony, and must have been generally held by Normans. Of course different families were included under the name in England. In Scotland it is equivalent to Stuart.
(Scotch), Steward. One of the most common names in Scotland. Queen Mary spelt her name Stuart, there being no w in the French or Gaelic languages.
From the Danish, Stigaard; from the Swedish, from the Dutch, Stuart; from the Flemish, Steyaert, Stuywaert; a personal name.
Stuart: derive from a Norman - Alan, Lord of Oswestry. His son Walter was one of the importations into Scotland by David I. in the twelfth century, and the King granted him by charter the burgh and lands of Renfrew, and Malcolm IV. made the office of High Steward hereditary in the family. Alan Dapifer’s son Walter was content to call himself Walter FitzAlan, and Walter’s son was called Alan FitzWalter, with the addition of Seneschallus (Scotice, Steward), from his hereditary office, which soon became the fixed surname of the descendants. The arms assumed by the Stuarts two generations after their settlement in Scotland were the fess chequy (the checquer, used for computing before the introduction of Arabic numerals), in allusion to their office at the Exchequer table. Although the family was not of Scottish origin, almost immediately after its settlement in Scotland it became completely identified with the nationality of the new country, to such an extent that Scotland has accepted the Stuart badge, the thistle, as its national emblem. “No Scotchman,” says Sir Bernard Burke, “should ever forget the title to honour and respect which the family of Stewart acquired before they began to reign, by their undeviating and zealous defence of their native land against the wanton aggressions of the English. Wherever the banner of freedom was unfurled, it was sure to be bravely defended by the Lord High Steward and all the nobles of his race.”
The surname Stewart (or Stuart) is a variation of the name Steward. This name is thus an occupational name, and as such it derives from the Old English word meaning ‘steward or keeper of a household’. The changing of the final ‘d’ in the original to the more usual ‘t’ is typical of Scottish usage, and accounts for why the name is so widespread in that country. Stewardson and Stewartson are occasional variations.
After the Norman Conquest, the rank of steward became synonymous for ‘an official who controls the domestic affairs of a household’ and became similar to chamberlain, though stewards were frequently more exalted in the hierarchy. For instance, the Lord High Steward of Scotland was the first officer of the Scottish kings and had the doubtful privilege of leading the Scots army into battle. Despite this hazardous occupation, a steward soon rose to the highest position in the land. Robert the Steward became King Robert II of Scotland in 1371 and founded the House of Steward (now known as the Stuarts, the French form of the word, adopted by Mary Queen of Scots).
In Scotland, steward (or Stewart) was also often another name for a magistrate. For this, and the more domestic occupational reason, the name became very widespread in Scotland. Thus, only in the rarest of cases would the family name Stewart indicate royal descent (and most of these are already traced in the records).
The first mention of the surname occurs in the early records for Devon covering the years 1100—30, where one Rogere se Stiwerd appears.
‘Bonnie Prince Charlie’, the Young Pretender, is one of the great heroes of Scottish history. As Charles Stuart (1720— 88) he laid claim to the English throne and led the Scottish clans in the great ’45 rebellion. His loyal highlanders rallied round him and he marched south, reaching as far as Derby-only to be defeated at the Battle of Culloden. After this massacre he fled to France disguised as a woman. He finally died, a drunkard, in Rome.
Frances Teresa Stewart (1647—1702) was the favourite of Charles II, her legendary beauty giving her the edge over her many rivals, such as Nell Gwynne. Known as ‘La Belle Stewart’, she was considered by Samuel Pepys as the greatest beauty of her time, and was immortalised when she posed for the image of Britannia on the coin of the realm.
The Australian town Alice Springs was formerly known as Stuart.
Scottish-born explorer John McDouall Stuart made six expeditions into the Australian interior between 1858 and 1862, finally reaching the Indian Ocean.
‘Walking Stewart’ was the baldly apt nickname bestowed upon John Stewart (d. 1822), an intrepid English wanderer who travelled on foot through Hindustan, Persia, Nubia, Abyssinia, the Arabian desert, Europe and the US.
The US Stuart tank, an M3 mounting a 37-millimetre gun, saw heavy action during World War II, playing a major role in the Italian Campaign and the post-D-day offensive.
Five towns in the United Kingdom are related-Stewartby, Stewarton (2), Stewartstown and Stuartfield. Canada has 5 as well, the United States has 9, but Australia and New Zealand have none. Both New Zealand and Chile have Stewart Islands while Australia has numerous mountains, points and bluffs named Stewart or Stuart. Name-related bodies of water and other topographic features are also common. Canada alone has 2 rivers named Stewart and 2 named Stuart.
There are over 41,000 Stewarts in Scotland where it is 7th in popularity. In Ireland it is estimated that with about 12,000 namesakes Stewart is the 58th most popular surname. (The name is not common enough throughout England and Wales to be counted separately.) Stewart is notably popular in and around Glasgow where an estimated one in about 140 families bears the name, while in Edinburgh the figure is one in 145. Around the world Stewarts are most common in Vancouver (one in 455 families), Wellington (one in 484) and Canberra (one in 500). The United States has more Stewarts than the entire population of Sunderland-an estimated total of just over 345,000 makes this their 47th most popular surname.
User-submitted Reference
Stewart is one of the most common Scottish surnames. It derives from the Old Norse word Stigward, meaning 'keeper of a household', 'steward'. Many Stewart families migrated to the Irish province of Ulster, the United States, Canada, Jamaica, and England. In Scotland the Stewarts are found in almost every county. In England most Stewart families live in Yorkshire, Lancashire, Northumberland, and Durham. In the United States, Tennessee, Mississippi, and Alabama have the highest concentrations of Stewart families.
- dinn315Stewart Demographics
Average Stewart Salary in
United States
$41,150 USD
Per year
Average Salary in
United States
$43,149 USD
Per year
View the highest/lowest earning families in The United States
Stewart Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Stewart Come From? nationality or country of origin
The surname Stewart (Arabic: ستيورات) occurs most in The United States. It may also be found as a variant:. For other potential spellings of this surname click here.
How Common Is The Last Name Stewart? popularity and diffusion
It is the 811th most prevalent last name at a global level. It is borne by around 1 in 11,178 people. This last name is primarily found in The Americas, where 73 percent of Stewart live; 69 percent live in North America and 69 percent live in Anglo-North America. Stewart is also the 7,694th most commonly held first name at a global level, held by 135,266 people.
The surname is most numerous in The United States, where it is held by 402,074 people, or 1 in 901. In The United States it is mostly found in: Texas, where 9 percent reside, California, where 8 percent reside and Florida, where 5 percent reside. Outside of The United States this last name occurs in 181 countries. It is also common in England, where 8 percent reside and Canada, where 8 percent reside.
Stewart Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The occurrence of Stewart has changed through the years. In The United States the number of people bearing the Stewart surname grew 562 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it grew 428 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Scotland it grew 105 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Ireland it declined 65 percent between 1901 and 2014 and in Wales it grew 755 percent between 1881 and 2014.
Stewart Last Name Statistics demography
The religious adherence of those carrying the surname is primarily Presbyterian (50%) in Ireland, Orthodox (85%) in Russia, Melkite Greek Catholic (50%) in Lebanon and Orthodox (75%) in Ukraine.
In The United States those bearing the Stewart surname are 11.85% more likely to be registered Republicans than The US average, with 58.62% being registered to vote for the party.
The amount Stewart earn in different countries varies greatly. In Italy they earn 107.75% more than the national average, earning €62,388 per year; in Norway they earn 7.65% less than the national average, earning 319,598 kr per year; in Peru they earn 153.05% more than the national average, earning S/. 49,054 per year; in South Africa they earn 55.05% more than the national average, earning R 368,448 per year; in Colombia they earn 44.57% less than the national average, earning $12,583,100 COP per year; in United States they earn 4.63% less than the national average, earning $41,150 USD per year and in Canada they earn 2.76% more than the national average, earning $51,052 CAD per year.
Phonetically Similar Names
Stewart Name Transliterations
| Transliteration | ICU Latin | Percentage of Incidence |
|---|---|---|
| Stewart in the Arabic language | ||
| ستيورات | stywrat | - |
| ستيوارت | stywart | - |
Search for Another Surname
Stewart Reference & Research
Campbeltown DNA Website - A web page dedicated to the genetic research of those who bear the surname and its variants.
Stewart FamilyTree DNA Group - A group collating DNA test results for those who bear the surname, includes results of DNA tests and discussions.
STEWART (S781+) FamilyTree DNA Group - A group collating DNA test results for those who bear the surname, includes results of DNA tests and discussions.
Campbeltown FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.
Stewart FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.
STEWART (S781+) FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.
Stewart-2 FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.
STEWART-Bute 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 Stewart
- 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