Turner Surname
Approximately 673,277 people bear this surname
Turner Surname Definition:
This surname is derived from an occupation. 'the turner,' one who worked with a lathe. Lower quotes Mr. Ferguson as saying, 'Out of all proportion to the number of persons engaged in the trade'; also as suggesting that the name was in many cases baptismal and of Norman introduction.
Read More About This SurnameTurner Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 428,569 | 1:846 | 48 |
| England | 127,933 | 1:436 | 25 |
| Australia | 45,848 | 1:589 | 37 |
| Canada | 26,409 | 1:1,395 | 111 |
| South Africa | 6,077 | 1:8,915 | 1,124 |
| Scotland | 5,791 | 1:925 | 141 |
| New Zealand | 5,764 | 1:786 | 28 |
| Wales | 5,109 | 1:606 | 47 |
| Jamaica | 3,343 | 1:858 | 159 |
| Ireland | 1,716 | 1:2,744 | 505 |
| France | 1,265 | 1:52,508 | 6,903 |
| Northern Ireland | 1,240 | 1:1,488 | 318 |
| Thailand | 1,221 | 1:57,853 | 7,102 |
| Germany | 1,176 | 1:68,457 | 8,761 |
| Saudi Arabia | 795 | 1:38,812 | 5,622 |
| Spain | 791 | 1:59,105 | 5,394 |
| Austria | 593 | 1:14,360 | 2,111 |
| Israel | 531 | 1:16,116 | 2,417 |
| Nigeria | 463 | 1:382,598 | 20,281 |
| Bahamas | 387 | 1:1,012 | 198 |
| Hungary | 371 | 1:26,459 | 2,936 |
| Argentina | 330 | 1:129,525 | 10,974 |
| Netherlands | 319 | 1:52,938 | 9,079 |
| Panama | 315 | 1:12,420 | 1,016 |
| India | 252 | 1:3,043,910 | 90,807 |
| Samoa | 243 | 1:798 | 243 |
| Sweden | 229 | 1:42,999 | 3,404 |
| Mexico | 224 | 1:554,135 | 9,527 |
| Brazil | 220 | 1:973,065 | 34,571 |
| Ecuador | 205 | 1:77,589 | 5,612 |
| Trinidad and Tobago | 204 | 1:6,686 | 1,009 |
| Switzerland | 201 | 1:40,860 | 5,772 |
| Chile | 198 | 1:88,972 | 3,436 |
| Czechia | 193 | 1:55,096 | 9,222 |
| Jersey | 191 | 1:519 | 31 |
| Fiji | 189 | 1:4,732 | 899 |
| Zimbabwe | 188 | 1:82,118 | 11,985 |
| Slovenia | 187 | 1:13,303 | 3,179 |
| Portugal | 179 | 1:58,202 | 3,162 |
| Belgium | 166 | 1:69,257 | 11,060 |
| Bahrain | 162 | 1:8,325 | 1,494 |
| Malta | 162 | 1:2,656 | 209 |
| Vanuatu | 157 | 1:1,677 | 485 |
| Isle of Man | 155 | 1:554 | 58 |
| Philippines | 150 | 1:674,921 | 69,745 |
| Dominican Republic | 146 | 1:71,458 | 3,346 |
| Russia | 143 | 1:1,007,854 | 77,587 |
| Slovakia | 137 | 1:38,952 | 7,218 |
| Antigua and Barbuda | 117 | 1:848 | 145 |
| Denmark | 110 | 1:51,316 | 5,275 |
| Japan | 98 | 1:1,304,534 | 22,820 |
| Malaysia | 90 | 1:327,714 | 17,651 |
| Luxembourg | 85 | 1:6,830 | 1,029 |
| Norway | 81 | 1:63,485 | 9,023 |
| Belize | 78 | 1:4,557 | 813 |
| Greece | 77 | 1:143,893 | 23,795 |
| Italy | 72 | 1:849,398 | 65,259 |
| China | 70 | 1:19,533,165 | 1,095 |
| Guernsey | 66 | 1:976 | 172 |
| Guam | 58 | 1:2,761 | 360 |
| Liberia | 58 | 1:76,009 | 6,407 |
| United States Virgin Islands | 53 | 1:2,083 | 353 |
| Croatia | 52 | 1:81,319 | 13,910 |
| Honduras | 50 | 1:176,329 | 2,117 |
| United Arab Emirates | 50 | 1:183,245 | 12,955 |
| Cyprus | 47 | 1:18,827 | 2,132 |
| Cayman Islands | 43 | 1:1,486 | 194 |
| Mauritius | 43 | 1:30,079 | 5,976 |
| Iraq | 42 | 1:833,849 | 11,429 |
| Gibraltar | 41 | 1:828 | 151 |
| Hong Kong | 40 | 1:183,387 | 2,972 |
| Bermuda | 39 | 1:1,674 | 273 |
| Peru | 39 | 1:814,978 | 17,459 |
| Guyana | 36 | 1:21,173 | 2,609 |
| Barbados | 35 | 1:8,213 | 697 |
| Pakistan | 34 | 1:5,254,232 | 33,450 |
| Indonesia | 32 | 1:4,132,787 | 209,071 |
| Papua New Guinea | 32 | 1:254,804 | 34,943 |
| Kuwait | 29 | 1:131,058 | 14,967 |
| Afghanistan | 25 | 1:1,286,127 | 11,103 |
| Sierra Leone | 25 | 1:283,585 | 406 |
| Venezuela | 25 | 1:1,208,163 | 17,203 |
| Finland | 24 | 1:229,029 | 18,579 |
| Estonia | 23 | 1:57,470 | 10,794 |
| Benin | 22 | 1:469,800 | 32,108 |
| Botswana | 22 | 1:99,406 | 15,343 |
| Turks and Caicos Islands | 21 | 1:1,635 | 178 |
| Poland | 20 | 1:1,900,437 | 96,203 |
| Zambia | 20 | 1:792,496 | 27,807 |
| South Korea | 19 | 1:2,696,856 | 537 |
| Colombia | 18 | 1:2,654,115 | 13,778 |
| French Polynesia | 18 | 1:15,600 | 3,086 |
| Singapore | 17 | 1:323,983 | 13,856 |
| Vietnam | 17 | 1:5,449,768 | 2,445 |
| Serbia | 15 | 1:476,330 | 19,508 |
| Belarus | 14 | 1:678,647 | 56,781 |
| Georgia | 12 | 1:312,129 | 14,385 |
| Kazakhstan | 12 | 1:1,473,541 | 75,349 |
| Ukraine | 12 | 1:3,793,558 | 197,857 |
| Turkey | 11 | 1:7,074,675 | 122,870 |
| Iceland | 10 | 1:38,009 | 2,599 |
| Uganda | 10 | 1:3,903,928 | 93,934 |
| Aruba | 9 | 1:11,497 | 1,511 |
| Egypt | 9 | 1:10,215,084 | 48,153 |
| Morocco | 9 | 1:3,830,678 | 54,497 |
| Qatar | 9 | 1:262,000 | 30,726 |
| Tunisia | 9 | 1:67,847 | 8,246 |
| Uzbekistan | 9 | 1:3,436,571 | 32,268 |
| Ghana | 8 | 1:3,377,586 | 15,333 |
| Saint Kitts and Nevis | 8 | 1:6,900 | 616 |
| Malawi | 7 | 1:2,445,587 | 24,019 |
| Montserrat | 7 | 1:707 | 123 |
| Cambodia | 6 | 1:2,581,191 | 8,069 |
| Falkland Islands | 6 | 1:522 | 125 |
| Northern Mariana Islands | 6 | 1:9,097 | 939 |
| Sri Lanka | 6 | 1:3,468,093 | 12,102 |
| Anguilla | 5 | 1:2,687 | 256 |
| Bangladesh | 5 | 1:31,871,355 | 17,304 |
| Brunei | 5 | 1:83,746 | 1,811 |
| Costa Rica | 5 | 1:956,014 | 6,058 |
| Lebanon | 5 | 1:1,127,417 | 17,983 |
| Taiwan | 5 | 1:4,688,949 | 27,695 |
| Angola | 4 | 1:6,747,304 | 6,999 |
| Saint Helena, Ascension and Tristan da Cunha | 4 | 1:1,464 | 128 |
| Tanzania | 4 | 1:13,235,403 | 84,310 |
| Cuba | 3 | 1:3,840,905 | 13,116 |
| Lithuania | 3 | 1:1,011,529 | 32,308 |
| Moldova | 3 | 1:1,187,123 | 48,973 |
| Mozambique | 3 | 1:9,087,190 | 7,315 |
| Myanmar | 3 | 1:17,312,662 | 2,080 |
| Nicaragua | 3 | 1:2,007,030 | 6,490 |
| Algeria | 2 | 1:19,315,776 | 97,017 |
| Azerbaijan | 2 | 1:4,824,561 | 42,415 |
| British Virgin Islands | 2 | 1:15,797 | 839 |
| Bulgaria | 2 | 1:3,489,452 | 64,958 |
| Guatemala | 2 | 1:8,041,334 | 9,698 |
| Haiti | 2 | 1:5,341,954 | 21,336 |
| Latvia | 2 | 1:1,025,023 | 41,546 |
| Libya | 2 | 1:3,121,987 | 6,135 |
| Macau | 2 | 1:300,815 | 1,009 |
| Nepal | 2 | 1:14,240,478 | 17,812 |
| Oman | 2 | 1:1,843,986 | 9,590 |
| Puerto Rico | 2 | 1:1,775,070 | 6,602 |
| Rwanda | 2 | 1:5,682,489 | 5,910 |
| Saint Lucia | 2 | 1:89,390 | 2,918 |
| Sudan | 2 | 1:18,755,098 | 14,167 |
| Albania | 1 | 1:2,914,055 | 29,474 |
| Andorra | 1 | 1:83,838 | 2,381 |
| Armenia | 1 | 1:2,930,180 | 22,770 |
| Bolivia | 1 | 1:10,616,434 | 17,077 |
| Burkina Faso | 1 | 1:18,352,100 | 30,051 |
| Curaçao | 1 | 1:157,247 | 1,313 |
| Djibouti | 1 | 1:914,932 | 1,612 |
| DR Congo | 1 | 1:73,879,570 | 260,543 |
| East Timor | 1 | 1:1,215,928 | 507 |
| El Salvador | 1 | 1:6,343,888 | 8,415 |
| Faroe Islands | 1 | 1:48,998 | 2,049 |
| Gambia | 1 | 1:1,923,451 | 1,043 |
| Grenada | 1 | 1:108,535 | 1,793 |
| Iran | 1 | 1:76,782,524 | 277,718 |
| Ivory Coast | 1 | 1:23,071,232 | 76,679 |
| Jordan | 1 | 1:8,842,437 | 26,010 |
| Kenya | 1 | 1:46,179,900 | 103,372 |
| Laos | 1 | 1:6,588,323 | 1,961 |
| North Macedonia | 1 | 1:2,101,472 | 31,546 |
| Madagascar | 1 | 1:23,649,837 | 9,420 |
| Micronesia | 1 | 1:106,243 | 1,380 |
| Monaco | 1 | 1:37,066 | 4,748 |
| Mongolia | 1 | 1:2,825,289 | 17,010 |
| Montenegro | 1 | 1:639,565 | 9,092 |
| Namibia | 1 | 1:2,409,401 | 19,676 |
| Paraguay | 1 | 1:7,236,746 | 16,511 |
| Romania | 1 | 1:20,077,870 | 89,414 |
| Saint Martin | 1 | 1:35,156 | 229 |
| Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | 1 | 1:112,659 | 1,704 |
| Solomon Islands | 1 | 1:580,029 | 22,243 |
| Tajikistan | 1 | 1:8,386,692 | 12,859 |
| Uruguay | 1 | 1:3,431,758 | 38,295 |
| Yemen | 1 | 1:26,425,294 | 55,147 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 1,967 | 1:2,252 | 425 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| England | 77,975 | 1:313 | 17 |
| Scotland | 4,036 | 1:927 | 160 |
| Wales | 1,333 | 1:1,177 | 80 |
| Jersey | 92 | 1:564 | 85 |
| Isle of Man | 30 | 1:1,809 | 241 |
| Guernsey | 25 | 1:1,306 | 224 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 78,966 | 1:636 | 40 |
The alternate forms: Türner (138) & Turnér (1) are calculated separately.
Turner (5,386) may also be a first name.
Turner Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
This surname is derived from an occupation. 'the turner,' one who worked with a lathe. Lower quotes Mr. Ferguson as saying, 'Out of all proportion to the number of persons engaged in the trade'; also as suggesting that the name was in many cases baptismal and of Norman introduction. In a day that knew little of ornamental fictile vessels the turner would be busy enough, and the only wonder is that it is not, as a surname, as common as Smith. A glance at early registers will show how familiar the occupation was. Chaucer's Miller of Trumpington could 'turn cuppes.'
'There dwelled also turners of beads': Stow.
'Sponers, torners, and hatters.' - Cocke Lorelle's Bote.
To assert that Tumour is local from 'de Tour Noire,' the Black Castle (in Normandy, of course), is childish; and little better is Tourneour, a tilter. There is no evidence.
Aylbricht le Turnur, London, 1271. Hundred Rolls.
Geoffrey le Turner, Cambridgeshire, ibid.
William le Tumor, Oxfordshire, ibid.
Johannes Tumour, turnour, 1379: Poll Tax of Yorkshire.
William le Tournour. Calendarium Rotulorum Originalium.
Henry le Tornour, Somerset, 1 Edward III: Kirby's Quest.
1791. Married — George Tumor and Ann Eleanor Hanmer: St. George, Hanover Square.
From the occupation of 'turner,' a lathe-worker, once a familiar and skilled occupation. A family of this name had possession of the estate of Ardwall in the parish of New Abbey for many generations. Thomas dictus Tumour held land in Aberdeen in 1382 (RMS., I, 682), and John Turnoure held land in Irvine in 1426 (Irvine, I, p. 130). William Tumour, merchant of Scotland, had a safe conduct in England, 1473 (Bain, IV, 1411), and William Turnoure is recorded in Edinburgh, 1482 (CDE., 54). Johannes Tumour, tenant in Kynmonty, 1511 (REA., I, p. 372). Bartholomew Turnor appears in Dysart, 1554 (Dysart, p. 23), and Patrick Turner of Tullinaucht was heir of conquest of Alexander Turner of Kindroght, 1657 (Retours, Ayr, 495). An old surname in Aberdeenshire (seventeenth century) and common in Cowal in the eighteenth century. See Macinturner. Turneour 1659.
(Anglo-French-Latin & English) Lathe-Worker [Middle English t(o)urnour, t(o)urnur, t(o)urner; from Middle English t(o)urnen, French tourner (Latin tornare), to turn; and Old English turnian) Geoffrey le Turner.—Hund. Rolls, A.D. 1274 Aylbricht le Turnur.— do.
Will’us Tumour.—Inq. ad q. Damn., A.D. 1421-2.
Tourneur and Letourneur (rarely Le Tourneur) are common surnames in France.
(French - Latin) 1 One from Le Tourneur (Calvados, Norm.), A.D. 1155 Tourneor = (prob.) (the Place of) the Turner [French tourneur, a turner] 2 for the French Tournier = Tournament-Champion [French tournier, ‘champion de tournois, homme qui défie volontiers plusieurs combattants en champ clos’; i. tourner, Old French torner, Latin tornare, to turn]
(English) One who fashioned objects on a lathe.
The occupation. One of the most common of surnames-"out of all proportion," Mr. Ferguson alleges, "to the number of persons engaged in the trade" of the lathe. "We find it in fact," he continues, "as a name before the Conquest-a grant to the monastery of Croyland, in 1051, being signed, among others, by a Turnerus Capellanus. The Icelandic has turnera, turnamentum agere; turnari, a tilter-which may probably shew the origin of the name. As, however, the Turner in question was a bishop's chaplain, his "tilting" must have been only theological. But the name may probably have been baptismal, and perhaps of Norman introduction." p. 336. Le Turnur, Le Turner. H.R. See Turnour below.
In some cases, perhaps, from the ville of Torneor, Normandy: usually, however, from Le Turnur, an employment which included Norman and other families.
From the French, Tournaire, Tourneur, Turnier; from the Flemish, Turner; personal name Reginald le Turnur held land in Oxon temp. King John.
Turner: spelled as a surname also Turnour. Some Turners pretend that the name derives from some imaginary Tour Noire. In early entries we have always le Tourneur, never de la Tour Noire. There was, however, a “Sire de le Tourneur” at Hastings.
Turner. —This name is distributed over the greater part of England, but is infrequent or absent in the north beyond Lancashire and Yorkshire. It is well represented in the midlands, especially in Derbyshire, Notts, and Staffordshire, and is also numerous in Lancashire. In the eastern counties it has its great centre in Suffolk and afterwards in Norfolk. In the south of England it is less frequent, but has two independent homes in Sussex and Devonshire. The prevalence of this name may probably be explained, as Bardsley suggests, by the circumstance that until the close of the 16th century, the "turner" made most of the best household vessels, such as mugs, jugs, etc., only those in rough and common use being made of clay. Since this name often prefers to gather in industrial counties, we are not surprised to find that it has its Scottish home in the Greenock and Glasgow districts, though it is not numerous.
Turner has several derivations, dating from antiquity to comparatively recent times. All of these derivations are occupational-in other words, stemming from some form of work or activity. In earlier times, when society was less complex, a man was what he did. Common examples of this are the names Archer, Shepherd, Hornblower and Goldsmith.
The earliest derivation of Turner (or Turnour, or Turnor) is from the Old French word ‘tournour’. This means ‘one who turns or fashions objects of wood, metal, bone, etc. on a lathe’. The reason there are so many Turners today is because in medieval times there was a great variety of objects which could be ‘turned’. Most frequently these were measures for wine and ale, or round pieces of wood for chairlegs. The lathes used by these turners bore little relation to the one you’ll find in a modern workshop, though the principle was the same. The ancient lathe almost certainly evolved originally from the potter’s wheel-although it’s thought unlikely that the names Turner and Potter were ever synonymous. In medieval times there was little call for rounded chairlegs, except amongst the gentry at The Hall.
The turners were a sub-branch of the trade of cabinetmakers, which included many carpentering skills whose practitioners took on the name of their skill. Hence the Turners were closely related (by trade at least) to the Carvers, Dishers (fashioners of wooden dishes) and Arkwrights (chest makers).
A secondary derivation of Turner is from the Old French word ‘tournoieur’ which meant ‘one who takes part in a tourney or tournament’. However, it’s likely that only very few modern Turners derive their name from this fine medieval pastime.
The last but probably the most intriguing derivation of the name Turner comes from the old word ‘turnehare’. In medieval times this was the man who ran after the hare and he literally ‘turned’ it into the path of the waiting hunters. Needless to say, these Turners (or Turnehares) had to be fast runners, and soon the name became synonymous with what we would term a sprinter. The name may also have had derogatory connotations. A Turnehare (the opposite of a Turnbull) was someone who only had sufficient courage to turn a hare (or perhaps run away like a hare). Turnpenny was a nickname for a miser.
The earliest Turner in the records is one Warner le Turnur, who appears in the 1180 Pipe Rolls for London.
The Worshipful Company of Turners, founded in England in 1604, is still a thriving guild of makers of lathe-turned wooden articles.
English soldier Sir Tomkyns Hilgrove Turner (1766—1843) brought the Rosetta Stone back from North Africa’s Alexandria.
Dating from the time of Ptolemy V (c. 195 BC), it is covered in inscriptions in Ancient Greek and both demotic and hieroglyphic Egyptian. His ability to decipher it unlocked the secrets of other inscriptions and led to an intensive study of Egyptian antiquity. The stone is now displayed in the British Museum.
Sixteenth-century botanist William Turner (1520—68) introduced scientific botany into England. The many plants he named include hawkweed and goatsbeard.
Joseph Mallord Turner (1775—1851) is generally acknowledged to be one of England’s greatest landscape painters. His impressionistic use of light and colour is world-famous. Celebrated and wealthy in his time, he died a virtual recluse leaving over 20,000 watercolours and 300 paintings to the nation.
One town in the United Kingdom is a namesake-Turner’s Hill. Australia has a town named Turner while the United States has 6 towns so named as well as a Turners Falls, Turnercrest, Turnersville and Turnerville. Given the popularity of the surname remarkably few geographic features are Turners. Australia does have a mountain and a river which are so named.
With about 167,000 namesakes Turner is the 23rd most popular surname in England and Wales. (The name is not common enough throughout Scotland to be counted separately.) Turner is notably popular in and around Sheffield where an estimated one in about 255 families bears the name. In descending numerical order Bradford, Birmingham and Nottingham are other Turner strongholds. Around the world Turners are most common in Wellington (one in 607 families), Canberra (one in 639) and Auckland (one in 678). The United States has more Turners than the entire population of Coventry-an estimated total of just under 346,000 makes this their 46th most popular surname.
Turner Demographics
Average Turner Salary in
United States
$40,036 USD
Per year
Average Salary in
United States
$43,149 USD
Per year
View the highest/lowest earning families in The United States
Turner Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name Turner Come From? nationality or country of origin
The last name Turner (Arabic: تورنر, Russian: Турнер) is more commonly found in The United States than any other country or territory. It can be found as: Türner or Turnér. Click here to see other possible spellings of this surname.
How Common Is The Last Name Turner? popularity and diffusion
Turner is the 788th most prevalent family name worldwide It is held by around 1 in 10,824 people. The last name is mostly found in The Americas, where 68 percent of Turner live; 68 percent live in North America and 67 percent live in Anglo-North America. Turner is also the 91,771st most widespread forename in the world, borne by 5,386 people.
It is most widely held in The United States, where it is borne by 428,569 people, or 1 in 846. In The United States Turner is most numerous in: Texas, where 10 percent live, California, where 8 percent live and Georgia, where 6 percent live. Beside The United States it exists in 178 countries. It is also found in England, where 19 percent live and Australia, where 7 percent live.
Turner Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The prevalency of Turner has changed over time. In The United States the number of people who held the Turner last name grew 543 percent between 1880 and 2014; in England it grew 164 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Scotland it grew 143 percent between 1881 and 2014; in Wales it grew 383 percent between 1881 and 2014 and in Ireland it fell 13 percent between 1901 and 2014.
Turner Last Name Statistics demography
The religious adherence of those holding the Turner surname is primarily Catholic (39%) in Ireland and Orthodox (100%) in Russia.
In The United States those holding the Turner last name are 11.85% more likely to be registered with the Republican Party than The US average, with 58.62% registered to vote for the political party.
The amount Turner earn in different countries varies greatly. In Italy they earn 6.12% less than the national average, earning €28,191 per year; in Norway they earn 5.8% more than the national average, earning 366,157 kr per year; in Peru they earn 206.7% more than the national average, earning S/. 59,454 per year; in South Africa they earn 67.6% more than the national average, earning R 398,280 per year; in Colombia they earn 2.26% more than the national average, earning $23,214,800 COP per year; in United States they earn 7.21% less than the national average, earning $40,036 USD per year and in Canada they earn 2.96% more than the national average, earning $51,152 CAD per year.
Phonetically Similar Names
Turner Name Transliterations
| Transliteration | ICU Latin | Percentage of Incidence |
|---|---|---|
| Turner in the Russian language | ||
| Турнер | turner | - |
| Turner in the Arabic language | ||
| تورنر | twrnr | - |
| ترنر | trnr | - |
Search for Another Surname
Turner Reference & Research
Tanner FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.
Turner FamilyTree DNA Project - A description of a group researching the paternal lines of men who bear the surname with the help of DNA analysis.
The name statistics are still in development, sign up for information on more maps and data
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 Turner
- 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