Medieval Occupations and Titles

  1. Pope
    • Poulter
      • Queen
        • Origin:

          Word name
        • Meaning:

          "queen"
        • Description:

          Queen has seen a revival in recent times, reaching its record high in 2018 with 280 births — it has remained steady since then. Previously, Queen saw a peak in the 1920s, but its origins go back even further than that. Queen was a noted name among enslaved people in America, along with other royal choices such as Duke, Squire, and Prince.
      • Quarryman
        • Quilter
          • Reeve
            • Origin:

              English occupational name
            • Meaning:

              "bailiff"
            • Description:

              Reeve is cool and dignified, sophisticated and modern — an excellent combination of assets, and a name being seen as a more masculine and distinctive alternative to Reese.
          • Roper
            • Origin:

              English
            • Meaning:

              "rope maker"
            • Description:

              Cowboyish occupational name that's one of the hottest choices below the Top 1000, increasing in rank more than 5000 places since the year 2000. Roper may not be a unique choice much longer.
          • Reaper
            • Rectifier
              • Regent
                • Sailor
                  • Origin:

                    Occupational name
                  • Description:

                    Supermodel Christie Brinkley launched an entire name genre when she picked this breezy occupational name for her daughter in 1998, and it has become more prevalent in recent decades. The Saylor version, which you might consider a spelling spin or a surname-name, is now among the Top 500 names for girls, given to three times as many baby girls as the Sailor spelling. Counted together, Saylor and Sailor were used for about 1000 baby girls in one recent year in the US, versus about 100 boys.
                • Sawyer
                  • Origin:

                    English
                  • Meaning:

                    "woodcutter"
                  • Description:

                    Sawyer is a surname with a more relaxed and friendly feel than many others, and is one of the hottest occupational names right now, with the Nameberry seal of approval. Sawyer is becoming one of the top unisex names. Both Sara Gilbert and Diane Farr used Sawyer for their daughters, while it was given a boost as a boys' name by the character Sawyer on Lost, an alias for the character really named James Ford.
                • Scout
                  • Origin:

                    Word name
                  • Description:

                    Scout, a character nickname from To Kill a Mockingbird (her real name was Jean Louise), became a real-life possibility when Bruce Willis and Demi Moore used it for their now grown middle daughter, followed by Tom Berenger a few years later. A unisex choice that is growing in popularity for both genders -- but given to girls about four times more often than to boys -- it was picked by skater Tai Babilonia for her son and Kerri Walsh for her daughter Scout Margery.
                • Sergeant
                  • Origin:

                    Latin
                  • Meaning:

                    "to serve"
                  • Description:

                    Sargent, as in Kennedy brother-in-law Shriver, is the more familiar and usable form of this name.
                • Shepherd
                  • Origin:

                    Occupational name
                  • Meaning:

                    "sheep hearder"
                  • Description:

                    Shepherd is an occupational surname with a pleasant pastoral feel. It was chosen for their son by the Jerry Seinfelds, which might inspire others to follow their lead.
                • Smith
                  • Origin:

                    English occupational name
                  • Meaning:

                    "blacksmith"
                  • Description:

                    Even if it is the Number one surname in the U.S.--with more than 2.5 million bearers--we still think that Smith would make a cool first or middle name, whether or not it has family history.
                • Squire
                  • Origin:

                    French
                  • Meaning:

                    "esquire"
                  • Description:

                    Conjures up a tweedy English country gentleman with a large paunch.
                • Steward
                  • Salter
                    • Sapper