Atkinson (surname) explained

Atkinson
Gender:Unisex
Language:English
Language origin:Middle English
Origin:Atkin
Meaning:son of Atkin
See also:Acheson, Aitchison, Aicheson, and Aitcheson, Adcock, Atcock

Atkinson is an English-language surname. The name is derived from a patronymic form of the Middle English Atkin. The personal name Atkin is one of many pet forms of the name Adam.[1]

The name corresponds to the Scottish name Aitchison. The name Atkinson is particularly common in Northern England. At the time of the British Census of 1881,[2] its relative frequency was highest in Westmorland (19.8 times the British average), followed by Cumberland, County Durham, Northumberland, Yorkshire, Lincolnshire, Lancashire, Cheshire and Rutland. In Ireland the name is common only in Ulster and particularly in counties Antrim and Down. Some Atkinsons are descended from Planters, although the name was recorded in Ireland before that period.[3]

Acheson is a variation of the name in Scotland and the Border region, having been originally spelt Atzinson (with the 'z' being pronounced as 'y', as in yet).[3]

People with the surname

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Species named after a person named Atkinson

See also

Notes and References

  1. which cited Book: Dictionary of American Family Names . . 0-19-508137-4 . for the surnames "Atkinson" and "Atkin".
  2. Web site: Atkinson Meaning and Distribution . forebears.co.uk. Retrieved 25 January 2014
  3. Book: Bell, Robert. The Book of Ulster Surnames. Paperback. 1988. 1990. The Blackstaff Press Limited. Belfast. 0-85640-405-5. registration.