Clarkson (surname) explained

Clarkson
Gender:Unisex
Language:English
Language origin:Old English
Origin:clerc, clerec
Meaning:"priest"
Variant:Clarson

Clarkson is a common English surname.

Etymology

It is derived from a patronymic form of an occupational name. The surname means "son of the clerk", and refers to a scribe or secretary. The surname is derived from the Old English clerc, English, Old (ca.450-1100);: clerec, which means priest; the Old English words were later reinforced by the Old French form of the word clerc. Both the Old English and Old French words are from the Late Latin clericus, which is derived from the Greek, which is in turn a derivative of kleros, which means "inheritance", "legacy".[1]

An early instances of the surname in English records is "le Clerkissone", in 1308; "Clerksone", in 1332; and "Clarkson", in 1491.[2]

Persons with the surname

Fictional characters

Notes and References

  1. , which cited:, for the surname "Clarkson".
  2. .