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TRIBAL AFFILIATION
Shabtaw/ Choctaw
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SURNAME HERITAGE
England/Ireland/Scotland
King History, Family Crest & Coats of Arms
The origins of the King surname date back to the time of the Anglo-Saxon tribes of Britain. It comes from an early member of the family who was a person who lived and acted like a king. It is derived from the Old English cyning or cyng, meaning “king,” and was probably first bestowed as a nickname upon someone who was kingly in personality or appearance, or perhaps to someone who had played the king in a pageant.
As one source notes, it is curious that the name “Queen” is not as popular as it should be given the similar importance of the title in ancient times. 1
Early Origins of the King family
The surname King was first found in Devon, where the name was first found about 1050. 2 Geoffrey King brought the name to Cheshire in 1177 and by 1273 John King had established lands and estates in the county of Norfolk as evidenced by John le Kyng who was listed in the Hundredorum Rolls of Norfolk at that time. The Hundredorum Rolls also lists Walter le Kyng in Cambridgeshire. 1
Regional distribution of the name is interesting. “Mostly confined south of a line drawn from the Wash to the southern border of Shropshire. North of this line the name rapidly diminishes in frequency, being absent from my list in nearly all the counties thus marked off. It is rare also in the extreme south – west, in Devon and Cornwall. It is best represented in Beds, Bucks, Suffolk, and Wilts. The name is sparingly represented in Scotland.” 3
In Scotland, it was “a surname of some antiquity and still met with in many parts of the country, Berwick, Fife, and Aberdeen. The first of the name recorded in Aberdeenshire is “Robertus dictus King” who bequeathed to the prior and convent of St. Andrews land in that shire which was the subject of a convention in 1247 between his brother’s daughter, Goda, and the prior and convent.” 4