Jewish Last Names & Their Meanings

Shalom! We’re tracing the roots of some of the most common Jewish last names found in the world today. Learn more about your Jewish heritage by tracing the meaning and origin of your Jewish last name.

Illustration: “Jews Praying in the Synagogue on Yom Kippur” by Maurycy Gottlieb, 1878
Illustration: “Jews Praying in the Synagogue on Yom Kippur” by Maurycy Gottlieb, 1878. Credit: Tel Aviv Museum of Art; Wikimedia Commons.

The history of the Jewish people is punctuated with periods of immense suffering and persecution. From their beginnings as slaves to the Egyptian pharaohs, to their Babylonian Exile, and up to the siege of Jerusalem and the destruction of the Temple by the Romans, the Twelve Tribes of Israel had remained in the same relative geographical area. This, however, ended after the Roman conquest and the Great Diaspora (as it would become known) scattered the Jewish population around the globe.

By the Middle Ages, the majority of the Jewish people had settled in two distinct areas: the lands of the Holy Roman Empire in today’s Germany, Austria and Poland; and on the Iberian Peninsula, modern Spain and Portugal. These two groups became known as Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews, respectively, and had very little to do with one another. The two groups established diverging cultural traditions which would later be reflected in their last names.

Naming Conventions: Hebrew Surnames

As last names were not a necessity, or even a consideration, in many ancient cultures, Jewish last names were often only used as a point of pride of parentage or religious lineage.

Patronymic last names: Before political repressions and societal norms resulted in many Jewish people adopting European last names, there were patronymic Hebrew surnames, some of which are still around today. The name ben, meaning “son of,” and bat, or “daughter of,” followed by their father’s name became the first established Hebrew surname tradition.

Lineage – priestly groups: If people held religious offices their name often denoted this. The two most common groups of Hebrew surnames denoting religious lineage are Cohen and Levi. Variations of the Cohen last names include Cohn, Katz, Kohn, Kogan, Kahane, Kahneman, and Kaplan. The second group, the Levites, were people who worked alongside priests in ancient Jerusalem. Common variations include Levine, Levitt, Levitas, Lewin, and Lewinson.

Ashkenazi Surnames

The Ashkenazi Jews, or those who settled in Northern and Eastern Europe, adopted the tradition of surnames common with their European neighbors. Many Ashkenazi surnames followed the geographical and occupational signifiers that were in vogue at the time, while many others drew upon the pre-Christian tradition of descriptive surnames.

However, as Erika Gottfried wrote us when she read this article (see her note below, including a link for more information), some of these name changes were caused by state intervention.

Some common Ashkenazi surnames include:

  • Goldberg: meaning the people from the “town of Gold” in medieval Poland
  • Schneider: German for the occupation “tailor”
  • Geller: a Yiddish name denoting the blonde or yellow coloring of hair

It is interesting to note that many common Jewish last names found among the Ashkenazi are not occupational, geographical, or descriptive. Instead, many are colors or the names for precious stones. As a result, common Jewish surnames around today include Green, Gold, Goldman, and Weiss.

Sephardic Surnames

In 1492 the King and Queen of Spain signed an order to force Sephardic Jews to register themselves before their subsequent expulsion from the Iberian Peninsula. As a result, many adopted Spanish last names to avoid detection by the Spanish Inquisition. Many others who were forced into exile in Northern Africa adopted Arabic and Turkish last names due to similar repressions.

Common Jewish Last Names & Their Meanings

Search your last name and uncover the surname meaning to learn more about your family history. Some common Jewish last names include:

  • Abrams: the name Abrams and its derivatives harken back to Abraham, the patriarch of the Jewish people.
  • Blau: one of the common Jewish last names that is a color, Blau means “Blue” in German.
  • Horowitz: a geographical Jewish surname, Horowitz describes someone from the Jewish community of Horovice in the modern-day Czech Republic.
  • Lieb: a descriptive surname that means “Lion,” Lieb gives us the glorious impression of an ancestor who was, in their time, both brave and mighty.
  • Roth: meaning “Red,” Roth is another Jewish last name that uses color, though it may also be used as a descriptor either for hair or complexion.

Your Jewish last name is a link to your past, a window into your people and the ancestors that came before you. If you have Jewish American roots, you can trace your family history using Jewish American newspapers.

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8 thoughts on “Jewish Last Names & Their Meanings

  1. I was surprised to learn just recently that Bensemann is a Jewish German surname. The reason being all the Bensemanns I have met are all blue eyed, including me, my sisters & first cousins. I find that quite weird, as we are fair skinned & fair hair, more like the Aryan race. It use to upset me very much how the Germans abused the Jews never knowing that my ancestors were probably Jews.
    My father was actually born in Nelson, NZ, & he never mentioned this fact. It may have been kept from him.
    Interesting how life turns out.

  2. I am disappointed in the section about Ashkenazic names because it doesn’t mention the single biggest reason for a majority of them: state intervention. Leaving out this information leaves readers in the false impression that most Jewish names just happened. Part of the decree of 1787 by Austrian emperor Joseph II decreed that Jews MUST take German surnames. And in its first iteration the decree limited the German surnames (and even the given names) Jews would be allowed to take to a rather narrow list. I hope that the article will be revised to reflect this information. Plenty of reliable information exists on this history. A good place to start is the YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe’s article on Jewish names and naming practices:

    https://yivoencyclopedia.org/article.aspx/Names_and_Naming

    1. Thanks for writing us, Erika. I have edited the article as you suggest, and directed readers to see your comment at the end of the article and follow its link. Thanks again; we appreciate your feedback.

  3. Hello! I have recently been doing some research into my family history, and where we thought my great grandparents where from the Ukraine it turns out they where actually Austrian. Specifically from Galicia. After doing some research I believe that they might have been Jewish, specifically Ashkenazi. Their surnames where Kozak and Krokowich (possibly Krakowich). If anyone knows anything I would be very grateful!!

  4. Recently traced family tree. Goes to one Romeo Durrenberger, translates as shepherd of the dry barren mountain–the Durrnberg, Canton Basil area, Switzerland, were he married into the Durrenberger family, (seemed odd they had the same last name, unless it is a descriptive one), and where his wife’s is the daughter of another patrilineal line, Vogel, father Jakob Vogel, whose parents are described as familia Vogel…like it is not a surname. Now, I would be happy to learn if the connection demonstrates Jewish heritage and surname adaptation, since we can’t trace any family surname before that 1515 sudden descriptive surname, Vogel, immediately becoming my patrilineal line directly to Durrenberger/Durrnberger from Vogel. Anyone got any suggestions for searches? I was told Durrenberger was Jewish, but I am not seeing it on any list. Vogel is on a list, but I’m not sure if that means it necessarily without substantiation. I was raised by the government, without family, so all I have is that name. I am trying to find out where it leads.

  5. Ok, how about this. Around 1492 in Spain, Jewish people were ordered to register for expulsion from the Iberian peninsula. Many changed their surnames to hide. Could some of the Vogels have changed their surnames to describe the area they are from out of concern persecution would spread and a desire to hide ancestry? It seems to me that Durrnbergers would have been Ashkenazi if they had close connections, intermarriage, with Vogels. Any help out there?

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