As described in historical dictionaries

An Etymological Dictionary of Family and Christian Names (1857)

A man free-born, a freeholder; one next in order to the gentry.

Arthur, William (1857) An Etymological Dictionary of Family and Christian Names. New York: Sheldon, Blakeman. Public Domain.


Patronymica Britannica (1860)

YEOMAN. A freeholder; the first degree of commoners. Some " define a Yeoman to be a free-born Englishman, wlio may lay out of his own free land in revenue to the sum of forty shillings." Bailey. Under the feudal system a knight's fee was twenty pounds, whence it would follow, that an ordinary yeoman's revenue was one-tenth part of that of the knight ; though some Yeomen, for example tiaose of Kent, were much richer. See Wliatman.

Lower, Mark A (1860) Patronymica Britannica: a dictionary of the family names of the United Kingdom. London: J.R. Smith. Public Domain.


Surname type: Occupational name

Origin: English

Region of origin: British Isles

Country of origin: England

Religion of origin: Christian

Language of origin: English

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