Dutch Surname Research · Netherlands Heritage
Dutch surname · meaning, origin and genealogy
An occupational surname from the medieval Dutch/German meier or meyer — a farm steward, estate manager, or village mayor responsible for collecting rents and managing an estate on behalf of a lord. The word derives from Latin maior (greater, senior). Meyer was one of the most prestigious occupational titles in the medieval agrarian world, denoting authority and responsibility. The spelling Meyer is more common in areas with German influence; the Dutch variant Meijer or De Meyer is found in the western Netherlands and Flanders.
Common across the Netherlands, Germany, and Flemish Belgium. In the Netherlands, Meyer is found throughout but particularly in areas with German border contact: Groningen, Drenthe, and Overijssel. Also widespread in South Africa and North America through Dutch and German emigration.
Menno Meyer, Dutch speed skater. Also: the Meyer merchant families of Amsterdam, active in the 17th-century Dutch East India trade. The name has numerous distinguished bearers across German, Dutch, and Jewish genealogical traditions.
MAY-er
Meyer/Meijer records in the northern Netherlands are held in the Groninger Archieven and the Drents Archief. For families near the German border, the German civil registration records after 1874 may complement Dutch parish registers. South African Meyers should consult the GSSA and the Western Cape Archives.
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