Rare Surname Names for Girls: Adair, Isley, Zavala - Appellation Mountain.
For the most part, members of the Royal Family who are entitled to the style and dignity of HRH Prince or Princess do not need a surname, but if at any time any of them do need a surname (such as upon marriage), that surname is Mountbatten-Windsor.
Sweet is an Anglo-Saxon surname. Notable people with the surname include : Alec Stone Sweet, Yale Law School professor, musician and pétanque player.
Love is an English language surname predominant, in Great British terms, in the west of Scotland. It is derived from "Luiff", which came from "Wolf".
The Santa Claus that we know lives in the North Pole. According to some North American sources, his original name was Kris Kringle before he changed his name to Santa Claus. Kris Kringle was a toymaker who married Jessica. Other names found for Mrs Claus are Mary Christmas, Gertrude, and Carol.
Believe it or not, the oldest recorded English name is Hatt. An Anglo-Saxon family with the surname Hatt are mentioned in a Norman transcript, and is identified as a pretty regular name in the county. It related simply to a hat maker and so was an occupational name.
(eBook available here: Ripley's Believe It or Not!) The oldest surname in the world is KATZ (the initials of the two words — Kohen Tsedek). Every Katz is a priest, descending in an unbroken line from Aaron the brother of Moses, 1300 B.C.
Senate panel probes billionaire Leon Black's $158 million in payments to Jeffrey Epstein. The Senate Finance Committee revealed an investigation into Apollo Global Management co-founder Leon Black's ties to the late disgraced financier Jeffrey Epstein.
Despite all of these complexities, or sometimes because of them, certain surnames dominate various corners of the globe. Yet there's no doubt about which surname is the most popular in the world: Wang. More than 106 million people have the surname Wang, a Mandarin term for prince or king.
Consider this: “Mary was the most common name given to girls every year from the beginning of record-keeping (at least back to 1800) through 1961 (except for a six-year dip to #2, behind Linda),” reports The Atlantic. Its popularity has waned in recent years, but it still takes the number one spot.
Nevertheless — as a person is normally called and known by something — a person will always have a name of some kind. It's possible to have a single name — that is — a first name only, and no surname (although the single name could still consist of more than one word or name).