Type Surname (from location & ornamental)
Usage German, Dutch, French, Polish, Norwegian, Danish, Swedish, Finnish, Jewish (Ashkenazi), Sorbian (Germanized), Muslim, Indian
Scripts बेग, بيج ,בייג
Pronounced Pron. /baɪk/(German) /bɛiχ/(Dutch) /bɛɪɡ/(French, Polish) /baɪɡ/(Norwegian, Swedish, Sorbian) /baɪ̯/(Danish) /beɪɡ/(Finnish, Muslim, Indian) /beɪk/(Jewish (Ashkenazi)) [key·simplify]
Other Forms FormsVandenberg, Baerg, Barg, Berge, Bergen, Berger, Berget, Bergh, Berghorst, Baig, Begum, Bey, Bay, Beig, Begom, Bagum
Meaning & History
Some characteristic forenames: Scandinavian Erik, Lennart, Bjorn, Lars, Nils, Alf, Nels, Thor, Tor, Knute, Selmer, Anders.German and Dutch: topographic name for someone who lived on or by a hill or mountain, from Middle High German berc, Middle Dutch berghe. This surname is also found in some other parts of Europe, e.g. in France (Alsace and Lorraine) and Poland. Compare Dutch Vandenberg.Norwegian and Danish: habitational name from a farmstead named with Old Norse bjarg ‘mountain, hill’.Swedish: topographic or ornamental name from berg ‘mountain, hill’, or a habitational name from a place called Berg or from a placename containing the word berg. The surname, which is also found in Finland, may also be of German origin (see 1 above).Jewish (Ashkenazic): artificial name from German Berg ‘mountain, hill’, or a short form of any of the many artificial surnames containing this word as the final element, for example Schönberg (see Schoenberg) and Goldberg.Germanized form of Sorbian Běrk (see Berk).Muslim (more Pakistani) and Indian: Variant of Baig.