Browse Surnames

This is a list of surnames in which the usage is German; and the first letter is F.
usage
letter
Fabel German
Derived from a diminutive of the given name Fabian.
Fabian German, English, Polish
Derived from the given name Fabian.
Falk Swedish, Danish, Norwegian, German
From Old Norse falki or Old High German falco meaning "falcon".
Falkenrath German
Derived from Middle High German falke "falcon" and rat "counsel, advice".
Falkner English, German
English variant and German cognate of Faulkner.
Färber German
Occupational name meaning "dyer", derived from German Farbe "colour".
Fashingbauer German
From Fasching, a German carnival (Fastnacht meaning "eve of the beginning of the fast", or the time before Lent) celebrated in Austria and Bavaria, and bauer meaning "farmer".
Faust German
Derived from the given name Faust, a form of Faustus.
Feigenbaum German, Jewish
Means "fig tree" in German.
Feld German, Jewish
Means "field" in German. The name was originally given to someone who lived on land cleared of forest.
Feldt German, Danish, Swedish
North German, Danish and Swedish variant of Feld.
Fenstermacher German
Means "window maker" in German.
Ferber German
Variant of Färber.
Fertig German
Means "ready, prepared" in German.
Fiedler German
Means "fiddler" in German.
Fischer German
Occupational name meaning "fisherman" in German.
Flater German
Means "reed bed" in German.
Fleischer German
Occupational name meaning "butcher" in German.
Forney German
Name for someone who lived near ferns, from Old High German farn "fern".
Forst German
Derived from Old High German forst "forest". Probably unrelated to the Old French word forest, which was derived from Latin, Old High German forst was derived from foraha meaning "fir tree".
Förstner German
Denoted a keeper or one in charge of a forest (see Forst).
Frank 3 German, Dutch, Danish, Norwegian
Name for a person from Franconia in Germany, so called because it was settled by the Frankish people. A notable bearer was the German-Jewish diarist Anne Frank (1929-1945), a victim of the Holocaust.
Frankenstein German, Literature
From any of the various minor places by this name in Germany, meaning "stone of the Franks" in German. It was used by the author Mary Shelley in her novel Frankenstein (1818) for the character of Victor Frankenstein, a scientist who creates a monster and brings it to life. The monster, nameless in the novel, is sometimes informally or erroneously called Frankenstein in modern speech.
Franz German
Derived from the given name Franz.
Frei German
Means "free" in German, probably referring to someone outside the feudal system.
Freud German, Jewish
Means "joy" in German, a nickname for a cheerful person. A famous bearer was the psychologist Sigmund Freud (1856-1939).
Freudenberger German, Jewish
Ornamental name from old German freud meaning "joy" and berg meaning "mountain".
Freund German
From Middle High German vriunt, modern German Freund meaning "friend".
Fried German
Derived from the given name Friedrich.
Friedrich German
Derived from the given name Friedrich.
Fries German
Denoted someone from Frisia, an area along the coastal region of the North Sea stretching from Netherlands to Germany.
Fromm German
From a nickname derived from Middle High German vrume meaning "noble, honourable".
Frost English, German
From Old English and Old High German meaning "frost", a nickname for a person who had a cold personality or a white beard.
Fuchs German
From Old High German fuhs meaning "fox". It was originally a nickname for a person with red hair.
Fuhrmann German
Derived from Middle High German vuorman meaning "cartwright".
Fürst German
From a nickname meaning "(sovereign) prince" in German. The word fürst itself is derived from Old High German furisto "first".
Fux German
Variant of Fuchs.