Find out the origin, the popularity and the genealogy of the surname Aber in GeneaNet

Aber: Origin, Geographical Distribution
(Celtic and Gaelic.) Local. The name of a parish in Fife, Scotland, on the northern shore of the Frith of Forth, whence the possessor took his surname; from Aber, marshy ground, a place where two or more streams meet; and cruvme or crombie, a bend or crook. Aber, in the Celtic and Gaelic, and also in the Cornish British, signifies the confluence of two or more streams, or the mouth of a river, where it flows into the sea; hence it is often applied to marshy ground, generally near the confluence of two rivers. It also signifies, sometimes, a gulf or whirlpool.
Aber Surname Origin
Aber: Place of Origin :  Grampian (United Kingdom) |  Powys (United Kingdom) |  Lothian (United Kingdom) |  Leitrim (Ireland) |  Tayside (United Kingdom) |  London (United Kingdom)
Aber: Online Family Trees

Online Family Tree Archive & Transcript Library Other Source
Aber: Books that contain this surname
Paying Access
ABERHistory of Pittsburgh and Environs: Biographical (Volume 1)
Author: George Thornton Fleming, American Historical Company - Published in 1922
... of the city. He married Mary E. Aber. and among their children was a son, Frank A. Sowash, now president ...
ABERThe Pennsylvania magazine of history and biography (Volume 43)
Author: Historical Society of Pennsylvania - Published in 1877
... Philadelphia. He assisted Rev. Dr. James Aber-crombie in founding the "Academy of the Protestant Episcopal Church," now located on Locust ...
More...


Updated on 2011-04-12
GeneaNet Homepage | Surname