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Albert is an English, Low German, French, Catalan, or Hungarian surname, derived from the Germanic personal name Albert, which was one of the most widely used Germanic personal names in the medieval period. [1]
Pages in category "German-language surnames" The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 4,621 total. This list may not reflect recent changes .
Albert Brehme (1903–1971), German bobsledder; Albert Heinrich Brendel (1827–1895), German painter; Albert Brenner (1926–2022), American production designer and art director; Albert Breton (1882–1954), French clergyman and bishop; Albert Brewer (1928–2017), American lawyer and congressman from Alabama, Governor of Alabama (1968–1971)
The practice persists among German nobility, e.g. Johann Friedrich Konrad Carl Eduard Horst Arnold Matthias, Prince of Saxe-Meiningen, Duke of Saxony (b. 1952), Ernst August Albert Paul Otto Rupprecht Oskar Berthold Friedrich-Ferdinand Christian-Ludwig, Prince of Hanover (b. 1954), Christian Heinrich Clemens Paul Frank Peter Welf Wilhelm-Ernst ...
Bert Sakmann (Bertold) (born 1942), German cell biologist, winner of the 1991 Nobel Prize for Medicine; Bert Schneider (1897–1986), Canadian Olympic champion welterweight boxer; Bert Stenfeldt (born 1933), Swedish Air Force major general; Bert Trautmann (Bernhard) (1923–2013), German football player; Bert Vaux (born 1968), American linguist
Alberto is the Romance version of the Latinized form (Albertus) of Germanic Albert.It is used in Italian, Portuguese and Spanish.The diminutive forms are Albertito in Spain or Albertico in some parts of Latin America, Albertino in Italian as well as Tuco as a hypocorism.
Alberts is a Dutch and Afrikaans patronymic surname, meaning "son of Albert". [1] Alberts is also a Latvian masculine given name , a cognate of the name Albert. People with the name Alberts include:
The following image is a family tree of every prince, king, queen, monarch, confederation president and emperor of Germany, from Charlemagne in 800 over Louis the German in 843 through to Wilhelm II in 1918. It shows how almost every single ruler of Germany was related to every other by marriages, and hence they can all be put into a single tree.