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Updated March 26, 2024

Table of contents

Boy name origins & meanings

  • Old German : Famous for nobility
  • German : Noble, bright; famous
  • German : Noble, intelligent

Boy name variations

Adelbert

Adelbert

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Delbert

Delbert

- 6% this year
Masculine
Rare
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Alberto

Alberto

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Albertine

Albertine

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Albertus

Albertus

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Albrecht

Albrecht

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Aubert

Aubert

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Elbert

Elbert

+ 100% this year
Masculine
Rare
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Bertel

Bertel

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Berty

Berty

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Bertie

Bertie

- 31% this year
Neutral
Rare
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Al

Al

- 8% this year
Masculine
Rare
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Alby

Alby

+ 60% this year
Masculine
Rare
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Albie

Albie

- 6% this year
Masculine
Rare
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Ailbert

Ailbert

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Albyrt

Albyrt

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Albyrte

Albyrte

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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Alvertos

Alvertos

0 % this year
Masculine
Rare
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How Popular Is The Name Albert

Family name origins & meanings

  • English, French, North German, Danish, Catalan, Hungarian, Czech, Slovak, Slovenian, etc. : from the personal name Albert, composed of the Germanic elements adal ‘noble’ + berht ‘bright’, ‘famous’. The standard German form is Albrecht. This, in its various forms, was one of the most popular of all European male personal names in the Middle Ages. It was borne by various churchmen, notably St. Albert of Prague, a Bohemian prince who died a martyr in 997 attempting to convert the Prussians to Christianity; also St. Albert the Great (?1193–1280), an Aristotelian theologian and tutor of Thomas Aquinas. It was also the name of princes and military leaders, such as Albert the Bear (1100–70), Margrave of Brandenburg. In more recent times it has been adopted as a Jewish family name.
  • A bearer of the surname Albert, from Saintonge, France, was documented in Quebec city in 1664.

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