Carnock is used as a family name or surname in Wales. It is 7 characters long in length.

Family Name / Last Name: Carnock
No. of characters: 7
Origin: Wales
Meaning:

Family name Carnock is a form of Corns. See under Cowhorn - The Hundred Rolls have the similar name, Corndeboef (corn-ile bouf) and Corns and Cornu still exist as surnames. Perhaps applied originally to one who blew a cow's horn.

The form of the Cornish. One who came from Cornwall, i.e., the Welsh in Cornavia, a county in England.

The surname is variant form of Cornish. Belonging to Cornwall applied originally to one who had removed from that to another county. A family so called at St. Issey in Cornwall, "originally descended from one William Cornish, who settled here temp. Queen Mary, a Welshman."

The local surnames of Cornwall present some marked peculiarities, which render it convenient to treat of a large body of them in one article. In most of the countries and districts where the Celtic dialects prevail, or have prevailed, the family names are principally of the patronymical class—the son or descendant having assumed the name of the father or ancestor with some prefix. For instance, most of the Gaelic surnames were personal names compounded with Mac; the Irish with O'; the Welsh with Ap or Ab. In Cornwall, however, the names are principally of the local sort, and as the names of places in that county are generally derived from Celtic roots, possessing, as to the first syllable at least, a generic meaning, it has be come proverbial that,
"By Tre, Pol, and Pen,
Ye shall know the Cornish-men."
while a less known and more comprehensive distich with more truth affirms that-
"By Tre, Ros, Pol, Lan, Caer, and Pen,
You may know the most of Cornishmen."

TRE is equivalent to the Anglo-Saxon tun, a town, or enclosure; Ros to heath, or unenclosed ground; Pol, to pool; LAN, to church; CAER or CAR, to a fortified place; and PEx, to a headland. In Breton local names and surnames, the same prefixes occur, though "pol" is written poul, and "car," or ker. In Walesthere are likewise caer many," place- names with these syllables, with modified orthographies and modified significations—Tre, Rhos, Pwll, Llan, Caer, and Pen; but these with rare exceptions have not given names to families. In Scotland, Ros, Caer, and perhaps some of the others, occur in the same sense; and also in Ireland, but as these arebut rarely, if at all, found as surnames, they belong rather to topographical than to family nomenclature. In the following lists I have arranged such Cornish sur names as have occurred to me en masse, reserving such elucidations as seem necessary for their particular and proper places in the alphabetical order of the work.

Surname is a variant of the Corns. A nickname of Cornelius.

How popular is Carnock?

Carnock is ranked 2435106 on our list.

Carnock is a very rare family name, few people in United States and Sweden have the last name. Around 62 people have been found who wears Carnock as their family name. Few people around the world have Carnock as their surname. More detailed information can be found below:
RankCountryCount
Countries with low frequency i.e., 50 - 100:
318,668 United States53
Countries with very very low frequency i.e., 6 - 10:
116,183 Sweden6

Immigrants to US

From Ireland

Jas. Carnock worked as workman and hailed from Ireland. During the great famine, 28 years old embarked for USA from Liverpool on Shoodiac and arrived on July 5, 1850. Ann Carnock (28) , Martin Carnock, aged 9 months old, are other Carnock that migrated to US.

Carnock Namesakes

  • John Erskine of Carnock, Scottish jurist and professor of Scottish law at the University of Edinburgh
  • Erskine Nicolson, 3rd Baron Carnock, British peer and sailor
  • David Nicolson, 4th Baron Carnock, British peer and solicitor
  • Robert Drummond of Carnock, was Master of Work to the Crown of Scotland
  • Arthur Nicolson, 1st Baron Carnock, British diplomat and politician during the last quarter of the 19th century to the middle of World War I

Carnock Namesakes

  • John Erskine of Carnock, Scottish jurist and professor of Scottish law at the University of Edinburgh
  • Erskine Nicolson, 3rd Baron Carnock, British peer and sailor
  • David Nicolson, 4th Baron Carnock, British peer and solicitor
  • Robert Drummond of Carnock, was Master of Work to the Crown of Scotland
  • Arthur Nicolson, 1st Baron Carnock, British diplomat and politician during the last quarter of the 19th century to the middle of World War I

Related Family Names: