The English language surname Hawkins is said by FaNUK (Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland)[1] to have three possible origins.

Hawkins
Origin
Word/nameforename Hawkin
Meaningson of Hawkin
Region of originEngland; Ireland
Other names
Variant form(s)Hawking, Ó hEacháin, Mac Eacháin, Háicín, Håkan

The most usual origin is the forename Hawkin with an original genitival -s (that is, "Hawkin's son") (or else it is Hawkin used as a surname[2] with a later excrescent -s in the early modern period to bring it into line with the predominant style of hereditary surnames with such a genitival -s).

It is one of many personal names with the diminutive Middle English suffix -kin (originally from Low German or Dutch) added to a single-syllable hypocoristic form, such as Robert > Hob > Hopkin, Walter > Wat > Watkin, or William > Will > Wilkin. The Middle English personal name Haw is a rhyming fond form of Raw, that is, Ralph.

Another possible origin is the placename Hawkinge, near Folkestone, in Kent, England. This was written as Hauekinge in 1204,[3] based on Old English heafoc (hawk), or more likely this same word used as a personal name. A final 'ng' was (and is) simplified to 'n' in English generally; the final -s would be the excrescent -s added to the locative surname in the belief that it was the personal name Hawkin.

In Ireland, Hawkins may be the result of Anglicising a native surname: it was used as a substitute for Ó hEacháin ‘descendant of Eachán' (= little Eachaidh, i.e. a pet form of the personal name Eachaidh meaning ‘horseman’), as it had a vague similarity in sound to the Irish name.

In Scotland, the given name Eachann has two elements. The first element is each, meaning "horse". The second element is donn, which has been given two meanings. One proposed meaning is "brown"; the other is "lord". The early Gaelic form of the name, Eachdonn, was confused with the Norse Hakon. Hawkins and a derivative, Howkins, are a sept of Clan Stewart of Lennox and of Clan Guthrie.[citation needed]

In Scandinavia, we find the name Haakon, Hakon, and Håkon.

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References

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  1. ^ "UWE (University of the West of England) - BCL (Bristol Centre for Linguistics) - FaNUK examples of family names (The Dictionary of Family Names in Britain and Ireland is a research project led by UWE Bristol which details the linguistic origins, history, and geographical distribution of the 45,000 most frequent surnames in Britain and Ireland)". Retrieved 2020-01-19.
  2. ^ "National Archives, Kew. 13 February 1462. Debtor: William Hawkin, of [?Saffron] Walden in Essex [Uttlesford & Freshwell Hundred]". Retrieved 2020-01-19.
  3. ^ "Kent Past". Retrieved 2020-01-19.
  4.  https://electricscotland.com/webclans/scotsirish/hawkins.htm
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