alexander melville Bell 1819-1905 – Ancestry®
English (northern) and Scottish (Lowlands): from Middle English‘bell’ (Old English) in various applications; most probably a metonymic occupational name for a bell ringer or bell maker or a topographic name for someone living ‘at the bell’ (as attested by 14th-century forms such as). This indicates either residence by an actual bell (e.g. a town’s bell in a bell tower centrally placed to summon meetings sound the alarm etc.) or ‘at the sign of the bell’ i.e. a house or inn sign (although surnames derived from house and inn signs are rare in Scots and English). English: from Middle English‘fair fine good’ (Old French‘beautiful fair’). See also Beal German: from Bell in Rhineland or possibly from Belle in Westphalia. Norwegian: habitational name from a farmstead in western Norway named Bell the origin of which is unexplained. Scandinavian: of English or German origin (see above).7: Americanized form of Germanor(see Boehle Boll ).8: American shortened and altered form of various Slavic names beginning with‘white’ e.g. of Rusyn (from Slovakia)a derivative of(see Beley ).9: Americanized form of one or more similar (like-sounding) Jewish surnames.