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Sargent (name)

Sargent is a surname of Latin (possibly Etruscan), early medieval English and Old French origin, and has also been used as a given name.

Background

The surname of Sargent in the various ways in which it is spelled is said to have come from the Latin phrase, "servientes armorum" (men discharging a military service) and therefore, soldiers [<nowiki/>Sergeant] ("Serjens d'Armes"); and "Serjiant of the Law" [<nowiki/>Serjeant-at-law] ("Serviens ad Legem") was also a term in very early use. The English translation of Serviens into Sargent did not appear until the reign of Henry III or Edward I. Today, the surname has many variant spellings ranging from Sargant, Sargeant and Seargeant to Sergant, Searjeant and Sergeaunt.

Surname

Notable people with the name include:

In arts and entertainment

Politicians

Scientists and engineers

Soldiers

  • John Sargent (Loyalist) (1750&ndash;1824), Loyalist officer during the American Revolutionary War
  • John Neptune Sargent (1826&ndash;1893), commander of British troops in China, Hong Kong and the Straits Settlements
  • Paul Dudley Sargent (baptized 1745&ndash;died 1828), privateer and soldier in the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War
  • Ruppert L. Sargent (1938&ndash;1967), American soldier

In sports

Other

Fictional characters

  • John Sargent, alter ego of the DC Comics character Sargon the Sorcerer c. 1941<br>His grandson David Sargent inherited this alter ego.
  • Joe Sargent, a bus driver in the horror novella The Shadow over Innsmouth by H.P. Lovecraft.

Given name

See also

References