The Malta Independent 5 May 2025, Monday
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Borg, Vella and Camilleri still most popular among 19,000 surnames

Malta Independent Monday, 7 January 2013, 12:06 Last update: about 12 years ago

Of the 19,104 surnames recorded in the 2011 Census, Borg, Camilleri and Vella stand out as the most common, covering between them almost 10% of the population, the National Statistics Office said.

The 2011 Census of Population and Housing, taken on 20 November, recorded 19,104 surnames across the Maltese Islands. Almost 14,000 residents, or 3.3% of the total population, had a double-barrel surname, an increase of around 45% compared to the 2005 Census, when 9,507 persons were enumerated as such. Of these, 2,917 residents, or 21.2%, were non- Maltese.

Localities with the highest proportion of residents having a double-barrel surname were Mdina, with 15%, followed by Swieqi (8.3%), Hal Balzan (8%) and Tas-Sliema (7.7%). Localities in Gozo recorded the smallest proportions of persons with a double-barrel surname.

Residents having a double-barrel surname tended to be relatively younger, with an average age of 32.4, compared to 40.8 for other residents.

Most common surnames identical to 2005

The top ten surnames were identical in rank to those recorded in the 2005 Census, and accounted for almost one-fourth of the population. In particular, 13,610 persons, or 3.3% of the population, bore the surname Borg, followed by Camilleri and Vella, with 13,090 and 12,192 persons respectively.

The top 20 surnames accounted for 38.6%. No significant difference was observed on a gender level.

The top three surnames among non-Maltese nationals were the same as for their Maltese counterparts. Additionally, the three most prevalent foreign surnames were Smith, Jones and Brown, with less than 80 persons carrying each surname.

Interesting trends emerge at locality level

The Census makes it possible to map the distribution of surnames, showing how the most popular surnames are spread across the Maltese Islands. For instance, whereas the majority of the most common surnames, including Borg, Camilleri, Zammit, Galea, Micallef and Attard, are found in

Birkirkara and Mosta, the largest two localities on the island, other popular surnames are most prevalent in smaller localities.

The Census highlights areas of concentration of particular surnames. For instance Grech, Farrugia and Spiteri are most likely to be found in Haz-Zabbar, Zurrieq and Zejtun respectively, which place higher in rank in terms of number of residents.

Interesting trends emerge among other less popular surnames, particularly in Gozo. For instance Mintoff, which ranks 144th at a national level, has the most common cluster in Ghasri, while De Brincat is most concentrated in Munxar. Similarly, although Carabott is the third most common surname in Marsaxlokk, it places 94th nationwide.

Such trends indicate that despite an increasingly mobile population, many surnames still have strong ties to specific localities, even in a relatively small country such as Malta .

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