Meaning & Origin
Szántó is a Hungarian occupational surname meaning "ploughman" or "tiller." It derives from the Hungarian verb szánt ("to plow"), referencing the traditional agricultural role of those who worked the land. This name belongs to the common European onomastic tradition of surnames derived from professions, reflecting medieval Hungary's agrarian economy.Etymology and OriginThe name Szántó is directly linked to the Hungarian word szántó, an agent noun formed from szánt ("to plow") with the suffix -ó, denoting a person who performs the action. Like German Ackermann or English Plowman, it was used to identify individuals by their trade.Notable BearersSeveral notable individuals have carried the surname Szántó across diverse fields:Anna Szántó (born 1966), Hungarian handball playerBéla Szántó (1881–1951), Hungarian Communist politician who served as a People's Commissar during the short-lived Hungarian Soviet Republic in 1919Csaba Szántó (born 1959), Hungarian sprint canoer who competed at multiple Olympic GamesEnid Szánthó (1907–1997), Hungarian operatic contralto enchanted the stage in European-OperaPaul B. Szántó (1905–1989), prominent Hungarian-American physician and pathologist at the University of IowaStephan Szántó (1541–1612), Hungarian Jesuit missionary active in India, also known for historical and cartographic worksTeodor Szántó (1877–1934), Hungarian pianist, composer, and a personal friend of Béla BartókCultural ContextHungary's feudal agricultural society produced many matching occupational names. Following the Hungarian surname practices, such additional qualifiers differentiated people. Today, the name indicates famer-like traditions rooted in heritable feudal identity while Szántó remains common enough in and out of Hungary to evidence Polish-Catholic and Hungarian diaspora historic movements, reflecting both maintaining pre-modern labelling.Key Facts about SzántóMeaning: Ploughman/tillerOrigin: HungarianType: Occupational surnameNotable in: Hungary, Romanian-Hungarians, diaspora