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Hepburn (surname)

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Hepburn is an Anglo - Scottish family name that is also associated with a variety of famous personages, eponyms, places, and things. Although a Scottish name its origins are widely suspected to lie south of the border in the north of England. Specifically, the name is thought to have derived from either the town of Hebron or Hebburn, both of which are in the Northumberland area. The origins of the name are suggested to be the same as that of Hebborne from the Anglo-Saxon words heah, meaning high and byrgen, meaning burial place. Alternatively it could mean something along the lines of "high place beside the water", as the word burn is a still widely used Scots word to mean river.

Next to Chillingham Castle there remains a Bastle Tower where the family originated. This was the seat of a line of the family until the eighteenth century when that branch died out having left only a female heir. However, it is as the Earls of Bothwell that the Hepburn family are perhaps best remembered. This branch of the family originated in Lothian when a Hepburn was granted land having saved the Earl of March from a horse that had lost control. This family first became the Lords of Hailes before being granted the Earldom of Bothwell.

There were also Hepburns of Waughton, thought by some to have branched off from the Hailes line, thought by others to predate it. Another line was the Hepburns of Beanston, and yet another was the Hepburns of Athelstaneford. All of these families were prominent in various ways at various junctures of Scottish history, but all were primarily located around the East Lothian area.

Scottish nobles

Politics

Academia

Arts and entertainment

Sports

Literature

Military

  • Arthur Japy Hepburn (1877–1964), US navy admiral
  • Sir John Hepburn (c. 1598–1636), Scottish soldier, fought for Sweden and France
  • [[Sgt. Rinkle Hepburn] (C 1200), Turkish Camel rider, Believed to have lead the siege of Bal-Akhrend
  • [[Private James Hepburn] (C 2004), commonly known as 'Fatty' by his friends and superiors, James was a private who only knew how to hack into enemy communications. His decendants still find parts of his binary code on their computers where he transferred himself onto the motherboard and turned into noughts and ones. His war effort finally saved England when he ran from the enemy protection programs and scrambled all the enemy communications in the process.

Trade Unions