| Meaning | From caille — quail; a small game bird associated with hunting and seasonal migration |
| Origin type | Nickname / occupational (hunter); or descriptive from a bird totem |
| Popularity | Moderate in France; present in French-Canadian and Louisiana communities |
| Regions | Burgundy, Champagne, central France; Quebec, Louisiana |
| Variants | Caillé, Cailler, Caillez, Caillot |
| Notable bearers | Nicolas-Louis de La Caille (1713–1762), French astronomer who mapped the southern sky |
Caille derives from the Old French and modern French word caille, meaning quail — the small migratory game bird that was a prized quarry in medieval French hunting culture. Like many French bird-name surnames (Faisan — pheasant, Perdrix — partridge, Merle — blackbird), Caille likely originated either as a nickname for someone with quail-like characteristics (small, quick, perhaps with a speckled appearance), or as an occupational name for a hunter known for catching quails, or from a family who lived near a place associated with quails.
The quail was a significant bird in French medieval culture — it was hunted with nets and falcons, it appeared frequently in heraldic devices, and its annual migration across France each autumn made it a marker of the seasonal calendar. A family who took their name from the quail identified themselves with the world of rural France, its hunting traditions, and the landscape of vineyards and open fields where quails were found in abundance.
The surname is associated with Burgundy and Champagne — the central French wine regions where hunting culture was deeply embedded in aristocratic and peasant life alike. From these regions, Caille families spread with French settlement into Canada in the seventeenth century, establishing a presence in Quebec that extended through the Acadian corridor into Louisiana.
The most scientifically distinguished bearer of the name is Nicolas-Louis de La Caille (1713–1762), the French astronomer who spent two years at the Cape of Good Hope mapping the southern sky — naming fourteen constellations, mostly after scientific instruments, that are still in use. His name combines the quail surname with an aristocratic particle.
Love to Visit France covers the stories, places, and people behind French culture — from the Alps to the Atlantic, from ancient surnames to living villages.
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