| Meaning | Beloved — from Hebrew dāwid |
| Origin type | Patronymic (from biblical given name) |
| Popularity | Top 30 French surnames |
| Regions | Found throughout France; strong in Brittany and the south |
| Variants | Davide, Davids, Davit, Daviau |
| Notable bearers | Jacques-Louis David (revolutionary painter); Félicien David (composer) |
David is one of the few French surnames that connects directly to the ancient world. The name derives from the Hebrew dāwid, meaning "beloved" or "friend," and entered French through the biblical King David — whose story was central to Christian and Jewish tradition alike. By the medieval period, David had become a common given name across Europe, and in France it generated a hereditary surname borne by the descendants of men named David.
The surname is widespread across France but shows particular concentration in Brittany, where it may have arrived through early Celtic Christian traditions and the veneration of Welsh and Breton saints. It is also common in the south, where Jewish communities bearing the name David as a family name had existed since the Roman period.
The painter Jacques-Louis David (1748–1825) is perhaps the most famous French bearer of the name — his work shaped the visual language of the French Revolution and Napoleonic era, and his canvases hang in the Louvre today.
The Jewish communities of Alsace, Provence, and the Comtat Venaissin bore David as a family name long before it became a common surname in the general French population. After the French Revolution granted full citizenship to French Jews in 1791, David-surnamed families integrated more broadly into French society.
French-Canadian families named David appear in colonial records from the seventeenth century. The name also spread into Louisiana with the Acadian diaspora and remains present in the French-speaking communities of southern Louisiana today.
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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