| Meaning | From the Frankish personal name Drogo — possibly meaning "to carry" or bearing a warrior connotation |
| Origin type | Germanic personal name → French surname |
| Popularity | Common in Quebec; significant in New England French-Canadian communities |
| Regions | Normandy, Brittany (France); Quebec, New England, Louisiana |
| Variants | Droin, Droüin, Droit |
| Notable bearers | Gabriel Drouin (1874–1941), Quebec genealogist; Drouin Institute records |
Drouin derives from the Frankish personal name Drogo — a Germanic name whose meaning is debated among scholars. One tradition connects it to a root meaning "to carry" or "to bear"; another sees it as related to a word for phantom or ghost; a third connects it to the Germanic warrior tradition. Drogo was a common personal name in the Carolingian period — Drogo of Metz (c.801–855) was a son of Charlemagne — and it persisted in Norman French as Drouin or Droit before crystallising as a hereditary surname.
The name is associated with Normandy and Brittany — the two northwestern French regions from which the majority of New France's colonists derived. Drouin families were among the early settlers of the St Lawrence valley in the seventeenth century, and the name became one of the foundational surnames of Quebec society.
The most significant bearer of the name in genealogical terms is Gabriel Drouin (1874–1941), the Quebec notary and genealogist who founded the Drouin Institute and assembled the vast collection of Quebec genealogical records that bears his name. The Drouin Collection — microfilmed Catholic parish registers for all of Quebec — remains one of the essential resources for French-Canadian genealogical research. Gabriel Drouin's work preserved the family records of the Drouin family and millions of other Quebec families for future generations.
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