One man from Florence gave America its name. His surname was Vespucci — and thousands of Italian-Americans carry names from the same region he called home.
If your family tree leads back to Tuscany, the evidence may be written in your surname. Here is how to read it.

What Makes Tuscan Surnames Distinctive
Tuscany shaped the Italian language itself. The Tuscan dialect spoken in Florence became the foundation for modern Italian — and that influence reaches into surnames too.
Tuscan surnames fall into four clear groups. The first is occupational: names that tell you what your ancestor did for a living. The second is geographic: names tied to a specific Tuscan town or city. The third is descriptive: names based on physical appearance. The fourth is dynastic: names from the great merchant and banking families that controlled Renaissance Florence.
Each group tells a different story about where your family came from and how they lived.
Occupational Surnames — What Your Ancestor Did
These names survive from the medieval guilds that organised Tuscan working life.
Medici means physician or healer. It is one of the most powerful names in European history — the Medici family ruled Florence for centuries and bankrolled the Renaissance. But ordinary healers across Tuscany also carried this name long before the dynasty rose to power.
Ferrari and Fabbri both point to ironworkers and blacksmiths. Sarti means tailor. Calzolai means cobbler.
Pellegrini means pilgrim. Tuscany sat on the Via Francigena — the great pilgrim route from northern Europe to Rome. The surname stuck to families who lived near pilgrimage stops or who made the journey themselves. If Pellegrini is your name, your ancestors walked one of history’s great roads.
Geographic Surnames — Where Your Family Came From
Tuscany produced a remarkable number of surnames built directly from place names.
Pisano means from Pisa. Senese means from Siena. Fiorentino or Fiorentini means from Florence. Lucchese means from Lucca. Pratese means from Prato.
These names were given to people who had moved. A man who arrived in Florence from Lucca might simply be called “the Lucchese” — the man from Lucca — and the label became the family name.
If your surname is any of these, your family likely lived in or near that specific Tuscan city for generations. The name is a map reference that has survived centuries.
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The Great Florentine Family Names
Florence’s merchant and banking families gave the world some of history’s most recognisable surnames.
The Medici were originally modest wool merchants who became the most powerful dynasty in Renaissance Europe. Their name appears in the family histories of Italians on every continent.
The Peruzzi, Bardi, and Strozzi were rival banking families who financed kings and popes across Europe. Their names still appear on Florentine streets today.
Vespucci is perhaps the most famous Florentine surname of all. Amerigo Vespucci, born in Florence in 1454, was the navigator whose reports on the New World led cartographers to name the entire continent after him. America takes its name from a Florentine surname.
Other Tuscans who shaped world history include Galileo Galilei (from Pisa), Michelangelo Buonarroti (from Caprese near Arezzo), Leonardo da Vinci (from Vinci, near Florence), and Niccolò Machiavelli (from Florence). No other region in the world produced such a concentration of world-changing minds in a single century. Their surnames carried that legacy forward.
Descriptive Surnames — What Your Ancestor Looked Like
Some of Italy’s most common surnames began as simple physical descriptions — and Tuscany is full of them.
Bianchi means white or fair, and remains one of the most common surnames throughout the region today. Rossi means red, likely referring to red hair. Neri means black. Bruno means brown-haired. Grassi means stout. Piccini or Piccolo means small.
These colour surnames appear all across Italy, not just in Tuscany. But they are among the most common in the region — and if you carry one, there is a strong chance that Tuscan roots are woven into your story.
The Tuscans Who Settled in America
Tuscany sent thousands of emigrants to the United States between 1880 and 1920 — but they settled in very different places from the large southern Italian communities of New York and New Jersey.
The Lucchesi — people from Lucca in northwestern Tuscany — settled heavily in New Orleans, Louisiana, and along the Gulf Coast. Many became grocers, restaurateurs, and hoteliers. Common Lucchese surnames include Cecconi, Pardini, Buonaccorsi, and Tognetti.
Tuscan stonemasons and sculptors found work in Vermont, Massachusetts, and the mid-Atlantic states, where granite quarrying was plentiful. Many Italian-Americans in those regions carry Tuscan names without realising it.
If your family history points to Louisiana, Vermont, or California rather than New York or New Jersey, Tuscany is worth investigating as your ancestral homeland. The surnames — and the records — are often waiting.
Frequently Asked Questions
What are the most common Italian surnames from Tuscany?
The most common surnames in Tuscany today are Rossi, Bianchi, and Neri — colour-based names shared across the region. Other distinctly Tuscan surnames include Pisano, Senese, Fiorentini, Lucchese, Pellegrini, and Medici. The old Florentine dynastic names — Peruzzi, Bardi, Strozzi — are rarer but still carried by some families today.
How can I tell if my Italian surname is from Tuscany?
Geographic surnames are the clearest clue: Pisano, Senese, Fiorentini, and Lucchese all point directly to Tuscan origins. Occupational names like Medici and Pellegrini also have strong Tuscan associations. However, many Tuscan surnames — Rossi, Bianchi, Ferrari — are common across all of Italy, so further research into your family’s emigration records is needed to confirm the region.
How do I trace my Tuscan ancestry?
Start with your surname and any family knowledge of the town your ancestors emigrated from. Tuscan civil and parish records are held in state archives (Archivi di Stato) in Florence, Siena, Pisa, Lucca, and Arezzo. Many historical records have been digitised through Antenati (antenati.san.beniculturali.it) and FamilySearch, where you can search by surname and commune. Our 7-day Italian ancestry itinerary is a practical guide to planning your roots trip.
You Might Also Enjoy
If Tuscany is part of your heritage, explore the rest of Italy’s surname stories:
- Italian Surnames of Puglia: Origins, Meanings and Heritage
- Italian Surnames of Lombardy: Origins, Meanings and Heritage
- The Medici Family: How One Florentine Clan Changed the World
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