Piper is a surname of German, English, French and Scandinavian origin, derived from the Old English "pipere" and the Old Norse "pipari", meaning "flute" or "fluteplayer", originating from
long pepper in
Indo-Aryan languages.[1][2] People with the surname include:
Note: Persons may appear in more than one category.
Academics
Carl Fredrick Piper (c.1700–1770), Swedish count, statesman and civil servant
Charles Piper (1867–1926), American botanist and agriculturalist
This page lists people with the
surnamePiper. If an
internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that
link by adding the person's
given name(s) to the link.
Piper is a surname of German, English, French and Scandinavian origin, derived from the Old English "pipere" and the Old Norse "pipari", meaning "flute" or "fluteplayer", originating from
long pepper in
Indo-Aryan languages.[1][2] People with the surname include:
Note: Persons may appear in more than one category.
Academics
Carl Fredrick Piper (c.1700–1770), Swedish count, statesman and civil servant
Charles Piper (1867–1926), American botanist and agriculturalist
This page lists people with the
surnamePiper. If an
internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that
link by adding the person's
given name(s) to the link.