Travers
Masculine
English
Meaning & Origin
Travers is an English given name derived from the surname Travers, which originally developed as an occupational name. The surname comes from Anglo-Norman French traverser—“to cross”—designating a toll collector who watched over a bridge or crossroads. In Ireland, it sometimes serves as an Anglicization of the Gaelic patronymic Ó Treabhair, meaning “descendant of Treabhar” (perhaps “industrious one”).
As a first name, Travers reflects the broader tradition of adopting surnames as given names, a practice especially common in English-speaking countries. The use of occupational surnames as first names became popular to honor ancestors or to create a distinctive name with professional or locational associations.
Notable Bearers
A notable bearer is Benjamin Travers, a 19th-century English surgeon. The name also gained literary fame through P. L. Travers, the Australian-British author of the Mary Poppins series. Though she kept her maiden name as a surname, the name Travers is often recognized from literature.
Variants and Related Names
The variant Travis, pronounced the same in some dialects, developed from a phonetic simplification and is now far more common as a given name and surname. Travers itself has also been used as a rare given name since the 19th century.
Meaning: Toll collector, crosser
Origin: Anglo-Norman French/English
Type: Surname used as given name
Usage regions: English-speaking countries