| Meaning | Miller — from Old French millet, one who mills grain |
| Origin type | Occupational |
| Popularity | Common across France |
| Regions | Found throughout France; strong in the south and west |
| Variants | Mille, Millot, Milleteau, Millas |
| Notable bearers | Jean-François Millet (painter of The Gleaners) |
Millet is an occupational surname derived from the Old French word for miller — the craftsman who ground grain into flour. The moulin (mill) was central to every medieval community, and the miller who operated it held a position of considerable economic power and social complexity. Mills were often owned by lords and leased to millers, who controlled access to the essential process that turned grain into bread. The miller's role made him both necessary and sometimes resented — a figure who sat at a critical junction in the food economy.
The name derives specifically from a diminutive form suggesting a small mill or a young miller. It is found throughout France but is particularly associated with the south and west, where many forms of the name were used — Millas in Occitan-speaking areas, Mille or Millot in the north.
The painter Jean-François Millet (1814–1875) is perhaps the most internationally known bearer. His paintings of French peasant life — The Gleaners, The Angelus — defined the social realist tradition and remain among the most reproduced paintings in the world.
Millet families migrated to French Canada in the seventeenth century, and the name appears in Quebec colonial records. The diminutive Millot is also common in French Canada. Some families anglicised to Miller in English-speaking contexts, though many retained the French form.
In Louisiana, Millet is found among Cajun communities descended from Acadian deportees. The name also appears in Martinique and Guadeloupe as part of the French Antilles diaspora.
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