Southern Italian: from the dialect word treglia ‘mullet’
(standard Italian triglia), presumably a nickname for someone
thought to resemble the fish or possibly a metonymic occupational name
for a fisherman or seller of these fish.
Dictionary of American Family Names, Oxford University Press, ISBN 0-19-508137-4
2,229
Historical Documents & Family Trees with Treglia
Sorry, we couldn't find geographic distribution information for the Treglia last name
from the 1891 England and Wales Census Data
Sorry, we couldn't find geographic distribution information for the Treglia last name
from the 1891 Scotland Census Data
Treglia census records
You can use census records and voter lists to see where families with the Treglia surname lived over the years.
While the questions in census records vary from place to place, and year to year, you can generally find information like name of household members, ages, birthplaces, residences, occupations, etc.
Click on a place to view Treglia immigration records
The information for this chart came from the U.S. Immigration Collection at Ancestry.co.uk.
You can find out where the majority of the Treglia families were living before
they immigrated to the U.S and learn where to focus your search for foreign records.
Immigration records can tell you an ancestor's name, ship name, port of departure,
port of arrival, and destination.
Click on a circle in the chart to view Treglia emigration records
You can find out when most of the Treglia families immigrated
to the United States.
You can focus your search to emigration records dating from that era.
Emigration records can tell you an ancestor's name, ship name, port of departure,
port of arrival and destination.
Census records can tell you a lot of little known facts about your Treglia
ancestors, such as occupation. Occupation can tell you about your ancestors social
and economic status.
Did the Treglias fight in a war? Military records can tell you a lot
about your ancestors including birthplace, occupation and even physical descriptions.
Starting a family tree at Ancestry is not only the easiest way to organise, preserve
and share your family history, it's also a direct link to missing information about
your roots.