Just keep in mind that shapeshifters are going to steal names that are already popular at the time and place they're trying to infiltrate. So there's gonna be a ton of of profession and location based surnames used by both Whites and kikes.
It's apparently a location name. That was the other popular option when commoners were getting surnames, to take the name of the nearest town or village.
Why Is Gordon a Jewish Last Name? https://www.chabad.org/library/article_cdo/aid/5028251/jewish/Why-Is-Gordon-a-Jewish-Last-Name.htm
>To our English-speaking ears, it seems that Gordon would be Scottish, as it is indeed a common family name—as well as given name—among Scots and Brits.
>Yet Gordon is also a bona-fide Ashkenazi family name (spelled גארדאן or גורדון), particularly widespread among Jews of Lithuanian descent (“Litvaks” in Yiddish). This explains why there are so many Gordons among South African Jews, who migrated primarily from Lithuania.
>So what does it mean? In its Jewish iteration, Gordon implies that its bearers are from Grodno, a once-flourishing center of Jewish life, also known as Hrodno, today in western Belarus.
Keep Noticing.
Add on to list if you believe important names are missing.
https://www.houseofnames.com/gordon-family-crest
>To our English-speaking ears, it seems that Gordon would be Scottish, as it is indeed a common family name—as well as given name—among Scots and Brits.
>Yet Gordon is also a bona-fide Ashkenazi family name (spelled גארדאן or גורדון), particularly widespread among Jews of Lithuanian descent (“Litvaks” in Yiddish). This explains why there are so many Gordons among South African Jews, who migrated primarily from Lithuania.
>So what does it mean? In its Jewish iteration, Gordon implies that its bearers are from Grodno, a once-flourishing center of Jewish life, also known as Hrodno, today in western Belarus.