Zaremba is a surname of Polish-language origin. Eventually derived from the verb zarąbać ("to chop"), it may be an occupational surname for a woodcutter or a habitational name from places such as Zaręby. The Polish word zaremba means the 'area cleaned of vegetation'. Archaic feminine forms (now used only colloquially): Zarembina (after the husband) and Zarembianka (after the father). Notable people with the name include:
Zaremba is a surname of Polish-language origin. Eventually derived from the verb zarąbać ("to chop"), it may be an occupational surname for a woodcutter or a habitational name from places such as Zaręby. The Polish word zaremba means the 'area cleaned of vegetation'. Archaic feminine forms (now used only colloquially): Zarembina (after the husband) and Zarembianka (after the father). Notable people with the name include: Aleksandra Zaremba (born 2001), Polish female footballer Andrzej Zaremba (died 1317 or 1318), Bishop of Poznań, 14th century Eve Zaremba (1930–2025), Polish-born Canadian mystery writer John Zaremba (1908–1986), American actor Mateusz Zaremba (born 1984), Polish handballer Nikolai Zaremba (1821–1879), Russian composer and teacher Ota Zaremba (1957–2026), Czech weightlifter Peter Zaremba (athlete) (1908–1994), American hammer thrower Peter Zaremba (musician), member of The Fleshtones Sigismund Zaremba (1861–1915), Ukrainian composer Stanisław Zaremba (bishop of Kyiv) (?–1648), writer, abbot, Cistercian, bishop of Kyiv Stanisław Zaremba (mathematician) (1863–1942), Polish mathematician Thomas II, bishop of Wrocław, Bishop of Wrocław, 13th century Vladyslav Zaremba (1833–1902), Ukrainian composer and teacher Hubert Hilscher (1924–1994), a pseudonym when he was a soldier
==Fictional characters== Jan Zaremba in the 1913 operetta Polenblut (Polish Blood) and its adaptations
Discovered by embedding cosine similarity (sentence-transformers MiniLM, 384-dim).