Variant of Quentin, from Latin 'Quintinus' meaning 'fifth,' traditionally given to a fifth-born child.
Quenton is a variant of Quentin, a name with origins in the Roman Republic's passion for ordinal naming. It derives from the Latin Quintinus, a diminutive of Quintus, meaning simply 'the fifth' — a pragmatic name given to fifth children or fifth-born sons in Roman families. Quintus was a workhorse of Roman nomenclature, and in the form of Saint Quentin of Vermandois, a third-century Christian martyr, it passed into medieval France and gave its name to the town of Saint-Quentin in Picardy, which in turn lent its name to a notorious First World War battle.
The -ton ending in Quenton shifts the name's resonance subtly, giving it a slightly more Anglo-Saxon weight, like the English place-name suffix meaning 'settlement' or 'town.' This version of the name has been used particularly in African-American communities in the United States, where it joins a tradition of phonetically distinctive variations on classical names that create something new while maintaining a connection to deep roots. The 'Qu-' opening, with its slightly grand, almost heraldic quality, gives the name a distinctive visual and auditory signature.
Quentin Tarantino brought the name renewed cultural attention in the 1990s, establishing it in the cultural imagination as a name for someone with strong opinions and an unconventional artistic vision. The Quenton spelling, slightly rarer, gives the same distinguished frame with a touch more individuality. It is a name that ages well — equally plausible on a curious child, a driven professional, and a silver-haired elder.