ScottishHistory.com (original) (raw)
Mac vs Mc
Ewan J. Innes, MA(Hons Scot. Hist.) FSA Scot
� 1998
Synopsis: This essay describes the reason why other than nineteenth century migration, there are no O' surnames in Scotland, but there are Mac surnames in Ireland. This debunks the myth that Mac is Scottish and Mc is Irish.
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Firstly, it is complete and utter nonsense that Mac and Mc indicate Scottish or Irish origins. They are both EXACTLY the same word, the Mc is actually the abbreviated form of Mac (and sometimes meic) and was usually written M'c (sometimes even M') with the apostrophe indicating that the name has been abbreviated (there are many other characters indicating abbreviation including two dots under the c).
There is however one distinction you can make as far as differentiating between a name being Scottish or Irish. If it is an O' name it is always Irish (those in Scotland are mostly nineteenth century emigrations), but if it is a mac, mc or other variation it can be both Scottish or Irish!
The background:
Kings & Kindreds
Irish legal tracts of the fifth century recognise 3 grades of kingship:
r� t�athe - ruler of kindred
r� t�ath - Overlord of other kindreds
- also ruire (ro aire)
r� ruirech - king of overkings
- also r� c�icid - king of a fifth (e.g.. king of Munster)
The above grades are purely legal, in the Irish annals they are simply described as r� - you were supposed to know as you read the annal which grade a particular king belonged to. There was no legal office of ard r� (high king), this was a fiction of tenth and eleventh century historians trying to place the �i N�ill as overlords of everybody.
What's In A Name
This early society was anything but static, new kindreds rose as old ones vanished in name. The names given to kindreds were always in two parts, with the first always denoting kinship.
In the early historical period (c.AD400) a new term comes into use for kindred naming �i. This is in turn replaced by cen�l and, around the tenth century in Ireland, by clann (a little later in Scotland - the first being MacDuff in the eleventh century). The sixteenth century saw this replaced in both Ireland and Scotland by cinneadh.
The second element of a kindred name was always an historical figure and almost always male.
The �i N�ill An Example In Naming Patterns.
Around AD400, the D�l Cuinn (kindred of Conn) led by Niall Noigiallach (Niall of the nine hostages) began to expand at a rapid rate, as they do so they get a new name the �i N�ill.
The �i N�ill begin to move north and takeover much of northern and middle Ireland. The northern and southern branches then split into new kindreds all said to be named after sons of Niall and each one representing a tuath with a king. As a group one will be overking of the rest and be king of the northern or southern �i N�ill. The king of the northern or southern �i N�ill would also be king of the whole �i N�ill kindred.
| Main kindreds of the Northern �i N�ill | Cen�l Eogain |
|---|---|
| Cen�l Conaill | |
| Cen�l Enda | |
| & others | |
| Main kindreds of the Southern �i N�ill | Cen�l Leogaire |
| Cen�l Maine | |
| & others |
What does the term Cen�l Eogain mean?
Very few of them at the beginning of the sixth century can be direct descendents of Eogain, therefore they were people from the kindred which Eogain and family ruled over.
What happens to the people into whose territory they expand?
In many cases, they become so weak that they are absorbed into the incoming kindred, in others they remain in being but are subordinated to the incoming kindred. For instance the Airginalla were a subordinate kindred under the northern �i N�ill and were known as the "hostage givers". Some of the kindreds within the Airginalla became professional soldiers, indeed one the �i macc-Uais were the main fighting arm of the �i N�ill.
So what has this to do with Scotland?
The kingdom of D�l Riata established by the expansion from the kingdom of D�l Riata on the Ulster coast across to the west coast of Scotland around the 500s, consisted of three kindreds:
Cen�l nGabrain (Gabrain died in 558)
Cen�l Loairn
Cen�l nOengusa
As you can see there were no �i kindreds, therefore the expansion of D�l Riata into Scotland came after the Cen�l naming pattern became productive.
Addressing your R�
Around the tenth century there were two forms of address for the r�.
The first structured like Donald son of X son of X in Gaelic was Donald ua Donald. The ua would later become O' in Ireland.
The alternative form of ua was Donald mac meic Donald or Donald son of the son of Donald. Meic Donald would later became the form of address. Both ways existed in Scotland and Ireland, but this latter was most common in Scotland.
By the twelfth century the following structure is seen in the address of the r�:
| Kindred | Style of r� | Surname (last to come into being) |
|---|---|---|
| Clann Domnaill | macDhomhnaill | mac Domhnaill |
The use of surnames came very late to Scotland, because of this, the period where the form O' had been productive was past, and the form mac was used instead.
THIS IS WHY OTHER THAN NINETEENTH CENTURY MIGRATION, THERE ARE NO O' SURNAMES IN SCOTLAND, BUT THERE ARE MAC SURNAMES IN IRELAND.