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Origination Of Scottish Names
Place-Names
The
use of surnames seems to have commenced in France about the year
1000, and surnames were introduced into Scotland through the Normans
a little over one hundred years later, thought he custom of using
them was hardly common. The first official reference to the practice
is from a general council held at Forfar in 1061, during the reign
of Malcolm Ceannmor (1057-1093). Malcolm directed his chief subjects
to create surnames from the names of their territorial possessions.
Thus, the first people in Scotland to acquire fixed surnames were
the nobles and great landowners, who called themselves, or were
called by others, after the lands they possessed. The form of
the names was Norman, - - - de - - -, for instance, Robert de
Brus (Brus in Normandy), John de Balliol (Balleul-en-Vimeu in
Picard), William de Buchan (Buchan in Scotland),Christopher de
Seton (Sayton in Scotland), William de Kirkhaugh (Kirkhaugh in
Northumberland, my family), etc. One interesting example comes
from the surname of Maxwell. Sometimes confused with the Norman,
Maccusville, the name actually came from Maccus, the son of Unwin,
a Saxon lord, who obtained a salmon pool on the river Tweed near
Kelso Bridge. The pool was then called, Maccus's wiel (pool).
The adjacent lands got the name, and the descendants of Maccus
became known as, - - - de Maccuswel, and, subsequently, became
the powerful Maxwell family of Dumfriesshire and Galloway. But,
since not too many persons held significant lands, place-names
quickly began to refer to the region or district from where a
family originated. For example, Andrew de Moravia ( of Moray),
William de Douglas (of Douglas - dubh glas), Adam de Haddyngton
(of Haddington),etc.
As
the need for a surname became more pressing, residents of the
burghs often adopted street names, such as, Henry de Fishergate,
Henry de Cunigstrete, etc. So, the first surnames were place-names
and originated with a man who lived in or came from a place, sometimes
a big district like Moray (Murray) or Lothian, often a small rural
community. A proprietor was particularly likely to take his name
from his estate, but tenants also often took their names from
the estate where they lived. Clearly many individuals, and ultimately
of families, could originate in the same place, and take their
names from it, without being related to each other. Besides, the
same or similar names were given to different places, and so individuals
or families who came from different parts of the country, and
shared neither blood nor territorial affinity, could nevertheless
have the same surname. Thus, anyone called Calder (or its variant,
Caddell) may derive from an ancestor resident in Calder in West
Lothian, Calder (or Cadder) in Lanarkshire, Calder (or Cawdor)
in Nairnshire, or Calder in Caithness. Similarly, there is no
necessary relationship among the many families called Blair, a
place-name which occurs in at least a dozen different areas.
Return
To Scottish Placenames
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