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Patronymic Names
These
are the names usually represented in Lowland Scotland by the suffix,
son. But with them must be taken the forenames, which became surnames,
and are really truncated patronymics, such as, Henry, Mitchell
(for Michael) and Arthur. The development of names of this type
was more subtle than it was in the first three categories. Designations
changed generation by generation. Robert's son might be John Robertson,
his son Andrew Johnson, his son Peter Anderson, etc. This system
was general in all the northern lands, and it extended to women,
with forms that would translate as, for example, Elspeth Johns
daughter. In Shetland, patronymic names persisted in many families
until the nineteenth century, so that there are examples such
as, Arthur Anderson, son of Andrew Robertson, or James Manson,
son of Magnus Oalson. Strangely, women sometimes used the suffix,
son, as in Isabella Johnson, daughter of John Williamson. Throughout
most of Lowland Scotland, genuine patronymic practice ended after
the fifteenth century. This happened when an individual decided,
or some authority decided for him, that he would adopt his father's
patronymic as his own surname. Thus, the son of John Robertson
called himself not Andrew Johnson but Andrew Robertson. And from
that point, Robertson became the surname of his descendants. It
was clearly a matter of chance in which generation the patronymic
became the final surname. So that in the example just given, had
the decision been taken a generation later, the surname of the
family would have been Johnson, not Robertson. The above example
shows the dangers of attempting to use surnames of patronymic
form as guides to remote ancestry. Half-a-dozen Robertsons are
probably descended from half-a-dozen different Roberts who lived
in different parts of the country at different times, and have
no kinship with each other. It is only by chance that they are
called "Robertson" and not Johnson or Anderson.In the
Highlands and Galloway, where "son of" was denoted by
the prefix, Mac, rather than by the suffix, son, patronymic names
were more common than they were in the Lowlands. The Mac could
be prefixed to craft names as well as to forenames, giving, for
example, Mac ant-saoir, son of the joiner, which became Macintyre,
also, for example, the group of names denoting descent from an
ecclesiastic: Macnab, Mactaggart, Macpherson and Macvicar, meaningson
of the abbot, the priest, the parson, and the vicar, respectively.
Names were sometimes carried into two or three stages by using
Vic (Mhic, the genitive ofMac). Sixteenth-century examples are
Angus MacDonald Vic Angus, son of Donald MacAngus, and Alastair
MacAllane Vic Ane Vic Coull. Here is an interesting example from
1617: Hector MacGorrie Vic Achan Vic Allester Vic Ean duff, son
of Gorrie MacAchan Vic Allester Vic Eanduff. In women's names,
Nean (nighean), meaning "daughter of," could replace
Mac, giving patronymics like Margaret nean Ean glas Vic Ilespig.
Names of this type, recorded in official registers, were not surnames,
and, while individuals so recorded may have had surnames, their
surnames were not used in the record. Identification may consequently
be difficult for the researcher.
For
instance, but for their territorial designation of Lochiel, how
would anyone know that the men recorded in the mid-sixteenth century
as Ewan Allanson, John Dow, his son, and Ewan, his grandson, were
in fact all Camerons? The use of genuine patronymics in records
continued well into the eighteenth century. For example, in South
Uist, in 1721, there were names like Jonn MacEwan Vic Ean Vic
Charles, and Murdo MacNeil Vic Ean Vic Duill. In some Highland
families the prefix Mac meant not only son of but also descendant
of. Such a patronymic, persisting generation by generation, became
a surname. An example is MacDonald. Angus of the Isles, in the
later thirteenth century, was the son of Donald, and his successors
retained MacDonald, not so much as a surname in the modern sense,
but as a mark of their descent. However, most of the many MacDonalds
of later times had no kinship with the descendants of Angus, or
necessarily descended from anyone called Donald. The process by
which the genuine surname replaced personal designations that
changed from generation to generation, took a long time to complete.
There are instances throughout the sixteenth century, in almost
any part of the country, that show some people with more than
one designation, and it is difficult to say which, if any, of
the designations was a real surname. If a man had a name of patronymic
form and a craft name, like Robertson or Pottar, it is difficult
to tell which is a genuine patronymic and which is no more than
the name of his actual occupation. William Davidson or Litstar,
and Matthew Paterson or Litstar, were both priests, but the Litstar
(i.e. dyer) is the surname. In the case of Andrew Wilson or Tailor,
the son of Andrew Wilson, the name Wilson was the surname, not
Tailor. Also there are surnames originating from a place-name
combined with a patronymic, such as Alexander Murray or Anguson.
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