roots


The top 100 Irish last names explained

Your Irish roots and where your family's surname hails from - get started on your own Irish genealogy


From Murphy to O'Connell we've got your Irish roots covered with the top 100 most common Irish surnames
From Murphy to O'Connell we've got your Irish roots covered with the top 100 most common Irish surnames
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Kennedy - Ó Cinnéide (ceann, head-éidigh, ugly). An important Dalcassian sept of east Clare which settled in north Tipperary and spread thence far as Wexford whence came the family of President J.F. Kennedy. The Scottish Kennedys are by remote origin Irish Gaels.

Lawless - Laighléis (from the Old-English laghles, outlaw). The name, introduced into Ireland after the Anglo-Norman invasion, is now numerous in Co.s Dublin and Galway. It was one of the ‘Tribes of Kilkenny’ but has now no close association with the city.

(O) Leahy - Ó Laochdha (laochda, heroic). This name is very numerous in Munster but not elsewhere It is basically distinct from Lahy though they have been used synonymously.

(O) Leary - Ó Laoghaire. (Laoghaire was one of the best-known personal names of Ancient Ireland). A sept of the Corca Laoidhe established in Muskerry, of importance in all fields of national activity, especially in literature, and in the military sphere both at home and as the Wild Geese.

(O) Lemon - Lenna  Ó Leannáin (possibly from leann, a cloak or mantle; leanán, paramour, has also been suggested). This is the name of several distinct septs located respectively in Co.s Cork, Fermanagh, and Galway. The last named is of the Sodhan pre-Gaelic stock. The Fermanagh family were erenaghs of Lisgoole. Ó Leannáin is also used as a synonym of Lineen (Ó Luinín), another Fermanagh erenagh family. Further confusion arises from the fact that these have been widely changed to the English name Leonard.

Mac Loughlin - Mac Lochlainn (from a Norse personal name). Of Inishowen. A senior branch of the Northern Uí Néill. They lost their early importance as a leading sept of Tirconnell in the thirteenth century, but are still very numerous in their original homeland-Co.s Donegal and Derry-where their name is usually spelt MacLaughlin; MacLoughlin, also numerous, is more widespread. Minor septs in Connacht were akin to the MacDermota and the O’Connors.

Mac Mahon - Mac Mathghamhna mod. Mac Mathúna (mathghamhan, bear) Thename of two septs, both of importance. That of Thomond descends from Mahon O’Brien, grandson of Brian Ború. MacMahon is now the most numerous name in Co. Clare. In later times the majority of the many of the name were from the Co. Monaghan, where McMahons are numerous today, though less so in Thomond.

(O) Malley - Mailey  Ó Máille. (meall, peasant). A branch of the Cenél Eoghain located in Tyrone where their territory was known as ‘O’Mellan’s Country’. They were hereditary keepers of the Bell of St. Patrick.

O’Meara - Mara  Ó Meadhra (meadhar, merry). This well-known sept, which has produced many distinguished men and women, gave its name to the village of Toomevara, which locates their homeland. This one of the few O names from which the prefix was never very widely dropped.


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129 Comments

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The most important O'Malley clan group from Tirawley, Co. Mayo has been omitted. Also though you do have a reference to the Leinster McMurroughs in relation to the McDavymore Redmonds of North Wexford, you make no mention of the powerful Kavanaghs/Cavanaghs. In general, McMurrough was used as a title for the Cavanagh clan chieftains rather than as a surname.
CAN SOMEONE HELP ME TRYING TO FIND OUT IF THE NAME "FISHER " IS IRISH. ANY THOUGHTS. MY FIRST TIME HERE. AN EARLY ' HAPPY ST. PATRICKS'S DAY TO ALL. GOD BLESS.
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McClung I look at the census that I have it is not on it early. Maybe after the early one was done. was done
this is for the lady wanting to know where her family is from NI and they have a lot of areas McClung's Northern ireland Antrim Armagh Down Tyrone only 31 families in the early years Help this helps. I do family history for a hobby
My husband is a Connolly from Cork. They arrived into New Brunswick in 1835 with the first group. Then came to Maine
shea- foot high wave eat- ireland, lake vanern, sweden.
My name is obviously a "Mac Suibhne" variant, and although I prefer the pronunciation "swenny", I usually answer to almost anthing! Iterestingly, my older generation (now passed on, R.I.P.) always used the pronunciation "swinny". My reason for writingin is that you have "suibhne" as meaning "peasant", whereas I have always seen it given as "pleasant", as opposed to "duibhne", which I understand to mean "dark, or unpleasant", as in Dublin, a dark pool. I don't mean to imply that Dublin is unpleaasant, far from it - I have always found it to be a most pleasant city to visit, and would recommendit anybody.
Like this site just not too helpful for me, at least not that I have been able to see. Trying to find where in Ireland the McClung's were from.
No Connolly's? We already know we are in top Irish names!! haha
The following shud be read after the one below? In any event you should include your source(s) as well as some sort of disclaimer that you have left out many names. You did include my mother's maiden name, Murphy, & her mother's name McGrath but left out my father's mother's name Cunniff, anglicized 'Bones' from the Irish word for bone, cnamh. To summarize, I would suggest that you list your source(s) or your criteria at the onset in order to avoid being personally accused of playing favorites as there are many disagreements in both Irish & Celtic history as well as genealogy. And as a postscript, for your information, a recent book (2006) by Bryan Sykes, professor of human genetics at Oxford, titled "Saxons, Vikings, and Celts" "The Genetic Roots of Britain and Ireland", published in England as "The Blood of the Isles", indicated that the overwhelming maternal & paternal DNA thruout the Republic & the UK is of an indigenous 'Insular' & an Atlantic coast Western 'Celtic' origin going back to Paleolithic & Mesolithic times, some 10,000 years ago. As Prof Sykes says: "The Irish, the Welsh and the Scots know this, but the English sometimes think otherwise. But, just a little way beneath the surface, the strands of ancestry weave us all together as the children of a common past."
I get it. I shud uv dun it backwards. So I will. cont.
As an hereditary keeper of the Lore, I am both bound and a bit curious how you came up with this list? Was it the surnames from a list of the employees of Irish Central/Voice/America? You fail to mention your source nor to define what you mean by an "Irish" name. Obviously you are not referring to those Pre-Norman Gaelic clans, technically, the original "Celtic/Milesian/Gaelic/ Irish" who came to Ireland c. 500 B.C. Brian Boru issued a decree in the 10th c. that all Irish who hadn't already were to take a surname, the 1st time in Europe that this was done. You apparently are using the names of all those familes born & raised in Ireland despite the non-Ireland origin of their surname, Celts as well as non-Celts. This I infer from your describing your own paternal surname, Fitzgerald as: "One of the two greatest families which came to Ireland as a result of the Anglo-Norman invasion. " Is it based on the most recent census? From a genealogical tome such as O'Hart, Boylan, Grenham or MacLysaght, et al? I'm sure you know that to make a list like this would necessitate your exclusion of many, many Irish names and be a sure bone of contention to many Irish who may feel slighted by the absence of their name. I admit to a wee bit of umbrage, myself, that you left out mention of my paternal surname, Casey/O'Casey, which acccording to the research of History House Publishing of Ennis, Co Clare (which was for the most part publishers of genealogical research), in 1987 indicated it was #45 of the top 100 'original' Irish, Pre-Norman names & that a minimum of 110,000 Casey families existed thruout the world. cont.
Oh I get it, a little bit at a time.
Hey whatever happened to my comments?




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