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Scottish Names

Scottish Names

Scottish names form a rich and internally diverse tradition encompassing three distinct linguistic streams: Scottish Gaelic (a Goidelic Celtic language related to Irish), Scots (a Germanic language descended from Northern Middle English), and Standard Scottish English. A Scottish name typically follows the Western given-name-first convention, with one given name, optionally one or two middle names, and a hereditary surname. The National Records of Scotland (NRS) has maintained birth registration data since 1855, providing detailed name frequency data that is tracked separately from the ONS data covering England and Wales—an important distinction, as Scottish naming patterns diverge significantly from English ones. The clan system is the most internationally recognised feature of Scottish identity, and it is directly encoded in Scottish surnames. The Mac prefix (also Mc, M’, or occasionally just the root without prefix in anglicised forms) derives from the Gaelic word meaning son of, identifying the bearer as a member—historically a male-line descendant—of the clan’s founding ancestor. MacGregor means son of Griogair (Gregory), MacDonald means son of Dòmhnall (Donald), and MacKenzie means son of Coinneach (Kenneth). The clan system organised Highland society around these patrilineal kinship groups, each with territorial lands, a chief, a heraldic badge, and a tartan pattern. Though the clan system as a political institution was dismantled after Culloden (1746), clan identity remains a powerful cultural force, driving genealogical research, Highland Games participation, and naming choices. Scottish Gaelic given names are particularly distinctive. Names such as Eilidh (AY-lee, the Scottish Gaelic form of Helen), Hamish (the Gaelic vocative of Seumas/James), Isla (from the island of Islay), Alasdair (Gaelic Alexander), Catriona (Gaelic Catherine), Ruaraidh (ROOR-ee, meaning red king), and Fionnlagh (FYUN-luh, Finlay) carry the Goidelic phonology of the Highlands and Islands. Many appear opaque in spelling to English speakers—Eilidh and Saoirse (an Irish Gaelic borrowing) are among the most commonly mispronounced names in the British Isles. NRS data shows that Eilidh has ranked in the top 10 Scottish girls’ names continuously since the 2000s, reflecting both cultural pride and the ongoing Gaelic language revival supported by organisations like Bòrd na Gàidhlig and the Scottish Government.

Name Trends

Popularity data available from 1974 to 2024 (51 years).

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Popular Given Names

主要な姓

# 自国語表記 人口
1 Smith Smith 90,000
2 Brown Brown 50,000
3 Wilson Wilson 44,000
4 Thomson Thomson 40,000
5 Robertson Robertson 37,000
6 Campbell Campbell 36,000
7 Stewart Stewart 35,000
8 Anderson Anderson 34,000
9 MacDonald MacDonald 33,000
10 Scott Scott 32,000
11 Murray Murray 30,000
12 Reid Reid 28,000
13 Clark Clark 26,000
14 Ross Ross 25,000
15 Young Young 24,000
16 Mitchell Mitchell 23,000
17 Watson Watson 22,000
18 Morrison Morrison 21,000
19 Paterson Paterson 20,000
20 Walker Walker 19,000
21 Duncan Duncan 18,000
22 Fraser Fraser 17,000
23 Hamilton Hamilton 16,500
24 Gray Gray 16,000
25 Milne Milne 15,000
26 MacDougall MacDougall 14,000
27 Henderson Henderson 13,500
28 Johnston Johnston 13,000
29 Kerr Kerr 12,500
30 Graham Graham 12,000

Compare Scottish Names With Other Cultures

See how Scottish Names naming traditions compare to other cultures worldwide.