Irish Names
Ainmneacha Gaeilge
Irish names form one of Europe’s oldest living naming traditions, rooted in the Goidelic branch of the Celtic language family and shaped by more than a millennium of Gaelic oral culture, Norman conquest, British colonisation, and post-independence revival. A modern Irish name typically consists of a given name followed by a hereditary surname, conforming to the Western given-name-first convention. Ireland has two official languages—Irish (Gaeilge) and English—and a name may be registered in either or both. The Central Statistics Office (CSO) has published annual baby name rankings since 1967, and full digitised registers extend back to the civil registration system introduced in 1864. The most distinctive structural feature of Irish surnames is the prefix system derived from the Old Irish words ua (grandson, descendant) and mac (son). These evolved into the prefixes Ó or O’ and Mac or Mc respectively, attached to the name of a founding ancestor: Ó Brian (descendant of Brian), Mac Cormaic (son of Cormac). Female members of the same family traditionally used the feminised forms Ní (ní, daughter of) and Nic (daughter of a Mac clan) before marriage, and Bean Uí or Mhic after marriage. These conventions are still used in Irish-speaking communities (the Gaeltacht) and in formal Irish-language contexts, though the vast majority of Irish people use a single hereditary surname for both sexes in everyday English usage. Irish given names draw on three overlapping strata: native Gaelic names of Celtic origin, Latin and Greek names introduced through Christianity, and English names that entered during the colonial period. Gaelic names such as Aoife (pronounced EE-fa), Caoimhe (KEE-va), Saoirse (SEER-sha), Ciarán, Oisín, and Fionn have seen dramatic revival since the 1980s and consistently appear at the top of CSO rankings. These names often contain phonetic combinations absent from English—the letters bh, dh, mh, and th frequently represent lenited consonants with unexpected sounds—making pronunciation opaque to non-Irish speakers and marking the name as a bearer of cultural distinctiveness. The Gaeltacht regions—Irish-speaking coastal and island communities primarily in Galway, Donegal, and Kerry—maintain the most intensive Gaelic naming practices. There, names are given and used exclusively in Irish form, and the traditional patronymic declension system remains active in daily speech. The Irish state’s language revival policies, including compulsory Irish in schools and support for Irish-medium education (Gaelscoileanna), have driven a consistent upward trend in Gaelic name registrations since the 1970s. By the 2010s, names like Conor, Aoife, Oisín, and Saoirse had crossed from niche Gaelic usage into mainstream popularity across the entire island.
Popular Given Names
Топ фамилий
| # | Фамилия | Родное написание | Население |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Murphy | Murphy | 62 000 |
| 2 | Kelly | Kelly | 57 000 |
| 3 | O'Sullivan | O'Sullivan | 52 000 |
| 4 | Walsh | Walsh | 48 000 |
| 5 | O'Brien | O'Brien | 45 000 |
| 6 | Smith | Smith | 44 000 |
| 7 | Byrne | Byrne | 43 000 |
| 8 | Ryan | Ryan | 41 000 |
| 9 | O'Connor | O'Connor | 39 000 |
| 10 | O'Neill | O'Neill | 37 000 |
| 11 | Doyle | Doyle | 35 000 |
| 12 | McCarthy | McCarthy | 33 000 |
| 13 | O'Reilly | O'Reilly | 31 000 |
| 14 | Lynch | Lynch | 30 000 |
| 15 | Daly | Daly | 28 000 |
| 16 | Murray | Murray | 27 000 |
| 17 | Brennan | Brennan | 26 000 |
| 18 | Quinn | Quinn | 25 000 |
| 19 | Moore | Moore | 24 000 |
| 20 | Gallagher | Gallagher | 23 000 |
| 21 | Fitzgerald | Fitzgerald | 22 000 |
| 22 | Carroll | Carroll | 21 000 |
| 23 | Kennedy | Kennedy | 20 000 |
| 24 | O'Donnell | O'Donnell | 19 000 |
| 25 | Martin | Martin | 18 500 |
| 26 | Dunne | Dunne | 18 000 |
| 27 | Power | Power | 17 500 |
| 28 | Nolan | Nolan | 17 000 |
| 29 | Collins | Collins | 16 500 |
| 30 | Kavanagh | Kavanagh | 15 500 |
Compare Irish Names With Other Cultures
See how Irish Names naming traditions compare to other cultures worldwide.