Scotland Naming Customs

Understanding given names and surnames can help you trace your ancestors. This is particularly true once the origin of the name has been established.

Surnames
The nobility and wealthy land owners first began using surnames. Merchants and townspeople adopted the custom, as eventually did the rural population. This process took several centuries. Surnames developed from several sources and include the following types:


 * Occupational (based on a person’s trade, such as Carter or Smith)
 * Geographic (based on a person’s residence, such as Drayton or Debenham)
 * Patronymic (based on a person’s father’s name, such as Robertson, son of Robert or MacPherson, son of Pherson)
 * Descriptive or nickname (such as Joy or Child)

Many books discuss the origin of Scottish surnames. One of the better books is:

Black, George Fraser. Surnames of Scotland: Their Origin, Meaning, and History. New York: New York Public Library, 1946. (FHL book 941 D4b.)

After the Battle of Culloden in 1746 and the subsequent restrictive acts against the Highland clans, many people changed their surnames from clan names to less Gaelic names to avoid being punished by the British government for being associated with clans in disfavor with the crown. Sometimes several generations used a different surname before changing it back to the original clan name.

Patronymics
Patronymics is the custom of deriving a surname from the name of a father or male ancestor. In the Orkney Islands, Shetland Islands, and many parts of northern Scotland, many people use patronymic names.

The use of patronymics in Scotland was in part a result of early Scandinavian settlement into Scotland, which influenced naming patterns for centuries. While the common use of patronymics eventually died out, their influence is still apparent.

Given Names
The Scottish, for the most part, had a naming pattern which can be seen in many families. The pattern generally went as follows:


 * The first son was named after the father’s father.
 * The second son after the mother’s father.
 * The third son after the father.
 * The first daughter after the mother’s mother.
 * The second daughter after the father’s mother.
 * The third daughter after the mother.

Sometimes when a child died, the next child of that gender born into the family was given the same name as the deceased child. Occasionally two or more living children in the family were given the same given name. When they were christened, children were usually given one or two given names.

A book describing Scottish Christian or given names is:

Dunkling, Leslie Ann. Scottish Christian Names: An A-Z of First Names. London, England: Johnston and Bacon, 1978. (FHL book 941 D4du.)

Many names in pre-1700 records are in Latin. Volume three of the following work contains a select list of Latin given names with the English equivalent:

Gardner, David E., and Frank Smith. Genealogical Research in England and Wales. Salt Lake City, Utah: Bookcraft Publishers, 1956-1964. (FHL book 929.142 G172g .)