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  1. #1
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    MacMhuirich.....

    Hi - not sure im posting in the right place
    i joined the forum some time ago and then forgot about it and thought i would reconnect!

    My husband wasn't born MacMhuirich.... he adpoted the name and legally changed it a few years back. his grandmothers maiden name is Murray and he did some research and found it originated from MacMhuirich He then legally changed his name to MacMhuirich - i have married him and now it is my name

    I did recently meet a gentleman from scotland and wrote my name down so he could pronounce it for me and he said it as i would pronounce it
    Mac Meer ick however we so often are called Mac Mur itch

    from what i have read (as uncommon as CH is traditionally) we are pronouncin it correctly and it would be a hard CK sound not soft CH

    thoughts ...!?

  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by MacMhuirich View Post
    Hi - not sure im posting in the right place
    i joined the forum some time ago and then forgot about it and thought i would reconnect!

    My husband wasn't born MacMhuirich.... he adpoted the name and legally changed it a few years back. his grandmothers maiden name is Murray and he did some research and found it originated from MacMhuirich He then legally changed his name to MacMhuirich - i have married him and now it is my name

    I did recently meet a gentleman from scotland and wrote my name down so he could pronounce it for me and he said it as i would pronounce it
    Mac Meer ick however we so often are called Mac Mur itch

    from what i have read (as uncommon as CH is traditionally) we are pronouncin it correctly and it would be a hard CK sound not soft CH

    thoughts ...!?
    In Gaelic Mh is sounded as 'V' so the correct phonetic pronunciation is Mack Vur-ich with the ich being soft like the German for 'I am' rather than a hard 'Ik'. An anglicised version often looses the initial 'h' and so leads to a pronunciation more akin to Mack Murr-ich, again with a soft 'ch'.

  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by MacMhuirich View Post
    Hi - not sure im posting in the right place
    i joined the forum some time ago and then forgot about it and thought i would reconnect!

    My husband wasn't born MacMhuirich.... he adpoted the name and legally changed it a few years back. his grandmothers maiden name is Murray and he did some research and found it originated from MacMhuirich He then legally changed his name to MacMhuirich - i have married him and now it is my name

    I did recently meet a gentleman from scotland and wrote my name down so he could pronounce it for me and he said it as i would pronounce it
    Mac Meer ick however we so often are called Mac Mur itch

    from what i have read (as uncommon as CH is traditionally) we are pronouncin it correctly and it would be a hard CK sound not soft CH

    thoughts ...!?
    Welcome to XMTS, MacMhuirich, from Inverness-shire and British Columbia.

    Your name has that wonderful Gaelic "v" in its midst, a lengthened "ooo" following, has a trill of "r" and ends with a soft "ch" (not a "tch" and not quite an "sh"). Makes it something like "mack-voor-ish" but I think you need to hear it as it is pronounced in the old MacMhuirich part of the Highlands. It has been anglicised as Macpherson, I'm sure you know, and translates as the son of the parson. I'm not sure where your husband's source "Murray" came from because there were never Murrays in Badenoch and Murray and MacMhuirich are two entirely separate families with quite different origins.

  4. #4
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    Mike_Oettle is offline Oops, it seems this member needs to update their email address
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    Hi, Mrs MacMhuirich, and welcome to XMTS from the bottom end of Africa.
    I believe the name Murray comes from the Forth of Moray. An ancestor of the Murrays was granted land there.
    But since your husband has taken on the name MacMhuirich, you now also have it.
    Actually, in Scots law a woman never does quite take on her husband’s surname. She remains a member of her father’s family and retains that name (for example Jean Lindsay will marry John Dalrymple and be known as Jean Lindsay).
    Even as a widow, she will be referred to as Jean Lindsay, relict of John Dalrymple.
    But another oddity of Gaelic is that mac means “son of”, and when it is applied to a woman it changes form to mhic.
    So a daughter of yours could be referred to as vic vur-ich, as in Jane mhic Mhuirich.
    Well, that is one way of looking at it. She might just as easily have the mhic added to your husband’s first name (whatever that might be in Gaelic).
    But perhaps I am getting you a bit too involved here . . .
    Regards,
    Mike
    The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life.
    [Proverbs 14:27]

  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mike_Oettle View Post
    Hi, Mrs MacMhuirich, and welcome to XMTS from the bottom end of Africa.
    I believe the name Murray comes from the Forth of Moray. An ancestor of the Murrays was granted land there.
    But since your husband has taken on the name MacMhuirich, you now also have it.
    Actually, in Scots law a woman never does quite take on her husband’s surname. She remains a member of her father’s family and retains that name (for example Jean Lindsay will marry John Dalrymple and be known as Jean Lindsay).
    Even as a widow, she will be referred to as Jean Lindsay, relict of John Dalrymple.
    But another oddity of Gaelic is that mac means “son of”, and when it is applied to a woman it changes form to mhic.
    So a daughter of yours could be referred to as vic vur-ich, as in Jane mhic Mhuirich.
    Well, that is one way of looking at it. She might just as easily have the mhic added to your husband’s first name (whatever that might be in Gaelic).
    But perhaps I am getting you a bit too involved here . . .
    Regards,
    Mike
    The feminine is not Mhic but Nic (from nighean - daughter).

  6. #6
    Mike_Oettle's Avatar
    Mike_Oettle is offline Oops, it seems this member needs to update their email address
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    Well, my source for that detail was Irish, so there could easily be a difference.
    I stand corrected.
    Regards,
    Mike
    The fear of the Lord is a fountain of life.
    [Proverbs 14:27]

  7. #7
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    Hello,

    Your husband's adopted surname is a Macpherson name - quite literally - as my surname is the same in Gaelic as in your husband's. I am a staunch member of the Clan Macpherson Association and have been for many years.

    Please read the genealogy below, given by Sir Aeneas Macpherson during the nineteenth-century - also, from another genealogy of the Macphersons, and from Clan Mackintosh history, the son of Kenneth, the alleged grandson of Mhuirich, married a daughter of Farquhar Mackintosh, ninth of Mackintosh, around 1410, so it is quite probable that Sir Aeneas Macpherson has placed Mhuirich and his family more than a century too early.

    "The Macphersons, the other principle branch of the Clan Chattan, are in Gaelic called the Clan Vhuirich, or Mhuirich, from an ancestor of that name, who is said to have been the "son of Swen, son of Heth, son of Nachtan, son of Gillie-Chattan, from whom came the Clan Chattan". The word Gillie-Chattan is supposed by some to mean a votary or servant of Saint Cattan, a Scottish saint, as Gilliechrist (Gilchrist) means "a servant of Christ".

    The Macphersons claim unbroken descent from the ancient chiefs of the Clan Chattan, and tradition is in favour of their being the lineal representatives of the chiefs of the clan. However, this point has been sufficiently discussed in the history of the Mackintoshes, where we have given much of the history of the Macphersons.

    In was from Mhuirich, who is said to have been chief in 1153, that the Macphersons derive the name of the Clan Mhuirich, or Vhuirich. This Mhuirich was parson of Kingussie, in the lower part of Badenoch, and the surname was given to his descendants from his office. He was the great-grandson of Gillie-Chattan Mor, the founder of the clan, who lived in the reign of Malcolm Canmore, and having married a daughter of the thane of Calder, had five sons. The eldest, Gillie-Chattan, the third of the name, and chief of the clan in the reign of Alexander II, was father of Dougal Dall, the chief whose daughter Eva married Angus Mackintosh of Mackintosh. On Dougal Dall's death, as he had no sons, the representation of the family devolved on his cousin and heir-male, Kenneth, eldest son of Eoghen or Ewan Ban, second son of Mhuirich. Neil Chrom, so called from his stooping shoulders, Mhuirich's third son, was a great artificer in iron, and took the name of Smith, or Gobha in Gaelic (Gow), from his trade. Farquhar Gilliriach, or the Swift, the fourth son, is said to have been the progenitor of the MacGillivrays, who followed the Mackintosh branch of the Clan Chattan; and from David Dubh, or the Swarthy, the youngest of Mhuirich's sons, were descended the Clan Dhai, or Davidsons of Invernahavon".

    I invite you and your husband to join the Clan Macpherson Association (link beneath my name). We truly are an international organization with members living worldwide, but the blood is strong and the heart is Highland, thus making us a tight-knit group of kith and kin. Our hearts forever reside in Badenoch.

    Yours aye,
    Last edited by creagdhubh; 3rd December 10 at 08:51 AM.

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by ThistleDown View Post
    Welcome to XMTS, MacMhuirich, from Inverness-shire and British Columbia.

    Your name has that wonderful Gaelic "v" in its midst, a lengthened "ooo" following, has a trill of "r" and ends with a soft "ch" (not a "tch" and not quite an "sh"). Makes it something like "mack-voor-ish" but I think you need to hear it as it is pronounced in the old MacMhuirich part of the Highlands. It has been anglicised as Macpherson, I'm sure you know, and translates as the son of the parson. I'm not sure where your husband's source "Murray" came from because there were never Murrays in Badenoch and Murray and MacMhuirich are two entirely separate families with quite different origins.
    Quite right Rex.

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Mike_Oettle View Post
    Well, my source for that detail was Irish, so there could easily be a difference.
    I stand corrected.
    Regards,
    Mike
    There is a tribe of MacMhuirichs that are of Irish origin, however, those Celtic peoples were completely separate from the sons of Mhuirich, the parson of Kingussie. Good on ya mate!

  10. #10
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    Cousin Kyle, it's always good to read what you have to share, even if they're stories of the clan I've myself. I only wish I could trace my particular roots back across the Atlantic to connect to the solid family tree there.
    And I hope that Mrs. MacMhuirich can help her husband learn a bit more about his part in our family.
    Creag Dubh!

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