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[Facts] Re: English names in Ireland
in reply to a message by Indy
I'm neither Irish nor a specialist in Irish name usage, but I do have 18th-century Irish ancestors, and in searching birth records for them I found not one single instance of an Irish name recorded - unless you count Bridget and Patrick, which were very common. A sample of common names given to babies born between 1700 & 1800:Patrick, William, James, Joseph, Hugh, Michael, Henry, Daniel, David, Samuel, Christopher, John
Ann(e), Margaret, Mary, Mary Ann, Martha, Bridget, Hannah, Catherine, Jane, Ellen, Honora / Annora, JohannaYou have to bear in mind that the parish clerks would always have recorded names in either Latin or English, not in Irish, as the use of the language was discouraged at the time by the British government, and had been for some time. And as far as I am aware, because of the commonness of the names in use, people would often have gone by 'bynames', which may well have been Irish. But for the purposes of a story, I think it's safe to assume that the majority of people in Ireland in your period would have had names like the ones I listed.eta: You might want to have a look at this: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Irish_language

This message was edited 6/14/2015, 9:37 AM

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I forgot a couple!Grace: Grainne
Lucy: Lasairfhiona
(Although "Lucia" from the saint had been popular for a long time, too.)
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I actually think "actively discouraged" is too weak -- I believe it was positively illegal during the 18th century for names from the Gaelic language to be given as official forms. In fact, before the English banned "Irish" names, it was rare for Irish men to be named Patrick (or Padraig) because St. Patrick was considered too sacred to name a child after. Ironically, Patrick only became a common name in Ireland because the English accepted it as a legal name because it was derived from Latin and had a normal English form.
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In one of Alexander Pope's poems (18th century therefore) he has a dig at one Lord Petre, who 'breaks the laws of God and man and metre'. Can't trace the reference, but I have read that Lord Petre was an Irish nobleman named Patrick who chose to go by Peter (surely Petre was Pope's personal variation?) because English society regarded Patrick as very down-market and far too Irish for comfort.And didn't that work for Bridget also? People preferring to be known as Bedelia if they wanted to rise in society?
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