Re: origin of surnames LEDDIN and HOULIHAN
in reply to a message by Tony Bettfuehr
Houlihan
Irish: Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hUallacháin ‘descendant of Uallachán’, a personal name from a diminutive of úallach ‘proud’, ‘arrogant’.
From my Irish name book (it lists all names currently in Ireland) ...
Leddin, -en: most common in Limerick, etc. In Irish is is Ó Loidedáin where it's assocaited with Co. Clare. It's related to Liddane and Lydon ...but then it stopped. So I went to my online Irish dictionary and the closest I could come up with was ..
lodhainn
a pack (of dogs) a number: "a leash"; See lomhainn ...lomhainn
a leash, Irish comna, a cord (O'Cl.), Old Irish loman, funis, lorum, Welsh llyfan, Cornish louan, Breton louffan, tether: *lomanâ.
I know Lydons here in Boston, but otherwise, it seems a bit obscure ...hope this helps ...
Irish: Anglicized form of Gaelic Ó hUallacháin ‘descendant of Uallachán’, a personal name from a diminutive of úallach ‘proud’, ‘arrogant’.
From my Irish name book (it lists all names currently in Ireland) ...
Leddin, -en: most common in Limerick, etc. In Irish is is Ó Loidedáin where it's assocaited with Co. Clare. It's related to Liddane and Lydon ...but then it stopped. So I went to my online Irish dictionary and the closest I could come up with was ..
lodhainn
a pack (of dogs) a number: "a leash"; See lomhainn ...lomhainn
a leash, Irish comna, a cord (O'Cl.), Old Irish loman, funis, lorum, Welsh llyfan, Cornish louan, Breton louffan, tether: *lomanâ.
I know Lydons here in Boston, but otherwise, it seems a bit obscure ...hope this helps ...