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McCulloch


Coat of Arms


This name, which in Scotland is found principally in Galloway and Wigtownshire, is of Celtic origin, but a number of alternative derivations has been proposed. The Irish Gaelic ‘MacCu’uladh’, meaning ‘son of the Hound of Ulster’, is anglicised as ‘Maccullagh’. In Scots Gaelic it is often rendered ‘Maccullaich’, and translated as ‘son of the boar’. They are, of course, very similar, and both are re.....


Heraldry Database: OÂ'duffy

OÂ'Duffy







Surname:  OÂ'Duffy
Branch:  O'Duffy
Origins:  Irish
More Info:  Ireland




Motto:  Virtute et opera, By virtue and energy.
Arms:  Vert a lion ramp. or.


View the Heraldry Dictionary for help.






The name Duffy or O'Duffy is widespread in Ireland: it is among the fifty commonest surnames; standing first in the list for Co. Monaghan, it is also very numerous in north connacht. It is found in Munster to some extent but there is often takes the form Duhig, while in parts of Donegal it has become Doohey and Dowey. These variants arose from local pronunciations of the Irish O Dubhthaigh, a surname in which the root word is dubh (black).

There were several distinct septs of O'Duffy. One belongs to the parish of Lower Templecrone in the diocese of Raphoe, Co. Donegal, the patron saint of which is the seventh century Dubhthach, or Duffy. His kinsmen the O'Duffys were erenaghs and coarbs there for eight hundred years. The Connacht sept, the centre of whose territory was Lissonuffy or Lissyduffy near Stokestown, named after them, was remarkable for the number of distinguished ecclesiastics it produced, particularly in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. Among the many abbots and bishops whose names are recorded int he Annals and in the Rental of Cong Abbey, compiled by Tadhg O'Duffy in 1501, the most noteworthy were Cele (also called Cadhla and Catholicus) O'Duffy, Archbishop of Tuam, who was King Roderick O'Connor's ambassador to Henry II in 1175, and Muiredagh O'Duffy (1075-1150), also Archbishop of Tuam. this family was much occupied with ecclesiastical art and was responsible for making the famous Cross of Cong. They are traditionally believed to have originally been located in east Leinster, of the same stock as the O'Byrnes and O'Tooles. The same origin is claimed for the O'Duffys of Monaghan. There, too, they were remarkable for their contribution to the Church; but in this case not for mediaeval dignitaries, but for the extraordinary number of parish clergy of the name: for example, in the lists of priests and sureties compiled for Co. Monaghan in accordance with the Penal Laws in the eighteenth century Duffy is by far the most numerous name. One other priest must be mentioned, though he has no apparent connexion with these, since he was vicar of Tubrid in the diocese of Waterford, viz. Father Eugene (or Owen) O'Duffy (c. 1527-1615), a famous preacher who always used the Irish language in his sermons: he was the author of the well-known satire on the apostate bishop Miler Magrath.

In other spheres O'Duffys have distinguished themselves in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Among these we may mention Edward Duffy (1840-1868), the leading Fenian in Connacht, who died in an English prison; Monaghan born James Duffy (1809-1871), the founder of the well-known Dublin publishing firm; and three members of the Gavan Duffy family (which, by the way, is not a hyphenated name) - Sir Charles Gavan Duffy 91816-1903), also of a Co. Monaghan family, founder of the Young Ireland party and The Nation newspaper, subsequently Prime Minister of Victoria, Australia; his son John Gavan Duffy (1844-1917), also a member of the Victoria government, though born in Dublin; and on the third generation a very prominent figure in modern Irish politics, George Gavan Duffy (1882-1951), one of the signatories of the Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1922 and later President of the High Court of Justice of Ireland.

The variant Duhig occurs in Munster. sir James Duhig, the late Archbishop of Brisbane, was born at Limerick in 1871. He held that position for 46 years. His predecessor, the first Archbishop, Robert Dunne (1830-1917), a native of Ardfinnan, Co. Tipperary, held it for 30 years. The first bishop was James Quinn, appointed in 1859. He was so successful in promoting Irish emigration to Australia that his critics sarcastically suggested changing the name of Queensland to Quinnsland.

The Mayo surname O Doither, formerly anglicized O'Diff, presents an example of the absorption of uncommon names by common ones: the O'Diffs have now become generally Duffys and so are hardly distinguishable from the O'Duffys or the adjoining county of Roscommon.

Name Variations:  O'Duffy, Duffy, Duhig, Dowey.

References:
One or more of the following publications has been referenced for this article.
The General Armory; Sir Bernard Burke - 1842.
A Handbook of Mottoes; C.N. Elvin - 1860.
Irish Families, Their Names, Arms & Origins; Edward MacLysaght - 1957.
The Surnames of Ireland; Edward MacLynsaght - 1957.
The Book of Irish Families Great and Small.






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