- Galwegian surnames found in "The Surnames of Scotland" other forms also include MNarin, MNairn etc.
"Scots Kith and Kin" says McNairn appears first in Dumfriesshire in the 14th century and belongs to the clan of Appin Stewart
- an explanation of this association with the clan of Appin Stewart might be that McNairns were tenant farmers at that time on lands that Stewart of Appin received through his father's will.Earliest records indicate that McNairns were tenant farmers
taksmen etc. rather than peasants or nobility- Cuthbert
MNarne tenant of the lands of Auchirdilakdy in
Dumfriesshire in 1376
Malcolm MNerane l509
Gillecrist Makrierrane - tenant
under Stewart of Appin in 1509
from "Surnames of Scotland"
Origins of the
name
in. Gaelic Nairn is "na fhearn" (fh mute) - meaning the Alder Trees
- another possibility - rather a romantic one is: Neirin or Arieurin as he was better known was a famous "Welsh" bard of the 7th century The poem The Gododin tells of the battle in which the heroes of Neirins Celtic tribe living somewhere south of where Edinburgh now stands were wiped out by the Saxons-Neirin escaped and spent his last years in Galloway no one knows whether or not he had any descendants. more than likely all the variations came about because few people knew how to spell and pronunciations varied with the region.Books to refer to include:
"The Surnames of Scotland" by George F. Black N.Y. Pub.1.ib., 1946 "Scots Kith and Kin" Clan House, Edinburgh Published in. the 1950's