-
expansion is
explained in part by the
loyalty of Sir Neil
Campbell (Niall
mac Caile) (died 1316) to the
cause of
Robert the Bruce, a
loyalty that was rewarded...
- all of
these have male and
female forms depending on the bearer, e.g. all
Mac-
names become Nic- if the
person is female. Some of the
Scottish Gaelic surnames...
- in
Gaelic as
Mac Artairr, "son of Arthur", in
reference to
their alleged ancestry. The head of the
family bears the
Gaelic title MacArtair Strac****rr....
- Scottish-Gaelic
Mac Artair with Mc
meaning "son of." Its
appearance and
pronunciation as
Carter may also be the
Anglicized form of the
Irish Mac Artúir, Cuirtéir...
- Clan
Arthur or Clan
MacArthur, (Scottish Gaelic:
Clann Artair) is a
highland Scottish clan that once held
lands on the s****s of Loch Awe
opposite Inishail...
-
evidenced by the fifteenth-century
executions of
Alasdair Mac Ruaidhrí and Eóin
Mac Artair,
chieftains said to have
commanded one
thousand men apiece...
-
Sergeant C. Lurin, 16th
Canadian Battalion Private A.
MacArtair,
Canadian Signal Company Sergeant A. W.
MacDonald, 1st Battalion, East
Lancashire Regiment Sergeant...
-
executions of two
Highland chieftains in 1428: a
certain Alasdair Mac Ruaidhrí and Eóin
Mac Artair, both who are
recorded to have
commanded one
thousand men apiece...
-
evidenced by the fifteenth-century
executions of
Alasdair Mac Ruaidhrí and Eóin
Mac Artair,
chieftains said to have
commanded one
thousand men apiece...
- Arthur's Seat (Scottish Gaelic:
Suidhe Artair,
pronounced [ˈs̪ɯi.əˈaɾt̪ʰəɾʲ]) is an
ancient volcano which is the main peak of the
group of
hills in Edinburgh...