Origin of the Name McMenamin
The ancient history of the name
McMenamin was found in the allfamilycrests.com archives.
Over the centuries Surnames developed a wide number of variants. Different spellings of the same name can be traced back to an original root. Additionally when a bearer of a name emigrated it was not uncommon that their original name would be incorrectly transcribed in the record books at their new location. Surnames were also often altered over the years based on how they sounded phonetically and depending on the prevailing political conditions it may have been advantageous to change a name from one language to another.
Variants of the name McMenamin
include McManaman, McMenaman, McManamon, McManaway, McMenamy and several others. This Irish name is of remote and obscure origin with members of the MacMeanman and MacMeanma septs adopting these names as the anglicized forms of their native Gaelic names.
A sept or clan is a collective term describing a group of persons whose immediate ancestors bore a common surname and inhabited the same territory. Irish septs and clans that are related often belong to even larger groups, sometimes called tribes.
When Gaelic names were anglicized during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries they were often changed to Anglo equivalents that sounded most like their original Gaelic name. In Ireland these names are mostly found in Ulster , particularly in County Donegal, but also in County Mayo. Among the very earliest recorded bearers of the name were the brothers Teag and Maol MacMenamin, who were nephews of the ruling O'Neill Chief of the time in year 1303.
The McMenamin coat of arms came into existence centuries ago. The process of creating coats of arms (also often called family crests) began in the eleventh century although a form of Proto-Heraldry may have existed in some countries prior to this. The new art of Heraldry made it possible for families and even individual family members to have their very own coat of arms, including all McMenamin descendants.