McPhilbin or Philbin Irish name: MacPhilbín |
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Ethnicity | Irish, Norman |
Current region | Connacht, Ireland |
Information | |
Place of origin | Co. Mayo & Co. Galway[1] |
Notable members | John MacPhilbín |
Connected families | Burke clan, Bourke, de Burgh, Phillips, McWilliams, Gibbons |
Name origin and meaning | patronymic form meaning "son of Philip" McKillop McPhillips Phillips Phillipson Surnames are of different origin. |
Philbin or McPhilbin (Irish name: MacPhilbín) are Irish surnames, which is a patronymic form meaning "son of Philip".
The clan is of Norman origin, and is one of the Hibernicised branches of the Burke clan. Some would have later dropped the prefix.[2] The clan descends from John MacPhilbín, son of Little Philip de Burgh and Grandson of William de Burgh, "of Athanchip". This was the Connacht Burke clan, who from the 14th century were prominent in Co. Mayo. Historian John O'Donovan, in the Annals of the Four Masters, lists MacPhilbín as one of the chiefs of the district then known as Síol Anmchadha in east Galway. He also claims there are two sept one in Co. Mayo and other in Co. Galway.[3] The surname is also common in Co. Sligo.
In Connacht, Phillips is an Anglicisation of McPhilbin. Phillips was used interchangeably with MacPhillips, but later dropped the Mc/Mac prefix.[4][5][6][7][8]
This page or section lists people with the surname Philbin. If an internal link intending to refer to a specific person led you to this page, you may wish to change that link by adding the person's given name(s) to the link. |