Murray (surname)
Murray ( listen ) is both a Scottish and an Irish surname with two distinct respective etymologies. The Scottish version is a common variation of the word Moray, an anglicisation of the Medieval Gaelic word Muireb (or Moreb); the b here was pronounced as v, hence the Latinization to Moravia. These names denote the district on the south shore of the Moray Firth, in Scotland. Murray is a direct transliteration of how Scottish people pronounce the word Moray. The Murray spelling is not used for the geographical area, which is Moray, but it became the commonest form of the surname, especially among Scottish emigrants, to the extent that the surname Murray is now much more common than the original surname Moray. See also Clan Murray.
The Irish version derives from Ó Muireadhaigh. However there were many Scottish Murray immigrants into Ireland during the Middle Ages and so a Murray of Irish heritage today could be descended from either source of the name.
History
A considerable number of present bearers of this surname are of Scottish origin, especially in Ulster. Possible etymologies are:
- From Moray in northeast Scotland, which came from the Scottish Gaelic for "sea settlement".
- As a native Irish of this name, from Mac Muireadhaigh or Ó Muireadhaigh "descendant of Muireadhach" or Mac Giolla Mhuire "descendant of the servant of the Virgin Mary".
The motto for Murray is "Imperio". "Murrays" trace their heritage back to the 12th century and take their name from the great province of Moray, once a local kingdom.
It was during this time that the Flemish lords crossed the North Sea and established themselves in the Scottish realm. Among them was Freskin.
It is possible that either Freskin or his son William intermarried with the ancient royal house of Moray. The senior line of the Murrays took the surname of Sutherland and became Earls of Sutherland by 1235.
Thereafter the chiefs of the Murrays were the Lords of Petty in Moray who also became Lords of Bothwell in Clydesdale before 1253. An heir of this line, Sir Andrew Moray, was the brilliant young general who led the Scots in 1297 in their first uprising against English rule. He was mortally wounded while winning his famous victory at Stirling Bridge.
His son, Sir Andrew Murray, 4th Lord of Bothwell, third Regent of Scotland, married Christian Bruce, a sister of King Robert the Bruce. He was captured at Roxburgh early in 1333 and was a prisoner in England at the time of the Battle of Halidon Hill. He obtained his freedom in time to march to the relief of his wife, who was defending Kildrummy Castle. Sir Andrew commenced with unabated spirit to struggle in the cause of independence and died in 1338.
The last Murray Lord of Bothwell died in 1360 of the plague. By the 16th century, the Murrays of Tullibardine in Strathearn had assumed the leadership of the Murrays. This was formally confirmed by Bands of Association in 1586 and 1589.
Sir John became the 1st Earl of Tullibardine in 1606. Thus, the Tullibardine hegemony was firmly established among the Murrays; and George Iain Murray, 10th Duke of Atholl was also Marquis of Tullibardine as recognized in Lyon Register as Chief of the Murrays. The 2nd Earl of Tullibardine married Lady Dorothea Stewart, heiress of the Earls of Atholl in 1629 and Marquises from 1676. To their medieval peacock's head crest (motto-Praite), they added the mermaid (motto-Tout Pret), as Lords of Balquidder; and in the seventeenth century, they took the demi-savage holding a sword and a key commemorating the capture of the last Lord of the Isles by the 1st Stewart Earl of Atholl in 1475: hence the motto Furth, Fortune, and Fill the Fetters. (Go forth against your enemies, have good fortune, and return with hostages and booty).
Since 1703, the Murray's chiefs have been Dukes of Atholl. For a time in the 18th century, the Murray dukes were also Sovereign Lords of the Isle of Man, with their own coinage and parliament, The House of Keys. The 1st Duke's younger son, Lord George Murray, was the Jacobite general responsible for the highlander's successes through the early part of the 1745 uprising.
Much of the above information about the Murrays was taken from the book The Highland Clans, by Iain Moncreiffe of that Ilk.
Lord George's descendant George Murray, 10th Duke of Atholl, died in February 1996. The new Duke of Atholl is John Murray, 11th Duke of Atholl, a South African. The new Duke has taken the chiefship of the Murrays.
People
Murray may refer to many people (see also Clan Murray):
A
- Adam Murray, English footballer
- Adam Murray, Irish soldier known for the 1689 defence of Derry
- Al Murray, comedian
- Albert Murray, including:
- Albert Murray (writer) (1916–2013), African American literary and jazz critic, novelist and biographer
- Albert Murray, Baron Murray of Gravesend (1930–1980), British Labour Party politician, Member of Parliament 1964– 1970
- Bert Murray (born 1942), English football player
- Alexander Murray (1755–1821), U.S. Navy officer, Revolutionary War
- Alexander Murray (1816–1884), U.S. Navy officer, Mexican-American and American Civil Wars
- Alexander Murray (geologist) (1810–1884), Scottish geologist
- Alexander Murray (linguist) (1775–1813), linguist and professor at Edinburgh University
- Alexander Murray, 1st Baron Murray of Elibank (1870–1920)
- Alexander Murray, 6th Earl of Dunmore
- Alexander Murray, 8th Earl of Dunmore
- Alexander Borthwick Murray (1816–1903), South Australian colonist, pastoralist and parliamentarian
- Alexander Hunter Murray (1818 or 1819–1874), a Hudson's Bay Company fur trader and artist
- Alexander Stuart Murray (1841–1904), archaeologist
- Aline Murray Kilmer, American poet
- Allan Murray, Australian rules footballer
- Alma Murray, (born 1854), actress
- Andrew Murray, including:
- Sir Andrew Murray, Guardian of Scotland in 1332 and again from 1335 to 1338
- Andrew Murray (botanist), (1812–1878), Scottish botanist
- Andrew Murray (Guyanese boxer) (1971–2002), Guyanese boxer of the 1990s and 2000s
- Andrew Murray (campaigner and journalist), member of the Communist Party of Britain
- Andrew Murray (children's writer), English children's writer
- Andrew Murray (golfer) (born 1956), English golfer
- Andrew Murray (minister) (1828–1917), South African minister of religion, missionary, and author
- Andrew Murray (Australian politician), Australian politician, current member of the Australian Senate
- Andrew Murray, 1st Viscount Dunedin
- Andrew C. Murray, Texas state representative, 1893–1895, 1903–1905, and 1911–1917
- Andy Murray (ice hockey), Canadian ice hockey player, coach
- Andy Murray (born 1987), currently the top-ranked British tennis player
- Ann Murray, Irish mezzo-soprano
- Anne Murray (born 1945), Canadian singer
- Anne Murray, Duchess of Atholl
- Anton Murray, South African cricketer
- Antonio Murray, English football player
- Antonio Murray (police officer), former Baltimore Police officer sentenced to 139 years in prison
- Archibald Murray (1860–1945), British general
- Arnold Murray, including:
- Arnold Murray (pastor) (born 1927), founder and pastor, The Shepherd's Chapel
- Arnold Murray (1854-1952), one of the Last surviving Confederate veterans
- Arnold Murray (1933–89), lover of Alan Turing, prosecuted for homosexual activity
- Arthur Murray (1895–1991), American dance instructor and businessman, married to Kathryn Murray
- Arthur Murray, 3rd Viscount Elibank
- Athol Murray, Canadian priest and high school president
- Lady Augusta Murray
B
- Barbara Murray, actress
- Bert Murray (born 1942), English football player
- Bill Murray (born 1950), American actor
- Billy Murray (actor) (born 1941), British actor
- Billy Murray (singer) (1877–1954), American singer
- Bob Murray (businessman), businessman and former chairman of Sunderland Football Club
- Brady Murray, American ice hockey player
- Brett Murray, South African artist
- Brian Doyle-Murray, American comedian, screenwriter and actor
- Bruce C. Murray, American planetary scientist
- Bruce Murray (cricketer), New Zealand cricketer
- Bruce Murray (soccer), American soccer player
- Bryan Murray (ice hockey), Canadian ice hockey coach and executive
C
- Chad Michael Murray (born 1981), American actor, former male fashion model and teen idol
- Charles Murray (disambiguation)
- Charles R. Murray (1882–1938), Canadian professional golfer
- Charlotte Murray (1754–1808), English botanist and author better known as Lady Charlotte Murray
- Charlotte Murray, Duchess of Atholl (1731–1805)
- Cheryl Murray (born 1952), British actress
- Chris Murray (born 1966), Canadian singer-songwriter and guitarist
- Christian Murray, Canadian comedy writer
- Clark Murray (born 1938), American sculptor
- Colin Murray, Canadian ice hockey player
- Conrad Murray (born 1953), personal physician of Michael Jackson
- Craig Murray (born 1958), former British Ambassador to Uzbekistan
D
- Daniel Murray (mathematician) (born 1862) Canadian mathematician
- Daniel Alexander Payne Murray (1852–1925), African American intellectual
- Darren Murray (born 1974), Scottish footballer
- Darrin Murray (born 1967), New Zealand cricketer
- Dave Murray (musician) (born 1956), Iron Maiden guitarist
- David Murray (disambiguation)
- David Christie Murray (1847–1907), English journalist and writer
- David Murray-Lyon (1890–1975), officer in the Indian Army
- Dee Murray (1946–1992), British bassist, best known as a member of Elton John's original rock band
- Denis Murray (journalist) (born 1951), British television journalist
- DeMarco Murray, Dallas Cowboys running back
- Denis Murray (athlete), Irish athlete at the 1908 Olympic Games in London
- Deryck Murray (born 1943), former West Indies cricketer
- Devon Murray (born 1988), Irish actor
- Don Murray (clarinetist) (1904–1929), American jazz musician
- Don Murray (actor) (born 1929), American actor
- Don Murray (writer) (1923–2006), Pulitzer Prize–winning writer for the Boston Herald
- Donald Walter Gordon Murray (1894–1976), Canadian surgeon
- Douglas Murray (ice hockey) (born 1980), Swedish ice hockey player
- Durno Murray (1925–2009), Australian ornithologist
E
- Earl Murray (1926–1994), American football player
- Ed Murray (Washington politician), politician from Washington State
- Eddie Murray (born 1956), American baseball player
- Eddie Murray (American football)
- Edmund P. Murray (1930–2007), American novelist and journlist
- Edwin R. Murray (born 1960), American politician
- Elaine Murray, Scottish politician
- Eli Houston Murray, Governor of Utah Territory (1880–1886)
- Eoin Murray, Irish auto racing driver
- Eric Murray (bridge) (born 1928), Canadian bridge player
- Eric Murray (cricketer), South African cricketer
- Eric Murray (rower), New Zealand rower
- Eustace Clare Grenville Murray (1824–1881), English journalist
F
- Francis Murray, mayor of Brisbane
- Francis Edwin Murray, poet
- Francis Joseph Murray, American mathematician known for his foundational work on functional analysis
- Frank Murray, coach of the Virginia Cavaliers
- Franny Murray, American football player
- Frieda A. Murray, fantasy writer
G
- Garth Murray, Canadian ice hockey player
- Geoffrey Cushing-Murray, American songwriter
- George Murray (disambiguation)
- Gideon Oliphant-Murray, 2nd Viscount Elibank
- Gilbert Murray, British intellectual
- Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 1st Earl of Minto
- Glen Murray (ice hockey), Canadian ice hockey player
- Glen Murray (politician) (born 1957), Canadian politician
- Glenn Murray, English football player
- Gerald R. Murray, 14th Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force
- Gordon Murray, designer of Formula One race cars
- Gordon Murray (puppeteer)
- K. Gordon Murray, American film producer
- Grace Hopper, Grace Murray Hopper, American computer scientist and United States Navy rear admiral
- Graham Murray, Australian rugby league player and coach
- Graham Murray, Irish GAA all star.
- Grant Murray, Scottish professional footballer
- Grover E. Murray, President of Texas Tech University (1966–1976)
- Guillermo Murray (born 1927), Argentine-Mexican actor and director
- Guy Murray, American track/cross country coach and former marathon runner
H
- Hannah Murray (born 1989), English actress
- H. J. R. Murray (1868–1955), English chess historian
- Harry Murray (1880–1966), Australian Victoria Cross recipient
- Henry Murray, (1893–1988), American psychologist who developed the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)
- Herbert Harley Murray (1829–1904), English colonial governor
- Hubert Murray (1861–1940), brother of Gilbert Murray
- Hugh Murray (disambiguation)
I
- Iain Murray (disambiguation)
- Iain Murray (sailor), Australian olympic sailor
- Ian Murray (disambiguation)
J
- J. A. Murray (naturalist)
- Jack Murray (disambiguation)
- Jaime Murray, English actress
- Jamal Murray (born 1997), Canadian basketball player
- James Murray (disambiguation)
- Jamie Murray, Scottish tennis player
- Jan Murray, American stand-up comedian
- Janice Murray, English association footballer
- Janet Murray, professor at the Georgia Institute of Technology
- Jenni Murray, British journalist and broadcaster
- Jennifer Murray, British pilot and the first woman to circumnavigate the world in a helicopter
- Jillian Murray, an American Actress
- Jim Murray (football), an American football executive
- Jim Murray (musician), a San Francisco musician of the 1960s
- Jim Murray (sportswriter) (1919–1998), American sportswriter
- Joan Murray, American poet
- Joel Murray, American actor
- John Murray (disambiguation)
- John Courtney Murray, American priest and theologian
- John Stewart-Murray, 7th Duke of Atholl
- John Stewart-Murray, 8th Duke of Atholl
- Johnston Murray, Governor of Oklahoma
- Jon Murray (disambiguation)
- Jonathan Murray, television producer
- Joseph Murray (disambiguation)
- Judith Sargent Murray
- Judy Murray Scottish tennis coach
- Juggy Murray
- Junior Murray (born 1968), West Indian cricketer
K
- Kate Murray
- Katharine Stewart-Murray, Duchess of Atholl
- Keith Murray (ceramic artist)
- Keith Murray (rapper)
- Keith Murray (singer) (born 1978), lead vocalist for We Are Scientists
- Keith Murray, Baron Murray of Newhaven (1903–1993), British academic
- Ken Murray (disambiguation)
- Kenny Murray
- Kevin Murray (disambiguation)
L
- Lamond Murray (born 1973), basketball player
- Larry Murray
- Lawrence J. Murray, Jr. (1910–2000), New York politician
- Lawrence O. Murray, U.S. Comptroller of the Currency from 1908 to 1913
- Lee Murray (born 1977), a British mixed martial arts fighter of partial Moroccan descent.
- Len Murray (Lionel Murray, Baron Murray of Epping Forest, 1922–2004), British Trade Union leader
- Lenda Murray (born 1962), American female bodybuilder
- Les Murray (broadcaster)
- Les Murray (poet)
- Leticia Murray
- Lindley Murray
- Lindley Murray (tennis) (1892–1970), American tennis player
- Liz Murray
- Lowell Murray
M
- Madalyn Murray O'Hair (1919–1995), American atheist
- Mae Murray (1885–1965), American actress, dancer, film producer, and screenwriter
- Magnus Miller Murray (1787–1838), Mayor of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Margaret Murray (1863–1963), British Egyptologist
- Margaret Polson Murray (1865–1927), Canadian social reformer, magazine editor, and founder of the Imperial Order Daughters of the Empire
- Margaret Lally "Ma" Murray (1888–1982)American-Canadian newspaper editor, publisher, and columnist
- Margaret Murray Washington
- Mark Murray (disambiguation)
- Marty Murray
- Matt Murray
- Matthew Murray
- Michael Murray (organist)
- Mike Murray (cricketer)
- Mike Murray (ice hockey)
- Mitch Murray
- Mitchell Durno Murray
- Montolieu Oliphant-Murray, 1st Viscount Elibank
N
- Nathan Lovett-Murray
- Nathaniel A. Murray
- Nathaniel O. Murray, American politician
- Neil Murray (Australian musician)
- Neil Murray (British musician)
- Nora Grace Murray (American dignitary)
P
- Patrick Murray (disambiguation)
- Patty Murray (Patricia Lynn Murray, born 1950), United States Senator
- Paul Murray (disambiguation)
- Pauli Murray
- Peta Murray, Australian writer
- Pete Murray, Australian singer-songwriter
- Pete Murray (disc jockey)
- Peter Murray (Harvard Law School), Harvard Law professor
- Peter Murray-Rust
- Philip Murray
R
- Raymond Murray, American Marine Corps officer
- Red Murray, American baseball player
- Rem Murray, Canadian ice hockey player
- Richard Murray, British businessman
- Richard William Murray, Cape Colony newspaper proprietor
- Rob Murray, Canadian ice hockey player
- Robert Murray (disambiguation)
- Robin Murray, British psychiatrist
- Ronald Murray, American basketball player
- Ronald King Murray, Lord Murray, Scottish politician and judge
- Ruby Murray, Northern Ireland singer
- Rupert Murray, film director
S
- Sabina Murray
- Samantha Murray
- Samantha Murray (tennis)
- Scott Murray, Scottish rugby player
- Sean Murray (disambiguation)
- Shaun Murray
- Simon Murray
- Stephen Murray, including:
- Stephen Murray (actor) (1912–1983), British actor
- Stephen O. Murray (born 1950), a sociologist, anthropologist scholar specialising in homosexuality
- Stuart Murray
- Stuart S. Murray
- Suna Murray
- Sunny Murray
- Sara Murray
T
- T. C. Murray, Irish dramatist
- Tavi Murray, 8th woman to win the Polar Medal
- Terence Aubrey Murray (1810–1873), politician in New South Wales
- Terry Murray
- Therese Murray, American politician, President of the Massachusetts Senate
- Thomas Murray (disambiguation), including:
- Tim Murray
- Tom J. Murray, Democratic U.S. Representative from Tennessee (1943–1966)
- Tracy Murray, NBA basketballer
- Troy Murray, Canadian ice hockey player
- Ty Murray, American champion rodeo cowboy, husband of Jewel
w
- Wal Murray, Australian politician
- Walter Charles Murray
- Will Murray (writer)
- Willard H. Murray, Jr.
- William Murray (disambiguation)
- William H. Murray (Medal of Honor recipient), American Medal of Honor recipient
Y
- Yvonne Murray, Scottish athlete
See also
- Clan Murray
- McMurray (surname)
- Fort McMurray
- Jonathan Marray (tennis player)