MacCall Surname
Approximately 318 people bear this surname
MacCall Surname Definition:
G MacCathail, 'son of Cathal,' which see. The M'Calls of Guffokland were an old Nithsdale family. Robert M'Kawele, lord of Karsnelohe, c. 1370—80 (Laing, 64). The Maccalls of Ayrshire and the Lowlands have no connection with the Maccolls.
Read More About This SurnameMacCall Surname Distribution Map
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 173 | 1:2,095,138 | 133,172 |
| England | 40 | 1:1,392,951 | 61,553 |
| Scotland | 32 | 1:167,307 | 9,494 |
| Canada | 24 | 1:1,535,233 | 104,339 |
| Ireland | 15 | 1:313,929 | 10,911 |
| Argentina | 14 | 1:3,053,101 | 127,728 |
| Australia | 7 | 1:3,856,529 | 135,538 |
| Wales | 4 | 1:773,633 | 29,106 |
| France | 3 | 1:22,140,907 | 385,998 |
| Dominican Republic | 1 | 1:10,432,932 | 36,508 |
| Italy | 1 | 1:61,156,688 | 199,583 |
| Nigeria | 1 | 1:177,142,758 | 748,972 |
| Brazil | 1 | 1:214,074,332 | 1,693,628 |
| Switzerland | 1 | 1:8,212,915 | 156,297 |
| Belgium | 1 | 1:11,496,644 | 167,539 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ireland | 6 | 1:738,311 | 21,113 |
| Place | Incidence | Frequency | Rank in Area |
|---|---|---|---|
| United States | 13 | 1:3,862,976 | 168,604 |
MacCall Surname Meaning
From Where Does The Surname Originate? meaning and history
G MacCathail, 'son of Cathal,' which see. The M'Calls of Guffokland were an old Nithsdale family. Robert M'Kawele, lord of Karsnelohe, c. 1370—80 (Laing, 64). The Maccalls of Ayrshire and the Lowlands have no connection with the Maccolls. The Maccalls of Dumfriesshire were settled there as early as 1500, and are said to be descended from the Macaulays (Clan Maccoll journal, IV, p. 37). John M'Call is recorded in Cumbray, 1583 (Hunter, p. 31). Matthew McCall in Maybole, charged with reset of rebels in 1607, appears a few days later as McEall (RPC., XIV p. 507). Quintigern Makcall, bailie of Edinburgh, 1610 (Laing, 1597). John M'Call was retoured heir of Patrick M'Call of Guffokland, his father, 1629 (Retours, Dumfries, 138). Robert M'Kaal in the parish of Carsfern was charged with being a disorderly person, 1684 (RPC., 3. ser. IX, p. 574). William McAull, merchant councillor of Haddington, 1686 (ibid., XII., p. 544), and John McCaull, bailie of Maybole, 1688 (ibid., XIII, p. 208). William McAall in Auchintgart and Robert McAll gave their bond in the same year (op. cit., p. 318). M'Aull 1667, McCaule, McCawell, and McGal 1684 (Parish), Mackall 1672, Makcale and M'Kall 1663; M'Auld, Maccail, McCale, M'Gale, Magall, Megall.
MACALL, Maccall, Maccaull, Mackall: G MacCathail, 'son of Cathal,' which see. The M'Calls of Guffokland were an old Nithsdale family. Robert M'Kawele, lord of Karsnelohe, c. 1370—80 (Laing, 64). The Maccalls of Ayrshire and the Lowlands have no connection with the Maccolls. The Maccalls of Dumfriesshire were settled there as early as 1500, and are said to be descended from the Macaulays (Clan Maccoll journal, IV, p. 37). John M'Call is recorded in Cumbray, 1583 (Hunter, p. 31). Matthew McCall in Maybole, charged with reset of rebels in 1607, appears a few days later as McEall (RPC., XIV p. 507). Quintigern Makcall, bailie of Edinburgh, 1610 (Laing, 1597). John M'Call was retoured heir of Patrick M'Call of Guffokland, his father, 1629 (Retours, Dumfries, 138). Robert M'Kaal in the parish of Carsfern was charged with being a disorderly person, 1684 (RPC., 3. ser. IX, p. 574). William McAull, merchant councillor of Haddington, 1686 (ibid., XII., p. 544), and John McCaull, bailie of Maybole, 1688 (ibid., XIII, p. 208). William McAall in Auchintgart and Robert McAll gave their bond in the same year (op. cit., p. 318). M'Aull 1667, McCaule, McCawell, and McGal 1684 (Parish), Mackall 1672, Makcale and M'Kall 1663; M'Auld, Maccail, McCale, M'Gale, Magall, Megall.
One of the many anglicized forms of MacCathmhaoil of the Cenél Eoghain in use in Tyrone and Armagh. Also for MacCahill, q.v. MIF 55
(Celtic) Son of Cathal = War, Warrior [Gaelic Mac Cathail-mac, son + cathail, genit. of cathal, warrior: cath, war]
(Irish) The son of Cathal (battle mighty), or of Cathmhaol (battle chief).
User-submitted Reference
Our surname was originally spelled MacCuill. Which means "son of Hazael". The first known MacCuill was Dagda MacCuill, son of Prince Elatha. Dagda MacCuill was born Eochaidh Ollathair, but changed his name to Dagda MacCuill, to honor his God Hazael, when he became Ard Ri (High King) of Ireland. He was High King from 1823 BC - 1744 BC. The name was not used again until his son Cremait's son, Ethur MacCuill became Ard Ri of Ireland. Ethur MacCuill ruled jointly with his two brothers over Ireland for 30 years. Their reign ended with the Milesian Invasion of Ireland. Ethur MacCuill ruled from 1723 BC - 1694 BC. (These dates are recorded in the book "Annals of the Four Masters").
The next major date in Clan MacKall history is when they are exiled with the 3 Collas brothers in 326 AD for killing the Ard Ri of Ireland in 323 AD. They are exiled to Scotland with the 3 Collas brothers and the other Clans that supported the Collas Rebellion. In 329 AD the 3 Colla brothers along with 9 retainers each are allowed to return to Ireland, but the Clans that helped them are still exiled.
During the Crusades Clan MacKall went with Alan Fitz Walter Stewart on the 3rd Crusade with King Richard, from 1190 AD - July 1191 AD. It is unknown if they returned with the Stewart or stayed to fight. They also went on another Crusade thought to have been the 5th Crusade. I know that John Stewart son of Alan Fitz Walter Stewart died in the 7th Crusade in Egypt.
In 1314 at the Battle of Bannockburn, Clan MacKall is credited with following Angus Og MacDonald into the Battle. (According to Clan MacDonald history).
During the mid to late 1500s, the Earl of Sinclair resigned his title to his Earldom from falling into the hands of his eldest son. During this time James MacKall became Baron of Caithness. This happened two other times during this period. So that a younger more worthy son could inherit the Earldom. Once the previous Earl died, James MacKall returned the Earldom to the new Earl. (I have only ever found 2 documents on this issue), (Chieftain Peter John Dundas McCall, of St. Quivox & Birkenshaw, Sept of Clan MacAualy, stated this and claimed to have seen a record of this), sadly he passed away and the record is now lost.
James MacKall, Baron of Caithness, is known to have had at least one son, Samuel MacKall, The Gentleman of Glasgow. Samuel married Margaret Dundas, daughter of Robert Dundas, Granddaughter of Sir George Dundas, of Dundas. They had at least 2 sons Robert and James.
Some time in the early to mid 1600's Clan MacKall of Caithness was forced to flee the Highlands due to non-conformity to the Roman Catholic Church. They fled to Ulster, it is believed the Armagh area. In 1650, Prince Charles II came to Ireland to find Scottish ex-patriots to help him retake the throne. James and Robert joined and became Captain's in the King's Lyfe Guard of Foote. It is unclear how many members of the Clan joined. To prevent being recognised James and Robert changed their last names to James MacKallroy and Robert MacKalbla. What is known is that 3 McCalls where captured at the Battle of Dunbar. Captain James MacKallroy, Captain Robert MacKalbla, and Duncan McCall. All 3 where marched to Durham Cathedral and from their marched to the ship called "Unity" to be sent to the Colonies as indentured slaves.
James is the only one we have a record of after being released from the Saugus Iron works. His line continues to this day. His 3rd Great Grandson Ebenezer MacKall, Esq., was granted a new Coat of Arms, after the previous had been lost at Dunbar. His grandson is the current Captain & Armiger of the Clan. The Lord Lyon has stripped the "of" out of Caln MacKall of Caithness and made it Clan MacKall (Caithness), as we no longer own any land there.
As we no longer have enough officially recognized Armigers we can not at this time elect a new Chief or Commander.
- Ray McCallMacCall Demographics
MacCall Political Affiliation
in United States
United States
Average
MacCall Last Name Facts
Where Does The Last Name MacCall Come From? nationality or country of origin
The surname MacCall is found most frequently in The United States. It can be found as a variant:. Click here to see other possible spellings of this surname.
How Common Is The Last Name MacCall? popularity and diffusion
The last name is the 857,026th most frequently occurring family name throughout the world, borne by around 1 in 22,916,811 people. This last name occurs mostly in The Americas, where 67 percent of MacCall are found; 62 percent are found in North America and 62 percent are found in Anglo-North America.
This surname is most frequently occurring in The United States, where it is held by 173 people, or 1 in 2,095,138. In The United States MacCall is primarily found in: Virginia, where 21 percent reside, Pennsylvania, where 14 percent reside and Illinois, where 12 percent reside. Beside The United States MacCall exists in 14 countries. It also occurs in England, where 13 percent reside and Scotland, where 10 percent reside.
MacCall Family Population Trend historical fluctuation
The occurrence of MacCall has changed through the years. In The United States the number of people bearing the MacCall surname rose 1,331 percent between 1880 and 2014 and in Ireland it rose 250 percent between 1901 and 2014.
MacCall Last Name Statistics demography
The religious devotion of those carrying the last name is principally Catholic (100%) in Ireland.
In The United States those bearing the MacCall surname are 27.04% more likely to be registered Republicans than The US average, with 73.81% being registered to vote for the political party.
The amount MacCall earn in different countries varies marginally. In United States they earn 0.55% less than the national average, earning $42,910 USD per year and in Canada they earn 0.65% more than the national average, earning $50,006 CAD per year.
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Footnotes
- Surnames are taken as the first part of an person's inherited family name, caste, clan name or in some cases patronymic
- Descriptions may contain details on the name's etymology, origin, ethnicity and history. They are largely reproduced from 3rd party sources; diligence is advised on accepting their validity - more information
- Name distribution statistics are generated from a global database of over 4 billion people - more information
- Heatmap: Dark red means there is a higher occurrence of the name, transitioning to light yellow signifies a progressively lower occurrence. Clicking on selected countries will show mapping at a regional level
- Rank: Name are ranked by incidence using the ordinal ranking method; the name that occurs the most is assigned a rank of 1; name that occur less frequently receive an incremented rank; if two or more name occur the same number of times they are assigned the same rank and successive rank is incremented by the total preceeding names
- Ethnic group cannot necessarily be determined by geographic occurrence
- Similar: Names listed in the "Similar" section are phonetically similar and may not have any relation to MacCall
- To find out more about this surname's family history, lookup records on FamilySearch, MyHeritage, FindMyPast and Ancestry. Further information may be obtained by DNA analysis