Last updated: March 2026

Character Name

Cormac

Meaning — Derived from the Old Irish "corb" meaning "chariot" (or possibly "raven") and "mac" meaning "son" — giving the meaning "son of the chariot" or possibly "charioteer's son". The name was borne by the legendary High King Cormac mac Airt, considered one of Ireland's greatest and wisest kings, whose court at Tara became associated with an idealised golden age of justice and prosperity.·Old Irish origin·Male·KOR-mak

Cormac Cormac is a name for natural leaders who govern with wisdom and fairness rather than mere force. The legendary Cormac mac Airt was celebrated above all for his justice, and characters bearing this name tend to carry a sense of innate authority combined with intellectual curiosity and an impulse toward order. It is an ideal name for kings, chieftains, judges, and scholars in historical or fantasy settings.

Best genres for Cormac

Historical FictionFantasyMythologyAdventureLiterary Fiction

Famous characters named Cormac

Cormac mac Airt

The Fenian Cycle and Irish historical tradition Traditional Irish Mythology

The legendary High King of Ireland at Tara, renowned for his wisdom, justice, and patronage of the Fianna under Fionn mac Cumhaill.


Variations & nicknames

CormacCormackCormick

Pairs well with

Cormac mac AirtCormac McCarthyCormac O'BrienCormac RiordanCormac HanniganCormac Fallon

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Related names

Fionn

Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish "find" meaning "white", "fair", or "fair-haired". It is one of the most celebrated names in Irish mythology as the given name of Fionn mac Cumhaill, the legendary leader of the Fianna warrior band. Fionn gained supernatural wisdom as a boy by accidentally tasting the Salmon of Knowledge, and he became Ireland's greatest hero and protector.

Fergus

Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish elements "fer" meaning "man" and "guss" meaning "vigour", "strength", or "force" — together meaning "man of vigour" or "strong man". The name was borne by several early rulers of Ireland and Dál Riata, and most notably by the hero Fergus mac Róich of the Ulster Cycle, a warrior of extraordinary physical power and loyal character.

Diarmuid

Old Irish · “Derived from the Old Irish "Diarmait", possibly from "di" (without) and "airmit" (envy) — meaning "without envy" or "free from jealousy". Alternatively interpreted as "freeman". In Irish mythology, Diarmuid Ua Duibhne was the most handsome warrior of the Fianna, whose magical "love spot" on his forehead caused any woman who glimpsed it to fall instantly in love with him, leading to the legendary elopement with Gráinne.

Conor

Irish · “Anglicised form of the Irish "Conchobar" or "Conchobhar", derived from "con" (dog or wolf, used as an honorific for a great warrior) and "cobhar" (desiring or loving) — together possibly meaning "lover of hounds" or "wolf-lover". Conchobar mac Nessa was the king of Ulster in the Ulster Cycle of Irish mythology, the lord who ruled over the great warriors including Cúchulainn.


More Old Irish names

Fearghal

From the Old Irish "Fearghall" or "Fergal", composed of "fear" (man) and "gal" (valour, ferocity), meaning "man of valour" or "super-valour". The name was borne by Fergal mac Máele Dúin, King of Ireland from 710 to 722 AD, and by Saint Fergal (Virgilius) of Salzburg — an Irish monk who became Bishop of Salzburg and controversially taught that the Earth was spherical, centuries before it was widely accepted in Europe.

Lír

From the Old Irish "lir" meaning "sea" or possibly related to the Proto-Celtic sea deity. Lír (or Lir) was the Irish god of the sea and father of the four children who were transformed into swans in the most beloved of Irish mythological tales. The related figure Llyr appears in Welsh mythology in the Mabinogion, and scholars identify him with the legendary British king whose story Shakespeare transformed into King Lear.

Declan

Possibly derived from the Old Irish "Deaglán" or "Diaglán", with the most accepted interpretation being "full of goodness" or "man of prayer", though an alternate reading suggests "full of God" from "Dia" (God). Saint Declan of Ardmore was one of the earliest Christian missionaries in Ireland, predating Saint Patrick, and his name has been honoured in the Munster province for over fifteen centuries.

Rónán

Derived from the Old Irish "rón" meaning "seal" combined with the diminutive suffix "-án" — giving the meaning "little seal" or "young seal". In Irish tradition, seals were often believed to be fallen angels or transformed humans (selkies), and the name carries overtones of the liminal space between the natural and supernatural worlds. Several Irish saints bore the name.

Ciarán

Derived from the Old Irish "ciar" meaning "dark", "black", or "dark-haired", with the diminutive suffix "-án" giving "little dark one". The name was borne by two major Irish saints: Saint Ciarán of Clonmacnoise (c. 512–545 AD), who founded the great monastery of Clonmacnoise on the River Shannon — one of the most important centres of early medieval learning in Europe — and Saint Ciarán of Saighir, one of the earliest Irish saints.

Fionnuala

Derived from the Old Irish "Fionnghala" composed of "fionn" meaning "white" or "fair" and "guala" meaning "shoulder" — together meaning "white shoulder" or "fair-shouldered". In the Irish legend of the Children of Lir, Fionnuala is the eldest daughter of the sea god Lir, transformed into a swan by her jealous stepmother Aoife and forced to wander the waters of Ireland for nine hundred years.


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