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This is a draft edition! It is very incomplete! See the first part of this article. You have been warned!
As yet, no pre-1600 Scottish Gaelic examples of the name have been found.
A list of Gaels who were parishioners in Kilmacronak in Muckarne, in the west Highlands, in 1541 included "Mora nein a doura".[Ewen, p. 209] But here her name is being recorded in Latin, not Gaelic.
So while this shows that mid-16th century Scottish Gaels were using a name that was recorded in Latin documents as <Mora>, it does not tell us what the medieval Gaelic form of that name was.
Entries in the late 16th century Burgh Court Books for Inverness record the names of a number of women who, based on their full names, were apparently Gaels (although, since they appear in a burgh/town, at least some of them may have been bi-cultural). Examples include:
But these names are being recorded in Scots, not Gaelic.
The Annála Connacht mention the following Irish women in entries for the years indicated:[O'Brien]
But these are the names of Irish Gaels, not Scottish Gaels.
So while this shows that 13th through 15th century Irish Gaels were using a name that was recorded in Gaelic documents as <Mor>, it does not tell us whether medieval Scottish Gaels were also using the name and, if so, whether they used the same form of the name.
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http://MedievalScotland.org/scotnames/gaelicgiven/women/mor.shtml