Eoin Explained
Eoin (in Irish pronounced as /oːnʲ/) is a masculine Irish-language given name. The Scottish Gaelic equivalent is Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Eòin|italics=no (in Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic pronounced as /jɔːɲ/) and both are closely related to the Welsh Welsh: [[Ioan]]. It is also cognate with the Irish Irish: [[Seán]] and English John. In the Irish language, it is the name used for all Biblical figures known as John in English, including John the Baptist and John the Apostle.
Irish: Eoin|italic=no/Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Eòin|italic=no are different names from Irish: Eoghan|italic=no/Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Eòghan|italic=no. The Old Irish name Eógan is generally considered to a derivation of the Greek and Latin name [[Eugene (given name)|Eugenes]], meaning "noble born".[1] [2] [3]
Political figures
Artists
Sportsmen
Gaelic Athletic Association
Gaelic footballers
Hurlers
Soccer players
Other
- Eoin Collins, a former Irish tennis player
- Eoin Kennedy, an All-Ireland winning handballer
- Eoin Morgan, an Irish cricketer who now represents England
- Eoin Murray, an Irish British Touring Car Championship driver
- Eoin Reddan, an Irish Rugby international
- Eoin Reilly, a junior champion sculler and rower from New Zealand
- Eoin Rheinisch, an Irish canoeist
- Eoin Ó Siochrú, an Irish motorcyclist
- Eoin B. B. Kennelly, an Irish serial killer
Others
- Eoin Cameron, an Australian radio personality
- Eóin Mac Suibhne, fourteenth-century Scottish nobleman
- Eoin Macken, Irish actor and model
- Eoin McKiernan, an academic in the field of Irish Studies
- Eoin McLove, a fictional character in the sitcom Father Ted
- Eóin Doyle, fictional character from "the JFKs" song of the same name.
See also
Notes and References
- Surnames of the United Kingdom (1912), reprinted for Clearfield Company, INC by Genealogical Publishing Co. INC, Baltimore 1995, 1996. Cormic gives this origin for Eogan (one MS, Eogen); and Zimmer considers Owen to be borrowed from Latin Latin: Eugens, as noted by MacBain, p. 400. The mediaeval Latinization of Owen as Latin: Oenus led to a belief that the etymology was the Welsh and Breton Welsh: oen, "lamb". With much stronger reason it was at one time considered that the name represented Irish Irish: eoghunn = Gael. Irish: Ogan- [f. Old Irish {{lang|sga|oc-}} Welsh {{lang|cy|og}}, young], ‘youth’. Surnames of the United Kingdom cites Tomás Ua Concheanainn, Irish: Mion-Chomhrádh (p. 126), that "Irish: Eóghan is a diminutive of Irish: Eóghainin, = Owain, Eugene"
- Morgan, T.J. and Morgan, Prys, Welsh Surnames, University of Wales, 1985, Owain (Owen, Bowen, Ednowain). According to T.J. Morgan in Welsh Surnames (page 172/173) Owen is a derivation of the Latin Latin: Eugenis > Old Welsh Ou(u)ein, Eug(u)ein ... 'variously written in Middle Welsh as Ewein, Owein, Ywein. LL gives the names Euguen, Iguein, Yuein, Ouein. The corresponding form in Irish is Irish: Eoghan. Additionally, another Latinized variation of the name Owen is Latin: Audoenus in certain parish registers.”
- As cited by T.J. Morgan in Welsh Surnames, page 172