Fairlie is a Scottish surname. It has alternatively been spelled Fairley, Fairly, Fairle,[1] Ffairlie,[2] Ferly, Fferle, among other similar variations. The Scots and Cumbric term fairlie/fferly/fferyll/fferyllt is often a synonym for fairy.[3] These variations appear in various parish records and armorial rolls.

History edit

The family name emerges in two different locations in Scotland: Fairlie in Ayrshire and the former lairdship of Braid in Midlothian (now within the City of Edinburgh).

Motto edit

There are several mottos associated with Fairlies and recorded sets of arms. From the branch that descended from the family of Braid, the motto is recorded:

  • "Paratus Sum" (Latin for "I am prepared")
  • "I am readie"

Other Fairlies of Ayrshire, Falkland, and Myres have often preferred one of the following phrases:

  • "Tak a thocht" (Scots for roughly "think on it")
  • "Meditare" (Latin for "meditate / think")
 
A Coat of Arms recorded for Alexander Fairlie of Braid (thrived circa 1549-1623) in The Crawford Armorial (folio 105), published circa 1601. Arms for other family members are often recorded with various charges and bruises, like a ribbon sable or a star in dexter chief. These undifferentiated arms are identical to those of the Earl of Fife and MacDuff. They are also quite similar to those of Powys. Alex Maxwell Findlater has speculated that this similarity points to an ancestry within ancient Fife[4] while other myths speculated that the Fairlies of Braid descended from King Robert II.

Etymology edit

It's commonly speculated that the Scottish name Fairlie and its variety of spellings originates from an old or middle-English phrase meaning some version of:

  • beautiful meadow
  • the far field
  • fern-covered field/meadow
  • sheep field
  • boar field
  • bull field

Less commonly noted is that the name originates in regions that were anciently populated by Gaelic and Cumbric-speakers. There is known to be a series of Brittonic kingdoms that stretched from modern Wales, through the west coast of England (Cumberland), through to the southern regions of modern Scotland (Lothian).[5] These kingdoms would have shared some cultural traits like languages.

The old Scots definition of a fairlie is:

  • A marvellous thing; a wonder[6].

There is a similar word in Cumbric and Welsh fferllys/fferyl relating to a region of Elfael in Wales and/or pseudo-mythical figures meaning either:

Both the Scots and Cumbric phrases seem loosely related to the concept of a "wonder-worker".

Notable people edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Armorial of Sir David Lindsay of the Mount (Secundus, c. 1599)". The Heraldry Society of Scotland. Retrieved 4 April 2024.
  2. ^ "Queen Mary's Roll (c. 1562)". The Heraldry Society of Scotland. Retrieved 4 April 2024.
  3. ^ a b c "fferyllt". Oxford Reference. Retrieved 2024-04-04.
  4. ^ Michael Findlater, Alex (2008). The Crawford Armorial (1st ed.). Bristol, UK: Heraldry Society of Scotland. p. 257. ISBN 978-0-9525258-8-2.
  5. ^ "Teyrnllwg: A Bright Kingdom Slips Away Like Dust". The Cell of Sister Patience. 2015-05-25. Retrieved 2024-04-05.
  6. ^ "Dictionaries of the Scots Language:: DOST :: farly n". Retrieved 2024-04-04.
  7. ^ a b "fferyll", Wiktionary, the free dictionary, 2023-12-14, retrieved 2024-04-04

External links edit