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Cormick

Cormick is likely a variant ofCormac or McCormick, from Gaelic roots often linked with charioteer or raven.

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Name story

Cormick is an anglicized variant of the ancient Irish name Cormac, composed of two Old Irish elements: corb, meaning "chariot," and mac, meaning "son" — yielding "son of the chariot" or, by extension, "charioteer." It is one of the oldest attested personal names in the Irish tradition, appearing in annals and king-lists that predate Christianity in Ireland by centuries. The most celebrated bearer is Cormac mac Airt, the legendary High King of Ireland said to have reigned at Tara in the third century CE, remembered in saga literature as a paragon of wisdom, justice, and hospitality — Ireland's Solomon.

The name Cormac was borne by dozens of Irish saints, kings, and chieftains throughout the medieval period, and it survived the upheavals of Norman invasion and English plantation with its Gaelic identity largely intact. The anglicized form Cormick — treating the final syllable as a suffix rather than a separate element — emerged in the context of English-language record-keeping, where Irish names were regularized for official documents. As a surname it spread widely (McCormick, Cormick) before re-emerging in modern times as a given name in its own right.

In contemporary usage Cormick sits in the appealing space occupied by revived Gaelic names that feel rugged and distinctive without requiring explanation. The -ick ending gives it an approachable Anglo-Irish quality, less stark than Cormac to non-Irish ears, while the name's deep roots ensure it carries genuine historical weight. For families of Irish heritage seeking a name that honors the old world while wearing easily in the new, Cormick offers exactly that balance.

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