From the Lorne district in Scotland; popularized as a given name meaning fox.
Lorne is a Scottish place-name turned personal name, drawn from Lorn (or Lorne), the ancient district of Argyll on Scotland's west coast. The region's name is of uncertain Celtic origin, possibly connected to a legendary Irish prince named Lóarn mac Eirc, said to have settled there in the fifth century.
As a given name, Lorne carries the particular atmosphere of the Scottish Highlands — a landscape of sea lochs, castle ruins, and mist-shrouded mountains that Romantic-era writers made into one of the world's most potent imaginative territories. Lorne achieved its broadest cultural recognition through two remarkable figures: Lorne Greene, the Canadian actor who played patriarch Ben Cartwright on the American television series *Bonanza* (1959–1973), whose steady moral authority made the name familiar in millions of living rooms, and Lorne Michaels, the Canadian-American television producer who created *Saturday Night Live* in 1975 and has shaped American comedy culture ever since. Both men hail from Canada, where Lorne has been particularly embraced as a given name, likely reflecting that nation's deep Scottish heritage.
Lorne is rarer today than at its mid-century peak, but retains a dignified, unhurried quality. It is neither fashionable nor forgotten — a name that carries real geographic and cultural identity, suggesting a bearer who is quietly self-possessed, rooted in something older than trend.