Chiefs of the Name

An Irish Chief of the Name was a person recognised by the Chief Herald of Ireland as the most senior known male descendant of the last inaugurated or de facto chief of that name in power in Gaelic Ireland at or before the end of the sixteenth century, see Irish nobility. After embarrassing official blunders in the 1990s which saw Terence Francis MacCarthy and several other impostors receive recognition, the Irish government decided in July 2003 to abandon this practice as there was no proper legal basis for it, and to continue such recognition would, on the advice of the Attorney General, necessitate a referendum to amend the Constitution of Ireland (Bunreacht na hÉireann). This decision was criticised by some, and greatly offended the recognized chiefs, but on the whole did not create a major stir. At abandonment the position was as follows:

Contents

Chiefs of the Name

Designation dormant

Designations disputed

Designation withdrawn

Application for recognition pending

Recognition not applied for

External link

See also: Chiefs of the Name, Attorney-General of Ireland, Bunreacht na hÉireann, Chief Herald of Ireland, Irish nobility, Terence Francis MacCarthy, Thomond