MAORMOR, the
highest title of honour amongst the Highlanders of Scotland, in
the 10th, 11th, and 12th centuries, the persons bearing it
having been the patriarchal chiefs of the great tribes into
which the Celtic population was then divided. They had
jurisdiction and authority over extensive districts, as Athole,
Moray, Ross, Garmoran, Mar, and Buchan. The word seems to have
been derived from the Gaelic maor, steward, and mhor, great, and
its office and dignity appear to have been next to that of the
king. So great indeed was the power of the maormors and so
extensive the territories which they ruled over, that they
sometimes were enabled to wage independent war even against the
sovereign himself. The succession to the maordom was strictly
hereditary in the male line. In proof of this, Mr. Skene
(Highlanders, vol. i. p. 79) instances the succession of the
maormors of Moray. In 1032, the Annals of Ulster mention the
death of Gilcomgain Mac Maolbride, maormor of Mureve. In 1058,
they record the death of Lulach Mac Gilcomgain, king of
Scotland, and in 1085, that of Maolsnechtan MacLulach, king or
maormor of Mureve. Thus showing, that although Lulach had been
driven from the throne, his son succeeded to the maordom of
Moray in his place.
The title of maormor was peculiar to
the Scottish Gael, and was altogether unknown among the Irish,
although they too were a Celtic race. It was exclusively
confined to the north of Scotland, and was never held by any of
those Saxon or Norman barons who obtained extensive territories
by grant, or succeeded, as they sometimes did, by marriage to
the possessions and power of the maormors. When the line of the
ancient maormors gradually sank under the ascendant influence of
the feudal system, the clans forming the great tribes became
independent, and their leaders or chiefs were held to represent
each the common ancestor or founder of his clan, and derived all
their dignity and power from the belief in such representation.
The chief possessed his office by right of blood alone, as that
right was understood in the Highlands; neither election nor
marriage could constitute any title to this distinction; it was
purely hereditary, nor could descend to any person, except to
him who, according to the Highland rule of succession, was the
nearest male heir to the dignity.