Supposed origins The family claimed descent from
Muireadhach Albanach Ó Dálaigh (
fl.1200–1230). in reference to the time he spent in Scotland. He supposedly spent 15 years there after being exiled for killing a
steward of Domhnall Mór Ó Domhnaill (1207–1241),
Lord of Tyrconell. While in Scotland, Muireadhach Albanach was employed as a bard by the
Earls of Lennox, and it appears as if members of his family also settled in
the Lennox, as a "Kathil Macmurchy" is recorded in the Lennox in the mid 13th century. In a
lament that Muireadhach Albanach composed on the death of his wife, Maol Mheadha, he stated that they had 11 children.
A professional family , on display in the
National Museum of Scotland, Edinburgh An early member of the MacMhuirich family was Lachlann Mór MacMhuirich, who authored the battle-incitement poem of
Clan Donald (
Clann Domhnaill) sometime before the
Battle of Harlaw, which took place in 1411. A possible descendant of Lachlann's was one "Lacclannus mcmuredhaich archipoeta", who witnessed a charter of
Aonghas of Islay, son of the last member of
Clann Domhnaill to be recognised as
Lord of the Isles. Other members of the MacMhuirich family, possibly one or two, composed poems of Aonghas's murder that are preserved in the
Book of the Dean of Lismore. Following the collapse of the Lordship of the Isles, the MacMhuirich family appears to have been chiefly employed by the chiefs of the
MacDonalds of Clanranald (
Clann Raghnaill). The earliest poet of the MacMhuirich family on record is Niall Mór MacMhuirich ( - c. 1613). A member of the family was the
seanchaidh (story-teller and genealogist) who authored much of the
Books of Clanranald, which date to the 17th and early 18th centuries. Other noted members of the family were Cathal MacMhuirich (
fl.1625) and
Niall MacMhuirich (
c.1637–1726), In the first part of the 16th century members of the family are also recorded as
Harpers, and one "John oig Mc murcquhie leiche in Ilay", a physician, is recorded in 1615. In the second half of the 17th century, Ruairidh MacMhuirich (anglicised as
Roderick Morison), known as
an Clàrsair Dall (the Blind Harper) was a bard who served Chief John MacLeod "the Speckled" of
Clan MacLeod until the latter's death in 1693. John's successor, the similarly named Rockerick MacLeod "the Younger", was an
absentee landlord for whom Morison composed
Oran do Mhac Leoid Dhun Bheagain ("A Song for MacLeod of Dunvegan"), rebuking the chief for not performing his traditional duties to his subjects and failing to support traditional Gaelic culture. Morison died in 1713. The last of the family to practice Classical Gaelic poetry was Domhnall MacMhuirich, who lived on
South Uist, as a tenant of Macdonald of Clanranald, in the 18th century. ==Modern day==