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14th November 24, 08:54 PM
#1
Etymology of Ghillie Brogue?
Does anyone know the etymology of the word 'ghillie' as it's used to refer to the style of brogue? I know it is commonly assumed to come from the Scottish Gaelic gillie meaning male attendant to a Highland chief or more recently, hunting guide, but I can't find a historical source for this claim. None of the Scottish dress history books I have checked use the word ghillie or gillie to refer to a type of shoe.
Interestingly, none of the 19th c. sources I've read call these shoes ghillie brogues either. In The Clans of the Scottish Highlands published 1845, Robert McIan's illustration for Chisholm has ghillie brogues; James Logan's description of them simply says, “The Brogs are of a pattern frequently worn by gentlemen.”
The Book of the Club of True Highlanders published in 1880 has an illustration of a ghillie brogue which the text simply refers to as a "modern bròg". Carmichael's 1894 glossary of Gaelic shoe terms does not mention ghillie brogues.
My inability to find historical uses of the term ghillie brogue makes me wonder if it's a relatively recent name. Does anyone know of any 19th c. texts that refer to shoes as ghillie brogues or ghillies?
Books Checked:
Old Irish and Highland Dress by H.F. McClintock, published 1943
History of highland dress by John Telfer Dunbar, published 1964
The costume of Scotland by John Telfer Dunbar, published 1981
A short history of the Scottish dress by Richard Manisty Demain Grange, published 1967
Scottish National Dictionary here
Carmichael's 1894 glossary is in this article: https://doi.org/10.9750/PSAS.028.136.150
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15th November 24, 04:37 PM
#2
I'm no expert but the word Gillie in Irish means servant, such as in the name Gillespie, the servant of the bishop
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16th November 24, 09:55 AM
#3
What an interesting question. One might have supposed that this term arose in second half of the 19th century and whilst there are examples depicted in McIan's (1847) and Macleay's (1870) works, they do not mention them as such. I suspect that this was a kilt shop term that quickly found favour as evidence by this article about ladies' wear from the The Bystander - Wednesday 05 August 1925.
OC Richard has a large collection of retailers' catalogues. It will be interesting to hear the earliest reference they give.
My Paisley's of Glasgow 1939 catalogue describes the style of brogue as Box Calf Lacing which suggests that the term was not universal at that time.
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16th November 24, 09:19 PM
#4
Originally Posted by figheadair
My Paisley's of Glasgow 1939 catalogue describes the style of brogue as Box Calf Lacing which suggests that the term was not universal at that time.
It's really interesting that the term was still not universal that late, especially since it had made it to the US by then.
The Winter 1932 Sears catalog has a woman's fashion shoe which is obviously inspired by the ghillie brogue:
Sears was an American company which made affordable versions of trendy fashions. The fact that they described the ghillie as having "taken the country by storm," implies that it was a recognized shoe style in the US in 1931.
The fact that the Bystander calls them ghillies' brogues with an S and apostrophe implies that the name is derived from them being worn by ghillies or at least the belief that ghillies wore them. I haven't seen much evidence that 19th-century ghillies actually wore ghillie brogues, but that might not matter.
The Book of the Club of True Highlanders calls John Eldar's c.1543 description of going hunting and then making ankle boots from the freshly slain deer's hide a description of "the manner in which the ancient bròg was made," and on the same page also says "the modern bròg [. . .] is simply a more elaborate specimen of handicraft". If someone who couldn't really understand Eldar's 16th c. Scots read that page, they might believe that the modern cross-lacing brogue really was basically the same as the 16th c. deerskin cuaran made while hunting. (In the late 19th c., some Highland brogues were made of deerskin (Mackay and Carmichael 1894).) If that person only knew the word 'ghillie' as meaning 'hunting guide', a brogue style historically made while hunting could therefore be a 'ghillie's brogue.'
(The Book of the Club of True Highlanders is wrong about the history of brogues, but that's off-topic of this post.)
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Originally Posted by Wandering Spark
The Winter 1932 Sears catalog has a woman's fashion shoe which is obviously inspired by the ghillie brogue:
Sears was an American company which made affordable versions of trendy fashions. The fact that they described the ghillie as having "taken the country by storm," implies that it was a recognized shoe style in the US in 1931.
It also implies that it was a new women's fashion. Obviously based on the male shoe, it may further reinforce the idea that the term itself was fairly recent.
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