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6th January 13, 08:41 AM
#1
Tartan Questions
Hello again!
I was trying to do more research into my family and came across a tartan that I believe is my families. As I started doing research into the tartan, I read on here that many tartans were not registered until the 1900s.
I am trying to go as authentic as I can for my family name and was wondering if anyone could verify if the tartan I found is for my family or not. The more research I did the more it pointed me to an alternate spelling of my name
The family name is Downey and the tartan (Downie) is below:
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Thank you all for your help!
Kraig
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6th January 13, 12:03 PM
#2
Hi and firstly welcome to xmarks from Southampton UK.
I checked on the Scottish Tartans Authority website and it would seem that Downey/Downie is a sept of the Lindsay Clan. The Downie tartan that you found was only designed in 1982 so is a modern concept. The STA shows 2 registered Lindsay tartans standard and hunting. Nice tartans.
Friends stay in touch on FB simon Taylor-dando
Best regards
Simon
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6th January 13, 12:32 PM
#3
Thank you so much. I will look into those tartans as well.
Kraig
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6th January 13, 01:02 PM
#4
http://www.downiesurname.org/clans-a...ie-surname.php
Check out the above link. It has some interesting and useful information that may assist in your search.
Friends stay in touch on FB simon Taylor-dando
Best regards
Simon
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6th January 13, 03:41 PM
#5
That was an excellent read. Thank you much for pointing me there.
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12th January 13, 09:50 PM
#6
A note of reality: almost all tartan designs were created long---centuries--- after the hey days of the clans, by tartan merchants beginning in the 19th century, who gave them names in order to sell them to the newly emerging, post-Industrial Revolution, urban middle class in search of rural and Highland fantasies, and with the money to pay for it. There are only two ways to know which---if any---clan your ancestors were associated with. One is time-consuming genealogical research in which one goes backward in time, carefully documenting each generation before preceding to the previous one. The other is Y-DNA testing which might---and only might---be helpful in determining one's patrilineal ancestry. For info on this, see the FAQ at www.familytreedna.com
You should also be aware that septs were historically not a Scots institution, but were an Irish idea, which the tartan merchants have promoted as a way to sell more tartan. Many of them are totally bogus, others merely questionable.
What made a person a member of a clan---if we can use that terms---was not birth and surname, but allegiance to a clan chief. These days some say that it is right and proper to write a clan chief and ask for permission to be associated with his clan.
One must remember that clans and clan associations are two different things.
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13th January 13, 08:57 AM
#7
Its an interesting question about how far you go to be "authentic". My name is Baxter. We are supposedly a "sept" of the MacMillan clan, and I have an ancient hunting MacMillan kilt. I have been tracing my family history, I have managed to get back to the early 1500's in a direct paternal line. Where an I from? the east coast, Fife and Dundee. Not a connect with the west coast MacMillans. So should I wear the Baxter tartan from the Fife Baxters? My GGGGG Grandfather moved away from Fife and into Lanarkshire in the early/mid 1700's. So, is 250 years since I had a connection with the Baxter's from Fife.
From the tartan genealogy web sites I can wear the following: (all only from my paternal great, great grand etc grand mothers. i have not even looked at my maternal side yet)
Currie = Macdonald and or Macpherson tartan. Ballantyne = Bannatyne = Campbell or Stewart of Bute tartan. Grewar = Drummond, Fraser or Macgregor tartan.
Quite a selection and all pretty meaningless to me in the here and now. When I get a new kilt, I'll just pick a tartan that I like, or I'll design my own. So, Offline, if I were you, that's what I'd do.
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19th February 13, 09:14 AM
#8
David, I too am a Baxter and would love to have more time and $$ to look into my family history. You may want to look into the 'Baxter of Balgavies' tartan. I believe that to be 'ours' though I still see that it is somewhat connected to the Buchanan.
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19th February 13, 11:48 AM
#9
Yes, I'm afraid most septs are pretty imaginative links to sell more tartan. Likewise the invention of tartans starting from the 1830s and now accelerated by means of computer software.
Alan
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19th February 13, 12:46 PM
#10
Gilmore, you mentioned in your post above about the belief that some people think that it is proper to write to a chief to ask permission to be associated with his clan. How does one do so and is there a place to do this?
Thank you.
Neloon, ***
Septs are pretty much Victorian fantasy, as are much of the modern notions about the clans.
The Official [BREN]
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