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  1. #19
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    Quote Originally Posted by IsaacW View Post
    I do not wish to beat a dead horse, and I acknowledge that this is not common by ANY means, but I do not think I would go so far as state it is a style that is "abandoned" in Scotland. Although it was over a decade ago, and I lived there for only half a year, in all my time, I saw only about a dozen chaps kilted (not counting pipers and soldiers) and one wore them. Additionally, just from this site, the following images have been grabbed...



    GRANTED... this is NOT THE NORM, and the 3rd chap is a P/M wearing more of morning dress (although the P/M that was with him in the image was much more in daywear). Anyway... rare, maybe even odd, but not abandoned.

    Interestingly, this also makes me think of traditions in other countries. The area of WI that I currently live had a large amount of Norwegian immigration historically. Today, many "traditions" that are maintained are no longer in Norway. Does that negate their importance or even the continuity of it not worthwhile? Oddly, a number of wood carvers from Norway came to a museum just over the border in Iowa to relearn an old form or carving so they could revitalize it in Norway. All this said, this not clothing in the Highlands, argyles, etc. I am not advocating anything. Just thinking aloud.
    Agreed. Argyll hose with day tweed in particular has not been completely abandoned in Scotland.(All but abandoned?) I was just responding to the general sentiment you expressed when you talked about "What we want it to be".

    My point is that we all have to remember who the "we" is that decides what is and is not THCD. Namely, the Highland Scots.

    Does that mean that if something were to fall out of use in the old country it stops being valid? Not at all. I'm from Cape Breton and we practice forms of dance, play a style of music and indeed sing and speak in some dialects of Gaelic that have been largely lost or changed in Scotland. For this reason the stuff that remains as it was when we brought it from the Western Highlands and Islands is now called "Cape Breton fiddle", "Cape Breton step dancing" and the dialectical differences are referenced as "particularities to the Cape Breton varieties of Scottish Gaelic".

    A person who plays dance style pipes in the old style in Cape Breton is practicing an art that was developed in the Highlands of Scotland but he's not a traditional Scottish style piper. They play very differently nowadays.
    Last edited by Nathan; 15th April 15 at 11:24 AM.
    Natan Easbaig Mac Dhòmhnaill, FSA Scot
    Past High Commissioner, Clan Donald Canada
    “Yet still the blood is strong, the heart is Highland, And we, in dreams, behold the Hebrides.” - The Canadian Boat Song.

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