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22nd August 06, 11:18 PM
#1
I am desended from French and Irish ancestors (among others). Does that mean I could put a french fry in my bonnet and call it a clan badge?
~~SSgt Baloo
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23rd August 06, 03:13 AM
#2
French bonnet badge...
 Originally Posted by SSgt Baloo
I am desended from French and Irish ancestors (among others). Does that mean I could put a french fry in my bonnet and call it a clan badge?
~~SSgt Baloo 
A fleur-de-lis badge or one of the Breton bonnet badges would be better:
http://www.tartanbreton.com/francais/catalogue.htm
I am still on the lookout for a fleur-de-lis kilt pin, as my Cumming ancestors were originally Normans who moved to Scotland, and of course, for my DW, who is of French Cajun heritage.
Regards,
Todd
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23rd August 06, 04:36 PM
#3
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4th February 10, 09:40 PM
#4
 Originally Posted by SSgt Baloo
I am desended from French and Irish ancestors (among others). Does that mean I could put a french fry in my bonnet and call it a clan badge?
~~SSgt Baloo 
AFAIK, French fries were originally Belgian.
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24th February 10, 06:53 PM
#5
 Originally Posted by SSgt Baloo
I am desended from French and Irish ancestors (among others). Does that mean I could put a french fry in my bonnet and call it a clan badge?
~~SSgt Baloo 
Why not?? Yankee Doodle stuck a feather in his cap and called it Macaroni!!!
By Choice, not by Birth
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24th February 10, 07:30 PM
#6
 Originally Posted by Bigkahuna
Why not?? Yankee Doodle stuck a feather in his cap and called it Macaroni!!!
Because he was a fool?*
*The original meaning of "Doodle" was "fool", as the song was lampooning colonial militia.
T.
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24th February 10, 08:35 PM
#7
I guess I'm lucky I belong to this "clan" because I can use a dandelion. My Scottish roots are on my mother's side. Her father was a McConnell which, apparently, is a sept of Clan MacDonald and the plant badge for that clan is listed as common heath which is an Australian plant (!?!) and her mother was an Anderson which has no plant badge listed. Of course, since the Anderson clan badge shows an oak tree, perhaps oak leaves might be appropriate.
I feel pretty good about this clan so I'd rather stick to the dandelion anyway. In the language of flowers the dandelion seems to stand for fidelity (or faithfulness) and happiness. Who needs more than that? :ootd:
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24th February 10, 08:53 PM
#8
heath = heather (and is also the common name for the entire family including azaleas and rhododendrons). You can often find heather varieties at nurseries. The red whortleberry in my avatar is also a heath.
Remember the scene of the three witches from MacBeth "When shall we three meet again? In thunder lightning or in rain? Where the place? Upon the heath. There to meet with MacBeth!" That's all the Shakespeare I can quote, though my son can recite reams and reams (he's an actor). I played one of the three witches in school when I was eleven.
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24th February 10, 09:02 PM
#9
MacBean,
That had occurred to me, but what further confused the issue was the fact that on more than one list it named common heath as the MacDonald badge and had other badges listed as various heathers. The use of both forms of the name seemed as though they must refer to entirely different plants. Of course, it could be a question of how the badges are referred to in the clan/family associated with it.
Regards,
Brian
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6th March 10, 01:10 AM
#10
 Originally Posted by MacBean
heath = heather (and is also the common name for the entire family including azaleas and rhododendrons). You can often find heather varieties at nurseries. The red whortleberry in my avatar is also a heath.
Remember the scene of the three witches from MacBeth "When shall we three meet again? In thunder lightning or in rain? Where the place? Upon the heath. There to meet with MacBeth!" That's all the Shakespeare I can quote, though my son can recite reams and reams (he's an actor). I played one of the three witches in school when I was eleven.
 Originally Posted by Brian K
That had occurred to me, but what further confused the issue was the fact that on more than one list it named common heath as the MacDonald badge and had other badges listed as various heathers. The use of both forms of the name seemed as though they must refer to entirely different plants. Of course, it could be a question of how the badges are referred to in the clan/family associated with it.
I'd have to agree with MacBean as well. I too have noted some on-line sources listing the Australian "heath", but as MacBean pointed out it is also a very old term used in literature throughout the UK. As for Clan Donald, I have seen the common heath/heather (purple-pink) listed as the plant badge, whilst my own branch (that of the Keppoch Macdonnell's/Macdonalds) list the white heather.
I hope that helps
[SIZE="2"][FONT="Georgia"][COLOR="DarkGreen"][B][I]T. E. ("TERRY") HOLMES[/I][/B][/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE="1"][FONT="Georgia"][COLOR="DarkGreen"][B][I]proud descendant of the McReynolds/MacRanalds of Ulster & Keppoch, Somerled & Robert the Bruce.[/SIZE]
[SIZE="1"]"Ah, here comes the Bold Highlander. No @rse in his breeks but too proud to tug his forelock..." Rob Roy (1995)[/I][/B][/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE]
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