
From Highland Clansman 1689-1746 by Stuart Reid and Angus McBride
This picture shows the actual clothing three unfortunuate individuals were wearing at the time of their deaths in the late 17th and early 18th centuries, recovered from three different peat bogs in Scotland.
The mannequin in the middle represents a young individual who was supposedly a victim of murder and apparently dumped in the bog. He has neither breeches nor plaid and apparently was considered "not well off" due to the patched and ragged condition of his clothing. I think we could only speculate whether he represented someone who was poorer and would have only had a frock shirt and the other items he was found with or perhaps his breeches or plaid were "lifted" from him before his body was tossed. It is my understanding that the bog conditions preserved these materials very well, so it is unlikely that some piece clothing disintegrated without trace.
I realize this is from a century prior to the earlier print from the RR McIan 1845 series, but paints an accurate picture that not everyone was wearing belted plaids, the kilt or trews in the Highlands when these would have been commonly worn.
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Some additional info related to these finds and descriptions of their clothing and other artifacts found with them.
http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/adsd...55_213_221.pdf
http://shetlopedia.com/Gunnister_Man
http://ads.ahds.ac.uk/catalogue/adsd...06_172_182.pdf
Last edited by HarborSpringsPiper; 11th November 09 at 12:43 PM.
Reason: add ons
Ken
"The best things written about the bagpipe are written on five lines of the great staff" - Pipe Major Donald MacLeod, MBE
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