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  1. #1
    Join Date
    23rd May 06
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    Far NW Corner of Washington State, USA (48° 45' 51.5808" N / -122° 30' 36.6228" W)
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    From
    Collins Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia
    by George Way of Plean LLB (hons), SSC, FRSA, FSA (Scot)
    & Romilly Squire OStJ, DA, FRSA, FSA (Scot)
    & with the assistance & imprimatur of the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs:


    "As already stated, chiefs are considered the authority as to what tartans their clans should wear. Any tartan specified in a Grant of Arms by the Lord Lyon is registered by him, and clan chiefs recognized as such may have their tartans recorded in Lyon Court Books. Otherwise the rules are not strict....

    Similarly, there is no real restriction on the wearing of a specific tartan, apart from good taste. The typical statement 'my great-grandmother was a MacPherson therefore I have the right to wear the clan tartan' has no basis in fact. No such 'right' exists. Also, a man takes his father's idenitity only, and any claims made through the female line are not, strictly speaking, valid. In fact, there is nothing to stop anyone wearing whatever pattern of tartan takes their fancy but they should not, it is suggested, make invalid claims as to any reason they may have for doing so.

    There are, however, shibboleths which exist over the wearing of different tartans at the same time: wearing two different tartans of your clan may be defensible, but wearing tartans of more than one clan is almost certainly not."
    [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]

  2. #2
    Join Date
    18th October 09
    Location
    Orange County California
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    Wowza... I can't believe I just waded through nine or ten pages of this.

    We should keep in mind, when we speak of clan tartans, that in the early 19th century when people were attempting to ascertain each clan's tartan, that the chiefs themselves didn't know they had a tartan to ascertain.

    It's why so many were willing and eager to take as gospel the Hay Allan's brothers' putative ancient manuscript. These fakers told the chiefs what their "authentic" tartan was, the weavers wove it and the chiefs wore it... and it was all bogus. It's why I have little patience for all this talk of tradition and clans and rights etc etc.

    Tartan wearing was "whimsy". People wore tartans they liked, and none had any significance.

    Here's a portrait of the MacDonald children, which well documents the orginial attitude, that the specific designs were meaningless:



    It may not be clear due to the small size of the image, but one of the boys is wearing three different patterns, and the other boy is wearing a fourth, none of them traditional MacDonald tartans. That was the norm in 18th century portraits, each item of clothing in a different pattern, though the colours harmonised. (Actually a couple of these patterns have been lifted off this portrait in modern times and woven.)

    On the other hand, someone earlier said that all of our tartans are 19th century inventions. Not the one I wear! Which can be dated to the first quarter of the 18th century. And many others can be dated to before 1745, and many others to before 1800. That's what makes studying tartans so interesting to me, the layers of it all, how old stuff was overlayed with a layer of Hay-Allan stuff etc.

    And this stuff about tracing our ancestory... if you go back 200 years each of us had 1,024 great-great-great-great-great-great-great-great-grandparents... 400 years ago each of us had more than a million people that we're the direct descendants of. So we could each probably choose any last name that existed in the part of the world our ancestors came from, and it would be just as much "our" name as the one we happen to currently use.

    The more I read about the history of Highland Dress, and about DNA research, the more I come to the conclusion that we might as well wear any tartan we like.

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