
You
are encouraged to browse your way, from end to end one of the most
all-embracing resources you will find on the Scottish History Past
and Present.
Easily accessible, handsomely illustrated, you can speedily discover an authentic collection of Scottish heritage and tradition. Here you may browse your way through Clan history, discover the resources at your fingertips of Scotland times gone by and find a wealth of genealogical information, you can even learn the Gaelic language |
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Within
this site I have set out to bring together as much information on
the subject of Scottish Clans and their history from the past to the
present. |
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According
to some Historical authorities, the original population of the Scottish
Highlands and Islands consisted of tribes who occupied extensive tracts
of land, and were governed by powerful chiefs called Earls. The Head
Earl, or supreme King, was called Ard ltigh. To him the others gave
unquestioning allegiance.
The most distinctive feature of Scotland's history, nationally and internationally, is probably that of clanship and the predominantly Highland clans. Too often, however, writings on the clans give precedence to literary romanticism over historical realism. In order to see the clans in their true historical perspective, the examination of five key themes is essential - the origins of the clans, the structure of clanship, clanship and disorder, the clans and the Royal House of Stewart and the aftermath of Culloden.
Mythological founders have often been claimed
by clans, reinforcing both their status and a romantic and glorified
notion of their origins. Most powerful clans appropriated for themselves
fabulous origins based on Celtic mythology. Thus the political rivalry
between Clan Donald, who claimed to be descended from either Conn,
a second-century king of Ulster, or Cuchulainn, the legendary hero
of Ulster, and the Campbells, who claimed Diarmaid the Boar as their
progenitor, was rooted in the Fenian or Fingalian cycle. On the other
hand, others such as the McKinnons and the McGregors were content
to claim common ancestry from the Alpin family who united the Scottish
kingdom in 843. Only one confederation of clans, that of the MacSweens,
Laments, MacLeys, MacLachlans and
MacNeills, who emerged to prominence
in Knapdale and Cowal in the twelfth century, can trace one line of
their ancestry back to the fifth century - to Niall of the Nine Hostages,
High King of Ireland. In reality, the progenitors of the clans can
rarely be authenticated further back than the eleventh century and
a continuity of lineage in most cannot be detected until the thirteenth
and fourteenth centuries.
Clanship
contained two complementary but distinct concepts of heritage. The
collective heritage of the clan, their `duthchas', was their prescriptive
right to settle the territories over which the chiefs and leading
gentry of the clan customarily provided protection. This concept meant
that the personal authority of the chiefs and leading gentry as trustees
for their clan was recognised by all clansmen; thus justification
for and recognition of the chiefs authority came from below and from
within the clan itself. However, the wider acceptance of the granting
of charters by the Crown, and by other powerful landowners to the
clan chiefs, chieftains and lairds defined the estates settled by
their clan as their `oighreachd', and gave a different emphasis to
the basis of the clan chiefs authority. This concept was one of individual
heritage, warranted from above, and it institutionalised the authority
of chiefs and leading gentry as landed proprietors - owners of the
land in their own right, rather than as trustees for the clan's collective
good. The absence of this land concept differentiates the clanship
of the Irish from Scottish Gaels. Of
course, the two concepts could co-exist, and from the outset of clanship in Scotland, the `fine' - the clan warrior elite - strove to be landowners as well as territorial warlords. |