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Clan MacNeil

Clan MacNeil, also known in Scotland as Clan Niall, is a highland Scottish clan of Irish origin. According to their early genealogies and some sources they're descended from Eógan mac Néill and Niall of the Nine Hostages. The clan is particularly associated with the Outer Hebridean island of Barra. The early history of Clan MacNeil is obscure, however despite this the clan claims to descend from the legendary Irish King Niall of the Nine Hostages, who is counted as the 1st Clan Chief, the current Clan Chief being the 47th. The clan itself takes its name from a Niall who lived in the 13th or early 14th century, and who belonged to the same dynastic family of Cowal and Knapdale as the ancestors of the Lamonts, MacEwens of Otter, Maclachlans, and the MacSweens. While the clan is centred in Barra in the Outer Hebrides, there is a branch of the clan in Argyll (McNeill/MacNeill) that some historians have speculated was more senior in line, or possibly even unrelated. However, according to Scots law the current chief of Clan MacNeil is the chief of all MacNeil(l)s.[1][2]

Clan MacNeil
MottoBuaidh no bas (Victory or death) also translated as "Conquer or Die"
Profile
RegionHighland and Islands
DistrictWestern Isles
Plant badgeDryas
Chief
Roderick Wilson Macneil of Barra
The Macneil of Barra, Chief of Clan Niall and 27th of Barra, Baron of Barra
Historic seatKisimul Castle
Clan branches
MacNeil of Barra
MacNeill of Gigha/Colonsay
Allied clans

History

Origins

MacNeils of Barra

Traditional origin

The MacNeils of Barra claim descent from a prince of the Uí Néill dynasty, Ánrothán Ua Néill, son of Áed, son of Flaithbertach Ua Néill, King of Ailech and Cenél nEógain, who died in 1036. Anrothan emigrated to Scotland in the 11th century. Through him the MacNeils of Barra also naturally claim descent from the legendary Niall of the Nine Hostages. Anrothan is claimed as ancestor of several clans in the Argyll vicinity: Clan Lamont, Clan Maclachlan, Clan MacEwen of Otter, and also the Irish Sweeneys (MacSween). If the MacNeils are indeed connected to Anrothan, then they appear to have been a junior branch of the family and were certainly overshadowed in the 13th century by the MacSweens, Lamonts and descendants of Gilchrist.[3]

An opposing theory, proposed by Nicholas Maclean Bristol, is that there is reason to believe that they descend from Neill Maclean who appears on Exchequer Rolls at a time when Tarbert Castle was being rebuilt by Robert the Bruce.[4] In 1252 Neil Macneil, fifth of Barra was described as a prince at a Council of the Lord of the Isles.[5] His son was Neil Og Macneil who is believed to have fought for Robert the Bruce at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314.[5] An alternate hypothesis is a descent from a Bute family in service to the Clan MacRuari and granted Barra by them after the conquest of Bute by Scotland.[6]

History

The earliest contemporary record of the Macneils of Barra is only in 1427, when Giolla Adhamhnáin Mac Néill (typically anglicised as Gilleonan Macneil) received a charter of Barra and Boisdale, from the Lord of the Isles, following the forfeiture of the previous Lordships of Uist and Garmoran, earlier that year.[1]

Gilleonan's namesake, reckoned the twelfth chief, was one of the island lords who were tricked into meeting James V of Scotland at Portree, where they were promised safe conduct but instead were arrested and imprisoned.[5] The MacNeil chief of Barra was not released until the king's death in 1542, when the Regent Moray wanted to use the island chiefs to counterbalance the growing power of the Clan Campbell.[5] His son was amongst the chiefs who supported the last Lord of the Isles in his alliance with Henry VIII of England in 1545.[5] The treaty they signed with the English as overlords proclaimed the ancient enmity between the chiefs of the isles and the kingdom of Scotland.[5]

In 1579 the Bishop of the Isles made a complaint of molestation against the MacNeil chief of Barra.[5] His son, the next chief, was denounced as a rebel by the Privy Council so many times that he was described as a "hereditary outlaw" and was known as the Turbulent or Ruari the Tatar.[5] He has also been described as the last of the Viking raiders as he often raided from his Kisimul Castle.[5] The king eventually arranged for his loyal vassals to extirpate and root out the chief of Clan MacNeil, whose own nephews captured him and placed him in chains.[5]

During the Scottish Civil War of the 17th century the chief of Clan MacNeil, Neil Og, was appointed as Colonel of the Horse by Charles II of England and fought at the Battle of Worcester in 1651.[5] His grandson was Roderick Dhu the Black who received a Crown charter for all of the lands of Barra to be erected into a free barony.[5] Roderick also led his clan at the Battle of Killiecrankie in 1689.[5] He also supported the Jacobite rising of 1715 and as a result his two sons, Roderick and James, went into exile in France.[5] Upon their father's death they returned but for his Jacobite sympathies, Roderick was consigned to a prison ship, the Royal Sovereign.[5] He was then taken to London and not released until July 1747.[5]

The clan prospered until the twenty-first chief, General Roderick Macneil, was forced to sell Barra in 1838.[5]

 
Castle Sween. MacNeills from Argyll are thought to have been hereditary keepers of the castle in the 15th and 16th centuries

McNeills of Argyll (in Taynish, Gigha and Colonsay)

The origins of the Argyll MacNeills is also obscure. In the late 15th century, one MacNeill is recorded as the keeper of Castle Sween. In the mid 16th century, a certain Torquil MacNeill was known as the "chief and principal of the clan and surname of Maknelis". The 19th century scholar W.F. Skene considered Torquil to be the last of the hereditary MacNeill keepers of the castle. Skene believed that after Torquil's demise, the hereditary office passed to the MacMillans. During the time of Torquil, there are records of separate clans on Barra and Gigha. Skene did not consider Torquil to be a member of either of these clans, since both clans had chiefs of their own.[7] A recent hypothesis make Torquil, son of Niall, living in 1440, the eponym of the clan, thus totally unrelated to the Barra MacNeils. His Norse name suggests his kindred were remnants of the lordship of Somerled, along with the Clan McCorquodale and Clan MacIver.[8]

The chief of the Gigha MacNeills at this time was Neill MacNeill, who was killed in about 1530. His only daughter inherited his lands and handed them over to her illegitimate brother, Neill. According to historian John Bannerman, while the lands of the chief passed to his daughter, the chiefship passed over to Torquil who was her second cousin. Bannerman considered it likely that when Torquil died, the chiefship passed to the illegitimate Neill.[9]

In 1553, this Neill sold the island to James MacDonald of Islay. Neill died without issue, and the next in line to the chiefship was another Neil, who obtained the lands of Taynish. His descendant Hector MacNeill of Taynish purchased Gigha in 1590. With the power of the Campbells growing and spreading out into the Inner Hebrides, the influence of the McNeills of Gigha decreased.[10] At about this time the MacNeils on more remote island of Barra, far removed of Campbell power, began to grow in prominence and for a long time since have been regarded as Chief of the Clan and Name.[11] Descending from this branch were the MacNeils of Colonsay who obtained Colonsay in 1700 and owned it until 1904 when it was sold by the heirs of Major General Sir John Carstairs McNeill.[11] According to Moncreiffe, there is reason to believe that historically this branch was superior to the current chiefs of the Clan MacNeil.[11] There is even a school of thought that there is no relation at all between this branch of McNeills to that of Barra.[1] However, according to a 1962 decree by the Lord Lyon, the chiefs of MacNeil of Barra are chiefs of the whole name of MacNeil by Scots law[1] until such time as the MacNeils of Colonsay acquire a Chief of their own. The last Clan Chief of the Clan McNeill of Colonsay was Alexander Malcolm McNeill who was born in New Zealand in 1899 and Matriculated his Arms in 1972. He held the title until his death in 1988. His son John Duncan McNeill became Head of the Clan on his father's death but did not apply to matriculate his own Arms. Duncan's eldest daughter, Deborah Jane McNeill, has petitioned the Lord Lyon to become the next Clan Chief of the Clan McNeill of Colonsay.

 
Kisimul Castle located in Castlebay, Barra is the current seat of the Chief of Clan MacNeil.

Modern Clan Macneil

The 18th and 19th centuries saw severe hardship to Clan MacNeil clansfolk. During this era there was mass clearance from Barra to Canada, Australia, New Zealand, and the United States. During the chiefship of Colonel Roderick (c.1755–1822) Barra suffered its first mass clearances. Ironically the chief described himself as a melieuratier (an "improver").[12] One mass exodus of Barra folk was led by Gilleonan, elder son of the chief. This consisted of 370 Catholic Barra folk (about 75 families in total) who emigrated in August to Pictou, Nova Scotia.[12] In 1838, after going broke, Colonel Roderick's son and heir, Lieutenant General Roderick MacNeil of Barra, sold Barra to Colonel Gordon of Cluny.[11][12] When Roderick died in 1863 the chiefship passed to a cousin (descendant of Gilleonan) who had emigrated during the mass emigrations to Canada in 1802.

Robert Lister MacNeil was born in 1889. An American citizen and a trained architect, he succeeded the chiefship of Clan MacNeil in 1915. In 1937 he was able to purchase Barra and the ruinous Kisimul Castle largely using the money from his second wife. Immediately he began work restoring the castle, aided in part by funds from a British Government grant. By his death in 1970 he had completed the restoration of the castle, ancient seat of the chiefs of the clan.[13] In 2001 the castle was leased to Historic Scotland for one thousand years at the rent of £1 per year and a bottle of Talisker whisky.[14] In October 2004 the chief handed over 3,600 hectares, comprising almost all of his estate on Barra to Scottish Ministers.[15][16] The current chief of Clan MacNeil is Roderick Wilson MacNeil of Barra, The MacNeil of Barra, Chief of Clan Niall and 26th of Barra, also Baron of Barra.[17] The chief is a member of the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs.[18] The current chief, while a United States citizen, lives in Edinburgh, Scotland.[19]

Regarding the ascent of the 45th chief (Robert Lister Macneil), The Arms of the Scottish Bishoprics (1917) states:

"In 1914 Roderick Ambrose MacNeil, Chief of the MacNeils of Barra, died in the United States of America, being still a British citizen, leaving two sons. Paul Humphrey MacNeil, the elder son, in his father's lifetime renounced his allegiance to the British Crown and became an American citizen; in consequence of this his father in 1913 nominated his second son, Robert Lister MacNeil, the petitioner, to succeed him as Chief of the Clan, and assigned to him the arms pertaining to the Chief. Robert Lister MacNeil therefore petitioned the Lyon King to grant him the arms recorded by General Roderick MacNeil in 1824, which were borne by his (the petitioner's father), Roderick Ambrose MacNeil."[20]

Clan Symbols

Crest Badges

Clan members who wish to show their allegiance to a particular clan and chief can wear a crest badge. Scottish crest badges usually contain the heraldic crest and heraldic motto of the chief of the clan. While clan members may wear the badge, the crest and motto within it are the heraldic property of the chief alone. A crest badge suitable for a clan member of Clan MacNeil contains the crest: on a chapeau gules furred ermine, a rock proper.[21] The motto upon the badge is: buaidh no bas, which translates from Scottish Gaelic as "to conquer or die", or "victory or death").[22]

Though not a clan in its own right, MacNeil(l)s who consider themselves of the Colonsay "branch" have used the following crest badge to distinguish themselves from the Barra "branch". This crest badge contains the crest: an armoured dexter arm with dagger; and the motto: vincere aut mori (also written as vincere vel mori), which translates from Latin as "conquer or die".[22]

Clan Badge

Another symbol used by clan members is a clan badge, or sometimes called a plant badge. The original clan badges were merely plants worn in bonnets or hung from a pole or spear. Today, the clan badge attributed to Clan MacNeil is dryas.[23] Trefoil has also been attributed to the clan,[24] however this clan badge may actually be attributed to the McNeills of Gigha, a branch of Clan MacNeil. Trefoil has also been attributed to the Lamonts, another clan in Argyl. The Lamonts and MacNeils/McNeills both claim descent from the same O'Neill who settled in Scotland in the Middle Ages.

Tartan

There have been several tartans associated with the name MacNeil / MacNeill. However, in 1997 the chief of Clan MacNeil directed members of the clan that there were only two tartans that he recognised as "clan tartans".[25] These were: MacNeil of Barra and MacNeil of Colonsay. The MacNeil of Barra tartan has been the standard MacNeil of Barra tartan for over a century.[25]

Coat of arms

 
Coat of Arms of the chief of Clan MacNeil painted in the great hall of Kisimul Castle.

In Scotland, all coats of arms belong to a single person. The coat of arms typically attributed to Clan MacNeil belongs solely to the current chief of the clan. A depiction of the coat of arms is painted in the Great Hall of Kisimul Castle in Castlebay, Barra, Scotland.

This coat of arms is divided into quarters:

Surrounding the Coat of Arms :

  • Crest: a Rock (same as on the clan badge)
  • Chapeau: Red velvet cap lined with ermine, symbolic of a Baron
  • Helm: Height of the Helmet is determined by rank
  • Mantle: Fabric surrounding the Arms
  • Supporters: Two lions rampant
  • Compartment: The base of the Arms, made of Dryas flowers (the clan badge)

Distribution

 
Mac Neil – a romanticized Victorian era plate illustrated by R. R. McIan.

The topic of who is a MacNeil can be a complicated one. By convention, anyone descended from a member of Clan MacNeil can claim membership. Because of the history of slavery in the United States and the Caribbean, however, many African-Americans may bear a MacNeil surname. Because it was not uncommon for a female slave to bear her slave-master's child, several African-American MacNeils may have legitimate descent from a MacNeil, however such descent can rarely be proven, and most African-American MacNeils remain uninvolved with clan activities and do not claim descent from the clan. Generally speaking, Caucasians with MacNeil surnames number between 40,000 and 80,000 worldwide.

In England, Wales, and the Isle of Man

source: UK National Statistics Database 2002[27]

  • McNeil: 3,522 (rank:2262)
  • McNeill: 4,212 (rank:1909)
  • MacNeil: 314 (rank:15845)
  • MacNeill: 286 (rank:16904)

Sizable populations also exist in Scotland, Ireland, Canada, France, Australia, and New Zealand

In the United States

  • McNeil: 33,239 (rank:961) (source: 2000 US Census[28])
  • McNeill: 22,383 (rank:1387) (source: 1990 US Census[29])
  • McNeal: 8,928 (rank:1723) (source: 2010 US Census[30])
  • MacNeil: 2,487 (rank:8716) (source: 1990 US Census[29])
  • McNiel: (rank:14781) (source: 2010 US Census[31]
  • McNeilly: (rank:16430) (source: 1990 US Census[32])
  • MacNeill: (rank:28690) (source: 1990 US Census[32])
  • MacNeal: 540 (rank:36525) (source: 2010 US Census[30])

Chiefs of Clan MacNeil

Current chief: Roderick "Rory" Wilson MacNeil of Barra, The MacNeil of Barra, Chief of Clan Niall and 27th of Barra, Baron of Barra.

The chiefs of Clan MacNeil,[33] are reckoned from Niall Noigíallach (Niall of the Nine Hostages), from whom all the MacNeil chiefs claim descent. The clan claims Niall Noigíallach as its first chief, while the current chief, Rory MacNeil, is reckoned as the 47th chief.

# Name Notes Year of death
1 Niall Noigíallach (Niall of the Nine Hostages) High King of Ireland also a member of the Connachta dynasty and ancestor of the Uí Néill dynastic family. Married to Rignach 405
2 Eógan mac Néill King of Aileach and Prince of Ulster, also the ancestor of the Cenél nEógain dynasty and their septs (O'Neill, O'Docherty, O'Boyle, MacNeill, etc.). Founded the kingdom of Tír Eógain in the 5th century. Married to Indorb Fionn 'the White'[citation needed] 465
3 Muiredach mac Eógain King of Aileach and Prince of Ulster. Married to Eirc[citation needed] 480
4 Muirchertach mac Muiredaig High King of Ireland in 487, King of Aileach. Married to Duaibhseach[citation needed]
5 Domnall mac Muirchertaig High King of Ireland in 559, King of Aileach 561
6 Áed Uaridnach High King of Ireland 599, King of Aileach 607
7 Máel Fithrich mac Áedo) King of Aileach, Prince of Ulster 626–630
8 Máel Dúin mac Máele Fithrich King of Aileach, Prince of Ulster. Married to Cacht[citation needed] 706
9 Fergal mac Máele Dúin High King of Ireland 709, King of Aileach. Married to Athiocht[citation needed] 718
10 Niall Frossach High King of Ireland 759, King of Aileach. Married to Eithne[citation needed] 773
11 Áed Oirdnide mac Néill High King of Ireland 793, King of Aileach. Married to Maebh[citation needed] 818
12 Niall Caille mac Áeda High King of Ireland 832, King of Aileach and Ulster. Married to Gormfhlaith Macdonell[citation needed] 845
13 Aed Finliath High King of Ireland 861, King of Aileach and Ulster. Married to Máel Muire, daughter of Kenneth MacAlpin, King of Scots[citation needed] 878
14 Niall Glúndub High King of Ireland 878, King of Aileach and Ulster. Married to Gormflaith[citation needed] 916
15 Muirceartach na Cochall Croiceann (Muirchertach mac Néill) High King of Ireland 937, King of Aileach and Ulster 943
16 Domnall ua Néill High King of Ireland 954, King of Aileach and Ulster 978
17 Muirceartach na Midhe Prince of Ulster and Tyrone 975
18 Flaithbertach Ua Néill King of Aileach and Ulster and Prince of Tyrone
19 Aodh Athlamh King of Aileach and Ulster and Prince of Tyrone
20 Aodh Aonrachan King of Aileach, Prince of Aileach and Argyll, resigned kingship to brother Domhnall in 1033 aft 1047
21 Niall of the Castle Prince of Argyll and the Norse Council of the Isles. Began construction of Kisimul Castle
22 Aodh Prince of the Norse Council of the Isles aft 1090
23 Donald Prince of the Norse Council of the Isles
24 Muirceartach Prince of the Norse Council of the Isles
25 Niall Prince of the Norse Council of the Isles aft 1263
26 Niall Og Received first charter for Barra from Robert the Bruce[34] aft 1314
27 Muirceartach
28 Roderick aft 1409
29 Gilleonan Roderick Muchard Macneil Received first recorded charter for Barra from Alexander, Lord of the Isles in 1427.[34] Married to Fynvola (Flora) MacLeod, daughter of Iain Borb MacLeod (6th chief of Clan MacLeod).[citation needed] aft 1427
30 Roderick
31 Gilleonan aft 1495
32 Gilleonan
33 Gilleonan aft 1578
34 Roderick Og Married to Mary MacLeod, the 10th chief and first female chief of Clan MacLeod
35 Roderick "the Turbulent" Married to a woman from Clan MacLean of Dowart (Duart) and later to a woman named Marion MacDonald. The children from both of these marriages fought over the title of chief of Clan MacNeil[34] aft 1601
36 Niall Og Married to Margaret MacLean[citation needed] aft 1651
37 Gilleonan Married to Catherine MacDonald[citation needed]
38 Roderick Dhu Baron of Barra. Married to Isobel (Isabella) MacLeod[citation needed] 1715
39 Roderick "Dove of the West" Baron of Barra. Married to Alice MacLeod[citation needed] 1763
40 Roderick "the Gentle" Baron of Barra. Married to Jean Cameron.[35] 1822
41 Roderick "the General" Baron of Barra, lost the Barony and Estate of Barra in 1838. Married to Isabella Brownlow[citation needed] When he died, the chiefship passed to a cousin (descendant of Gilleonan) who had emigrated during the mass emigrations to Canada in 1802.[11] 1863
42 Donald McGougan Macneil Baron of Barra 1880
43 Iain Macneil Baron of Barra 1893
44 Roderick Ambrose MacNeil Baron of Barra. Bequeathed the title of chief upon his second son, Robert Lister[20] 1914
45 Robert Lister MacNeil (Photo) Baron of Barra. An American, bought the Barra estate in 1937 and restored Kisimul Castle before his death. 1970
46 Ian Roderick MacNeil () Baron of Barra. An American-born, Harvard-educated law professor. Gifted Kisimul Castle to Historic Scotland for 1,000 years in 2001 and gifted the estate of Barra to Scottish Ministers in 2004.[16] Married to Nancy Wilson of Ottawa, Canada[36][37] 2010
47 Roderick "Rory" Wilson MacNeil Baron of Barra. Married to Sau Ming Kwan of Hong Kong.[38]
48

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b c d The Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs website: Retrieved on 2008-03-13
  2. ^ Septs and Related Families Page 28 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2008-03-13 There are more than one thousand possible spellings of the name MacNeil.
  3. ^ Sellar, David. "Family Origins in Cowal and Knapdale" 26 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008-03-13
  4. ^ A Closer Look at West Highland Heraldry 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008-03-13
  5. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Way, George and Squire, Romily. Collins Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia. (Foreword by The Rt Hon. The Earl of Elgin KT, Convenor, The Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs). Published in 1994. Pages 254 - 255.
  6. ^ Ronald Black, "1467 MS: The MacNeils", West Highland Notes & Queries, ser. 4, no. 6 (Feb. 2018), p. 11
  7. ^ Skene, William F. (1902), Macbain, Alexander (ed.), The Highlanders of Scotland, Stirling: Eneas Mackay, pp. 248–250
  8. ^ Ronald Black, "1467 MS: The MacNeils", West Highland Notes & Queries, ser. 4, no. 6 (Feb. 2018), p. 19
  9. ^ Bannerman, John (1998), "MacDuff of Fife", in Grant, Alexander; Stringer, K.J. (eds.), Medieval Scotland: Crown, Lordship and Community: Essays presented to G.W.S. Barrow, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, p. 34, ISBN 978-0-585-06064-4
  10. ^ Anderson, William (1878), The Scottish Nation; or, The Surnames, Families, Literature, Honours, and Biographical History of the People of Scotland, vol. 3, Edinburgh: A. Fullarton & Co., pp. 55–57
  11. ^ a b c d e Moncreiffe of that Ilk, pp. 81–84.
  12. ^ a b c Gibson, pp. 103–107.
  13. ^ The Clan MacNeil 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008-03-13
  14. ^ Scots Law News 26 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008-03-04
  15. ^ "Clan chief gives his lands to the people Historic day for crofters as MacNeil hands over 9000 acres on Barra". The Herald. Glasgow. 6 September 2003. Retrieved 16 December 2020.
  16. ^ a b Estate of Barra 1 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008-03-04
  17. ^ MACNEIL OF BARRA, CHIEF OF MACNEIL OF BARRA 3 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008-03-12
  18. ^ The Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs website. (link to website 1 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine) Retrieved on 2008-03-04
  19. ^ Clan MacNeil in Canada 1 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2007-06-27
  20. ^ a b Lyon, W. T. (7 May 2018). "The arms of the Scottish bishoprics". Selkirk : The Scottish Chronicle Offices. from the original on 1 February 2015. Retrieved 7 May 2018 – via Internet Archive.
  21. ^ Way, George; Squire, Romilly (2000), pp. 224–225.
  22. ^ a b The Badges of Clan MacNeil 7 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2007-06-27
  23. ^ Adam; Innes of Learney (1970), pp. 541–543.
  24. ^ Mackenzie (1884), p. 536.
  25. ^ a b c d Tartans and Badges Pages 19 October 2004 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008-03-13
  26. ^ Scotland's Forged Tartans, p.36-37
  27. ^ "Surnames of England and Wales". www.taliesin-arlein.net. from the original on 11 October 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2018.
  28. ^ . www.census.gov. Archived from the original on 19 November 2007. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  29. ^ a b "Most Popular Last Names in the United States (rank 1001-2000)". mongabay.com. from the original on 23 August 2017. Retrieved 7 May 2018.
  30. ^ a b . Archived from the original on 18 August 2014. Retrieved 6 December 2017.
  31. ^ Bureau, US Census. "Frequently Occurring Surnames from the 2010 Census". www.census.gov. Retrieved 22 June 2018.
  32. ^ a b "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 12 October 2010. Retrieved 10 August 2006.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  33. ^ Castle in the Sea, p.136-139
  34. ^ a b c Clan Macneil history 13 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine electricscotland.com. Retrieved 17 November 2013.
  35. ^ Memoir of Colonel John Cameron by Rev. Archibald Clerk
  36. ^ . Archived from the original on 5 March 2010. Retrieved 28 February 2010.
  37. ^ . announce.jpress.co.uk. Archived from the original on 28 July 2011. Retrieved 17 January 2022.
  38. ^ burkes peerage 3 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Scottish Chiefs Index 7 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine, MACNEIL OF BARRA, CHIEF OF MACNEIL OF BARRA

References

  • Adam, Frank; Innes of Learney, Thomas (1970). The Clans, Septs & Regiments of the Scottish Highlands (8th ed.). Edinburgh: Johnston and Bacon.
  • Gibson, John G. Old and New World Highland Bagpiping. MacGill-Queen's University Press, 2002. ISBN 0-7735-2291-3.
  • Mackenzie, Alexander (ed.) (1884). The Celtic Magazine; a monthly periodical devoted to the literature, history, antiquities, folk lore, traditions, and the social and material interests of the Celt at home and abroad. Vol. 9. Inverness: A. & W. Mackenzie. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)
  • Moncreiffe of that Ilk, Iain. The Highland Clans. London: Barrie & Rockliff, 1967.
  • Way of Plean, George; Squire, Romilly (2000). Clans & Tartans. Glasgow: HarperCollins. ISBN 0-00-472501-8.

External links

  • Clan MacNeil Association of America
  • Clan MacNeil in Canada
  • Iain MacNeil – Daily Telegraph obituary

clan, macneil, ship, same, name, clan, macneil, 1921, also, known, scotland, clan, niall, highland, scottish, clan, irish, origin, according, their, early, genealogies, some, sources, they, descended, from, eógan, néill, niall, nine, hostages, clan, particular. For the ship by the same name see SS Clan Macneil 1921 Clan MacNeil also known in Scotland as Clan Niall is a highland Scottish clan of Irish origin According to their early genealogies and some sources they re descended from Eogan mac Neill and Niall of the Nine Hostages The clan is particularly associated with the Outer Hebridean island of Barra The early history of Clan MacNeil is obscure however despite this the clan claims to descend from the legendary Irish King Niall of the Nine Hostages who is counted as the 1st Clan Chief the current Clan Chief being the 47th The clan itself takes its name from a Niall who lived in the 13th or early 14th century and who belonged to the same dynastic family of Cowal and Knapdale as the ancestors of the Lamonts MacEwens of Otter Maclachlans and the MacSweens While the clan is centred in Barra in the Outer Hebrides there is a branch of the clan in Argyll McNeill MacNeill that some historians have speculated was more senior in line or possibly even unrelated However according to Scots law the current chief of Clan MacNeil is the chief of all MacNeil l s 1 2 Clan MacNeilMottoBuaidh no bas Victory or death also translated as Conquer or Die ProfileRegionHighland and IslandsDistrictWestern IslesPlant badgeDryasChiefRoderick Wilson Macneil of BarraThe Macneil of Barra Chief of Clan Niall and 27th of Barra Baron of BarraHistoric seatKisimul CastleClan branchesMacNeil of BarraMacNeill of Gigha ColonsayAllied clansClan MacDonald Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins 1 1 1 MacNeils of Barra 1 1 1 1 Traditional origin 1 1 1 2 History 1 1 2 McNeills of Argyll in Taynish Gigha and Colonsay 1 2 Modern Clan Macneil 2 Clan Symbols 2 1 Crest Badges 2 2 Clan Badge 2 3 Tartan 3 Coat of arms 4 Distribution 4 1 In England Wales and the Isle of Man 4 2 In the United States 5 Chiefs of Clan MacNeil 6 See also 7 Footnotes 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditOrigins Edit MacNeils of Barra Edit Traditional origin Edit The MacNeils of Barra claim descent from a prince of the Ui Neill dynasty Anrothan Ua Neill son of Aed son of Flaithbertach Ua Neill King of Ailech and Cenel nEogain who died in 1036 Anrothan emigrated to Scotland in the 11th century Through him the MacNeils of Barra also naturally claim descent from the legendary Niall of the Nine Hostages Anrothan is claimed as ancestor of several clans in the Argyll vicinity Clan Lamont Clan Maclachlan Clan MacEwen of Otter and also the Irish Sweeneys MacSween If the MacNeils are indeed connected to Anrothan then they appear to have been a junior branch of the family and were certainly overshadowed in the 13th century by the MacSweens Lamonts and descendants of Gilchrist 3 An opposing theory proposed by Nicholas Maclean Bristol is that there is reason to believe that they descend from Neill Maclean who appears on Exchequer Rolls at a time when Tarbert Castle was being rebuilt by Robert the Bruce 4 In 1252 Neil Macneil fifth of Barra was described as a prince at a Council of the Lord of the Isles 5 His son was Neil Og Macneil who is believed to have fought for Robert the Bruce at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314 5 An alternate hypothesis is a descent from a Bute family in service to the Clan MacRuari and granted Barra by them after the conquest of Bute by Scotland 6 History Edit The earliest contemporary record of the Macneils of Barra is only in 1427 when Giolla Adhamhnain Mac Neill typically anglicised as Gilleonan Macneil received a charter of Barra and Boisdale from the Lord of the Isles following the forfeiture of the previous Lordships of Uist and Garmoran earlier that year 1 Gilleonan s namesake reckoned the twelfth chief was one of the island lords who were tricked into meeting James V of Scotland at Portree where they were promised safe conduct but instead were arrested and imprisoned 5 The MacNeil chief of Barra was not released until the king s death in 1542 when the Regent Moray wanted to use the island chiefs to counterbalance the growing power of the Clan Campbell 5 His son was amongst the chiefs who supported the last Lord of the Isles in his alliance with Henry VIII of England in 1545 5 The treaty they signed with the English as overlords proclaimed the ancient enmity between the chiefs of the isles and the kingdom of Scotland 5 In 1579 the Bishop of the Isles made a complaint of molestation against the MacNeil chief of Barra 5 His son the next chief was denounced as a rebel by the Privy Council so many times that he was described as a hereditary outlaw and was known as the Turbulent or Ruari the Tatar 5 He has also been described as the last of the Viking raiders as he often raided from his Kisimul Castle 5 The king eventually arranged for his loyal vassals to extirpate and root out the chief of Clan MacNeil whose own nephews captured him and placed him in chains 5 During the Scottish Civil War of the 17th century the chief of Clan MacNeil Neil Og was appointed as Colonel of the Horse by Charles II of England and fought at the Battle of Worcester in 1651 5 His grandson was Roderick Dhu the Black who received a Crown charter for all of the lands of Barra to be erected into a free barony 5 Roderick also led his clan at the Battle of Killiecrankie in 1689 5 He also supported the Jacobite rising of 1715 and as a result his two sons Roderick and James went into exile in France 5 Upon their father s death they returned but for his Jacobite sympathies Roderick was consigned to a prison ship the Royal Sovereign 5 He was then taken to London and not released until July 1747 5 The clan prospered until the twenty first chief General Roderick Macneil was forced to sell Barra in 1838 5 Castle Sween MacNeills from Argyll are thought to have been hereditary keepers of the castle in the 15th and 16th centuries McNeills of Argyll in Taynish Gigha and Colonsay Edit The origins of the Argyll MacNeills is also obscure In the late 15th century one MacNeill is recorded as the keeper of Castle Sween In the mid 16th century a certain Torquil MacNeill was known as the chief and principal of the clan and surname of Maknelis The 19th century scholar W F Skene considered Torquil to be the last of the hereditary MacNeill keepers of the castle Skene believed that after Torquil s demise the hereditary office passed to the MacMillans During the time of Torquil there are records of separate clans on Barra and Gigha Skene did not consider Torquil to be a member of either of these clans since both clans had chiefs of their own 7 A recent hypothesis make Torquil son of Niall living in 1440 the eponym of the clan thus totally unrelated to the Barra MacNeils His Norse name suggests his kindred were remnants of the lordship of Somerled along with the Clan McCorquodale and Clan MacIver 8 The chief of the Gigha MacNeills at this time was Neill MacNeill who was killed in about 1530 His only daughter inherited his lands and handed them over to her illegitimate brother Neill According to historian John Bannerman while the lands of the chief passed to his daughter the chiefship passed over to Torquil who was her second cousin Bannerman considered it likely that when Torquil died the chiefship passed to the illegitimate Neill 9 In 1553 this Neill sold the island to James MacDonald of Islay Neill died without issue and the next in line to the chiefship was another Neil who obtained the lands of Taynish His descendant Hector MacNeill of Taynish purchased Gigha in 1590 With the power of the Campbells growing and spreading out into the Inner Hebrides the influence of the McNeills of Gigha decreased 10 At about this time the MacNeils on more remote island of Barra far removed of Campbell power began to grow in prominence and for a long time since have been regarded as Chief of the Clan and Name 11 Descending from this branch were the MacNeils of Colonsay who obtained Colonsay in 1700 and owned it until 1904 when it was sold by the heirs of Major General Sir John Carstairs McNeill 11 According to Moncreiffe there is reason to believe that historically this branch was superior to the current chiefs of the Clan MacNeil 11 There is even a school of thought that there is no relation at all between this branch of McNeills to that of Barra 1 However according to a 1962 decree by the Lord Lyon the chiefs of MacNeil of Barra are chiefs of the whole name of MacNeil by Scots law 1 until such time as the MacNeils of Colonsay acquire a Chief of their own The last Clan Chief of the Clan McNeill of Colonsay was Alexander Malcolm McNeill who was born in New Zealand in 1899 and Matriculated his Arms in 1972 He held the title until his death in 1988 His son John Duncan McNeill became Head of the Clan on his father s death but did not apply to matriculate his own Arms Duncan s eldest daughter Deborah Jane McNeill has petitioned the Lord Lyon to become the next Clan Chief of the Clan McNeill of Colonsay Kisimul Castle located in Castlebay Barra is the current seat of the Chief of Clan MacNeil Modern Clan Macneil Edit The 18th and 19th centuries saw severe hardship to Clan MacNeil clansfolk During this era there was mass clearance from Barra to Canada Australia New Zealand and the United States During the chiefship of Colonel Roderick c 1755 1822 Barra suffered its first mass clearances Ironically the chief described himself as a melieuratier an improver 12 One mass exodus of Barra folk was led by Gilleonan elder son of the chief This consisted of 370 Catholic Barra folk about 75 families in total who emigrated in August to Pictou Nova Scotia 12 In 1838 after going broke Colonel Roderick s son and heir Lieutenant General Roderick MacNeil of Barra sold Barra to Colonel Gordon of Cluny 11 12 When Roderick died in 1863 the chiefship passed to a cousin descendant of Gilleonan who had emigrated during the mass emigrations to Canada in 1802 Robert Lister MacNeil was born in 1889 An American citizen and a trained architect he succeeded the chiefship of Clan MacNeil in 1915 In 1937 he was able to purchase Barra and the ruinous Kisimul Castle largely using the money from his second wife Immediately he began work restoring the castle aided in part by funds from a British Government grant By his death in 1970 he had completed the restoration of the castle ancient seat of the chiefs of the clan 13 In 2001 the castle was leased to Historic Scotland for one thousand years at the rent of 1 per year and a bottle of Talisker whisky 14 In October 2004 the chief handed over 3 600 hectares comprising almost all of his estate on Barra to Scottish Ministers 15 16 The current chief of Clan MacNeil is Roderick Wilson MacNeil of Barra The MacNeil of Barra Chief of Clan Niall and 26th of Barra also Baron of Barra 17 The chief is a member of the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs 18 The current chief while a United States citizen lives in Edinburgh Scotland 19 Regarding the ascent of the 45th chief Robert Lister Macneil The Arms of the Scottish Bishoprics 1917 states In 1914 Roderick Ambrose MacNeil Chief of the MacNeils of Barra died in the United States of America being still a British citizen leaving two sons Paul Humphrey MacNeil the elder son in his father s lifetime renounced his allegiance to the British Crown and became an American citizen in consequence of this his father in 1913 nominated his second son Robert Lister MacNeil the petitioner to succeed him as Chief of the Clan and assigned to him the arms pertaining to the Chief Robert Lister MacNeil therefore petitioned the Lyon King to grant him the arms recorded by General Roderick MacNeil in 1824 which were borne by his the petitioner s father Roderick Ambrose MacNeil 20 Clan Symbols EditCrest Badges Edit Main article Scottish crest badge Clan members who wish to show their allegiance to a particular clan and chief can wear a crest badge Scottish crest badges usually contain the heraldic crest and heraldic motto of the chief of the clan While clan members may wear the badge the crest and motto within it are the heraldic property of the chief alone A crest badge suitable for a clan member of Clan MacNeil contains the crest on a chapeau gules furred ermine a rock proper 21 The motto upon the badge is buaidh no bas which translates from Scottish Gaelic as to conquer or die or victory or death 22 Though not a clan in its own right MacNeil l s who consider themselves of the Colonsay branch have used the following crest badge to distinguish themselves from the Barra branch This crest badge contains the crest an armoured dexter arm with dagger and the motto vincere aut mori also written as vincere vel mori which translates from Latin as conquer or die 22 Clan Badge Edit Main article Clan badge Another symbol used by clan members is a clan badge or sometimes called a plant badge The original clan badges were merely plants worn in bonnets or hung from a pole or spear Today the clan badge attributed to Clan MacNeil is dryas 23 Trefoil has also been attributed to the clan 24 however this clan badge may actually be attributed to the McNeills of Gigha a branch of Clan MacNeil Trefoil has also been attributed to the Lamonts another clan in Argyl The Lamonts and MacNeils McNeills both claim descent from the same O Neill who settled in Scotland in the Middle Ages Tartan Edit Main articles Tartan and Kilt There have been several tartans associated with the name MacNeil MacNeill However in 1997 the chief of Clan MacNeil directed members of the clan that there were only two tartans that he recognised as clan tartans 25 These were MacNeil of Barra and MacNeil of Colonsay The MacNeil of Barra tartan has been the standard MacNeil of Barra tartan for over a century 25 MacNeil of Barra tartan Has been the standard MacNeil tartan for over a century 25 McNeill MacNeill of Colonsay tartan One of the two official clan tartans of Clan MacNeil 25 MacNeil tartan as published in the Vestiarium Scoticum in 1842 26 The tartan is not recognised as a clan tartan by the current chief citation needed Coat of arms Edit Coat of Arms of the chief of Clan MacNeil painted in the great hall of Kisimul Castle In Scotland all coats of arms belong to a single person The coat of arms typically attributed to Clan MacNeil belongs solely to the current chief of the clan A depiction of the coat of arms is painted in the Great Hall of Kisimul Castle in Castlebay Barra Scotland This coat of arms is divided into quarters Upper Left Lion Rampant mimicking the Royal Standard of the King of Scotland Upper Right Castle in the water symbolizing Kisimul Castle in Castlebay Lower Left 3 masted ship Representing either the seafaring nature of the clan or the migration of the clan from the Ulster Ireland to Barra Scotland Lower Right Red Hand of Ulster surrounded by nine shackles representing Niall of the Nine HostagesSurrounding the Coat of Arms 1 Crest a Rock same as on the clan badge Chapeau Red velvet cap lined with ermine symbolic of a Baron Helm Height of the Helmet is determined by rank Mantle Fabric surrounding the Arms Supporters Two lions rampant Compartment The base of the Arms made of Dryas flowers the clan badge Distribution Edit Mac Neil a romanticized Victorian era plate illustrated by R R McIan The topic of who is a MacNeil can be a complicated one By convention anyone descended from a member of Clan MacNeil can claim membership Because of the history of slavery in the United States and the Caribbean however many African Americans may bear a MacNeil surname Because it was not uncommon for a female slave to bear her slave master s child several African American MacNeils may have legitimate descent from a MacNeil however such descent can rarely be proven and most African American MacNeils remain uninvolved with clan activities and do not claim descent from the clan Generally speaking Caucasians with MacNeil surnames number between 40 000 and 80 000 worldwide In England Wales and the Isle of Man Edit source UK National Statistics Database 2002 27 McNeil 3 522 rank 2262 McNeill 4 212 rank 1909 MacNeil 314 rank 15845 MacNeill 286 rank 16904 Sizable populations also exist in Scotland Ireland Canada France Australia and New Zealand In the United States Edit McNeil 33 239 rank 961 source 2000 US Census 28 McNeill 22 383 rank 1387 source 1990 US Census 29 McNeal 8 928 rank 1723 source 2010 US Census 30 MacNeil 2 487 rank 8716 source 1990 US Census 29 McNiel rank 14781 source 2010 US Census 31 McNeilly rank 16430 source 1990 US Census 32 MacNeill rank 28690 source 1990 US Census 32 MacNeal 540 rank 36525 source 2010 US Census 30 Chiefs of Clan MacNeil EditCurrent chief Roderick Rory Wilson MacNeil of Barra The MacNeil of Barra Chief of Clan Niall and 27th of Barra Baron of Barra The chiefs of Clan MacNeil 33 are reckoned from Niall Noigiallach Niall of the Nine Hostages from whom all the MacNeil chiefs claim descent The clan claims Niall Noigiallach as its first chief while the current chief Rory MacNeil is reckoned as the 47th chief Name Notes Year of death1 Niall Noigiallach Niall of the Nine Hostages High King of Ireland also a member of the Connachta dynasty and ancestor of the Ui Neill dynastic family Married to Rignach 4052 Eogan mac Neill King of Aileach and Prince of Ulster also the ancestor of the Cenel nEogain dynasty and their septs O Neill O Docherty O Boyle MacNeill etc Founded the kingdom of Tir Eogain in the 5th century Married to Indorb Fionn the White citation needed 4653 Muiredach mac Eogain King of Aileach and Prince of Ulster Married to Eirc citation needed 4804 Muirchertach mac Muiredaig High King of Ireland in 487 King of Aileach Married to Duaibhseach citation needed 5 Domnall mac Muirchertaig High King of Ireland in 559 King of Aileach 5616 Aed Uaridnach High King of Ireland 599 King of Aileach 6077 Mael Fithrich mac Aedo King of Aileach Prince of Ulster 626 6308 Mael Duin mac Maele Fithrich King of Aileach Prince of Ulster Married to Cacht citation needed 7069 Fergal mac Maele Duin High King of Ireland 709 King of Aileach Married to Athiocht citation needed 71810 Niall Frossach High King of Ireland 759 King of Aileach Married to Eithne citation needed 77311 Aed Oirdnide mac Neill High King of Ireland 793 King of Aileach Married to Maebh citation needed 81812 Niall Caille mac Aeda High King of Ireland 832 King of Aileach and Ulster Married to Gormfhlaith Macdonell citation needed 84513 Aed Finliath High King of Ireland 861 King of Aileach and Ulster Married to Mael Muire daughter of Kenneth MacAlpin King of Scots citation needed 87814 Niall Glundub High King of Ireland 878 King of Aileach and Ulster Married to Gormflaith citation needed 91615 Muirceartach na Cochall Croiceann Muirchertach mac Neill High King of Ireland 937 King of Aileach and Ulster 94316 Domnall ua Neill High King of Ireland 954 King of Aileach and Ulster 97817 Muirceartach na Midhe Prince of Ulster and Tyrone 97518 Flaithbertach Ua Neill King of Aileach and Ulster and Prince of Tyrone19 Aodh Athlamh King of Aileach and Ulster and Prince of Tyrone20 Aodh Aonrachan King of Aileach Prince of Aileach and Argyll resigned kingship to brother Domhnall in 1033 aft 104721 Niall of the Castle Prince of Argyll and the Norse Council of the Isles Began construction of Kisimul Castle22 Aodh Prince of the Norse Council of the Isles aft 109023 Donald Prince of the Norse Council of the Isles24 Muirceartach Prince of the Norse Council of the Isles25 Niall Prince of the Norse Council of the Isles aft 126326 Niall Og Received first charter for Barra from Robert the Bruce 34 aft 131427 Muirceartach28 Roderick aft 140929 Gilleonan Roderick Muchard Macneil Received first recorded charter for Barra from Alexander Lord of the Isles in 1427 34 Married to Fynvola Flora MacLeod daughter of Iain Borb MacLeod 6th chief of Clan MacLeod citation needed aft 142730 Roderick31 Gilleonan aft 149532 Gilleonan33 Gilleonan aft 157834 Roderick Og Married to Mary MacLeod the 10th chief and first female chief of Clan MacLeod35 Roderick the Turbulent Married to a woman from Clan MacLean of Dowart Duart and later to a woman named Marion MacDonald The children from both of these marriages fought over the title of chief of Clan MacNeil 34 aft 160136 Niall Og Married to Margaret MacLean citation needed aft 165137 Gilleonan Married to Catherine MacDonald citation needed 38 Roderick Dhu Baron of Barra Married to Isobel Isabella MacLeod citation needed 171539 Roderick Dove of the West Baron of Barra Married to Alice MacLeod citation needed 176340 Roderick the Gentle Baron of Barra Married to Jean Cameron 35 182241 Roderick the General Baron of Barra lost the Barony and Estate of Barra in 1838 Married to Isabella Brownlow citation needed When he died the chiefship passed to a cousin descendant of Gilleonan who had emigrated during the mass emigrations to Canada in 1802 11 186342 Donald McGougan Macneil Baron of Barra 188043 Iain Macneil Baron of Barra 189344 Roderick Ambrose MacNeil Baron of Barra Bequeathed the title of chief upon his second son Robert Lister 20 191445 Robert Lister MacNeil Photo Baron of Barra An American bought the Barra estate in 1937 and restored Kisimul Castle before his death 197046 Ian Roderick MacNeil Photo Baron of Barra An American born Harvard educated law professor Gifted Kisimul Castle to Historic Scotland for 1 000 years in 2001 and gifted the estate of Barra to Scottish Ministers in 2004 16 Married to Nancy Wilson of Ottawa Canada 36 37 201047 Roderick Rory Wilson MacNeil Baron of Barra Married to Sau Ming Kwan of Hong Kong 38 48See also EditMcNeil McNeill MacNeil MacNeill McNeal MacNeal MacNeille Victory or Death McNeil surname The Barra MacNeilsFootnotes Edit a b c d The Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs website The History of the clan Retrieved on 2008 03 13 Septs and Related Families Page Archived 28 May 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2008 03 13 There are more than one thousand possible spellings of the name MacNeil Sellar David Family Origins in Cowal and Knapdale Archived 26 January 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 03 13 A Closer Look at West Highland Heraldry Archived 5 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 03 13 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Way George and Squire Romily Collins Scottish Clan amp Family Encyclopedia Foreword by The Rt Hon The Earl of Elgin KT Convenor The Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs Published in 1994 Pages 254 255 Ronald Black 1467 MS The MacNeils West Highland Notes amp Queries ser 4 no 6 Feb 2018 p 11 Skene William F 1902 Macbain Alexander ed The Highlanders of Scotland Stirling Eneas Mackay pp 248 250 Ronald Black 1467 MS The MacNeils West Highland Notes amp Queries ser 4 no 6 Feb 2018 p 19 Bannerman John 1998 MacDuff of Fife in Grant Alexander Stringer K J eds Medieval Scotland Crown Lordship and Community Essays presented to G W S Barrow Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press p 34 ISBN 978 0 585 06064 4 Anderson William 1878 The Scottish Nation or The Surnames Families Literature Honours and Biographical History of the People of Scotland vol 3 Edinburgh A Fullarton amp Co pp 55 57 a b c d e Moncreiffe of that Ilk pp 81 84 a b c Gibson pp 103 107 The Clan MacNeil Archived 7 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 03 13 Scots Law News Archived 26 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 03 04 Clan chief gives his lands to the people Historic day for crofters as MacNeil hands over 9000 acres on Barra The Herald Glasgow 6 September 2003 Retrieved 16 December 2020 a b Estate of Barra Archived 1 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 03 04 MACNEIL OF BARRA CHIEF OF MACNEIL OF BARRA Archived 3 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 03 12 The Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs website link to website Archived 1 February 2014 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 03 04 Clan MacNeil in Canada Archived 1 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2007 06 27 a b Lyon W T 7 May 2018 The arms of the Scottish bishoprics Selkirk The Scottish Chronicle Offices Archived from the original on 1 February 2015 Retrieved 7 May 2018 via Internet Archive Way George Squire Romilly 2000 pp 224 225 a b The Badges of Clan MacNeil Archived 7 July 2007 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2007 06 27 Adam Innes of Learney 1970 pp 541 543 Mackenzie 1884 p 536 a b c d Tartans and Badges Pages Archived 19 October 2004 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved on 2008 03 13 Scotland s Forged Tartans p 36 37 Surnames of England and Wales www taliesin arlein net Archived from the original on 11 October 2017 Retrieved 7 May 2018 Genealogy Frequently Occurring Surnames from Census 2000 www census gov Archived from the original on 19 November 2007 Retrieved 17 January 2022 a b Most Popular Last Names in the United States rank 1001 2000 mongabay com Archived from the original on 23 August 2017 Retrieved 7 May 2018 a b Genealogy Data Frequently Occurring Surnames from Census 2000 U S Census Bureau Archived from the original on 18 August 2014 Retrieved 6 December 2017 Bureau US Census Frequently Occurring Surnames from the 2010 Census www census gov Retrieved 22 June 2018 a b Archived copy Archived from the original on 12 October 2010 Retrieved 10 August 2006 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Castle in the Sea p 136 139 a b c Clan Macneil history Archived 13 March 2009 at the Wayback Machine electricscotland com Retrieved 17 November 2013 Memoir of Colonel John Cameron by Rev Archibald Clerk Obituary Ian MacNeil Clan chief and lawyer the Scotsman Archived from the original on 5 March 2010 Retrieved 28 February 2010 Prof Ian Roderick MacNeil Obituary Announcements announce jpress co uk Archived from the original on 28 July 2011 Retrieved 17 January 2022 burkes peerage Archived 3 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine Scottish Chiefs Index Archived 7 February 2009 at the Wayback Machine MACNEIL OF BARRA CHIEF OF MACNEIL OF BARRAReferences EditAdam Frank Innes of Learney Thomas 1970 The Clans Septs amp Regiments of the Scottish Highlands 8th ed Edinburgh Johnston and Bacon Gibson John G Old and New World Highland Bagpiping MacGill Queen s University Press 2002 ISBN 0 7735 2291 3 Mackenzie Alexander ed 1884 The Celtic Magazine a monthly periodical devoted to the literature history antiquities folk lore traditions and the social and material interests of the Celt at home and abroad Vol 9 Inverness A amp W Mackenzie a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a last has generic name help Moncreiffe of that Ilk Iain The Highland Clans London Barrie amp Rockliff 1967 Way of Plean George Squire Romilly 2000 Clans amp Tartans Glasgow HarperCollins ISBN 0 00 472501 8 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Clan MacNeil Clan MacNeil Association of America Clan MacNeil in Canada Clan MacNeil Net Iain MacNeil Daily Telegraph obituary Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clan MacNeil amp oldid 1117532562, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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