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Clan Gregor

Clan Gregor, also known as Clan MacGregor,[2] is a Highland Scottish clan that claims an origin in the early 9th century. The clan's most famous member is Rob Roy MacGregor of the late 17th and early 18th centuries.[2] The clan is also known to have been among the first families of Scotland to begin playing the bagpipes in the early 17th century.[3]

Clan Gregor
Clann Ghriogair, na Griogalaich[1]
Crest: a lion's head erased Proper, crowned with an antique crown Or.
Motto'S Rioghal mo dhream (Royal is my race)
War cryÀrd-Choille
Profile
RegionHighland
DistrictArgyll and Perthshire
Plant badgeScots pine
Pipe musicRuaig Ghlinne Freoine
Chief
Sir Malcolm MacGregor of MacGregor
The 7th Baronet of Lanrick and Balquhidder (An t-Ailpeineach Mòr[1])
SeatBoreland House
Clan branches
MacGregor of MacGregor (chiefs)
Greig (Russian nobility)
Allied clans
Pronunciation
Scottish Gaelic: Clann Ghriogair
Pronunciation: [kʰl̪ˠãn̪ˠˈɣɾʲikɪɾʲ]
Scottish Gaelic: Na Griogairich/Griogalaich
Pronunciation: [nə ˈkɾʲikɪɾʲɪç/ˈkɾʲikəl̪ˠɪç]
Scottish Gaelic: ’S rìoghail mo dhream
Pronunciation: [sˈRiː.al ˈɣɾãũm]
Scottish Gaelic: Àrd-choille
Pronunciation: [ˈaːrˠt̪xɤʎə]
Scottish Gaelic: Ruaig Ghlinne Freòine
Pronunciation: [ˈrˠuəkʲ ɣlɪɲəˈfɾʲɔːɲə]
Scottish Gaelic: An t-Ailpeineach Mòr
Pronunciation: [ən̪ˠˈt̪ʰalbɛɲəx ˈmoːɾ]

History edit

Origins of the clan edit

Clan Gregor held lands in Glen Orchy, Glenlochy and Glenstrae.[2] According to Iain Moncreiffe the MacGregors were descended from an ancient Celtic royal family, through the Abbots of Glendochart.[2] This is alluded to in the clan's motto: "Royal is my race".[2] There is also a tradition that Gregor was the brother of Kenneth MacAlpin.[2] Though there is little evidence to support this tradition,[2] it is supported by the Scottish historian, William Skene.[4] It is possible that the eponymous Gregor from whom the family derives may have been Griogair, son of Dungal, who was allegedly co-ruler of Alba.[2]

Most modern historians agree that the first chief of Clan Gregor was Gregor of the golden bridles.[2] His son was Iain Camm One eye, who succeeded as the second chief sometime before 1390.[2]

The barony of Loch Awe which included much of the MacGregor lands was granted to the chief of Clan Campbell by Robert the Bruce.[2] The Campbells had already built Kilchurn Castle which controlled the gateway to the western Highlands and they harried the MacGregors who were forced to retire deeper into their lands until they were restricted to Glenstrae.[2]

16th century and clan conflicts edit

 
A Clan MacGregor burial ground.

Iain of Glenstrae died in 1519 with no direct heirs.[2] He was the second of his house to be called the Black.[2] The succession of Eian was supported by the Campbells, and he married a daughter of Sir Colin Campbell of Glenorchy.[2] In 1547 Eian's son, Alistair, fought against the English at the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh but died shortly after.[2]

Colin Campbell refused to recognize the claim of Gregor Roy MacGregor to the estates, and for ten years Gregor waged a war against the Campbells.[2] He was an outlaw who raided cattle and sheltered in the high glens.[2] However, in 1570, he was captured and murdered by the Campbells.[2] The chiefship was claimed by his son, Alistair, but he was unable to stem the Campbell's persecution of his kinsmen, who over time became known as the Children of the Mist, a name associated with the MacGregors due to the extent of their losses.[2]

Additionally, John Drummond of Clan Drummond was the king's forester and was subsequently killed after hanging a number of MacGregors for poaching.[2] The chief took responsibility for the killing and it was condemned by the Privy Council.[when?][2]

17th century, clan conflicts and civil war edit

 
A Victorian-era, romanticised depiction of a member of the clan by R. R. McIan, from The Clans of the Scottish Highlands, 1845

In response to the execution of two MacGregor clansmen in 1603,[5][full citation needed] Alasdair MacGregor marched into Colquhoun territory with a force of over 400 men.[6]

The chief of Clan Colquhoun, in response, had been granted a royal commission to suppress the MacGregors.[6] Colquhoun assembled a force of 500 foot and 300 cavalry and advanced to Glen Fruin to repel the Highland raiders.[6] MacGregor split his force in two and while the main MacGregor force and the Colquhouns engaged in combat, the second MacGregor force attacked the Colquhouns from the rear.[6] The Colquhouns were driven into the Moss of Auchingaich where their cavalry was useless, and over 200 Colquhouns were killed.[6] At the end of the 18th century, in an act of good will, the chiefs of the two clans met and shook hands on the site of the former slaughter.[6]

In April 1603, James VI of Scotland issued an edict that proclaimed the name of MacGregor as "altogidder abolisheed".[2] This meant that anyone who bore the name must renounce it or suffer death.[2] In 1604, MacGregor and eleven of his chieftains were hanged at Mercat Cross, Edinburgh.[2] As a result, Clan Gregor was scattered, with many taking other names such as Murray or Grant.[2] They were hunted like animals and flushed out of the heather by bloodhounds.[2]

An Edinburgh burgess, Robert Birrel, who kept a diary of events at the time, described the episode thus[7] (translated into modern English):

[MacGregor] was conveyed to Berwick by the Guard to conform to the Earl's promise: for he promised to put [MacGregor] out of Scottish ground. So [the Earl] kept a Highlandman's promise; in respect he sent the Guard to convey [MacGregor] out of Scottish ground: But they were not directed to part with [MacGregor], but to fetch him back again! The 18th January, at evening, he came again to Edinburgh; and upon the 20th day he was hanged at the Cross, and 11 of his friends and name, upon a gallows: Himself being Chief, he wes hanged his own height above the rest of his friends.

An act of the Scottish Parliament from 1617 stated:[8] (translated into modern English):

It was ordained that the name of MacGregor should be altogether abolished, and that the whole persons of that clan should renounce their name and take them some other name, and that they nor none of their posterity should call themselves Gregor or MacGregor under pain of death .... [T]hat if any person or persons of the said clan who have already renounced their names or hereafter shall renounce and change their names; or if any of their children or posterity shall at any time hereafter assume or take to themselves the name of Gregor or MacGregor ... that every such person or persons assuming or taking to themselves the said name ... shall incur the pain of death, which pain shall be executed upon them without favour ....

Clan Lamont of Cowal defied this and provided aid and refuge for fleeing MacGregors in their lands in the wake of the persecution.[9] Clan Chattan also protected Macgregors from the MacDonalds of Keppoch in Badenoch.[10][full citation needed] Despite the savage treatment of the MacGregors, they had nevertheless fought for the king during the Scottish Civil War.[2] Some 200 men of Clan Gregor fought for the Earl of Glencairn, in what was known as Glencairn's rising, against the Commonwealth.[2] In recognition of this, Charles II of England repealed the proscription of the name in 1661,[8] but William of Orange, after Charles's brother James VII was deposed, reimposed the proscription in 1693;[2][8] it was to last until 1784.

18th century and Jacobite risings edit

 
The graves of Rob Roy MacGregor, his widow, and their sons.

Rob Roy MacGregor was born in 1671, a younger son of MacGregor of Glengyle.[2] (However, given the circumstances, he had been forced to assume his mother's surname of Campbell).[2] The adventures of Rob Roy MacGregor have been immortalized and romanticized by Sir Walter Scott in his novel Rob Roy.[2] Rob Roy was undoubtedly a thorn in the flesh of the government until he died in 1734.[2] He supported the Jacobite cause in 1715 and after the Battle of Sheriffmuir he set out plundering at will.[2] In one such raid on Dumbarton, the town was put into panic and Dumbarton Castle was forced to open fire with its cannon.[2] He also led Clan Gregor at the Battle of Glen Shiel in 1719. He is buried in Balquhidder churchyard.[2]

During the 1745 uprising, some of Clan Gregor fought at the Battle of Prestonpans with the Jacobite army under the Duke of Perth. Some of Clan Gregor were among the Jacobite force that was defeated at the Battle of Littleferry in 1746 in Sutherland,[11] and therefore missed the Battle of Culloden that took place the next day and which they would have been too late.[12] After the rising, when the MacGregors were returning home, no-one ventured to interfere with them when they strode across Atholl, with their flying colours they strode passed Finlairg Castle where according to one source the Clan Campbell militia "durst not move more than pussies", and the MacGregors defying in broad daylight the outposts which Lord Campbell of Glenorchy had established in the passes.[13]

Persecution of the MacGregors did not end until 1774, when the laws against them were repealed.[2]

19th century and restored clan edit

To restore pride in the clan, the chiefs needed to be re-established.[2] Eight hundred and twenty six MacGregors subscribed to a petition declaring General John Murray of Lanrick to be the true chief.[2] Murray was in fact a MacGregor who was descended from Duncan MacGregor of Ardchoille, who had died in 1552.[2] His son was Sir Evan, who played a part in the visit of George IV to Scotland in 1822, where he and his clansmen were given the tremendous honour of guarding the Honours of Scotland, better known as the Scottish Regalia and the oldest set of crown jewels in the British Isles.[2]

Clan chief edit

The current chief of Clan Gregor is Sir Malcolm Gregor Charles MacGregor of MacGregor, 7th Baronet of Lanrick and Balquhidder, 24th Chief of Clan Gregor.[14] His Gaelic designation is An t-Ailpeanach,[15] a name which bears testimony to the clan's traditional descent from Siol Alpin.

Clan badges edit

 
A shoot of Scots pine, the plant badge of Clan Gregor.

Tartans edit

Many tartans are associated with the name MacGregor. However, only the following are recognized as "clan tartans" by the current chief of Clan Gregor:[18]

Tartan image Notes
  MacGregor Red and Green. A specimen of this tartan appears in the Cockburn Collection, dating from about 1810–1820, now in the Mitchell library in Glasgow. It is one of the tartans labelled in Cockburn's handwriting in 1815. It is titled as MacGregor Murray Tartan by Wilson in the Key pattern book of 1819. James Logan titled it simply as MacGregor in 1831.[19][20]
  MacGregor Red and Black, also known as Rob Roy MacGregor, is the buffalo plaid of the US, associated there with the mythic lumberjack Paul Bunyan.[21] This is one of the most primitive setts of tartan. According to tartan scholar Donald C. Stewart, it is probably the oldest "MacGregor" tartan, however it was only adopted by MacGregors at a relatively late date.[22] A specimen of this tartan exists in the collection of the Highland Society of London. This piece is signed by, and bears the Seal of Arms of Sir John MacGregor Murray of MacGregor. This and other specimens of tartan kept in the collection were collected during 1815–1816, and are now kept in the Museum of Scotland, in Edinburgh.[23] The clan chief states that any MacGregor may wear this tartan.[20]
  MacGregor of Cardney. This tartan was designed in about 1930 by Alasdair MacGregor of Cardney, the younger brother of the 22nd chief of Clan Gregor, using his own vegetable dyes and wool from his sheep to produce a variation of the Red and Green, but in the same sett. Technically speaking it should only be worn by the MacGregors of Cardney, but that family is content for other MacGregors to wear it if they wish. It has been sold erroneously for many years as 'MacGregor Hunting'.
  MacGregor of Glengyle, also known as MacGregor of Deeside. A specimen of this tartan dates from about 1750.[24] The clan chief states that the Glengyle branch of the clan, or MacGregors from Deeside, are entitled to wear this tartan.[20]
  MacGregor Green.[25] This is a dance tartan. The chief has approved this tartan only for Highland dancers who compete, or who have competed in competitions at Highland games. The chief states that MacGregors who are not highland dancers should not wear this tartan.[20]

Signet and seal in Iowa edit

Descendants of Rob Roy MacGregor settled around McGregor, Iowa, and in 1849 it was reported that the original MacGregor seal and signet was owned by Alex McGregor of Iowa. The clan seal was inscribed: "Triogal Ma Dh'ream / Een dhn bait spair nocht", which was interpreted as 'I am of royal descent/Slay and spare not'. (The first part is Scottish Gaelic; the second is rather dialectal Scots language, which today would be rendered "E'en do but spair nocht".) The signet was a bloodstone from Loch Lomond, and was sketched by William Williams.[26]

Septs edit

 
Boy wearing MacGregor of Cardney tartan

The following table lists clan names and sept names recognized by the Clan Gregor Society. The society states that people who bear the following surnames, or who descend from a woman with one of the following surnames, is eligible for membership. The prefixes M', Mc and Mac are considered interchangeable, and other spelling variations are also omitted from this list.[27]

  • Alpin
  • Fletcher[note 1]
  • Greer
  • Gregg
  • Graig
  • Gregor
  • Gregorson
  • Gregory
  • Gregson
  • Greig
  • Grewer
  • Grier
  • Grierson[note 2]
  • Grigg(s)
  • Grigor
  • Gruer
  • Hubberd
  • King
  • Lawrence
  • MacAdam[note 3]
  • Macaldowie || Macara ||Macaree || MacChoiter
  • McGehee
  • MacConachie
  • MacCrowther
  • MacEan
  • MacEwin
  • MacGregor
  • MacGrigor
  • MacGrowther
  • MacGruder
  • Macilduy
  • MacLeister
  • MacLiver
  • MacNee
  • MacNeice
  • MacNeish
  • MacNie
  • MacPeter(s)
  • MacPetrie
  • Magruder
  • Malloch
  • Neish
  • Patullo/Pittillow
  • Peter[note 4]
  • Petrie
  • Gragg

The following names are documented aliases of MacGregor from the proscription. Membership is available for individuals who can show evidence of descent or a family tradition of MacGregor connection.[27]

  • Bain
  • Beachley
  • Black
  • Bowers
  • Bowie
  • Coleman
  • Comrie
  • Dochart
  • Dunn
  • Lakie
  • Lakey
  • Landless
  • Lawrence
  • Leckie
  • Lockie
  • Mor
  • Roy
  • Skinner
  • White
  • Whyte
  • Willox

The following names are traditional aliases of MacGregor with little documented evidence. Membership is available for individuals who can show evidence of descent or a family tradition of MacGregor connection.[27]

  • Argyl
  • Arrowsmith
  • Begland
  • Brewer
  • Caird
  • Callander
  • Clark
  • Craigdallie
  • Crerar
  • Crowther
  • Denison
  • Docherty
  • Dorward
  • Dowie
  • Fisher
  • Gair
  • Goodsir
  • Grayson
  • Gudger
  • Guinness
  • Kirkwood
  • Leishman
  • MacAndrew
  • MacAngus
  • MacCanish
  • MacGeach
  • Macgehee
  • Macghee
  • MacGill
  • MacGrew
  • Macnocaird
  • Macnucator
  • Nelson
  • Neilson
  • Nucator
  • Orr
  • Paterson
  • Peat
  • Peterson
  • Shankland
  • Stringer
  • Tainsh
  • Telfer
  • Telford
  • Tossach
  • Walker
  • Weliver

The following names are other clan names that are known to have been used by the MacGregors. People with the names from this list are properly the domain of other Clan and Family societies, however the MacGregor clan welcomes inquiries from persons bearing these names who can show their descent from a MacGregor who adopted the name as an alias.[27]

  • Balfour
  • Buchannan
  • Campbell
  • Cunningham
  • Donald
  • Dougal
  • Douglas
  • Drummond
  • Erskine
  • Ferguson
  • Gordon
  • Graham
  • Grant
  • Hay
  • Johnson
  • Johnston
  • Livingston
  • MacAlastair
  • MacDonald
  • MacDougal
  • MacEwan
  • MacFarlane
  • MacIan
  • MacInnes
  • MacLaren
  • MacNeil
  • MacNicol
  • MacPherson
  • Menzies
  • Murray
  • Ramsay
  • Stewart
  • Stirling
  • Williams
  • Wilson

See also edit

 
Coat of arms of the Russian family Greig

Notes edit

  1. ^ There is also a recognized Clan Fletcher.
  2. ^ There is also a recognised Clan Grierson.
  3. ^ There is also a recognized Clan Adam.
  4. ^ There is also a recognized Clan Peter.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Mac an Tàilleir, Iain. . Sabhal Mòr Ostaig. Archived from the original (docx) on 17 July 2011. Retrieved 15 October 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap Way of Plean, George; Squire of Rubislaw, Romilly (1994). "MacGregor". Collins Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia. Glasgow: HarperCollins (for the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs). pp. 220–221. ISBN 0-00-470547-5.
  3. ^ Porter, J., ed. (2007). "Introduction". Defining Strains: The Musical Life of Scots in the Seventeenth Century. Peter Lang. ISBN 978-3-03910-948-7.
  4. ^ Skene, William; Celtic Scotland: a history of ancient Alban, Volume 3. (1880).
  5. ^ Scott, Walter. "Historical account of the clan MacGregor". Manners, Customs and History of the Highlanders of Scotland. pp. 121–124.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Way of Plean, George; Squire of Rubislaw, Romilly (1994). "Colquhoun". Collins Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia. Glasgow: HarperCollins (for the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs). pp. 108–109. ISBN 0-00-470547-5.
  7. ^ Bryce, W. Moir. The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club. Vol. X. pp. 88–89. [MacGregor] wes convoyit to Berwick be the Gaird to conforme to the Earl's promese: for he promesit to put him out of Scottis grund. Swa he keipit ane Hieland-manis promes; in respect he sent the Gaird to convoy him out of Scottis grund: But thai were not directit to pairt with him, but to fetche him bak agane! The 18 Januar, at evine, he come agane to Edinburghe; and upone the 20-day he wes hangit at the Croce, and xj of his freindis and name, upon ane gallous: Himself being Chieff, he wes hangit his awin hicht aboune the rest of hes freindis.
  8. ^ a b c Black, George Fraser (1971) [1946]. "MacGregor, MacGreigor, MacGrigor". The Surnames of Scotland: Their Origin, Meaning and History. New York Public Library. pp. 505–506. It wes ordanit that þe name of mc gegoure sulde be altogidder abolisched And þat the haill persounes of thatt clan suld reunuce thair name and tak thame sum vther name And that They nor nane of thair posteritie suld call þame selffis gregor or mc gregoure thairefter vunder payne of deade .... [T]hat gif onie persoun or persounes of þe said Clane who hes alreddie renunceit thair names or heirefter sail renunce and cheinge thair names Or gif onye of thair bairnes and posteritie sail at ony time heirefter Assume or tak to thame selffis the name of gregoure or Mc gregoure ... That everie sick persoun or persones assomeing and taking to thame selffis the said name ... sail Incurre the payne of Deathe qlk payne salbe execute vpoun thame vithout fauoure ....
  9. ^ MacKinnon, Charles (1992). Scottish Highlanders. Barnes & Noble Publishing. p. 76. ISBN 9780880299503.
  10. ^ "Macgregor, Political History, 1". Register of the Privy Council of Scotland. 1st series. Vol. IX.
  11. ^ Simpson, Peter. (1996). The Highland Independent Companies, 1603 – 1760. pp. 135–136. ISBN 0-85976-432-X.
  12. ^ Pollard, Tony (2009). Culloden: The History and Archaeology of the last Clan Battle. South Yorkshire: Pen and Sword Books. p. 34. ISBN 978-1-84884-020-1.
  13. ^ Duffy, Christopher (2003). The '45, Bonnie Prince Charlie and the Untold Story of the Jacobite Rising. London: Cassell. p. 530. ISBN 9780753822623. Quoting: Tullibardine, The Marchioness of (ed). A Military History of Perthshire 1600 - 1902, Perth, Glasgow and Edinburgh, 1908, I, 330.
  14. ^ . Burke's Peerage and Gentry. Archived from the original on 12 August 2010. Retrieved 18 September 2007.
  15. ^ Adam, Frank; Innes of Learney, Thomas (1970). The Clans, Septs & Regiments of the Scottish Highlands (8th ed.). Edinburgh: Johnston and Bacon. pp. 539–540.
  16. ^ Way of Plean, George; Squire of Rubislaw, Romilly (2000). Clans & Tartans. Glasgow: HarperCollins. p. 190. ISBN 0-00-472501 8.
  17. ^ Adam, Frank (1970). Innes of Learney, Thomas (ed.). The Clans, Septs & Regiments of the Scottish Highlands (8th ed.). Edinburgh: Johnston * Bacon. pp. 541–543.
  18. ^ "The Clan Gregor Tartans". Clan Gregor Society. Retrieved 29 May 2017.[permanent dead link]
  19. ^ "MacGregor WR1526". Scottish Tartans World Register. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
  20. ^ a b c d MacGregor of MacGregor, Malcolm. "Our Tartans". Clan Gregor Society. Retrieved 29 May 2017.[permanent dead link]
  21. ^ "Buffalo Plaid's 100-year old Mysteries Finally Solved".
  22. ^ Stewart, Donald C. (1974). The Setts of the Scottish Tartans, with descriptive and historical notes (8th ed.). London: Shepheard-Walwyn. pp. 75–76. ISBN 978-0-85683-011-2.
  23. ^ "Rob Roy Macgregor WR1504". Scottish Tartans World Register. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
  24. ^ "MacGregor WR450". Scottish Tartans World Register. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
  25. ^ "MacGregor Green WR1577". Scottish Tartans World Register. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
  26. ^ Williams, William (1920). "Major William Williams' Journal of a Trip to Iowa in 1849". Annals of Iowa. 7 (4).
  27. ^ a b c d . Clan Gregor Society. Archived from the original on 19 July 2013. Retrieved 8 January 2009.
  28. ^ A. W. Smith A Gardener's Handbook of Plant Names: Their Meanings and Origins, p. 176, at Google Books
  29. ^ "Greigia Regel, Index Seminum (LE, Petropolitanus) 1864(Suppl.): 13 (1865)". kew.org. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  30. ^ "Greig's Tulip 'Chopin'". paghat.com. Retrieved 17 September 2017.
  31. ^ "Tulipa greigii aurea". rareplants.co.uk. Retrieved 17 September 2017.

External links edit

  • Clan Gregor Society 10 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine
  • American Clan Gregor Society
  • The German Clan Gregor Society

clan, gregor, also, known, clan, macgregor, highland, scottish, clan, that, claims, origin, early, century, clan, most, famous, member, macgregor, late, 17th, early, 18th, centuries, clan, also, known, have, been, among, first, families, scotland, begin, playi. Clan Gregor also known as Clan MacGregor 2 is a Highland Scottish clan that claims an origin in the early 9th century The clan s most famous member is Rob Roy MacGregor of the late 17th and early 18th centuries 2 The clan is also known to have been among the first families of Scotland to begin playing the bagpipes in the early 17th century 3 Clan GregorClann Ghriogair na Griogalaich 1 Crest a lion s head erased Proper crowned with an antique crown Or Motto S Rioghal mo dhream Royal is my race War cryArd ChoilleProfileRegionHighlandDistrictArgyll and PerthshirePlant badgeScots pinePipe musicRuaig Ghlinne FreoineChiefSir Malcolm MacGregor of MacGregorThe 7th Baronet of Lanrick and Balquhidder An t Ailpeineach Mor 1 SeatBoreland HouseClan branches MacGregor of MacGregor chiefs Greig Russian nobility Allied clans Clan RobertsonClan MacFarlaneClan GrantClan LamontClan TailyourRival clans Clan CampbellClan GrahamClan MacLarenClan ColquhounClan DrummondClan MacThomas Pronunciation Scottish Gaelic Clann Ghriogair Pronunciation kʰl ˠan ˠˈɣɾʲikɪɾʲ Scottish Gaelic Na Griogairich Griogalaich Pronunciation ne ˈkɾʲikɪɾʲɪc ˈkɾʲikel ˠɪc Scottish Gaelic S rioghail mo dhream Pronunciation sˈRiː al mɔ ˈɣɾaũm Scottish Gaelic Ard choille Pronunciation ˈaːrˠt xɤʎe Scottish Gaelic Ruaig Ghlinne Freoine Pronunciation ˈrˠuekʲ ɣlɪɲeˈfɾʲɔːɲe Scottish Gaelic An t Ailpeineach Mor Pronunciation en ˠˈt ʰalbɛɲex ˈmoːɾ Contents 1 History 1 1 Origins of the clan 1 2 16th century and clan conflicts 1 3 17th century clan conflicts and civil war 1 4 18th century and Jacobite risings 1 5 19th century and restored clan 2 Clan chief 3 Clan badges 4 Tartans 5 Signet and seal in Iowa 6 Septs 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 External linksHistory editOrigins of the clan edit Clan Gregor held lands in Glen Orchy Glenlochy and Glenstrae 2 According to Iain Moncreiffe the MacGregors were descended from an ancient Celtic royal family through the Abbots of Glendochart 2 This is alluded to in the clan s motto Royal is my race 2 There is also a tradition that Gregor was the brother of Kenneth MacAlpin 2 Though there is little evidence to support this tradition 2 it is supported by the Scottish historian William Skene 4 It is possible that the eponymous Gregor from whom the family derives may have been Griogair son of Dungal who was allegedly co ruler of Alba 2 Most modern historians agree that the first chief of Clan Gregor was Gregor of the golden bridles 2 His son was Iain Camm One eye who succeeded as the second chief sometime before 1390 2 The barony of Loch Awe which included much of the MacGregor lands was granted to the chief of Clan Campbell by Robert the Bruce 2 The Campbells had already built Kilchurn Castle which controlled the gateway to the western Highlands and they harried the MacGregors who were forced to retire deeper into their lands until they were restricted to Glenstrae 2 16th century and clan conflicts edit nbsp A Clan MacGregor burial ground Iain of Glenstrae died in 1519 with no direct heirs 2 He was the second of his house to be called the Black 2 The succession of Eian was supported by the Campbells and he married a daughter of Sir Colin Campbell of Glenorchy 2 In 1547 Eian s son Alistair fought against the English at the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh but died shortly after 2 Colin Campbell refused to recognize the claim of Gregor Roy MacGregor to the estates and for ten years Gregor waged a war against the Campbells 2 He was an outlaw who raided cattle and sheltered in the high glens 2 However in 1570 he was captured and murdered by the Campbells 2 The chiefship was claimed by his son Alistair but he was unable to stem the Campbell s persecution of his kinsmen who over time became known as the Children of the Mist a name associated with the MacGregors due to the extent of their losses 2 Additionally John Drummond of Clan Drummond was the king s forester and was subsequently killed after hanging a number of MacGregors for poaching 2 The chief took responsibility for the killing and it was condemned by the Privy Council when 2 17th century clan conflicts and civil war edit Main article Battle of Glen Fruin nbsp A Victorian era romanticised depiction of a member of the clan by R R McIan from The Clans of the Scottish Highlands 1845 In response to the execution of two MacGregor clansmen in 1603 5 full citation needed Alasdair MacGregor marched into Colquhoun territory with a force of over 400 men 6 The chief of Clan Colquhoun in response had been granted a royal commission to suppress the MacGregors 6 Colquhoun assembled a force of 500 foot and 300 cavalry and advanced to Glen Fruin to repel the Highland raiders 6 MacGregor split his force in two and while the main MacGregor force and the Colquhouns engaged in combat the second MacGregor force attacked the Colquhouns from the rear 6 The Colquhouns were driven into the Moss of Auchingaich where their cavalry was useless and over 200 Colquhouns were killed 6 At the end of the 18th century in an act of good will the chiefs of the two clans met and shook hands on the site of the former slaughter 6 In April 1603 James VI of Scotland issued an edict that proclaimed the name of MacGregor as altogidder abolisheed 2 This meant that anyone who bore the name must renounce it or suffer death 2 In 1604 MacGregor and eleven of his chieftains were hanged at Mercat Cross Edinburgh 2 As a result Clan Gregor was scattered with many taking other names such as Murray or Grant 2 They were hunted like animals and flushed out of the heather by bloodhounds 2 An Edinburgh burgess Robert Birrel who kept a diary of events at the time described the episode thus 7 translated into modern English MacGregor was conveyed to Berwick by the Guard to conform to the Earl s promise for he promised to put MacGregor out of Scottish ground So the Earl kept a Highlandman s promise in respect he sent the Guard to convey MacGregor out of Scottish ground But they were not directed to part with MacGregor but to fetch him back again The 18th January at evening he came again to Edinburgh and upon the 20th day he was hanged at the Cross and 11 of his friends and name upon a gallows Himself being Chief he wes hanged his own height above the rest of his friends An act of the Scottish Parliament from 1617 stated 8 translated into modern English It was ordained that the name of MacGregor should be altogether abolished and that the whole persons of that clan should renounce their name and take them some other name and that they nor none of their posterity should call themselves Gregor or MacGregor under pain of death T hat if any person or persons of the said clan who have already renounced their names or hereafter shall renounce and change their names or if any of their children or posterity shall at any time hereafter assume or take to themselves the name of Gregor or MacGregor that every such person or persons assuming or taking to themselves the said name shall incur the pain of death which pain shall be executed upon them without favour Clan Lamont of Cowal defied this and provided aid and refuge for fleeing MacGregors in their lands in the wake of the persecution 9 Clan Chattan also protected Macgregors from the MacDonalds of Keppoch in Badenoch 10 full citation needed Despite the savage treatment of the MacGregors they had nevertheless fought for the king during the Scottish Civil War 2 Some 200 men of Clan Gregor fought for the Earl of Glencairn in what was known as Glencairn s rising against the Commonwealth 2 In recognition of this Charles II of England repealed the proscription of the name in 1661 8 but William of Orange after Charles s brother James VII was deposed reimposed the proscription in 1693 2 8 it was to last until 1784 18th century and Jacobite risings edit nbsp The graves of Rob Roy MacGregor his widow and their sons Rob Roy MacGregor was born in 1671 a younger son of MacGregor of Glengyle 2 However given the circumstances he had been forced to assume his mother s surname of Campbell 2 The adventures of Rob Roy MacGregor have been immortalized and romanticized by Sir Walter Scott in his novel Rob Roy 2 Rob Roy was undoubtedly a thorn in the flesh of the government until he died in 1734 2 He supported the Jacobite cause in 1715 and after the Battle of Sheriffmuir he set out plundering at will 2 In one such raid on Dumbarton the town was put into panic and Dumbarton Castle was forced to open fire with its cannon 2 He also led Clan Gregor at the Battle of Glen Shiel in 1719 He is buried in Balquhidder churchyard 2 During the 1745 uprising some of Clan Gregor fought at the Battle of Prestonpans with the Jacobite army under the Duke of Perth Some of Clan Gregor were among the Jacobite force that was defeated at the Battle of Littleferry in 1746 in Sutherland 11 and therefore missed the Battle of Culloden that took place the next day and which they would have been too late 12 After the rising when the MacGregors were returning home no one ventured to interfere with them when they strode across Atholl with their flying colours they strode passed Finlairg Castle where according to one source the Clan Campbell militia durst not move more than pussies and the MacGregors defying in broad daylight the outposts which Lord Campbell of Glenorchy had established in the passes 13 Persecution of the MacGregors did not end until 1774 when the laws against them were repealed 2 19th century and restored clan edit To restore pride in the clan the chiefs needed to be re established 2 Eight hundred and twenty six MacGregors subscribed to a petition declaring General John Murray of Lanrick to be the true chief 2 Murray was in fact a MacGregor who was descended from Duncan MacGregor of Ardchoille who had died in 1552 2 His son was Sir Evan who played a part in the visit of George IV to Scotland in 1822 where he and his clansmen were given the tremendous honour of guarding the Honours of Scotland better known as the Scottish Regalia and the oldest set of crown jewels in the British Isles 2 Clan chief editThe current chief of Clan Gregor is Sir Malcolm Gregor Charles MacGregor of MacGregor 7th Baronet of Lanrick and Balquhidder 24th Chief of Clan Gregor 14 His Gaelic designation is An t Ailpeanach 15 a name which bears testimony to the clan s traditional descent from Siol Alpin Clan badges edit nbsp A shoot of Scots pine the plant badge of Clan Gregor Crest badge suitable for any members of Clan Gregor to wear consists of the chief s heraldic crest and slogan The crest is A lion s head erased Proper crowned with an antique crown Or The slogan is S rioghail mo dhream which is Scottish Gaelic for Royal is my race 16 Plant badge Scots pine 17 a conifer native to Scotland Tartans editMany tartans are associated with the name MacGregor However only the following are recognized as clan tartans by the current chief of Clan Gregor 18 Tartan image Notes nbsp MacGregor Red and Green A specimen of this tartan appears in the Cockburn Collection dating from about 1810 1820 now in the Mitchell library in Glasgow It is one of the tartans labelled in Cockburn s handwriting in 1815 It is titled as MacGregor Murray Tartan by Wilson in the Key pattern book of 1819 James Logan titled it simply as MacGregor in 1831 19 20 nbsp MacGregor Red and Black also known as Rob Roy MacGregor is the buffalo plaid of the US associated there with the mythic lumberjack Paul Bunyan 21 This is one of the most primitive setts of tartan According to tartan scholar Donald C Stewart it is probably the oldest MacGregor tartan however it was only adopted by MacGregors at a relatively late date 22 A specimen of this tartan exists in the collection of the Highland Society of London This piece is signed by and bears the Seal of Arms of Sir John MacGregor Murray of MacGregor This and other specimens of tartan kept in the collection were collected during 1815 1816 and are now kept in the Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh 23 The clan chief states that any MacGregor may wear this tartan 20 nbsp MacGregor of Cardney This tartan was designed in about 1930 by Alasdair MacGregor of Cardney the younger brother of the 22nd chief of Clan Gregor using his own vegetable dyes and wool from his sheep to produce a variation of the Red and Green but in the same sett Technically speaking it should only be worn by the MacGregors of Cardney but that family is content for other MacGregors to wear it if they wish It has been sold erroneously for many years as MacGregor Hunting nbsp MacGregor of Glengyle also known as MacGregor of Deeside A specimen of this tartan dates from about 1750 24 The clan chief states that the Glengyle branch of the clan or MacGregors from Deeside are entitled to wear this tartan 20 nbsp MacGregor Green 25 This is a dance tartan The chief has approved this tartan only for Highland dancers who compete or who have competed in competitions at Highland games The chief states that MacGregors who are not highland dancers should not wear this tartan 20 Signet and seal in Iowa editDescendants of Rob Roy MacGregor settled around McGregor Iowa and in 1849 it was reported that the original MacGregor seal and signet was owned by Alex McGregor of Iowa The clan seal was inscribed Triogal Ma Dh ream Een dhn bait spair nocht which was interpreted as I am of royal descent Slay and spare not The first part is Scottish Gaelic the second is rather dialectal Scots language which today would be rendered E en do but spair nocht The signet was a bloodstone from Loch Lomond and was sketched by William Williams 26 Septs edit nbsp Boy wearing MacGregor of Cardney tartan The following table lists clan names and sept names recognized by the Clan Gregor Society The society states that people who bear the following surnames or who descend from a woman with one of the following surnames is eligible for membership The prefixes M Mc and Mac are considered interchangeable and other spelling variations are also omitted from this list 27 Alpin Fletcher note 1 Greer Gregg Graig Gregor Gregorson Gregory Gregson Greig Grewer Grier Grierson note 2 Grigg s Grigor Gruer Hubberd King Lawrence MacAdam note 3 Macaldowie Macara Macaree MacChoiter McGehee MacConachie MacCrowther MacEan MacEwin MacGregor MacGrigor MacGrowther MacGruder Macilduy MacLeister MacLiver MacNee MacNeice MacNeish MacNie MacPeter s MacPetrie Magruder Malloch Neish Patullo Pittillow Peter note 4 Petrie Gragg The following names are documented aliases of MacGregor from the proscription Membership is available for individuals who can show evidence of descent or a family tradition of MacGregor connection 27 Bain Beachley Black Bowers Bowie Coleman Comrie Dochart Dunn Lakie Lakey Landless Lawrence Leckie Lockie Mor Roy Skinner White Whyte Willox The following names are traditional aliases of MacGregor with little documented evidence Membership is available for individuals who can show evidence of descent or a family tradition of MacGregor connection 27 Argyl Arrowsmith Begland Brewer Caird Callander Clark Craigdallie Crerar Crowther Denison Docherty Dorward Dowie Fisher Gair Goodsir Grayson Gudger Guinness Kirkwood Leishman MacAndrew MacAngus MacCanish MacGeach Macgehee Macghee MacGill MacGrew Macnocaird Macnucator Nelson Neilson Nucator Orr Paterson Peat Peterson Shankland Stringer Tainsh Telfer Telford Tossach Walker Weliver The following names are other clan names that are known to have been used by the MacGregors People with the names from this list are properly the domain of other Clan and Family societies however the MacGregor clan welcomes inquiries from persons bearing these names who can show their descent from a MacGregor who adopted the name as an alias 27 Balfour Buchannan Campbell Cunningham Donald Dougal Douglas Drummond Erskine Ferguson Gordon Graham Grant Hay Johnson Johnston Livingston MacAlastair MacDonald MacDougal MacEwan MacFarlane MacIan MacInnes MacLaren MacNeil MacNicol MacPherson Menzies Murray Ramsay Stewart Stirling Williams WilsonSee also edit nbsp Coat of arms of the Russian family Greig Siol Alpin clans traditionally thought to descend from the brood of Alpin and thus Cinaed the first accepted King of the Scots Greig Russian nobility Russian noble family of Scottish origin Edvard Grieg Norwegian composer descended from the clan Greigia a genus of the botanical family Bromeliaceae named after Samuel Greig in 1864 28 by Eduard August von Regel a director of the St Petersburg Botanical Garden 29 Tulipa greigii a species of tulip named by Regel after Samuel Greig 30 due to Greig once being president of the Russian Horticultural Society 31 Niau an atoll in French Polynesia also named Greig after Aleksey Greig by Russian admiral Fabian Gottlieb von Bellingshausen in 1820Notes edit There is also a recognized Clan Fletcher There is also a recognised Clan Grierson There is also a recognized Clan Adam There is also a recognized Clan Peter References edit a b Mac an Tailleir Iain Ainmean Pearsanta Sabhal Mor Ostaig Archived from the original docx on 17 July 2011 Retrieved 15 October 2009 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap Way of Plean George Squire of Rubislaw Romilly 1994 MacGregor Collins Scottish Clan amp Family Encyclopedia Glasgow HarperCollins for the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs pp 220 221 ISBN 0 00 470547 5 Porter J ed 2007 Introduction Defining Strains The Musical Life of Scots in the Seventeenth Century Peter Lang ISBN 978 3 03910 948 7 Skene William Celtic Scotland a history of ancient Alban Volume 3 1880 Scott Walter Historical account of the clan MacGregor Manners Customs and History of the Highlanders of Scotland pp 121 124 a b c d e f Way of Plean George Squire of Rubislaw Romilly 1994 Colquhoun Collins Scottish Clan amp Family Encyclopedia Glasgow HarperCollins for the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs pp 108 109 ISBN 0 00 470547 5 Bryce W Moir The Book of the Old Edinburgh Club Vol X pp 88 89 MacGregor wes convoyit to Berwick be the Gaird to conforme to the Earl s promese for he promesit to put him out of Scottis grund Swa he keipit ane Hieland manis promes in respect he sent the Gaird to convoy him out of Scottis grund But thai were not directit to pairt with him but to fetche him bak agane The 18 Januar at evine he come agane to Edinburghe and upone the 20 day he wes hangit at the Croce and xj of his freindis and name upon ane gallous Himself being Chieff he wes hangit his awin hicht aboune the rest of hes freindis a b c Black George Fraser 1971 1946 MacGregor MacGreigor MacGrigor The Surnames of Scotland Their Origin Meaning and History New York Public Library pp 505 506 It wes ordanit that the name of mc gegoure sulde be altogidder abolisched And that the haill persounes of thatt clan suld reunuce thair name and tak thame sum vther name And that They nor nane of thair posteritie suld call thame selffis gregor or mc gregoure thairefter vunder payne of deade T hat gif onie persoun or persounes of the said Clane who hes alreddie renunceit thair names or heirefter sail renunce and cheinge thair names Or gif onye of thair bairnes and posteritie sail at ony time heirefter Assume or tak to thame selffis the name of gregoure or Mc gregoure That everie sick persoun or persones assomeing and taking to thame selffis the said name sail Incurre the payne of Deathe qlk payne salbe execute vpoun thame vithout fauoure MacKinnon Charles 1992 Scottish Highlanders Barnes amp Noble Publishing p 76 ISBN 9780880299503 Macgregor Political History 1 Register of the Privy Council of Scotland 1st series Vol IX Simpson Peter 1996 The Highland Independent Companies 1603 1760 pp 135 136 ISBN 0 85976 432 X Pollard Tony 2009 Culloden The History and Archaeology of the last Clan Battle South Yorkshire Pen and Sword Books p 34 ISBN 978 1 84884 020 1 Duffy Christopher 2003 The 45 Bonnie Prince Charlie and the Untold Story of the Jacobite Rising London Cassell p 530 ISBN 9780753822623 Quoting Tullibardine The Marchioness of ed A Military History of Perthshire 1600 1902 Perth Glasgow and Edinburgh 1908 I 330 Mac Gregor of Mac Gregor Chief of Clan Gregor Burke s Peerage and Gentry Archived from the original on 12 August 2010 Retrieved 18 September 2007 Adam Frank Innes of Learney Thomas 1970 The Clans Septs amp Regiments of the Scottish Highlands 8th ed Edinburgh Johnston and Bacon pp 539 540 Way of Plean George Squire of Rubislaw Romilly 2000 Clans amp Tartans Glasgow HarperCollins p 190 ISBN 0 00 472501 8 Adam Frank 1970 Innes of Learney Thomas ed The Clans Septs amp Regiments of the Scottish Highlands 8th ed Edinburgh Johnston Bacon pp 541 543 The Clan Gregor Tartans Clan Gregor Society Retrieved 29 May 2017 permanent dead link MacGregor WR1526 Scottish Tartans World Register Retrieved 8 January 2009 a b c d MacGregor of MacGregor Malcolm Our Tartans Clan Gregor Society Retrieved 29 May 2017 permanent dead link Buffalo Plaid s 100 year old Mysteries Finally Solved Stewart Donald C 1974 The Setts of the Scottish Tartans with descriptive and historical notes 8th ed London Shepheard Walwyn pp 75 76 ISBN 978 0 85683 011 2 Rob Roy Macgregor WR1504 Scottish Tartans World Register Retrieved 8 January 2009 MacGregor WR450 Scottish Tartans World Register Retrieved 8 January 2009 MacGregor Green WR1577 Scottish Tartans World Register Retrieved 8 January 2009 Williams William 1920 Major William Williams Journal of a Trip to Iowa in 1849 Annals of Iowa 7 4 a b c d Clan Gregor Society Sept Family Names Clan Gregor Society Archived from the original on 19 July 2013 Retrieved 8 January 2009 A W Smith A Gardener s Handbook of Plant Names Their Meanings and Origins p 176 at Google Books Greigia Regel Index Seminum LE Petropolitanus 1864 Suppl 13 1865 kew org Retrieved 17 September 2017 Greig s Tulip Chopin paghat com Retrieved 17 September 2017 Tulipa greigii aurea rareplants co uk Retrieved 17 September 2017 External links editClan Gregor Society Archived 10 December 2005 at the Wayback Machine American Clan Gregor Society The German Clan Gregor Society Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clan Gregor amp oldid 1223025510 Tartans, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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