All You Need to Know About the History of Tartan in 15 Minutes

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 6 чер 2024
  • Tartan is iconically Scottish, but what's its history? Scottish history tour guide, Bruce Fummey, talks to tartan historian Peter MacDonald at the V&A exibition in Dundee
    Upcoming Live shows www.brucefummey.co.uk/shows.aspx
    Find out the history of the kilt at • What They Don't Say Ab...
    Buy me coffee at www.buymeacoffee.com/Scottish...
    Find Peter MacDonald at Www.scottishtartans.co.uk
    Find the Scottish Tartans Authority at Www.scottishtartansauthority.com
    Three ways to support Scotland History Tours video productions at www.scotlandhistorytours.co.u...
    ...or just buy me coffee here
    www.buymeacoffee.com/Scottish...
    My videographer is Matt Ward. You'll get him at thesassenachs.co.uk
    Here's a video explaining the three ways to help me make more videos • Crowdfunding Options t...
    Join The National Trust of Scotland and experience Scottish history in lots of many National Trust properties worth visiting. You can find out about National Trust for Scotland, it's properties and how to join here tidd.ly/3kuyDg3
    Join the mailing list at
    mailchi.mp/d2eab373c1fd/82lr7...
    Videography by Matt Ward at www.visualsofscotland.co.uk
    Scotland History Tours is here for people who want to learn about Scottish history and get ideas for Scottish history tours. I try to make videos which tell you tales from Scotland's past and give you information about key dates in Scottish history and historical places to visit in Scotland. Not all videos are tales from Scotland's history, some of them are about men from Scotland's past or women from Scotland's past. Basically the people who made Scotland. From April 2020 onward I've tried to give ideas for historic days out in Scotland. Essentially these are days out in Scotland for adults who are interested in historical places to visit in Scotland.
    As a Scottish history tour guide people ask: Help me plan a Scottish holiday, or help me plan a Scottish vacation if your from the US. So I've tried to give a bit of history, but some places of interest in Scotland as well.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 609

  • @ScotlandHistoryTours
    @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +26

    Upcoming Live shows www.brucefummey.co.uk/shows.aspx
    Find out the history of the kilt at ua-cam.com/video/gPLKLVvX_L4/v-deo.html
    Buy me coffee at www.buymeacoffee.com/ScottishBruce

    • @grann8862
      @grann8862 5 місяців тому +1

    • @Albanach-je1nk
      @Albanach-je1nk 5 місяців тому +1

      Bruce just to a pain, all the time I lived in Edinburgh I pronounced the palace Holy Rood witch is how is spelled and not Hollyrood, you must know story of how Abby was founded.
      Can we try to have the name of place pronounced as should be .
      We had enough trouble with Hollywood when we think of Brave hart.
      Soar Alba

    • @TheChzoronzon
      @TheChzoronzon 4 місяці тому

      Dude... can you let the expert talk 10 facking seconds without interrupting him? geez

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  4 місяці тому

      @@TheChzoronzon Nope

    • @TheChzoronzon
      @TheChzoronzon 4 місяці тому

      @@ScotlandHistoryTours Shame on you, so big and so childish

  • @kurtb8474
    @kurtb8474 5 місяців тому +43

    I'm sitting here watching this in my pipe band kilt. Our band tartan is Holyrood. I'm in northern California getting ready to play my pipes at a Christmas season ceremony at a local cemetery. A ceremony to honor fallen military veterans.

  • @ppavery
    @ppavery 5 місяців тому +275

    Ma mate was getting married in a kilt, I asked him "what's the tartan" , "aw she's just wearing a white dress" says he.....

  • @McHobotheBobo
    @McHobotheBobo 5 місяців тому +34

    That Royal Company of Archers uniform is badass! Never knew such a thing existed, magnificent!

  • @Calum_S
    @Calum_S 5 місяців тому +64

    I'm glad Peter explained the mystery of tartan paint. This is the sort of knowledge that we all tune in for on a weekly basis. 😂
    Thanks Bruce and Peter for another brilliant video.

  • @samwallaceart288
    @samwallaceart288 5 місяців тому +106

    About the Tartan in China, _I visited those_ as a kid. It was an ancient proto-European tribe that wandered out into the Gobi desert; their chieftain in his burial wears a pair of trousers, one of the oldest trousers in the world currently intact.
    Because of the extreme dry conditions of the Gobi Desert, those tribesmen excavated were found in a state of natural mummification, their skin dehydrated on them and everything. On the chieftain you could still see the reddish color of his beard. Said my dad "they look Scottish!"
    And then of course you got Atlas Silk with the Uighurs, which are like Tartan if it was more of a psychedelic rainbow.

    • @lenabreijer1311
      @lenabreijer1311 5 місяців тому +16

      All hair goes redish after death as the other tones are leached out. They weren't proto European, the latest DNA shows them to be mixed Chinese and Indian and siberian

    • @samwallaceart288
      @samwallaceart288 5 місяців тому +11

      ​@@lenabreijer1311Ah for real? That makes sense. Obviously I knew they weren't scottish-scottish but I thought their face structure looked more IndoEuropean than Oriental. Indian/ Siberian/ Chinese makes sense

    • @julianndavis9415
      @julianndavis9415 5 місяців тому +3

      Now I want to go to China and see that too!

    • @samwallaceart288
      @samwallaceart288 5 місяців тому +20

      @@julianndavis9415 wouldn't recommend it these days; it's a police state over there now especially around Xinjiang

    • @realWorsin
      @realWorsin 5 місяців тому

      This statement is false. Hair does not do that over time. Many mummified Blacks were found and they all continue to have black hair.
      This is a myth and was debunked many years ago. People in that area DID have reddish, blonde and brown hair as well as black hair. @@lenabreijer1311

  • @TheGribblesnitch
    @TheGribblesnitch 5 місяців тому +77

    I was rather surprised to see how prevalent tartan is in East Africa. In a lot of documentaries from the Ethiopian highlands you will see people clad in tartan, and the Masai of Kenya seem to wear quite a bit of tartan as well.
    Top notch stuff as always

    • @xtramail4909
      @xtramail4909 5 місяців тому +2

      I thought Scottish brought tartan to Africa

    • @andrewharper3165
      @andrewharper3165 5 місяців тому +19

      As Bruce Fummey and Mr Mcdonald, the expert, already stated there are indigenous produced tartans from all over the world.

    • @jacksimpson-rogers1069
      @jacksimpson-rogers1069 5 місяців тому +3

      One Edinburgh Castle espanade, in Festival time, I saw a splendid Gurkha Pipe Band.
      Also the smartest man I know is Maasai, from Kenya and has a degree from MIT.

    • @Taliesin-xd7ke
      @Taliesin-xd7ke 5 місяців тому

      @@xtramail4909 a glimpse of, before the bullets hit.

    • @alecmisra4964
      @alecmisra4964 4 місяці тому +2

      Probably indicative of scythian migration.

  • @GraemeCampbellMusic
    @GraemeCampbellMusic 5 місяців тому +49

    Thanks for that Bruce. It's always been funny to me seeing people on clan history FB pages arguing about "authentic" tartans etc when that family element is such a recent invention. There's also the Roman era "Falkirk Tartan" that was found with a horde of Roman coins years ago. There's not usually much mention of it.

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +18

      Whilst Peter and I discussed it in the background he tells me that the GlenAfric was the first 'true tartan'

    • @GraemeCampbellMusic
      @GraemeCampbellMusic 5 місяців тому +2

      @@ScotlandHistoryTours Ah fair enough

    • @therabbithole-sn5yb
      @therabbithole-sn5yb 5 місяців тому +2

      Yes, the Falkirk tartan is not mentioned as much as it should be, because it's not as Peter described "true tartan" or asymmetrical, but it is still a tartan weave & even though the older tartans aren't asymmetrical they shouldn't be discounted by historians as not "true tartan" because tartan has been a part of Scotland's history all the way back to the picts & Roman occupied Britain. Roman writers wrote about the colorful checked patterns of the picts & celts. But just as the English wanted, which was why the dress act was written, now even the Scottish historians act like Tartan was meaningless & just an English invention...😂

  • @euansmith3699
    @euansmith3699 5 місяців тому +17

    I find it amazing that it is possible to do isotope analysis on wool that been buried in a peat bog for 400+ years! Science, eh?! 😍
    "Of which more later..." Peter MacDonald knows who to keep his audience hooked. 👍
    It is weird how recently many of our "ancient traditions" were created. The Victorians have a lot to answer for. 😄

  • @frankhancock2881
    @frankhancock2881 5 місяців тому +64

    This was a eye opening trip through tartan. I never knew the history was so deep. Thank you Peter for all your work and Bruce as always wonderful job

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +4

      Glad you enjoyed it

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 5 місяців тому +1

      ScotlandHistory...not a tartan...but I still have my Avoca Tweed jacket and cap...maybe time to let go...

    • @frankhancock2881
      @frankhancock2881 5 місяців тому +1

      @eamonnclabby7067
      To us Americans the tartan is that most recognition part of Scottish historical and war. So don't feel negative about the comment that an American cares enough about another country to delve into tartans and kills and meanings of them all. And about the highland and lowland clearance

    • @frankhancock2881
      @frankhancock2881 5 місяців тому +4

      Those very clearance are what brought my coal mining great great grandfather to Virginia and into the Appalachian mount8to mine for coal

  • @JACK_TheAllSeeingEye
    @JACK_TheAllSeeingEye 5 місяців тому +25

    The earliest description of a Scot tartan is found in a 1503 manuscript....the 1503 MacIver. This tartan was the base for the first Campbell tartan, as all Campbell's had their origins in Clan Iver....and as such it is also the base for the Black Watch who were originally Campbells commissioned by the king.
    Clan Iver!

  • @YourContentSucks.
    @YourContentSucks. 5 місяців тому +35

    2024. A mixed dude with dreads and the thickest Scottish accent is telling me about tarten. What a time to be alive.

  • @allisonshaw9341
    @allisonshaw9341 5 місяців тому +10

    Great work, and I learned quite a bit I wasn't aware of. Thanks, Bruce!
    I wear a Clan Shaw tartan sash with my Cherokee regalia as a nod to Dad's side of the family. Strangely enough, its white folks I get the most comments from about doing that. I tell them that in the early days, since most transported Scots weren't exactly warmly welcomed by English colonists, many of them went up into the Appalachians and settled near or among the various tribes living there, and frequently married in. A look at the rolls of the Cherokee and Muskoki tribes in particular looks almost like a roll call of the Clans because of this. Also, the children of these marriages were referred to as the Blessed Blend because of their extraordinary beauty, talent, and form, having inherited the best of both lineages. As I honor both sides of my ancestry, it just simply made sense.
    A Cherokee artist (Cherokee Nation of Oklahoma) named Martha Berry has used tartan to make several bandolier bags for both men's and women's regalia, embellished with traditional beadwork. They are stunning (and quite pricey, too).

    • @jacquelineleitch7050
      @jacquelineleitch7050 4 місяці тому +1

      Here’s a Canadian aspect funny true story. A FN friend of mine was giving flak to a woman about assimilation of FN designs in Canadian clothing. As my FN friend then related the story, the woman responded to her saying “well look at you wearing tartans and plaids isn’t that assimilation” to which my FN friend responded without any sense of the irony “so I’m not allowed to wear clothes now?” I was so dumbfounded when she related this story to me that I had nowhere to begin. The Celts and FN have come a long way together in Canada. In many ways both tribal cultures were well to have found each other; given what was coming down the tracks (so to speak). As to how I responded to my friend, I just let it go as I knew that her concept of the tribalism of the tartan wasn’t clear to her and it wasn’t her intention to downplay that. I should have maybe explained it to her. Later

  • @ianpattison841
    @ianpattison841 5 місяців тому +14

    Really fascinating, as a sassenach I am actually entitled to wear my tartan and a kilt, a black and grey. The ancient Northumberland plaid. I plan to wear it at my wedding in January 2025, ready to repel any incursions from north of the wall!
    Thanks for the programmes.

  • @LeeGee
    @LeeGee 5 місяців тому +10

    That is a beautiful museum.

  • @bluered3228
    @bluered3228 5 місяців тому +8

    As an American who just discovered my 11th-9th great grandfathers were Campbells from Skipness, this was fascinating. Thank you.

    • @pjmoseley243
      @pjmoseley243 5 місяців тому +2

      why cant Scotland, Ireland and Wales have a TARTAN FLAG?

  • @-Pol-
    @-Pol- 5 місяців тому +15

    My understanding is that the oldest UK "Tartan" was discovered in an earthenware pot filled with silver coins, at the Antonine Wall in Falkirk, Scotland. This fragment, known as the Falkirk tartan or Falkirk sett, is currently the earliest check fragment found in the British Isles and dates back to Roman Britain times (around the 3rd century AD). It is actually more a tweed than a tartan in weaving style. This very plain check is available today as Northumbrian tartan which, as a descendant of Border Reiver clan, would be my personal choice. I particularly like that it's a historic and generic pattern and as such predates all the commercial tartanry of the 19th Century.

    • @skellagyook
      @skellagyook 4 місяці тому +1

      I was about to comment that. Tartan patterns are also found for on the ancient Bronze Age Celtic Hallstatt Culture in the Switzerland/Austria region, and are attested throughout ancient Gaul, Britain, and Ireland (as well as among the Balts, Slavs, and perhaps some Germanic peoples).

  • @hollywebster6844
    @hollywebster6844 5 місяців тому +13

    Americans can become quite heated in discussing "family tartan". I was surprised to learn that the codification of tartan only dates from 1815! Some of my US brethren act as though their clan tartan dates back thousands of years.

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +5

      I know. It's one of the things that makes us smile

    • @leslie4351
      @leslie4351 5 місяців тому +3

      Ah... ignorance is bliss!! And I'm an American! I'm of the "Nobragger" Clan!!! 😂

    • @hollywebster6844
      @hollywebster6844 4 місяці тому

      @@ScotlandHistoryTours Sometimes I think we just like to argue and try to "one up" each other. 🙄

    • @mandaout2427
      @mandaout2427 4 місяці тому

      Americans were the absolute worst tourists in Scotland.

    • @silverlaptop2022
      @silverlaptop2022 2 місяці тому +1

      Clan MacDonald here in Washington state West coast 🌹

  • @joshg9641
    @joshg9641 5 місяців тому +19

    Sometimes I’m happy to fit the description of the American who doesn’t know anything except his family name tied to a fun video. Thank you Bruce for giving my wife and I something to be happy about. “A Gordon for me” singing was perfect. Thank you for keeping us humble while enabling us to reach back into a culture that we feel apart of. Bydand!

  • @joanhuffman2166
    @joanhuffman2166 5 місяців тому +14

    I know wool is traditional, but I wish the manufacturers would notice the very large number of people with Scottish family names who live in warmer latitudes in the US, Australia, etc. My brother-in-law is a McLaughlin who lives on the US border with Mexico and suffers from the heat. Cotton tartans might not be strictly traditional, but I'm sure they would be popular. Also, I'm sure the improved opportunity to see men in kilts would be appreciated everywhere.

    • @leslie4351
      @leslie4351 5 місяців тому +3

      I guess they don't want to change traditional grade for the sake of modernality...?

    • @joanhuffman2166
      @joanhuffman2166 5 місяців тому +5

      @leslie4351 adding cotton to production is not "changing" tradition. That would be particularly silly since the whole idea of family tartans was made up in the 19th century. Adding a line of tartans in cotton increases their opportunity to sell products in more parts of the world. Would it improve my own opportunity to see men in kilts? Yes, yes, it would.

    • @rickmoore3730
      @rickmoore3730 5 місяців тому +4

      @@joanhuffman2166 There are lots of tartans available in poly-viscose that are both cheaper and cooler to wear . Also although not as good for kilt making 12 ounce wool would also not be as hot to wear .

    • @joanhuffman2166
      @joanhuffman2166 5 місяців тому +5

      @rickmoore3730 My brother-in-law almost had heat stroke wearing his kilt at the wedding in Spring in El Paso, Texas. We're on the same latitude as Tripoli Libya.

    • @rickmoore3730
      @rickmoore3730 5 місяців тому +3

      @@joanhuffman2166 I am in southern Ontario ,Canada . Even Virginia in summer is very hot / humid for me . The problem with light weight wool ( 12 ounce ) or light weight cotton is it won't hold pleats that well and will crease like crazy . I have one 14 ounce eight yard kilt that is good for summer here but the rest are 16 ounce kilts . Also for hotter weather a four yard kilt would be more suitable as there is no re -enforcing in the waist as with an eight yard kilt . Even here I tend to leave the eight yard kilts for the slightly cooler to cold weather . And remember , a kilt is only hot around the waist . It is pretty neutral for the rest of it . A four yard poly-viscose or wool kilt is the best way to go down there .

  • @kathleennagwak1761
    @kathleennagwak1761 5 місяців тому +9

    I always thought tartan’s history went back hundreds of years. Thank you for the video.

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому

      You're welcome

    • @suem6004
      @suem6004 5 місяців тому +1

      Nope. All marketing a false legend of family tartans

  • @sarahcarnithan6771
    @sarahcarnithan6771 5 місяців тому +17

    What a beautiful museum!!!

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +5

      Indeed

    • @DawnDavidson
      @DawnDavidson 5 місяців тому

      I LOVE the design of the museum displays! The pattern of the beams and the display windows being a tartan design itself is just genius. Subtle, clever, elegant. Whoever designed this museum should have won an award, and I hope they did!

  • @nickelei
    @nickelei 4 місяці тому +3

    From nova scotia, I did highland dance for years as a kid. At some point my parents got my own kilt and wool socks, as well as a sash for the lilt and flora, done up in with our familys tartan for my competition dances. I still love those pieces from my childhood.

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  4 місяці тому

      I hope you're coming to see my show in Halifax, New Glasgwo or Annapolis

  • @jacqueline4905
    @jacqueline4905 5 місяців тому +5

    It's always been my understanding that the plaid was coloured by the use of local plants. Mine's muted pink and yellow and tis beautiful 😊.
    Thanks Bruce and Peter.

  • @Stick3x
    @Stick3x 5 місяців тому +3

    My mothers family (Clan Elliott) were exiled from Scotland to Jamaica hundreds of years ago. Thanks for sharing. I love learning and piecing together our history.

  • @Wee_Langside
    @Wee_Langside 5 місяців тому +13

    Good stuff Bruce,
    The history of Tartan is fascinating, many years ago The The Museum of Scottish Tartan in Comrie Perthshire had a piece of the Tartan Alan Bean took to the Moon, on loan.
    It's said while he was there Alan Bean claimed the Moon for the MacBean Clan. Making the Moon, or at worst the Ocean of Storms Scottish.

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +2

      I suspect that museum was run by Peter

    • @Wee_Langside
      @Wee_Langside 5 місяців тому +4

      @@ScotlandHistoryTours Quite possibly, we would have visited round about 1990. I have a picture of my middle son wearing a kilt they had there when he was about 8 years old.

  • @Q_z_
    @Q_z_ 5 місяців тому +8

    I respect your ability to interject at appropriate times to ask questions, clarify, and demonstrate your engagement in the topic. It helped me digest the food of information much better and set the tone of the video as more conversational than something like a lecture. Your guide clearly had lots to share, and it's unfortunate the time was limited... Thank you both for the interesting introduction into tartans!

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +1

      Who knows, maybe we'll get him back for a longer episode at some point

    • @chrise.321
      @chrise.321 5 місяців тому +1

      Yes! Maybe the guide will be allowed to finish his sentences next time without you interrupting to repeat what he just said.

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому

      @@chrise.321 Stop yer nonsense

    • @lizzy66125
      @lizzy66125 4 місяці тому

      that would be good.​@@ScotlandHistoryTours

  • @SugarandSarcasm
    @SugarandSarcasm 5 місяців тому +12

    Haven't looked up the ancestor's tartan in a while. With the information in your video to go on as well, it doesn't show up earlier than in the Stuart's book.
    A great watch as always 😊

  • @resourcedragon
    @resourcedragon 5 місяців тому +23

    It's fascinating to see how vibrant they managed to make those early tartans, even although they were working with plant dyes.

  • @therabbithole-sn5yb
    @therabbithole-sn5yb 5 місяців тому +16

    Another great educational video, but one that leaves me with so many ?s this topic always has though. It is a true shame that after Culloden so much of our history was lost, because if there wasn't a real significance to tartan (like historians claim) then why ban it in the 1st place? I guess we wont ever really know... Till next time ❤️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @nancyholcombe8030
    @nancyholcombe8030 5 місяців тому +21

    Thank you Bruce for the tour of this museum and the knowledge of Peter! He answered so many questions (and arguments! Ahem!) that I've had with folks over the years about what a tartan really is and who first started the fashion! This would include 'knowledgeable' people with degrees in this type of stuff over here across the pond! Informative and entertaining as always! Happy Christmas to you and yours!😊

  • @yanina.korolko
    @yanina.korolko 4 місяці тому +4

    Thank you! Very informative about the tartan!
    Etymology:
    Blend of Middle English tartaryn (“rich material”), from Middle French tartarin (“Tartar cloth”), and Middle French tiretaine (“cloth of mixed fibers”), from Old French tiret (“kind of cloth”), from tire (“oriental cloth of silk”), from Medieval Latin tyrius (“material from Tyre”), from Latin Tyrus (“Tyre”).

  • @Sunshine-zm1fx
    @Sunshine-zm1fx 5 місяців тому +3

    I would definitely visit the museum. I've been interested in tartans since the late 80s. The designs and history are so fascinating.

  • @breadbunbun
    @breadbunbun 5 місяців тому +6

    I was just looking into the history of tartans jist a few days ago, and suddenly this! You must be readin my mind man!

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +6

      I send faireies through your Alexa

    • @SugarandSarcasm
      @SugarandSarcasm 5 місяців тому +2

      He's the one in your phone, listening to your every word.

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 5 місяців тому

      ​@@ScotlandHistoryToursTom Sleman writes a lot about them on haunted Wirral...on the Wirral Globe website

  • @raydriver7300
    @raydriver7300 5 місяців тому +4

    What an interesting video with two really passionate Scots. I noticed the tartan telephone box (TARDIS?) at 10.46 and the dialogue on tartan paint was hilarious. Keep ‘em coming, Bruce and compliments of the season to you and yours 🌞

  • @LungsOutJem
    @LungsOutJem 5 місяців тому +8

    This is exactly why I subscribed. 😊

  • @JElAlicanto
    @JElAlicanto 5 місяців тому +4

    Clan Boyd here Have a great Christmas man

  • @kirkmorrison6131
    @kirkmorrison6131 5 місяців тому +4

    Great video, it was interesting to see the couple of early tartan. I reenacted The 45 so i knew the no clan tartans until after the 45

  • @SamM_Scot
    @SamM_Scot 5 місяців тому +6

    I'm a very proud Scot and love learning about our history. Thank you so much for this great insightful channel :-)

  • @createlovehappy
    @createlovehappy 5 місяців тому +3

    My Sharp Family history goes back to the Highlands of Scotland and may be connected to the Stewart or Cameron clan.. My first name is Cameron so my parents were proud of where we came from. BTW, My grandmother ran up the stairs until she was in her 80's, then she walked up. I take my inspiration from her and always take the stairs. Keeps me healthy.

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому

      Aye, I bet her UA-cam videos were nae guid though😂

    • @allie1953
      @allie1953 4 місяці тому

      My mother too (may she rest in peace), bounding up the stairs, two at a time, well into her seventies, then slowed down to one stair at a time in her eighties but still quite rapidly! Your comment brought me back to that funny memory...

  • @cherbinsted2378
    @cherbinsted2378 5 місяців тому +11

    That was absolutely fascinating. Thank you Bruce from far away and currently very soggy northern end of Queensland Australia after cyclone Jasper.

  • @FERALDOG4
    @FERALDOG4 5 місяців тому +3

    Man I wanna visit that museum!

  • @danieltaylor5231
    @danieltaylor5231 5 місяців тому +2

    Just when we thought Bruce would wear a tartan for a video. Thank you for another excellent video Bruce.

  • @rickmoore3730
    @rickmoore3730 5 місяців тому +2

    Wonderful video Bruce . My turn to name drop . I bought a kilt from a site in Scotland that sells used highland wear . I saw a kilt ( much too large ) in Wilsons of Bannockburn colour palette and bought it . The tartan was woven by Peter MacDonald whom I had never heard of . When I told the kiltmaker in Vancouver who was going to rebuild the kilt that it was woven by Peter he was gob smacked . He ended up preserving as much of the material as he could because of that . I was chuffed having a kilt in the Wilsons colours but now knowing Peter was involved takes it to a whole different level .Cheers .

  • @glypnir
    @glypnir 5 місяців тому +2

    Fascinating. Especially that the Bean tartan apparently went to the moon. That’s the clan of my Scots ancestors. I had a tie with that tartan. I’ll have to see if I’ve still got it.

  • @superladyloraine
    @superladyloraine 5 місяців тому +2

    You and your TEAM are amazing! Thank you so much for all you do #believeitanditwillbe 🙏🏻♥️🕊️✨✨👑👑🎶♾️🌊🏝️☀️🌙🗺️

  • @ThatElfTorunn
    @ThatElfTorunn 5 місяців тому +6

    MacDonald on both sides of my lineage. Clanranald on my mums side and MacDonald of the Isles on my dad's. Loved this video, great stuff as always Bruce!

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +2

      Glad you enjoyed it!

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 5 місяців тому +1

      My Uncle Archie RIP was a descendant of the McDonald's of Glencoe...apart from my Aunt, all of them have migrated around the world....cheers/ slainte...E...

    • @davidgray3321
      @davidgray3321 4 місяці тому

      My grandmother also, she absolutely loathed Campbells which seems rather negative but to her it was very important. She was born in the rain of Victoria, her father was a Pipe Major who fought in Sudan, the Boer war, and finally ran out of luck on the Somme in 1916, I have his obituary. He was 54.

    • @davidgray3321
      @davidgray3321 4 місяці тому

      Sorry I misspelt Reign, I am a poor speller

  • @user-xk4pc4mv8d
    @user-xk4pc4mv8d 5 місяців тому +1

    Hi there thank you for another awesome episode big fan
    My mother’s mother were weavers of tartan way back when and my many times great grandad was a weaver and the Scandinavian side from mother’s father side were weavers
    And I’m proud of not just my Scottish roots but also my weaving heritage
    My 5th great granny was Lady Forbes who designed the Forbes tartan in 1780
    Thanks to Peter who I bought the wool from yrs ago I recreated the 1780 Forbes tartan
    as a university project and I still have it and love it

  • @Syl-Vee
    @Syl-Vee 5 місяців тому +2

    Thanks for a very informative episode.

  • @brodyrobertson8887
    @brodyrobertson8887 5 місяців тому +2

    Another great video Bruce 🇨🇦 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @user-ik2db9ww5v
    @user-ik2db9ww5v 5 місяців тому +1

    Fascinating Bruce - thank you!

  • @ChristinaMacDonald777
    @ChristinaMacDonald777 5 місяців тому +3

    Great video!💪🏞🌠
    Loved learning the tartan history. Had not ever heard history on tartans before.
    Loved this!

  • @ericthompson3982
    @ericthompson3982 5 місяців тому +2

    Thanks for this one, Bruce! Excellent!

  • @MarkPhilp1970
    @MarkPhilp1970 5 місяців тому +1

    That was a brilliant episode big fella. 👍🏻👍🏻

  • @johnnyphoenix1223
    @johnnyphoenix1223 5 місяців тому +1

    Thanks for another fascinating video

  • @lelleithmurray235
    @lelleithmurray235 5 місяців тому +1

    Fascinating look into tartan!

  • @taniakaratau5654
    @taniakaratau5654 5 місяців тому +4

    Love this!! I follow the Tartan website too very informative vid now for the kilts Thankyou Bruce! ❤

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +1

      Brilliant

    • @eamonnclabby7067
      @eamonnclabby7067 5 місяців тому

      ​@@ScotlandHistoryToursAnna from Ukraine ,sometimes wears something similar to a McDonald tartan...I,m such a nerd...😅😅😅😅

  • @footshotstube
    @footshotstube 5 місяців тому +1

    thankyou for still remaining to be one of the only genuine content creators on this dying platform

  • @edithengel2284
    @edithengel2284 5 місяців тому

    Thank you so much; this was wonderful.

  • @lizard6444
    @lizard6444 4 місяці тому

    Thank you Bruce for a wonderfully educational video! I'd love to visit some day.

  • @goofyvideosofthecat
    @goofyvideosofthecat 5 місяців тому +1

    Love the bit where you start up the stairs, look up and then head to the lift 😂 We are obviously the same age!

  • @sandylee9564
    @sandylee9564 5 місяців тому +2

    Just facinating. Who could have guessed that marketing played such a large part in 'the " fantasized Myth" of the Tartan. I had visions of the clan McDonald and McCleod proudly wearing their clan tartan up in the highlands of Scotland and that was one way of identifying themselves during battles....no other rival clan would dare wear the tartan of another clan......Big Sigh here....but that was just a romanticized version of the early life of a tartan. My brain has got to update my visions of how the early clanspeople of the Highlands dressed.!!! Thank you Bruce.

  • @samuellecalvez6699
    @samuellecalvez6699 5 місяців тому +1

    Scottish history is interesting, but that man make it so much better!
    You have to be interested by a man who loves a subject that much !
    Keep up the good work, you've just gained a binge watcher subscriber!

  • @janetmackinnon3411
    @janetmackinnon3411 5 місяців тому +1

    Thank you---I'll follow up the reference.

  • @debbybrady1246
    @debbybrady1246 5 місяців тому +1

    That was very interesting.

  • @quinntheeskimooutdoors6234
    @quinntheeskimooutdoors6234 Місяць тому

    Thanks for sharing 😊

  • @sarimento1
    @sarimento1 5 місяців тому

    Lord Bruce! Fun and interesting! Stair climb alone worthy of $Thanks!

  • @JamesFromTexas
    @JamesFromTexas 5 місяців тому +5

    Awesome as always! As an American obsessed with family history, I've always wondered why it seems we are more inclined to dig up our ancestry and their respective histories. Maybe we're not more inclined its just that I'm into it and have a bias. I don't know, just something that popped into my head. Anyways, again, great video!

    • @samwallaceart288
      @samwallaceart288 5 місяців тому

      Americans created their own identity when they moved to the New World; it's only natural many of us feel a need to reconnect and ground ourselves when our ancestors aren't buried right beneath us.
      To me, the more I find out about my family's ancient history, the more it sounds like something my family would do. My mom's family was always British with some German stock, and traveled all the way from New England to Kentucky setting up missions and churches, but Benedict Arnold had a huge falling out with America when he threw them under the bus for his British connections, and he spent the rest of his life floating around in England not really welcome or respected by anyone and completely alienated; which 100% sounds like something my grandparents would have ended up pitfalling into.
      Meanwhile all the American Wallaces have been hard-headed wannabe-intellectuals bravely putting up with rough work conditions while only _just barely_ getting along with their boss, until one gets fed up, burns all their bridges, and moves out further West, which is 100% my dad all over.
      Right now back in NY area I know these NY natives who are very similar; hard-headed wannabe-intellectuals who always push for what they want despite the dirty jobs they work at and their persistent people-problems; sure enough, their grandma was a Wallace; a photo of one of my great-aunts is in their living room.
      To a guy who grew up in Asia with family all over the world at this point, seeing that was mindblowing.

  • @jerrellarmstrong7026
    @jerrellarmstrong7026 4 місяці тому

    Glad I came across your channel.

  • @j.svensson7652
    @j.svensson7652 4 місяці тому

    I have several family tartans so this drew me in and imagine my surprise to see Hamish! Made me smile!

  • @annfahy2589
    @annfahy2589 4 місяці тому

    Really fascinating 👏 👌

  • @DuncanMcintyre-jk3qb
    @DuncanMcintyre-jk3qb 5 місяців тому

    Great vidya brucey-fella as always

  • @kellyburgess671
    @kellyburgess671 5 місяців тому +1

    SOOOOO interesting...

  • @MAMDAVEM
    @MAMDAVEM 5 місяців тому

    fascinating stuff

  • @ellennoblitt7728
    @ellennoblitt7728 4 місяці тому

    This is so cool !

  • @EliRedman
    @EliRedman 5 місяців тому

    Love this!! The bit about China blew my mind. That's really something.

  • @jessiejoseph1093
    @jessiejoseph1093 4 місяці тому

    Great video!

  • @bevinboulder5039
    @bevinboulder5039 5 місяців тому

    Loved the switch to the elevator!

  • @joelsmart8894
    @joelsmart8894 5 місяців тому

    Love to hear how the Smarts or Smearts have in common with the McDonalds in Scotland? Just found my family heritage of Scottish roots and tree from there, thanks and really love your shows and views and keep it coming please. Learning so much, thanks!!!!

  • @TheWizardOfGore89
    @TheWizardOfGore89 5 місяців тому

    Awesome!

  • @erinf4810
    @erinf4810 5 місяців тому

    Brilliant. Wow

  • @AlexanderTheHighlander
    @AlexanderTheHighlander 5 місяців тому +2

    Passed you on the way back from Abernathy the day I think ?😂😂😂
    Made my day 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿💪🏻
    Cheers for the vids Bruce 😎

  • @kkupsky6321
    @kkupsky6321 5 місяців тому

    Great video.

  • @tiffanyannhowe1712
    @tiffanyannhowe1712 5 місяців тому

    I’m late in late I’m late!! 6 hours late! 😂 super glad it’s Saturday. My entire tribe is sick with a tummy bug. Perfect excuse to lay in bed watching Mr. Fummey videos 👍🏼👍🏼
    Oh!! Bruce!! I have an exciting update! My eldest college student will hop on over to your beautiful country for the spring semester!! Uni of Edinburgh here she comes!! I’ve been sharing your videos with her for a few years. Now they mean a little bit more to me. 🖤🖤
    I will now go watch your video. 😊

  • @barbarasmith6249
    @barbarasmith6249 5 місяців тому

    Thanks!

  • @gerrimilner9448
    @gerrimilner9448 5 місяців тому

    facinating

  • @angelhelp
    @angelhelp 5 місяців тому +1

    My grandmother was a Gordon. I had no idea that there was an entire museum devoted to the Gordon name… wow!

  • @happygrandma5637
    @happygrandma5637 5 місяців тому

    Absolutely fascinating video Bruce. THANK YOU.
    At :26 I immediately went to the Kung Fu Panda movie when says 'ah, my old enemy.....stairs'. My favorite line from that movie. I'm with you Bruce, actually ahead of you as I wouldn't have gotten up the 1st set of stairs. At 1:00 "I'm a stairs guy" Well played.

  • @papajahko7121
    @papajahko7121 5 місяців тому +1

    Brilliant exhibition at the VnA in Dundee……..really interesting to learn of the connections with Tartan weave & Slavery…..also how Tartan was worn by some freed slaves as an act of rebellion…….as an auld Punk this resonated with me as I’ve always ‘claimed’ tartan as a sign of rebellion…….wear it with Pride 👍
    Also after our visit to the exhibition me n the wifey made our way to the Taybridge bar tae pay homage tae the great Michael Marra/Frida Kahlo….& a few beers as well !

  • @DouglasJenkins
    @DouglasJenkins 5 місяців тому +3

    ... and remember a 'plaid' is a blanket, not the pattern!

  • @hollyboomagoo69
    @hollyboomagoo69 5 місяців тому +3

    Awesome that you’re coming to Canada !!! Any chance you would add a show on the mainland in British Columbia, Victoria on Vancouver Island is expensive and a bit of a hassle to get to , if i could suggest a show in Kelowna or Vancouver proper ( on the mainland) , love this channel/ you !!

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  5 місяців тому +1

      I should be doign a show in Vancouver on 12th July. I couldn't get anyone from any of the Kelowna theatres to answer an email

    • @hollyboomagoo69
      @hollyboomagoo69 5 місяців тому

      Awesome, you could try soec too, south okanogan events centre in penticton or sagebrush theatre in Kamloops ot maybe Creekside theatre in lake country

    • @ScotlandHistoryTours
      @ScotlandHistoryTours  4 місяці тому

      Here's a link to my show in Vancouver on 12th July tinyurl.com/StoriesofScotland

  • @jeffreyhoadley5697
    @jeffreyhoadley5697 4 місяці тому

    Your audio is awesome

  • @iamauntmeem
    @iamauntmeem 5 місяців тому

    More about the tartan!

  • @mary-anneswanson1428
    @mary-anneswanson1428 5 місяців тому

    Loved the video and Im sure my Gran would have had some strong opinions about it lol. She was from the highlands and a very proud Scot :) My Mom was born in Inverness and our clan is the Stewart clan. Plus (,rumour has it ) one half of a rather fracus dinner party that didnt end well . I plan to save this video and see what my friend (MacGregor ) thinks of it :)

  • @peromalmstrom7668
    @peromalmstrom7668 5 місяців тому +5

    A brilliant, truthful, honest review of Tartan, where large screen movies meet the reckoning between fact and fiction. Even the origin of the word 'Tartan' is disputed between English, Scots and French meaning of 'linsey-woolsey cloth'; though Scottish Gaelic 'tarsainn' meaning, 'across/crossing over' is also claimed. Fascinating and intriguing, though throws-up questions of whom owns what in national ownership or origin of symbolism, that is weaved into and effects modern views on Nationalism. Maybe 'Tartan', taking the meaning 'across/crossing over', is a lesson to us all, that it is better and stronger to be intwined than to be separated by misplaced historical assertions, perceptions or even untruths in the cause of Nationalism within the islands of the United Kingdom.

    • @resourcedragon
      @resourcedragon 5 місяців тому +1

      Well, linsey-woolsey was originally a fairly cheap cloth with a linen warp and a woollen weft. That really wouldn't work for tartans as shown, which (at least in Scotland) would have been woollen.
      EDIT: also, it is very difficult to dye a plant fibre and a protein fibre the same shade with the same dye. Again, linsey-woolsey is going to make achieving equal warp and weft thread counts difficult. This is why linsey-woolsey works a lot better for denim-like fabrics.

    • @euansmith3699
      @euansmith3699 5 місяців тому

      @@resourcedragon Linsey Woolsey would make a great name for a sightly delicate character in a novel.

    • @jackdubz4247
      @jackdubz4247 5 місяців тому

      "...it is better and stronger to be intwined than to be separated by misplaced historical assertions, perceptions or even untruths in the cause of Nationalism within the islands of the United Kingdom." What a weaselly comment. The UK is not, and will never be, about intertwining anything. It's always been about the submission, subjugation and assimilation of the non-English peoples of the island of Britain along with their respective cultures into the English way of doing things. The truth is we don't need to be together to live together. We never have.

  • @shinrapresident7010
    @shinrapresident7010 5 місяців тому +1

    I'm Scottish Canadian, my father's last name is Bigley. He's operated the Highland games in Fergus, Ontario several times and I want to learn more about my family's clan and history but I just am *not* on good terms with my father at all. I would love to know if there's a way for me to learn more about my culture and history without having to go through him. I used to have our clan symbol and Tartan but suffered a house fire in 2009 and lost everything. You earned a new subscriber.

    • @davidgray3321
      @davidgray3321 4 місяці тому

      I have no knowledge to assist you but wish you good luck, keep looking and the family fire alight. Yours David.

  • @100nanay
    @100nanay 4 місяці тому

    Outlander has made me a Scot lover!

  • @kayallen7603
    @kayallen7603 5 місяців тому +1

    Oh my! You're coming to Canada!

  • @silvertongue3003
    @silvertongue3003 5 місяців тому

    OMG I wish I could move to Scotland, just to hear people speaking with this beautiful accent all day long! 🥰

  • @user-of9ij5yf1y
    @user-of9ij5yf1y 4 місяці тому

    Wish you’d bring your stories to Kansas! There’s a Scottish festival every year in McPherson! Love your show!!