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Sketches of The
Character, Manners, and Present State of the Highlanders of Scotland |
Appendix
Q,
Page 101. Patronymics
In the Highlands, where so many of the same name live
in the same district or glen, some denomination for distinguishing
individuals beyond that of the generic name is indispensable. In the late
Sutherland Fencible Regiment there were 17 William Mackays in Captain
Sackville Sutherland's company, and 104 in the regiment. When the 2d
battalion of the 78th Highlanders was raised in 1801, an ensign from
Ross-shire brought 18 men of his own name, of Macrae, as part of his
complement of 20, for an ensigncy. On the estates of many noblemen and
gentlemen, the number of their own surnames is often beyond all proportion
greater than any others. On a part of the estate of Menzies, running four
miles along one side of a valley, on the banks of the Tay, there are 502
of the Chief's name, descendants of his family. Many similar instances are
still to be met with where gentlemen have retained their ancient tenantry.
In Athole, an extensive district of Perthshire, there were, fifty years
ago, 36 landholders of the name of Stewart: there are still 23; and in Athole, Strathearn, and Monteith, there are 5000 people of that name, of
whom upwards of 1800 are descendents of Neil Stewart of Garth, who died in
1433. In such communities, the want of some distinguishing appellation
would lead to confusion. These distinctions were generally made as
follows: In the case of a chief by using singly, and by way of
distinction, the denomination of son of the first founder, or most
renowned man of the family; as, for example, the Duke of Argyll, who is
styled Mac Caillain Mor, [Although Mor is great, the word does not
always mean great power, or superior talent. It was more frequently given
to men of large size, or portly persons.] the son of the great Colin;
Mac Connel Dhu, the son of Donald the Black, the name of the chiefs of
the Camerons. Under this head there was another distinctions. Chieftains,
Cean Tays, or great branches of a clan or family, were distinguished as
the sons of the first founder. Such as Breadalbane, a great branch of the
clan Campbell; Mac Caillain Macconachie, the son of Colin the son
of Duncan. [The people seldom call Lord Breadalbane by his patronymic, but
not so the Duke of Argyll, Lord Seaforth, Lord Macdonald, and many others.
Biding a few years ago through the Duke of Argyll's parks at Inverary, I
observed some young blood horses grazing. A woman happening to pass at
that time, I asked in Gaelic to whom the horses belonged. "To whom should
they belong," she answered sharply, "To whom should they belong but to Mac
Caillain? seemingly quite indignant that I should suppose that any man
could posses any thing but Mac Caillain Mor.] Lairds or landholders were
often named from their estates, as Stewart of Grandully, Stewart of Garth,
and so on; all others being distinguished by some personal mark which
might be either an accidental defect, any natural advantage, or any
singularity of colour, figure, or features. The second Marquis of Atholl
was known by the name of Ian a Bheal Mor, John with the large
mouth; John the first Duke of Atholl being blind of an eye, Ian Cam;
the first Earl of Breadalbane having a pale countenance, Ian Glas;
the second Earl, Ian Bachach, from his being lame. If a man had
no personal mark, or patrimonial distinction, he was known by adding the
name of his father, as the son of John. This perhaps ran back for three or
four generations. However absurd a long string of names may appear in
English, it is not so in Gaelic, from the facility of compounding words in
that language. |
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