Origins of
the clans :
The word clann in Gaelic means children of the family. Each clan
was a large group of related people, theoretically an extended family,
supposedly descended from one progenitor and all owing allegiance
to the patriarchal clan chief. It also included a large group of
loosely-related septs – related families - all of whom looked
to the clan chief as their head and their protector.
Some clans such as Clan Campbell and
Clan Donald claim ancient Celtic mythological progenitors mentioned
in the Fenian cycle, with a group including Clan MacSween, Clan
Lamont, Clan Erinvines, Clan MacEwen, Clan MacLachlan, and MacNeil
tracing their ancestry back to the 5th century High King of Ireland.
Others such as Clan MacAulay, Clan MacKinnon and Clan MacGregor
claim descent from the Scots King Kenneth Mac Alpin who made himself
King of the Picts in 843, founding the Kingdom called after the
name of the land Alba (modern-day Scotland). The MacDonalds and
MacDougalls claim descent from Somerled, the half-Gael/half-Norse-Manx
Lord of the Isles in the mid-11th century.
Though the clans had always been a feature of pre-Christian Ireland
and Scotland, they first emerged into English consciousness from
the turmoil of the 12th and 13th centuries when the Scottish crown
pacified northern rebellions and re-conquered areas taken by the
Norse, and after the fall of Macbeth when the crown became increasingly
Anglo-Norman. This turmoil created opportunities for Norse, Scottish
and English warlords and their kin to dominate areas, and the instability
of the Wars of Scottish Independence brought in warlords with Anglo-Norman,
Anglian and Flemish ancestry, founding clans such as the Camerons,
Chisholms, Menzies and Grants. |