Historical Tartan Wear
However history clearly shows that the
kilt and tartans have been the true dress of Scots people for as long
as their history has been recorded. Indeed there is still a sample of
a small piece of Scottish brown and white tartan which was originally
used as a stopper for an earthenware pot. This contained a treasure trove
of silver coins and was found close to a Roman wall near Falkirk. This
tartan cloth appears to have been buried in the third century.
There are also other references to tartans
in various historic documents and paintings. For example, a charter granted to Hector
Maclean of Duart in 1587 for land in the neighbouring Isle of Islay details
a rental payable in 60 ells of white, black and green colours. This is
very similar to the pattern now being worn as the current Maclean Hunting
tartan.
One account of the Battle of Killiecranke
in 1689 described McDonnell’s men as being in a triple stripe. (However,
it would be fair to assume that local communities would normally wear
the cloth produced by their local weaver in quantities that would limit
the number of different patterns. Invariably, most men of the district
would be dressed in similar material.)
Whilst the wearing of the Tartan was a
distinctive form of identity enabling friend or foe to be recognised other
forms of identity such as flags, standards, shields, feathers and plants.
One story tells how a wounded clansman on the battlefield was nearly killed
by his own side until he announced who he was to be told "we did
not recognise you without your bonnet". Evidently the tartan of the
kilt was not able to show to which clan he belonged.
|