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Earliest Known Date:
1778
Earliest sample certified at the Highland Society of London:-
Signed by Mrs Mackenzie of Seaforth, 1816
Earliest Recorded Source: Wilson's pattern book, 1819
Status: Public Register of All Arms and Bearings, 1949
Type: Symmetrical
Modern
Colours |
Modern
Dress |
Old
Colours |
Ancient
Colours |
Ancient
Dress
78th
Highlanders |
Hunting
Weathered-Green |
Hunting
Weathered-Brown
Who can wear the Mackenzie
Tartan? Which Sett?
If your name is Mackenzie or
one of the Sept names then you are entitled to wear the Clan
Mackenzie Tartan. Although there is no law preventing you
from wearing whatever tartan you like, there are rules of
the Scottish Clan System.
The rules of the Scottish
clan system (I quote): Excepting the "District",
"Caledonia" and "Jacobite" tartans, no one should wear a
tartan to which he is not by name or descent entitled. To do
so is foolish and ill-mannered, invites scorn, and is
contrary to the whole principle of the clan system. Nor does
one "select" tartans from this or that "line" of ancestors.
The vital question is, "To which Clan do I
belong?"
1. You "belong" to
the clan of which you bear the name or sept name.
2. You have no real right
to wear your mother's tartan unless you have taken
her name.
3. You cannot belong to
several clans at once.
4. Adherents (cliathe) of
non-clan names are, as followers, sometimes allowed to
wear the tartan (usually a hunting set if any) and to
become members of a clan society.
See also the
Constitution
of the Clan Mackenzie Society of Scotland & the
UK.
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The
Tartan
The Mackenzie Tartan
is the regimental tartan of the Seaforth Highlanders,
which were raised by Mackenzie, Earl of Seaforth in 1778.
Wilson's 1819 pattern book records various widths and
weights of cloth suitable for different ranks in the
regiment. There is a certified sample in the Collection of
the Highland Society of London, signed by Mrs Mackenzie of
Seaforth, 1816.
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The Mackenzie tartan as we know it today is a military
tartan and was developed by the Mackenzie Lord MacLeod's
73rd Highland Regiment (and continued later by the Seaforth
Highlanders), which was taken from the an early version of
the Black Watch (developed about 1729) and had Black, White
and Red lines added. Infact most clan tartans today were
developed since the military Highland Independent Companies
introduced the idea of using the pattern for identity
between 1725 and 1739. With exceptions there are very few
examples of tartan patterns being used for clan identity
prior to 1700, moreover it was the cap badge, usually a
plant or ribbon, which was used for identity. However there
is evidence that regional tartans existed. This would
explain why different tartans were seen being worn by the
same clan at the battle of Culloden.
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Sandy
MacKenzie, former President of the Clan Mackenzie
Society, with his brother George MacKenzie, Society
Council Member, in the grounds of Culloden House,
in April 1994.
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Mackenzie
Ancient Colours
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Dress
Mackenzie Ancient Colours
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Mackenzie
Old Colours
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Mackenzie Modern
Colours,
the Seaforth Highlanders set
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Dress
Mackenzie Modern Colours
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Mackenzie
Muted Brown
Now considered to be a hunting set.
(Weathered / Hunting)
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Mackenzie Muted
Green
Now considered to be a hunting set.
(Weathered / Hunting)
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Mackenzie 78th Highlanders set (1820s).
(Re-created specially for the Millennium Gathering)
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A Mackenzie
Tartan dated from 1820
Mackenzie
78th Highlanders - Re-created specially for the Millennium
Gathering
Authenticated by world
renouned tartan & weaving authority, James Scarlett, a
fresh Mackenzie tartan has been discovered,
reminiscent of the current "Ancient" colouring but with
subtle differences. The material has been woven to match the
original piece dated from the 1820s. The white stripe
originally thought to have been of silk is woven with partly
a cashmere interface.
A bolt of this material has
now been woven and if you wish to have a kilt made of this
unique set, and at the same time support the Clan Centre
Fund, then please contact: The Hon. Secretary, Susan Weinmann
- email
100% wool cloth, 54" wide, price on application.
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The Mystery
Tartan
The Mackenzies possessed the
largest single area of land in Scotland in their day and
therefore if there was a regional tartan for Kintail &
Mid-Ross then it could have been worn quite often by
Mackenzie Clansmen and Septs of the Clan. There are
suggestions that there was an earlier Mackenzie tartan worn
before 1700 and that this has since been lost and replaced
by the military version. Apparently the pattern was
predominantly Red.
It is also interesting to note that the tartans for the
Clans MacRae,
Matheson and Ross
(all associated with Ross-shire) are, with individual
differences, all predominantly red with green and black
stripes! There have been very close associations between the
Mackenzies and the clans MacRae, Matheson and Ross,
especially in the early days; could there be a relationship
here and could the original tartan for the Mackenzies have
been something similar being predominantly red with green
and perhaps black stripes? Could they be variations of an
earlier Ross-shire district tartan? Perhaps this is why the
present day Mackenzie tartan has those Red and Black
Stripes? In many cases the white stripe denoted an officer
and was originally made of silk.
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The Mackenzie
Tartan
by James
Scarlett, CMS Magazine 1995
It would be easy to dismiss
the Mackenzie tartan as being simply a regimental pattern -
it has also been known as "MacLeod and Seaforth" from
MacLeod's Highlanders (H.L.I.) and the Seaforth Highlanders
- which has been adopted by civilians of the Clan that
produced the Regiments, but there is usually more to tartan
than appears on the surface and much interest can be derived
from delving below it; there will be no harm in asking where
the military tartan came from.
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Mackenzie Modern
Colours
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There is a body of evidence
which strongly suggests that the original tartan of the
Highland Independent Companies was a simple blue, black and
green check to which each of the Company Commanders added
coloured over-checks to distinguish his own Company. By
1733, this had been superseded by a tartan common to all the
Companies, still a blue, black and green but now with a red
line, edged with black centred on the blue, and some other
colour on the green. We know that, later on, the Grenadier
Company of the 42nd Regiment wore this tartan with the red
line repeated on the green and that Lord Loudoun's
Highlanders used a yellow line on the green; we do not know
what colour, if any, was used by those soldiers of the
43rd/42nd who were not Grenadiers, but my conclusion is that
there was such an over-check and that it was probably black.
According to General Stewart of Garth, who was a historian
even if he did not always get things precisely right, the
new Regimental tartan for the 43rd was arrived at by
removing the distinguishing coloured lines from the tartans
of the Companies and combining what remained; on the face of
it, this would leave us with the plain basic design, but if
we move on one stage and remove the red line from the common
tartan, we are left with a pair of black lines which, if
moved to the outside of each alternate blue square, gives us
the Black Watch tartan as it is today. That is not the only
way that the tartan could could have come about. There is a
Grant tartan that was around late in the eighteenth century
(though its actual age and origin are unknown) which has, in
addition to red and yellow over-checks, a pair of black
lines appear around the edge of the blue square. "Yer pays
yer money and takes yer choice!" But there seem to be no
very good grounds for the commonly held view that the Black
Watch tartan is actually an old Campbell set, though perhaps
it is descended from one.
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42nd
Black Watch
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To this base the later
Highlands regiments, the Gordons and the two Mackenzie
formations, the Seaforths and the H.L.I., again added
coloured over-checks, yellow for the Gordons and red and
white for the others; some who claim expertise in these
matters, and I do not, say that the latter are the colours
of the uniform jacket facings. That is one story. Another
could easily be built upon the existence of a MacRae tartan,
an extension of the familiar Hunting MacRae, which is, in
essence, Mackenzie with blue and green reversed. If this,
and not the shorter version, is the correct one, it is
indubitably old (D. W. Stewart claims it as a relic of "The
'15") and, bearing in mind the old affinity between the
MacRaes and the Mackenzies, it might have inspired the red
and white over-checks in the latter tartan; alternatively,
if it is the short form that is the genuine one, the
Mackenzie tartan could easily have inspired the longer
version. The study of tartan is full of imponderables like
this, and the best we can usually do is to arrive at the
framework, it cannot be called a skeleton because there are
precious few bones to be found, and then keep an eye open
for discoveries that may confirm or modify it. Unsuspected
relics do make their appearance from time to time; only a
few years ago a length of late eighteenth century hard
tartan plaiding in a previously unrecorded pattern was found
in the roof of a house in Bexhill-on-Sea.
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Many old tartans were
consigned to oblivion when the Sobieski brothers, so called,
published their Vestiarium Scoticum, which presented a
collection of rather lack-lustre designs masquerading as
genuine sixteenth century tartans; if there was a tartan
that could be called "Mackenzie" before the military set, it
may well have disappeared at this time.
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Clan
Ross Tartan
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Clan
MacRae Tartan
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In "The Sets of the Scottish
Tartans", D. C. Stewart posed a question of what such a
tartan might have been but went no further towards answering
it than to suppose that it would have been a red one. I
would go a little beyond that and suggest Ross as a likely
basis; there are broad territorial similarities between
tartan patterns and the framework of the Ross tartan, shared
with the MacRaes, covers a wide area.
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Finally for the uninitiated,
a word about colour. Tartans are on sale under three main
headings, "Ancient",
"Reproduction"
and, although the word is naturally not mentioned,
"Modern".
Ancient colours, sometimes called "old" or "vegetable
colours", are the popular washed-out pastel shades.
Reproduction, or "muted"
tartans are based on a relic found in a peat bog; they use
grey instead of blue, and brown instead of green. "Modern"
tartans use the very dark, almost black greens and blues
which, with the very strong red and white, make the
Mackenzie tartan look as if it has a plain black background
with a grid of light lines superimposed. The point about all
this is that the actual patterns ancient, modern or
reproduction, are all the same. In the days when the tartan
was made by Wilsons' (the well-known Bannockburn weavers) as
"78th or Ross-shire Highlanders", green was of medium
strength and rather yellowish, and blue dark but distinct,
producing a clear bold pattern that we do not get with any
of the present day colours. And (I quote from the firm's
pattern book of 1819) "The White of the Officers' plaids is
always silk".
James
Scarlett
[Probably
the leading authority on tartan, the late James Scarlett was an
author, hand weaver and consultant, having devoted over
thirty years to studying the subject of tartan and its traditions. He is the author of Tartans of Scotland,
The Tartan Spotter's Guide, The Tartans of the
Scottish Clans, How to Weave Fine Cloth and
Tartan The Highland Textile. He hand wove a reproduction of a 1745
plaid for the National Trust of Scotland's Culloden
Battlefield Centre.]
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Cabarfeidh speaking to
Oag Mackenzie at the Strathpeffer Highland
Games.
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Cabarfeidh (centre) is
wearing Clan Mackenzie Old colours tartan, Oag (right) is
wearing the Mackenzie Muted Brown or Hunting Mackenzie
tartan.
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MORE INFO:
Castles
Castle Leod
Historic Buildings
Clan Badges
Blazon of Arms (PDF)
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