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Tartan - Origins |  | Tartan - Origins: Encyclopedia II - Tartan - Origins |  | Jade figurines wearing tartan hats were found in China, dating back to 3,500 BC or earlier. The Celts wore coats set with a pattern of checks close together and of varied colors, similar in fashion to the Scottish tartan. Tartan patterns have been used in Scottish weaving for centuries. A possible predecessor dating from the 3rd century found near the Antonine Wall and known as the "Falkirk sett" has a checked pattern in two colours identified as the undyed brown and white of the native Soay sheep. The fabric had been used as a stopper in an earthenware pot c ...
See also:Tartan, Tartan - Origins, Tartan - Clan tartans, Tartan - Other modern tartans |  | | Tartan, Tartan - Clan tartans, Tartan - Origins, Tartan - Other modern tartans, Tartan Day, a day set aside for the celebration of the Scottish influence on North America, Australia and New Zealand., Tartan techno, a style of techno music from Scotland. |  | |
|  |  | Tartan: Encyclopedia II - Tartan - Origins
Tartan - Origins
Jade figurines wearing tartan hats were found in China, dating back to 3,500 BC or earlier. The Celts wore coats set with a pattern of checks close together and of varied colors, similar in fashion to the Scottish tartan. Tartan patterns have been used in Scottish weaving for centuries. A possible predecessor dating from the 3rd century found near the Antonine Wall and known as the "Falkirk sett" has a checked pattern in two colours identified as the undyed brown and white of the native Soay sheep. The fabric had been used as a stopper in an earthenware pot containing a hoard of silver coins.
For many centuries, the patterns were loosely associated with the weavers of a particular area, though it was common for highlanders to wear a number of different tartans at the same time. A 1587 charter granted to Hector Maclean of Duart requires feu duty on land paid as 60 ells of cloth of white, black and green colours. A witness of the 1689 Battle of Killiecrankie describes "McDonnell's men in their triple stripes". From 1725 the government force of the Highland Independent Companies introduced a standardised tartan chosen to avoid association with any particular clan and this was formalised when they became the Black Watch regiment in 1739.
The most effective fighters for Jacobitism were the supporting Scottish clans, leading to an association of tartans with the Jacobite cause. Efforts to pacify the Highlands led to the 1746 Dress Act banning tartans with exemptions for the military and the gentry. Soon after the Act was repealed in 1782 Highland Societies of landowners were promoting "the general use of the ancient Highland dress". William Wilson & Sons of Bannockburn became the foremost weaving manufacturer around 1770 as suppliers of tartan to the military. Wilson corresponded with his agents in the highlands to get information and samples of cloth from the clan districts to enable him to reproduce "perfectly genuine patterns" and recorded over 200 setts by 1822, many of which were tentatively named. The Cockburn Collection of named samples made by Wilsons was put together between 1810 and 1820 and is now in the Mitchell Library in Glasgow. At this time many setts were simply numbered, or given fanciful names such as the "Robin Hood" tartan.
By the 19th century the Highland romantic revival inspired by James Macpherson's Ossian poems and the writings of Walter Scott led to wider interest, with clubs like the Celtic Society of Edinburgh welcoming Lowlanders. The pageantry invented for the 1822 visit of King George IV to Scotland brought a sudden demand for tartan cloth and made it the national dress of the whole of Scotland, with the invention of many new clan tartans to suit.
Other related archives1587, 1689, 1725, 1739, 1746, 1770, 1778, 1782, 1810, 1815, 1820, 1822, 19th century, 3rd century, Amnesty International, Antonine Wall, April 8th, Australia, Bannockburn, Battle of Killiecrankie, Black Watch, British Airways, British Royal Family, China, Church of Scotland, Coat of arms, Commonwealth, Cornwall, Diaspora, Donald Caskie, Dress Act, Duart, Falkirk, Glasgow, Hare Krishna, Jacobite, Jacobitism, James Macpherson, James VI of Scotland, Kilts, London, Lord Lyon, King of Arms, Maclean, McDonnell, Mitchell Library, New Zealand, North America, Northumbrian, Ossian, Robin Hood, Royal Air Force, Royal Canadian Air Force, Royal Stewart Tartan, Scotland, Scottish, Scottish clan, Scottish clans, Soay sheep, Stewart, Tartan Army, Tartan Day, Tartan techno, United Kingdom, Wales, Walter Scott, blanket, ethnic tailfin, heraldry, highlanders, national dress, plaid, right angles, shoulder, soccer, society, techno music, visit of King George IV to Scotland, woven
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Origins", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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