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 Hi Juli: 
Yes I have read some of 
MacPherson's Ossianic verse.  It is actually not bad at getting the flavour 
of "the idea whose time had come" .  He felt compelled to say it 
was the remnants of the bard Ossian I guess partly because he felt the need as 
did so many others, of some form of legitimizing the yearning for the authentic 
Highland culture which was patently no more but was in the grasp of living 
memory.  I compare the Disarming Act of 1746 (Repealed circa 1780 and the 
instigation of the Highland Society of London inter alia) to the Babylonian 
Captivity.  Both lasted about 40 years, both involved a deep cultural loss 
and both cultures responded  with a resurgence in spades.  The Jews 
now saw that their oral culture could not be taken for granted and there was a 
concerted effort to write and codify the law --- the result was the 
collating of the Torah and the composition of the the 
commentary: the Talmud.  In the Scottish case,  we see a number of 
attempts to resurrect the old culture, Ossian being one of them.  It had an 
interesting impact on the literati of the day in Scotland and there was a huge 
division of scholars and other folk of importance as to whether they believed 
the authenticity of the poetry or that it was spurious.  Sir John Sinclair 
was a believer; Walter Scott was not  and that is only two examples.  
 
Walter Scott's not believing in Ossian did in no way stop him 
from participating in so many other endeavours  in the revival of the 
Highland Culture.  His historical novels were enormously popular not just 
in Scotland but throughout Europe.  He orchestrated the visit of George IV 
to Edinburgh (1822?)  at which all events family tartan was expected to be 
worn.  This was quite interesting because family tartans had not existed 
previously.  Take a look at the famous painting by David Morier of 
combatants at the Battle of Culloden --- of the eight or so Highlanders shown, 
they together are wearing 23 tartans and Morier painted these men from life --- 
they were being held in jail for treason in Edinbrugh when he painted 
them.  Highlanders of that time wore tartan because they liked the patterns 
and (evidently) the more mixed the better. 
But having said that, it is my opinion that this fact does not 
in anyway detract from ours and our ancestors' needs to know from whence we and 
they came. Just as it would be wrong to say that the Talmud is invalid because 
it is a later invention, it would be wrong to say that the effort to retrieve 
Highland Culture is invalid because  family tartans were a later invention. 
Sometimes the story is bigger than the mere facts. 
Ossian touched many people --- I am glad to know that it is 
MacPherson's work  but I am also glad to know that there was a need for an 
Ossian.  It speaks to a very deep longing that we, especially on this web 
site, will understand because it is the rootsiness that turns our cranks whether 
in be the seaarch for the "genealogical smoking gun" in Argyll, or 
wearing the kilt for the first time, or silly ones like me trying to recreate 
music that was composed 500 years ago.    
Yours 
Aye                               
Rory 
    
    Hi 
    Rory, Laurel and all - 
      
    Probably a bit off topic but I can't quite remember what the topic 
    was that started this all! 
      
    Has anybody read James MacPherson's controversial work and 
    collections of what is supposed to be fragments of the Celtic Bard Ossian's 
    poetry?  Many believe that MacPherson's dark, gloomy descriptions of 
    the Highlands was a catalyst for the romantic image Sir Walter Scott was to 
    cast of the Highlands.  
      
    Juli  
    
        
        Hi Juli: 
        Thanks for some 
        further references;  FYI.  Roslind Michison wrote the 
        difinitive work on Sir John Sinclair of Ulbster "Agricultural Sir 
        John" (Geoffrey Bles, 1962).  It was done with the complete 
        cooperation of the late Robin Sinclair, 2nd Viscount Thurso of Ulbster 
        and a direct descendant of Sir John.  It is an honest, 
        warts-and-all piece.  Nice to see a concatenation of scholars (is 
        that like a pride of lions, warren of rabbits, slime of lawyers etc) 
        focussed on our two interests.   Rory 
        
            
            For a well written, concise education on the evolution of 
            Clanship in Argyll I highly recommend Eric Cregeen's (late Reader in 
            Scottish Studies at the University of Edinburgh) article 'The 
            Changing Role of the House of Argyll' in the book Scotland in the 
            Age of Improvement edited by N.T. Phillipson (Reader in History 
            at the University of Edinburgh) and Rosalind Mitchison (Emeritus 
            Professor of Economic and Social History at the University of 
            Edinburgh). (pgs 5-23)  Mr.. Cregeen covers the political 
            situation in the highlands, the traditional clan structure and 
            land-tenure, the cultural influence of the south and the economic 
            conditions among other areas. 
              
            Great reading as are other articles in the book such as 'Law 
            and Society in Eighteenth-Century Scottish Though' by Peter Stein, 
            'The Government and the Highlands, 1707-1766' by John M. Simpson and 
            'Education and Society in the Eighteenth Century' by Donald J. 
            Withrington. 
              
            Each article lists notes with the reference material for 
            further investigation should you wish to understand 
            more. 
              
              
            Juli Anderson 
            Princeton, NJ USA 
            But Always Argyll  
            
                
                
                Argyll is a Sinclair homeland unique in its beauty and 
                profound in its mysteries.  
                I was going to add a bit of electronic applause 
                to Karen, Juli and Rebecca, who are three of the finest 
                researchers I have has occasion to every know and work with. The 
                material on Argyll is accurate from the perspective of first 
                language, secondly geography, and then from known genealogy and 
                in the context of an appreciation of social history. Members 
                should be cautious not to draw conclusions which are simply 
                conjecture from the evidence. There are unanswered questions 
                 
                and mysteries. Also the original material we 
                have from Argyll is also limited in the sense that it is not 
                always complete, there are gaps and there is a period beyond 
                which it is hard to conclude there will be any original 
                evidence, mostly because it never existed in the first place and 
                many questions and mysteries will continue.  
                The Argyll Sinclair history and genealogy is 
                unique and singular back to the mid 1600's. Many of the early 
                Sinclairs were descended from the McKokairds in the mid Argyll 
                region around the head of Loch Fyne. There is no evidence at all 
                to suggest that they were or were not connected to the clan in 
                Caithness at the time and if so, exactly how they were. The is 
                solid evidence to being connected by name in any event. Members 
                need to be cautious as to just how the clan system worked and 
                much of the current appreciation and conceptions does come, (as 
                Karen astutely points out), from the romantic revival of the 
                clans in the 1800's which reinvented the clans from a system 
                that had been made unlawful.  
                Many Sinclairs originally from Argyll do have 
                their roots directly from the McKokairds, but some others which 
                have been located in Argyll in the early 1700's may, or may not, 
                have been directly related to the earliest McKokairds. Like 
                Sinclairs of today, the Sinclairs of 1600-1700 moved around and 
                were not staying neatly within the borders of Caithness. Those 
                with applied mechanical skills or crafts were more mobile. By 
                mid 1700 to 1900 there was a further influx into Argyll of many 
                clan members, (Sinclairs among many others) including both Scots 
                and English names in response to migrations departing from 
                Argyll opening up new economic opportunities within the county. 
                Argyll is in the Highlands NW of Glasgow, and the Sinclairs can 
                take pride in the contribution they made through their talents 
                and their hard work to Argyll to this very day.  
                Forever Argyll, yours aye;  
                Neil Sinclair, Toronto, P.E.I., 
                Argyll      
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