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Your interest in Clan Keith is welcome. We are a worldwide family of diverse interests, all bound together by the union of the Keith's and its septs. The Earldom of Kintore and the loyal sons and daughters that trace their families to the Name Keith make up the modern Clan Keith.
UNDERSTANDING CLAN STRUCTURE & PURPOSE
Clanship was the system which
replaced the former division of
Although clanship is based on blood affinity, a striking feature
of the Scottish clans is their descent from totally different races. The MacLeods derive from Norsemen; the Murrays
and Sutherlands from Flemish stock; the Bruces, Chisholms and Frasers from
The Gaelic word clanna means
‘children’ and that spells out its essence: a clan is a family. In theory,
every Scottish clan is an extended family, with all its members descended from
one original patriarch, like the Jewish tribes in the Book of Genesis. Can that
be true? Is every
The chiefly line of each clan, deriving from the original patriarch, and its cadet branches had a well-recorded existence. But a clan was composed of ‘native men’ and ‘broken men’. The native men were the direct descendants of the original bloodline. The broken men were those individuals, from other clans that had been dispersed, who sought refuge in a particular glen and pledged allegiance to the local chief. They in turn intermarried with the native inhabitants so that their descendants also carried the genes of the clan.
The clan, then, was truly a family. It was also a self-contained political unit, comprising government, legal system and even social welfare provision. The chief was the monarch, whose word was law; but even he was bound by the traditions and legal institutions of the clan system. Around him he had a court and government, composed of the high officers of the clan. These included the tanist (the heir to the chiefship, not necessarily his eldest son); the commander, who led the clan in war; and the brieve, or judge, whose office was usually hereditary.
The principal men of the clan were the derbhfine
– the immediate relations of the chief, effectively the ‘royal family’ – from
among whom the chief was chosen. Below them were the lesser chieftains; then
the duine-uasail or gentlemen of the clan; the tacksmen, who held modest pockets of land; and then the
ordinary clansmen. It was a rigidly hierarchic system; but, at the same time,
it was democratic. Unlike
Clans are usually thought of in a
It has been claimed that the clan system was irretrievably dishonored by the
complicity of some chiefs in dispersing their clansmen overseas during the
Highland Clearances. Some of them honestly believed they were doing what was
best for their people (the subsequent careers of many Scots in
There are now more than 30 million people of Scottish
descent living overseas – six times the present population of