Clan Brodie

Clan Brodie
Brothaigh

Crest: A right hand holding a bunch of arrows all Proper
Motto Unite
Profile
District Moray
Plant badge Periwinkle
Chief
Alexander Brodie of Brodie
The 27th Chief of Clan Brodie
Historic seat Brodie Castle

Clan Brodie is a Scottish clan whose origins are uncertain. The first known Brodie chiefs were the Thanes of Brodie and Dyke in Morayshire. The Brodies were present in several clan conflicts, and during the civil war were ardent covenanters. They resisted involvement in the Jacobite uprisings, and the chief's family later prospered under the British Empire in colonial India.

Origins of the name

Early references to Brodie were written as Brochy, Brothy, Brothie, Brothu, Brode.[1][2] Various meanings to the name Brodie have been advanced, but given the Brodies uncertain origin, and the varying ways Brodie has been pronounced/written, these remain but suppositions. Some of the suggestions that have been advanced as to the meaning of the name Brodie are:

Map of Scotland showing the district of Moray, where the Brodies lived.

History

Origins of the clan

The origins of the Brodie clan are mysterious. Much of the early Brodie records were destroyed when Clan Gordon pillaged and burnt Brodie Castle in 1645. It is known that the Brodies were always about since records began. From this it has been presumed that the Brodies are ancient, probably of Pict ancestry, referred to locally as the ancient Moravienses. The historian Dr. Ian Grimble suggested the Brodies were an important Pictish family and advanced the possibility of a link between the Brodies and the male line of the Pictish Kings.[9][12][13]

Early history

The lands of Brodie {Map} are between Morayshire and Nairnshire, on the modern border that separates the Scottish Highlands and Moray. In the time of the Picts, this location was at the heart of the Kingdom of Moravia.[14] Early references show that the Brodie lands to be governed by a Tòiseach, later to become Thane.[15] Part of the Brodie lands were originally Temple Lands, owned by the order of the Knights Templar.[16] It is uncertain if the Brodies took their name from the lands of Brodie, or that the lands were named after the clan.[17]

After the Tòiseachs, whose names are lost, we find a reference to MacBeth, Thane of Dyke in 1262; next, in 1311, a Latin reference to Michael, filius Malconi, Thanus de Brothie et Dyke. It is unclear if Macbeth, Thane of Dyke, is of the same line as Michael. Accordingly, the Brodie Chiefs claim descent from Michael's referred father, Malcome, as First Chief and Thane of Brodie.[1][18][19]

Michael Brodie of Brodie received a charter from Robert the Bruce confirming his lands of Brodie.[20] The charter states that Brodie held his thanage of Brodie by the right of succession from his paternal ancestors.[20] The Brodie chiefs may have been descended from the royal Pictish family of Brude and there is so much evidence of Pictish settlement around Brodie that it has to be considered one reasonable explanation.[20]

Brodye tartan, as published in 1842 in the Vestiarium Scoticum.
Brodie hunting tartan

15th- and 16th-century clan conflicts

17th century and Civil War

Lord Brodie of Brodie went twice to The Hague to seek the return of the exiled King Charles II of Scotland, first in 1649, then, with a larger party in 1650, returned successfully with the King. Oliver Cromwell was eager to enroll Brodie into his regime. Tempted, Lord Brodie resisted Oliver Cromwell's summons to discuss a union of Scotland and England, writing in his diary "Oh Lord he has met with the lion and the bear before, but this is the Goliath; the strongest and greatest temptation is last.". Lord Brodie was the target of an unsuccessful royalist plot for his capture in 1650. He was the author of a diary revealing a complicated, yet devote mind, torn by temptation and doing what he believed to be right.[29][30][31][32]

18th century and Jacobite uprisings

Brodie chiefs family tree (click on to enlarge, then click again, and a third time for full view).

19th century and India

Recent history

Théodore Chassériau (1819–1856), Macbeth Meeting the Three Witches 1855.

Traditions and legend

Brodie of Brodie
Brodie of Spynie
Brodie of Lethen
Brodie of Mylntoun
Brodie of Mayne
Brodie of Rosthorn
Brodie of Idvies
Brodie of Boxford
Cap. David Brodie
Brodie-Wood
of Keithick
Callender-Brodie
of Idvies
Brodie-Innes of
Milton Brodie
[51][52]

Branches

Periwinkle: plant badge of Clan Brodie.

Clan profile

See also

Notes and references

  1. 1 2 Genealogy of the Thanes and Brodies of Brodie
  2. Shaw (1882), p.238
  3. Arthur (1857), p.82.
  4. Shaw (1882), p.248-249
  5. "Brodie Name Meaning and Origin". Retrieved 7 February 2008.
  6. Matheson (1905), p.119
  7. Meirs (2006), p.301.
  8. de la Chenaye Desbois (1774), p.14, at IV Aimery de Gain;
  9. 1 2 Grimble (1980), p. 52.
  10. Brodie, James (1991), p.1.
  11. rampantscotland.com
  12. Rampini (1897), p.257-258
  13. 1 2 3 4 "Clan History". Retrieved 7 February 2008.
  14. Bain (1893), p.54.
  15. Bain (1893), p.143.
  16. Bain (1893), p.134-135
  17. Rampini (1897), p.258.
  18. Bain (1893), p.91-92.
  19. Barrow (1998), p.58, p.70, p.72 and Appendix: Moray-Brodie, Moray-Dyke
  20. 1 2 3 Way, George and Squire, Romily. (1994). Collins Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia. (Foreword by The Rt Hon. The Earl of Elgin KT, Convenor, The Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs). pp. 80 - 81.
  21. Mackenzie(1894).
  22. The Celtic magazine, p.166-167.
  23. Mackenzie (1881), p.98.
  24. Bain (1893), p.221
  25. 1 2 Bain (1893), p.230
  26. "Site Record for Brodie Castle; Brodie Castle Policies; Brodie Estate". Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland.. Castle Brodie is at grid reference NH9795957775
  27. "Site Record for Downie Hillock; Dounie Hillock". Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland.. Downie Hillock fort is at grid reference NH96755815 and discussed in Shepherd, I (1991). "Downie Hillock (Dyke & Moy parish): defensive bank". Discovery and Excavation in Scotland (39).
  28. Bain (1893), p.259-272.
  29. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry: Brodie Brody, Alexander, of Brodie, Lord Brodie (1617–1680)
  30. Brodie of Brodie (1863).
  31. Bain (1893), p.258-287.
  32. Lord Brodie: his life and times, 1617–80. With continuation to the Revolution (1904)
  33. Bain (1893), p.274.
  34. Bain (1893), p.302-304
  35. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry: Brodie, Alexander, of Brodie (1697–1754)
  36. genealogy of the Brodies of Muiresk
  37. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry: Brodie, David (1707?–1787), naval officer
  38. Bain (1893), p.433-434
  39. Genealogy of the Brodies of Milton
  40. Bain (1893), p.389-390.
  41. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, entry: Gordon née Brodie, Elizabeth, duchess of Gordon (1794–1864)
  42. Electric Scotland-Historic Earls and Earldoms of Scotland, Chapter III – Earldom and Earls of Huntly, Section XIX
  43. Gordon (1865).
  44. Adyar.net
  45. The Hindu, Monday, 13 Mar 2006
  46. Brodie,James (1991), p.132-134.
  47. Gordon, Elizabeth, The Most Noble, Duchess of; date 22 April 1864; T. Misc. Papers 22 April 1864; SC1/37/53/pp523-584; Will can be accessed online at link
  48. for info on "moveable property" see link
  49. Shaw (1882), p.236-237
  50. Shaw (1882), p.173-174, p.218-219.
  51. Paul (1893), p. 28, p. 41, p. 44.
  52. Reference for Brodie arms: Heraldry-online, Brodie Arms, Officially Recorded in Scotland
  53. Template:Cite GmbH web
  54. "Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs – Members of the Standing Council".
  55. 1 2 Shaw (1882), p.252.
  56. The scottish tartans (1800), p. 23.

Bibliography

External links

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