The dazzling colours of tartan
materials are recognised globally as the uniform of Scots everywhere.
For years it was assumed the distinctive reds, blues, yellows
and purples on which modern designs are based came from dyes derived
from native Scottish plants.
But a new scientific study has
nailed that view as a myth. Sophisticated tests carried out on
dozens of 18th-century tartans have proved the vibrant colours
were provided by exotic foreign dyes.
The research confirms what many
scholars have long suspected: that dyes from native plants were
too dull and in too short supply when demand boomed before the
Jacobite rebellions. As a result, they were replaced by brighter
dyes from the Americas and India, even though the price could
be four times as high.
One example is a sliver of tartan
from the Highland suit worn by Bonnie Prince Charlie in 1743 and
which is now on display at the National Museums of Scotland, which
carried out the research.
Analysis of the dyes used shows
the red is cochineal, made from crushed South American beetles,
indigo from India, and Old Fustic, a yellow flowering plant from
North America.
Samples from another 48 18th-century
examples also show that the use of imported dyes was commonplace.
Anita Quye, the NMS’s analytical
chemist, said: "The myth is that tartan of this age was coloured
by plants native to Scotland. The perceived wisdom is that there
was a wee Highland cottage industry producing these dyes.
"It is now clear that Scotland
was importing good quality dyes, probably from well before the
start of the 18th century and these were all very bright."
The Scottish Tartan Authority,
the charity which keeps the International Tartan Index, said the
research was a valuable attempt to improve knowledge of one of
Scotland’s "great assets".
Secretary Brian Wilton said: "One
of the inferences has been that good, wholesome tartan from this
time was always made from good wholesome dyes from native heathers
and lichens. If that is not accurate then we need to know what
the true picture is. Research of this quality is immensely useful."
The 49 samples were taken from
the Highland Society of London’s Book of Certified Tartans
dating from 1812. The bound volume, kept at the museum in Edinburgh,
is believed to be the first official attempt to link tartans with
certain clans.
It includes samples from the Stewarts,
Colquhouns, Frasers, Macdonalds, Gordons and McPhersons among
others, and became the definitive Tartan ‘bible’ of
the time. Many of the designs became the template for the 5,500
tartans now on the STA’s index, the closest thing to an
official register.
Quye expected to find that the
reds in the woven designs came from native flowering plants such
as Ladies’ Bed Straw. In fact, all the samples tested revealed
they were cochineal.
"Cochineal was present in
all of them, and although it was four times the price of native
dyes at this time, it was a very specific, bright colour that
didn’t fade easily. One of the problems with native dyes
was that they tended to fade in sunlight and became very muted."
Blues used in tartan cloth originally
came from the native plant woad, which was also used as a form
of ceremonial face and body paint by ancient Scots. It was supplanted
by indigo from India.
Yellow dyes from native lichens
and tree bark were replaced by Old Fustic, a flowering plant,
and quercitron bark, both from North America. Shipping records
show it being imported into Greenock.
According to John Burnett, an
NMS historian, the widespread use of imported dyes showed how
sophisticated trade had become in Scotland by that time.
"Scotland was a poor country
on the edge of the Europe but that didn’t mean it didn’t
have commercial markets. Clan chiefs manufacturing their own tartans
probably sent their servants to trading centres like Edinburgh
and Glasgow to obtain dyes, or they got them from travelling peddlers
or from country fairs. It was probably easier to buy the stuff
rather than make it yourself."
Tartan dress has evolved over
many centuries. The plaid, a large piece of cloth belted in the
middle to form a combined kilt and upper garment, gradually developed
into the kilt as it is known today.
The wearing of tartan north of
the Highland Line - which ran roughly from the north of Glasgow
through what is now Perthshire to the west of Aberdeen - was proscribed
after the defeat of Bonnie Prince Charlie’s Jacobite army
in 1745. But demand soared when the ban was lifted in 1782 and
the cloth was popularised by romantic writers such as Sir Walter
Scott.
Rehabilitation was complete when
Scott engineered the visit of King George IV to Edinburgh in 1822
dressed in a kilt. Another official seal of approval came in 1852
when Queen Victoria’s husband plastered the walls, floors
and furniture of Balmoral Castle, their new Highland residence,
in a tartan of his own design. By this time natural dyes, imported
or otherwise, had been replaced by synthetic versions.
Tartan experts say the skills
of the early manufacturers have never been properly recognised
because the cloth’s image has been subverted by "shortbread
tin tourism".
"It is a wonderful, colourful
material and tartan weaving should have been recognised as a Highland
art form long ago," said Jamie Scarlett, author of the Tartan
Weavers’ Guide.
Full details of the research into
tartan colouring will be revealed at a lecture entitled ‘Scotching
the Myth of Old Tartan Colours’ at the National Museum of
Scotland, Chambers Street, Edinburgh, on January 20.
SECRETS OF THE KILT
A PIECE of tartan actually worn
by Bonnie Prince Charlie was among the 49 samples tested by the
National Museums of Scotland. Here are examples of some of the
foreign dyes discovered in the clan tartans analysed.
Colquhoun (red, blue, purple,
white): cochineal (red), old fustic and indigo/woad (green)
Fraser (red, blue and green):
lac (red), old fustic and indigo/woad (green)
Gordon (blue, black, green and
yellow): old fustic and indigosulfonic acid (green), quercitron
bark extract (yellow)
MacDonald of Clanranald (red,
blue, black, green): lac (red), old fustic and indigosulfonic
acid (green)
MacPherson (red, blue, black,
green, yellow, white): lac (red), old fustic (green)
Menzies (red, blue, green, white):
cochineal (red), old fustic and indigo/woad (green)
Stewart (red, blue, black, green,
yellow, white): lac (red), old fustic and indigo/woad (green),
quercitron bark extract (yellow)
Stewart (Hunting): lac (red);
old fustic and indigo/woad (green), quercitron bark extract (yellow)
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