-
16th August 09, 07:03 PM
#1
Namesakes
Didn't quite see this thread anywhere so I thought I would try my luck?
Since I would be taking my mothers maiden name to tie in to the Scottish Heritage my question is this;
How does one state their name?
My surname is Stiverson
My mothers maiden name is Andrews
Andrews is associated with Clan Ross
I imagine something to the claim of Barry Stiverson of the Andrews Clan of Clan Ross????
-
-
16th August 09, 07:19 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by Kilted Sapper
Didn't quite see this thread anywhere so I thought I would try my luck?
Since I would be taking my mothers maiden name to tie in to the Scottish Heritage my question is this;
How does one state their name?
My surname is Stiverson
My mothers maiden name is Andrews
Andrews is associated with Clan Ross
I imagine something to the claim of Barry Stiverson of the Andrews Clan of Clan Ross????
That's a mouthful.
Most Britons would hyphenate, I suspect, e.g., Barry Andrews-Stiverson.
What is the context in which you will take or use your mother's name?
Are you sure your Andrews are the same Andrews who are associated with Clan Ross? Some degree of certainty might be useful, lest you find some years down the road, after you have spent quite a bit of money and gone to much effort, that things were not as you thought they were, that your family is associated with a different clan, or with no clan at all. I went here http://www.nationaltrustnames.org.uk/default.aspx and discovered that most Andrews in the UK are from the south of England, and very, very few were Scots.
-
-
16th August 09, 07:32 PM
#3
After speaking with the Ross's in their tent at the Scottish games in Ohio they were the ones who got me searching for the Andrews who fought under Clan Ross. I looked up on various sites and found that most Andrews started off in the highlands and then moved south to Dumfrieshire, then I am sure they moved further south into England and eventually in America.
But let me be a little more clear as to my question, if I was to be wearing a kilt from the Ross clan and either competing in the games or if asked the question, Whats your lineage? I would like to respond in the proper form, i.e Stiverson with the Andrews Sept of Clan Ross! Or however it would be said!
-
-
16th August 09, 07:59 PM
#4
Not to dissuade you from wearing whatever you want, but....
The lists of septs, or surnames associated with a clan, are notoriously inaccurate and full of fantasy.
When we do genealogical research, we ALWAYS start with the most recent person, oneself and one's parents, then work our way backward, rather than picking some one in the distant path, then deciding to be descended from them, and trying to work our way forward and claim som relatinship. Likely one isn't related.
There are only two ways to discover ancestry. One is tracing the paper trail backward in time, documenting one generation before moving on the the previous one. The other, which is new and sometimes but not always helpful, is DNA testing. You might find the FAQ at www.familytreedna.com informative.
The problem with just picking a clan from a list and deciding to be descended from them is not so much that one is usually mistaken, but that it can lead others to repeat the same mistake, and that it gets passed on and on. A relative of mine did just that, and now one misinformed nephew has an expensive kilt in a clan that we have no association with, while another had the clan crest tattooed across his back. And neither are all that interested in correcting the misinformation, since it has gotten under their skin, so to speak.
Since you ask, I would say the proper form when asked one's lineage is to simply speak the unadorned truth: "My surname is Stiverson, and I don't know what my lineage is." There is nothing at all wrong with not knowing.
-
-
17th August 09, 01:56 AM
#5
Very sound advice.
Prior to my first starting to conduct genealogical research of my family, we were under the impression that we were some how connected to the Gordons. A cousin of mine also went to the trouble of buying said kilt & getting said tattoo (despite my telling them I wasn't so sure about the truth of it). As it turned out I found no connection to the Gordons, but to a number of other clans. To this day though, my cousins & aunt don't want to believe the truth, all because he jumped the gun 
The moral of the story, listen to Gilmore on this. You'll save yourself a lot of $$$ & headaches. It might take longer to verify where you came from, but the rewards are worth it in the long run! 
 Originally Posted by gilmore
When we do genealogical research, we ALWAYS start with the most recent person, oneself and one's parents, then work our way backward, rather than picking some one in the distant path, then deciding to be descended from them, and trying to work our way forward and claim som relatinship. Likely one isn't related.
There are only two ways to discover ancestry. One is tracing the paper trail backward in time, documenting one generation before moving on the the previous one. The other, which is new and sometimes but not always helpful, is DNA testing. You might find the FAQ at www.familytreedna.com informative.
The problem with just picking a clan from a list and deciding to be descended from them is not so much that one is usually mistaken, but that it can lead others to repeat the same mistake, and that it gets passed on and on. A relative of mine did just that, and now one misinformed nephew has an expensive kilt in a clan that we have no association with, while another had the clan crest tattooed across his back. And neither are all that interested in correcting the misinformation, since it has gotten under their skin, so to speak.
Since you ask, I would say the proper form when asked one's lineage is to simply speak the unadorned truth: "My surname is Stiverson, and I don't know what my lineage is." There is nothing at all wrong with not knowing.
[SIZE="2"][FONT="Georgia"][COLOR="DarkGreen"][B][I]T. E. ("TERRY") HOLMES[/I][/B][/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE]
[SIZE="1"][FONT="Georgia"][COLOR="DarkGreen"][B][I]proud descendant of the McReynolds/MacRanalds of Ulster & Keppoch, Somerled & Robert the Bruce.[/SIZE]
[SIZE="1"]"Ah, here comes the Bold Highlander. No @rse in his breeks but too proud to tug his forelock..." Rob Roy (1995)[/I][/B][/COLOR][/FONT][/SIZE]
-
-
17th August 09, 02:19 AM
#6
 Originally Posted by Kilted Sapper
But let me be a little more clear as to my question, if I was to be wearing a kilt from the Ross clan and either competing in the games or if asked the question, Whats your lineage? I would like to respond in the proper form, i.e Stiverson with the Andrews Sept of Clan Ross! Or however it would be said!
Hi Sapper,
Whether this will help or not, I don't know.
As far as I have discovered, EVERY clan will accept a person as a clan member as long as they undertake to support that clan and as long as they pay the membership fee. This is little different to when a man went to a clan chief and swore allegiance to him to become a member of the clan. Then, a man paid with service, now with money; but the allegiance is the same. If Clan Ross accept you as a member then that is between you and them; it is no one else's business.
There are no Lineage Police. If someone asks you your lineage, they are either being polite and trying to make conversation or they are trying to look important. No one in the whole world knows all the possible septs of all the clans and more importantly 'No One Cares'.
When someone asks 'How do you do?', they expect the same in return. They do not want to hear about that little bowel problem you've been having this last week; watch their eyes glaze over as you tell them. Likewise, 'What's your lineage?' should be replied with a snappy 'Sept of Clan Ross' and nothing more.
What if you, or one of your ancestors was illegitimate - born on the wrong side of the blanket as it is so politely said? Would anybody expect you to reveal your relative's indiscretion to a totally random stranger in a field. I think not. None of their business.
If you are happy to be in Clan Ross, that is your lineage and association. Clan is another word for family. Wear the tartan, work in the clan tent, be a good family member. There is not a lot else that a man can either ask for or deliver.
Regards
Chas
-
-
17th August 09, 03:11 AM
#7
 Originally Posted by Chas
When someone asks 'How do you do?', they expect the same in return. They do not want to hear about that little bowel problem you've been having this last week; watch their eyes glaze over as you tell them. Likewise, 'What's your lineage?' should be replied with a snappy 'Sept of Clan Ross' and nothing more.
Chas
This is the best advice I've read in this thread. As Chas and Jock Scot have said, have a quick confident reply. My grandmother bore a Scottish maiden name and my mother has a Scottish maiden name, but I choose to wear a tartan that goes quite a ways back because of personal, historical, and genealogical reasons. Since I bear an English surname, when asked the question, I reply, "I have a family connection with the clan." I know that would be obvious because of the tartan I'm wearing, but it's like Chas said, when people ask, "How are you?", they really expect you to say, "I'm fine; and you?". They don't want to know about the bad day you're having, nor does anyone really want to know your exact genealogical connection to a certain clan. Hope this is helpful advice.
-
-
20th August 09, 10:56 AM
#8
 Originally Posted by Chas
...If Clan Ross accept you as a member then that is between you and them; it is no one else's business...more importantly 'No One Cares'...None of their business...If you are happy to be in Clan Ross, that is your lineage and association. Clan is another word for family...
Chas
Right on!
-
-
16th August 09, 08:20 PM
#9
thanks for the advice, believe me when I started this process it has taken me everywhere from England to Wales to Scotland to Prussia to Netherlands and Ireland?!
I have traced back to the early 1700's on both sides and found that most all of the lineage comes from the UK area as noted. But with the Scots being the traditional with the highland dress of a kilt and if I was to wear one with what seems to be the correct lineage than that is what I was wondering on how to say it, not that it is neccessarily true and correct but how? I mean we can always go back as far as Israel if we wanted to push the envelope that far for our true lineage??????
-
-
16th August 09, 09:15 PM
#10
 Originally Posted by Kilted Sapper
thanks for the advice, believe me when I started this process it has taken me everywhere from England to Wales to Scotland to Prussia to Netherlands and Ireland?!
I have traced back to the early 1700's on both sides and found that most all of the lineage comes from the UK area as noted. But with the Scots being the traditional with the highland dress of a kilt and if I was to wear one with what seems to be the correct lineage than that is what I was wondering on how to say it, not that it is neccessarily true and correct but how? I mean we can always go back as far as Israel if we wanted to push the envelope that far for our true lineage??????
Why would you want to say something about your lineage that is anything other than true and correct? That is, why misrepresent oneself as something other than what and who one is?
BTW no one can trace their pedigree to pre-Christian Israel via documented sources. The earliest reliable Western sources go back only to the immediate ancestors of Charlemagne, from whom virtually everyone of European ancestry is descended, in one way or another, or several. It is possible that one of Charlemagne's great grandmothers, Berta, was a Merovingnian, and if so, that would put it back another couple of centuries. Before that, nothing is reliable, it's all myth and conjecture.
-
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
-
Forum Rules
|
|
Bookmarks