While I am waiting for DNA revelation
to strike me as a lightning bolt whereby all comprehension and
analysis of results become crystal clear, bwahahahaha ...
... I decided to have another look at
the ahnentafel printout a cousin sent me quite a while ago. Because
it purported to take some of my Scottish lines back to the 1200s, I
set it aside here in the hope that exposing it to a generally
inviting atmosphere would self-generate a few clues about its
sources.
Didn't happen. Osmosis does not work in
all areas of the universe.
So what is an ahnentafel and what does
it tell you? The German word means a list of ancestors; it's one type
of reference tool used by family historians. Each person in the
direct lineage is assigned a number in ascending order. We start with
a base person, usually oneself. The father's assigned number will
always be twice that of the child, and the mother's twice that of the
child plus one. E.g. If I am No. 1, my father is No. 2, my mother is
No. 3; their parents are Nos. 4, 5, 6, and 7.
Click to enlarge |
The numbers multiply exponentially as
each generation doubles the number of ancestors. Each woman
numerically following a man will be his wife, that is, mother of a
child. Typically, each one-line entry would have dates and places of
birth and death. Sources for the information are not normally cited.
See The Encyclopaedia of Genealogy.
After reviewing the chart, I decided to
re-format it manually with my father as No. 1 instead of myself. That
way, the ancestors would be entirely Scottish, and really, that was
the focus of the chart anyway. The process was similar to
transcribing a document in that I had to think about each entry. For
about five or six generations I knew the correlated "paper
trail" of research I had done myself.
Once beyond the realm of my own
research experience, it was much heavier going than I expected. For
one thing, I had thought having about three FRASER lines was
complicated but intriguing. The ahnentafel assigns me no less than
nine different MACKAY lines. As the names ascend farther and farther
back, birth and death information become sparse. Many lines disappear
when a dead end/brick wall was reached. The Mackays and a few allied
others persisted. And wouldn't you know it ―
they frequently married Mackays.
Clan Mackay, Wikipedia |
Shall I tell you some of the notable
ancestors? ― Eoin
Macdonald Lord of the Isles 1321-1387 and his predecessors; Robert II
Stewart, King of Scotland, ca.1316-1390; Walter Stewart, Lord High
Steward of Scotland, ca.1280; Robert I (VIII) Bruce, King of
Scotland, 1272-1329; an unnamed sister of King Malcolm IV ca.1137.
It's all lovely and thrilling. I couldn't possibly be more Scottish.
But uppermost I was asking myself,
where is this information coming from? Provenance! Contact
with my cousin has been lost but she was not a mediaeval scholar nor
a specialist in Scottish archival records. It had the ring of arcane
genealogies published by Scottish historians in the eighteenth or
nineteenth centuries. My feeling was that someone, some descendant at
some time, had copied bits and pieces from those old recorded
genealogies ―
genealogies with roots in the honourable Highland oral
tradition of reciting one's ancestors for generations. A tradition
not immune to its own transmission lapses.
I was noticing what seemed to be
discrepancies in naming practice, in the period before the early
1700s when surnames per se were unknown. Highlanders were then
customarily identified by patronymics, adding father's name and often
grandfather's name to their own. A great deal of historical context
is necessary to assign such a man to what we now think of as a
surname. Idiosyncrasies appear in my ahnentafel such as "Iye Roy
(Alexander or Hugh) Mackay ca.1463" and "Iye (Ymar, Ivor)
Mackay ca.1305" or "Angus Dow (Duff) Mackay" or "Mac
Eth," begging elucidation. Some
parentheses may indicate alternate occurrences or spellings of names
but the form is inconsistent (and who or what is an "Eth,"
please? I do know that Iye ‒
pronounced "eye"
–
was the early name that became the clan name). "Neil
Williamson Mackay" for a man born about 1606 strikes an odd
note. To my simple mind, would not "Neil MacWilliam Mackay"
or "Neil son of William son of Iye" be closer and truer to
the Gaelic?
In today's world, we would expect the
person's Gaelic identification with a translation in parentheses. Or
vice versa. But hand in hand with capturing the oral tradition in
writing and familiarity with cultural custom is the issue of spelling
the Gaelic pronunciations, firstly in Gaelic. I've no idea if
modern scholarly consensus has reached a consistency in that respect,
but the resurgence of Gaelic language and literature is surely
addressing it. Am I expecting too much information from an
ahnentafel? I'm no Gaelic scholar, in case that
wasn't clear!
Without belabouring the above points, I
found identical forms of address and spellings published in narrative
form in The Book of Mackay in 1906[1]
and harking back to History of Clan Mackay in 1826.[2]
Both have some basis in earlier works, primarily Gordon's
Genealogical History of the Earldom of Sutherland, a
manuscript of 1630 that was not published until 1813.[3]
These were historians who knew their Gaelic. As well as reference to
documents, accounts of oral history were also a likely original
source of any Scottish genealogy that reaches back so far. It
certainly helps that there are heritors (landowners) in the
ahnentafel since land inheritance was a most serious matter.
Documentation of land and title charters exist for some of the
people.
The ahnentafel is littered with place
names, the majority referring to what we know as the county of
Sutherland, although county delineation came later. Here I found some
geographical errors. Strathnaver of enduring northern setting
("Homeland of Mackay") was oddly put in distant
Kirkcudbright in 1232. Fowlis was placed in Ross and Cromarty in 1420
although it seems to be firmly planted in Perthshire. Gigha parish
was properly in Argyll in 1315 but was suddenly bumped to Ayrshire in
1280. Carrick (as in Earls of ...) was placed in Argyll whereas it
was a lordship in southwest Scotland. And so on.
ClanSutherland.org |
Those are not cases of evolving name
changes nor are they relevant to spelling variation over a long
historical period; learned compilers were highly unlikely to have
committed such obvious gaffes. Perhaps each new borrowing,
personalized by family historians, repeats or adds such pitfalls.
However! I am glad to say that the earliest narratives are more
explanatory about names and places than an ahnentafel.
Did I mention
pedigree collapse? Oh yes: It is visible six times on my particular
chart but likely happened more often in the "unknowns."
Basically it refers to an ancestor who occupies more than just one
entry on a pedigree. The most common example is when cousins marry.
They share two mutual grandparents instead of what would ordinarily
be four, reducing the expected, purely mathematical, total of
ancestors. See "Pedigree collapse" at International Society of Genetic Genealogy.
So how did my cousin find the
appropriate link to attach to our mutual heritage? Or did she? I
don't think I'll find a DNA match to Robert the Bruce any time soon.
[1]
Angus Mackay, The Book of
Mackay (Edinburgh: N. Macleod,
1906); available on Internet Archive,
https://archive.org/details/bookofmackay00mack.
[2]
Robert Mackay, History of the Clan Mackay [with lengthy subtitle]
(Edinburgh: Andrew Jack &
Co., 1829); available on Google books.
[3]
Sir Robert Gordon, Genealogical History of the Earldom of
Sutherland (Edinburgh: A.
Constable, 1813); available on Internet Archive,
https://archive.org/details/genealogicalhist00gord.
©
2015 Brenda Dougall Merriman. All rights reserved.
5 comments:
I have a copy of one of those arcane Scottish genealogies for my MacGregor ancestors. I took it seriously at first, then it all fell apart. Janice
http://writinguptheancestors.blogspot.ca/2014/03/the-macgregors-family-legend-or-true.html
I sort of went the other way, Janice, sceptical at first but appreciating the research and knowledge of those old historians. It's the connection to me that I question, needing to examine the place of linkage, but I don't have the in-depth background of historical sources.
I've several lines back to Robert the Bruce, etc. also. I have always taken them with a grain of salt, but I've entered the lines on my tree because I won't have time to prove or disprove everything. I've always said that anything "across the pond" is not my original research. But I enjoy reading books about these folks and learning about their world anyway.
Thanks for your input, Janice #2. It's true it would take a LOT of time and specialized knowledge to try confirming all those ancient connections. I don't have a lifetime to do it, either, but as you say just getting to know a bit about their times is interesting.
YOUR BLOG AND COMMENTS HAVE REKINDLED MY INTEREST IN MY WIFE'S LINE AS SHE IS DESCENDED FROM JOHN MCKAY(1802-1879) = JANET MACKAY (1805-1888) BOTH FROM DUNROBIN GLEN, SUTHERLAND SHIRE TO EKFRID TWSP, MIDDLESEX CO., UPPER CANADA ABOUT 1832. NOW I HAVE TO GO FIND THOSE 3 BOOKS!!!
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