Out Of Stock
Clan MacLeod
£135.00
Ex Tax: £112.50
- Model: F-RM101FG
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Leod was the younger son of Olaf the Black, one of the last
Norse kings of Man and the North Isles. Olaf died around 1237, and Leod
inherited the islands of Lewis and Harris, with part of Skye. Marriage to the
daughter of the Norse seneschal or steward of Skye brought the family to
Dunvegan, which remains the chief's seat to this day. The clan consisted of two
main branches, the Macleods of Lewis, later 'of the Lewes', named after a son
or grandson of Leod, Thorkil or Torquil (the 'Siol Torquil'), and the Macleods
of Skye, named after another of Leod's sons, Tormod (the 'Siol Tormod'), who
established their seat at Dunvegan.
R. R. McIan describes this figure thus:
‘The figure which illustrates this clan is clad in the dress
usually worn when not fully armed for war. The plaid was a most useful vestment
in so watery a climate as Skye; nor was it less necessary for the Highlanders, who,
in a thinly-peopled country, might, on occasion of sudden tempests, be
storm-staid on desolate isles; in such cases it would enable them to bivouac in
sufficient comfort. There is a fine full-length portrait of the Mac Leod of 1745
at Dunvegan, which appears in the trews and an ample plaid, like the figure
which the artist has here given; but that was manufactured by a lady of the name
of Fraser, and presented to the laird as a token of gratitude for some favour’.
The figurine weighs a little under 0.6 kilos. It stands 15cm tall, is 11cm at its widest, on a base rougly 10cm by 5cm.