GRANT CLAN
GRANT CLAN crest bracelet

Grant family bracelet – perfect lady's style clan bracelet


Price: US$160.00

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GRANT CLAN crest bracelet

This Grant family crest bracelet is such a tangible link to the ancestors of old - see your Grant family history below.

This elegant piece of Scottish Crest Jewelry is designed in ancient traditions and will lead to the greater appreciation of your Grant Clan family and Clan Crest. Our goldsmiths individually make your Grant Clan Bracelet to your order. We sculpt your Scottish clan bracelet in three dimensions with the same level of detail as our Grant Wall Crest. This results in the Grant family crest bracelet of quite outstanding appearance and exquisite beauty.

This Grant Clan Crest Bracelet is available in solid sterling silver for US$160.

GRANT CLAN History
GRANT CLAN

"Remember the people from whence you came"

Indeed, the Clan Grant’s war-cry is "Stand fast, Craigellachie". The Grant Clan Crest shows a mountain in flames and the proud Graham clan motto simply reads "Stand fast"

With the blood of kings flowing through the Grants’ veins, it is little wonder that the Clan’s name comes from the French "Grand", depicting the splendour of the Clan Grant’s status in the history of Scotland. The Clan is said to descend from the 12th Century warrior Gregor Mor Macgregor, a man whose name in Gaelic means Gregor the Great. Gregor was a direct descendant of King Alpin, whose mighty son Kenneth Macalpin holds the proud honour of becoming the first King of the Scots and Picts during the 9th Century. The Clan soon prospered, and by the 13th Century the Grants possessed considerable lands in Stratherick. In these early times the Clan’s name was often spelled "le Grand", a translation of the Gaelic "Mor" into the tongue of the Norman nobility that had begun to settle in the northern territories.

The Grants soon found favour with the Crown of Scotland, supporting King Robert the Bruce in his quest for Scottish independence. After the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314, where the English overlords were driven from Scottish soil, the Grants fortunes increased considerably. Clan Grant’s lands swelled to include Glenmoriston and Glen Urquhart on the banks of Loch Ness. The Clan’s Strathspey lands are renowned for their fertility, and the Grants’ cattle and produce soon proved to be the key to their prosperity. In 1493 the Crown erected the Grants’ lands into the free barony of Freuchie. It was on these lands that the Grants built Castle Freuchie (later to be named Castle Grant) in 1536. King James V rewarded the Grants’ loyalty to the Crown by exempting the Grant Chief from the jurisdiction of all royal courts except the Supreme Court in Edinburgh. This charter was enhanced in the late 17th Century when Ludovick Grant, 8th Laird of Freuchie, was granted a regality over the barony of Freuchie. This meant that the Grant lands were treated almost as a separate kingdom, with the Chief having the right to administer justice and punish wrongdoers. The Laird’s power was such that he could even control such commercial activities as the regulation of weights and measures. However, the regality was abolished with all other heritable jurisdiction in the wake of the Jacobite defeat of 1746.

The Grants continued to be prominent in Scottish affairs, and active in the promotion of their lands. Determined to maintain the Clan’s wealth and power, the Grants embarked on an ambitious modernisation programme for their lands in the late 18th Century. Factories and mills were established, and the Grants built a new town of Granton-on-Spey to contain their industries. Honours continued to befall the Grants, gaining the earldoms of Seafield and Findlater, with the Grant chiefs even acquiring a seat in the House of Lords during the 19th Century. The Clan Grant crest is of a burning hill, which is thought to be Craigellachie, "the rock of alarm", a prominent feature near Avimore. Chiefs would often light a fire on such a landmark to summon the Clansfolk during times of crisis.

The current chief is Sir James Patrick Trevor Grant of Grant, 6th Baron Strathspey, 33rd hereditary Clan chief of Clan Grant -The Schoolhouse Lochbuie Isle of Mull.

 



Septs/Spelling Variations of GRANT CLAN
GILROY of GRANT CLAN    MACILROY of GRANT CLAN    PRATT of GRANT CLAN    SUTTIE of GRANT CLAN    MCILROY of GRANT CLAN   
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