Boyd clan crest tie bar direct from the makers - for the most deserving Boyd clansman to "wear with pride"
Boyd clan crest tie bar direct from the makers - for the most deserving Boyd clansman to "wear with pride"
The Victorian age inspired the design of this very solid Scottish man’s tie bar which features your Boyd Crest supported between two distinctive horizontal columns. This impressive Clan Boyd tie bar is fitted with a strong crocodile clip and the crest is an exact match to the Boyd cufflinks.
Delivery: As we make this Clan Boyd Scottish jewelry/jewellery item to your order, please allow two weeks for production, and a week to most shipping destinations.
Click each row of boxes below to view all crest items: See your Boyd Family History below:
Clan Boyd: The current Chief is Dr Robin Jordan Boyd 9th Baron
Kilmarnock.
Previous Chief: Alistair Boyd 7th Baron Kilmarnock, died 19th March 2009.
Gaelic Name: Buihje meaning “fair” or “yellow”
Origin of name: The earliest record of Boyd is in Irvine Ayrshire in 1205 as
vassals of the Norman family of de Morvilles.
Crest Badge A dexter hand erect with the last two fingers bowed
inwards.
Clan Motto: Confido meaning (I trust).
Lands: Kilmarnoch
Your Boyd Family history is under construction................sorry for any inconvience.
The Clan Boyd Family crest shows a right hand erect with two outer fingers bowed inwards and the proud Boyd clan motto reads Confido which means "I trust".
Our Scottish Heritage is the common bond that unites our Boyd family name forever.........
An old Gaelic proverb................‘Remember the men from whence you came’
Robert Louis Stevenson wrote....
"The mark of a Scot of all classes is that he remembers and cherishes the memories of his forebears, good or bad, and here burns above in him a sense of identity with the dead even to the twentieth generation."
There are many spelling variations for the Clan Boyd surname. Included are families (known as Septs) with different surnames from the original Clan name. Throughout the centuries, surnames have continued to “develop” often leading to astonishing variants of the original spelling.