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Showing posts with the label Iona Abbey

Launching Soon! The Ark: A Living Document of the Lennox

The Ark: A Living Document of the Lennox By Tiffany McCarter Evans, Clans of Scotland Historian For over 700 years, the lands of Loch Lomond and the Lennox have whispered their stories in charters, dowries, and fragments of parchment written in Latin ink. Until now, most of those whispers have been left untranslated, misunderstood, or worse — ignored. That changes here. Welcome to The Ark: A Living Document — this will be the first open, searchable, and scientifically grounded database where medieval charters and modern Y-DNA meet. This is not a hobby project. This is not just a clan fan club. This is history reconstructed from the ground up, sourced line by line, signature by signature, haplogroup by haplogroup. And yes, it is free. No memberships. No gatekeeping. No secrets. What’s Inside the Ark The Ark is not just for Colquhouns or McCarters. It is for anyone descended from the ancient Earls of Lennox. The charters inside stretch from 1100 AD through the 170...

The Tears That Named a Monastery: Scotland’s Earliest Charter Story

  The Tears That Named a Monastery:  Scotland’s Earliest Charter Story by Tiffany McCarter Evans Imagine: ChatGPT AI Creation by Tiffany McCarter Evans Imagine Scotland before kings wrote Latin charters, before castles dotted the hills, and before surnames even existed.  The year is around A.D. 565 , and into the rugged northeast comes a monk with a fire in his eyes and a student at his side. The monk? Columcille — better known today as St. Columba , the Irish saint who founded Iona. The pupil? Drostan, son of Cosgrach , was destined to be remembered as the quiet saint of Aberdeenshire. Their destination? A patch of land in Buchan that would one day become Deer Abbey . The First Scottish “Charter” We call it a charter, but in truth it’s a miracle story, a legal note, and a folk etymology all rolled into one. It survives not in stone but scribbled into the margins of a gospel book — the Book of Deer , now one of Scotland’s national treasures. Here’s the tale:...