Clan McMillen

Clan McMillen Miseris Succurrere Disco...
"TO SECURE THOSE IN DISTRESS" Probably our most famous ancestor is Macbeth King of Scots 1040-1057. Ferchar.

Because of the falsehoods that Shakespeare wrote about Macbeth, most individuals don't realize that he was a real King and that He is considered one of our greatest due to the peace and prosperity during his reign. He was a generous and noble King that cared about all the people rich or poor. One thing to remember about Scottish Kings, they did not rule over land, they ruled over their people, wh

ich is why that Scottish and only Scottish royalty to be labeled as King of Scots...not King of Scotland. From Macbeth we descend to his son Ferchar Og to his son Murdach and to his son Airbeartach who is the (1st) Chief of Clan MacMillan known as the legendary progenotor of the Twelve Celtic Tribes.

1.MacQuarrie....2.MacKinnon....3.MACMILLAN....
4.Lamont....5.MacGregor....6.MacDuffie....7.MacNab....
8.Matheson....9.Ross....10.MacKensie....11.MacCauslan....12.Munro

From Airbeartach we descend to his son Cormac (2nd). Cormac (2nd) had 6 sons... 1.Guire, 2.Finigon, 3. GILCHRIST (3rd), 4.Gille-Adhamhman, 5.Anrias, 6. MacMillans are descendants of GILCHRIST 3rd son of Airbeartach, which is why the MacMillan Coat-of-Arms has three mullets as remembrance. GILCHRIST (3) was a Culdee Celtic Priest known as the 'Tonsured One', his name appearing in the book of Deer, 1132. We then descend to Gilchrsts' oldest son MALCOLM MAC GILLIE MHAOIL IAIN (4TH) FIRST TO USE THE NAME MacMILLAN, his name found in the Book of Deer in Latin as Malcolium McMolini, dated 1150. To:
DOUGALL (5th).... LACHLAN OG (11th, 4th of Knap).....
CAINN (6th).... ALEXANDER (12th, 5th OF Knap).....
MAOLMUIRE (7th).... HECTOR(13th, 6th of Knap)....
MALCOLM MOR (8th, 1st of Knap).... DUNCAN(14th, 7th of Knap)....
MALCOLM OG (9th, 2nd of Knap).... ***
LACHLAN (10th, 3rd of Knap)....


***(NEW DUNMORELINE BRANCHES OFF FROM DUNCAN (14th, 7th of Knap) WITH JOHN ROY WHICH IS THE CURRENT CHIEF OF CLAN MACMILLANS BLOODLINE.......MY FAMILIES BLOODLINE, THE OLD DUNMORELINE CONTINUES AS CHIEFTANS TO NEIL GLAS (15th, 8th of Knap)

NEIL GLAS (15th, 8th of Knap)....
DUNCAN (16th, 9th of Knap)....
DONALD (17th, 10th of Knap)....
ANGUS (18th, 11th of Knap). Angus had a fourth son named NEIL which this pages creator is a direct male to male descendant of. DONALD OG (19th,12th of Knap).....
NEIL (2oth, 13th of Knap)...
NEIL MOR (21st, 14th of Knap).....
DONALD OF CLACHBRECK & BAILLIE (22nd, 15th of Knap)
DONALD OF BAILLIE (23rd, 16th of Knap)...lost to Duncan 3rd of New Dunmore Line called to so called debts, but this happened in 1742, 4 years before the Battle of Culloden in 1746.

01/20/2015
02/24/2013
04/20/2012

Today is the 266th anniversary of the battle on Culloden Moor. The Highland Army under Prince Charles Edward Stuart and the Royal Army of George II, commanded by his son, the Duke of Cumberland, met in the last attempt by the ‘Bonny’ Prince’ to return to the throne of Scotland. Supported mostly by Catholic Jacobites, he had, in earlier battles, handily bloodied the troops of King George’s protestant government. But against the desires of the Highlanders, the Prince then pushed into England, assuring his warriors that they would there be joined by English Jacobites. Instead there were three armies aligned against the invaders, who retreated north to draw their enemy into the rugged terrain where they could be divided. Hungry, tired, and quarrelsome, the Jacobites were no longer the unified army of Prestonpans and Falkirk. Though Lord George Murray warned that they were poorly positioned in the open moor, as the Duke of Cumberland had artillery, Prince Charles refused to move them. In the morning the well-supplied Royal army took the field and the Highlanders lined up opposite them; the Royal artillery commenced firing. Expecting a charge, Prince Charlie gave no order, suffering the Highlanders to be decimated before commanding them to charge. Most did, and the battle eventually became a mass of hand-to-hand combat. The battle lost, Prince Charles withdrew, followed by the clan regiments. Massive suppression of the Highlands followed. Culloden is not a battle honor for British regiments in spite of being a victory. (Portrait is of Prince Charles Stuart)

03/19/2012

As a veteran of the Upstate New York music scene, Doug McMillen has been involved in a fair share of rewarding musical endeavors. Right now, his projects are in a state of re-working. Sometimes, positive realignment is the way to be successful within the act of reinvention. After speaking with Doug,...

12/02/2011

The first Irish Gaels, the Scots, arrived in Scotland around 450 AD and settled in Argyll (Earra Ghàidheal), which they called Dal Riata, after the homeland they had left. While establishing themselves, they were fiercely resisted by the established Pictish people and it was not until 843 that the Gaelic leader, Kenneth MacAlpin united the Picts and the Gaels and became the first ruler of Alba which comprised most of Scotland north of Forth and Clyde. Alba has since remained the Gaelic name for Scotland. The culture of the Gaels spread throughout the country, and their language became the language of the king, court and most of the common people. James IV (1473-1513) was the last Scottish monarch to speak Gaelic.

12/02/2011

The Stone has been used successively by Dalriadic, Scottish, English and British monarchs as an important part of their enthronement ceremonies. At first sight, it is difficult to understand why this plain and rather unremarkable block of sandstone has fired the passion that it has over the past 700 years. Yet the power and importance of the Stone (also known as the Stone of Scone) far outstrips its physical appearance. It is arguably the greatest symbol and touchstone of Scottish nationhood and as such, has been a very potent icon for more than a thousand years.

Early history
Like much of what is now 'uniquely Scottish', the origins of the Stone have been lost to history and typically, there are legends aplenty concerning it. One theory grants it biblical origins while others have it produced in various parts of Ireland and Scotland. In so far as any of its early history is clear, it seems that the Stone was used at Iona, Dunadd, Dunstaffnage and Scone for enthroning a succession of Dalriadic and subsequent monarchs. In 1292 John Balliol became the last king to use the Stone in Scotland as it was captured by Edward I of England in 1296, taken south alongside other important relics of nationhood and placed in Westminster Abbey. There it remained for the next 700 years, a part of the throne of Edward the Confessor on which all new sovereigns sit during their coronation. The last time it was used was at the coronation of HM The Queen in 1953.

The Stone returns home...
On St Andrews Day, 30 November 1996, the Stone of Destiny returned north of the border and amid much pomp and ceremony, was installed in Edinburgh Castle, taking its place alongside those other symbols of national identity, the Honours of Scotland. About 10,000 people lined the Royal Mile to watch the procession of dignitaries and troops es**rt the stone from the Palace of Holyroodhouse to the castle. In a service at St Giles cathedral, the Church of Scotland Moderator, the Right Reverend John MacIndoe, formally accepted the Stone's return, saying it would 'strengthen the proud distinctiveness of the people of Scotland'.
..or does it?
The question is, was it the real Stone that was returned? There have been doubts over the Stone's authenticity ever since The Hammer of the Scots carried it off as war b***y. Some historians claim that by a cunning sleight-of-hand, the Scots actually handed Edward the cess-pit cover from Scone Castle rather than the real Stone (which if true, means that a long succession of English and British monarchs have been crowned while atop a medieval toilet-seat lid!). The picture is further blurred by the fact that on Christmas Day 1950, four nationalist students removed the Stone from Westminster Abbey and drove it north. It resurfaced some four months later following a huge public outcry, having been left symbolically in Arbroath Abbey, draped in a saltire. The rumour mill was quickly in action and it was suggested that the recovered stone, now safely restored beneath the Coronation Throne at Westminster, was in fact a copy. At least one acknowledged copy of the Stone does exist, on public display at Scone Palace in Perthshire, where it serves as a favourite roost for the elegant peacocks and camera-toting tourists who stroll the grounds. As to whether other copies exist, only a small handful of people know and they're not saying...

01/07/2011

The new year....time to quit wasting time and make the changes necessary. Buying a pocket dictionary is one! I always feel like I have the worst spelling and grammar when I make a post.

12/29/2010
Castle Sween, Scotland.
12/29/2010

Castle Sween, Scotland.

12/29/2010

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Seneca Falls, NY
13148

Website

http://www.clanmacmillannortheastusa.org/

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