Clan Tailyour

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

MottoIn Cruce Salus (Salvation from the cross)[2]
Historic seatKirktonhill Castle[3]
Clan Tailyour
Macintaylor[1]
Crest: A hand holding a passion cross Gules[2]
MottoIn Cruce Salus (Salvation from the cross)[2]
Clan Tailyour no longer has a chief, and is an armigerous clan
Historic seatKirktonhill Castle[3]
Allied clans

Clan Tailyour,[1] also known as Clan Taylor,[2] is a Scottish clan. The clan is recognized by the Lord Lyon King of Arms but it does not currently have a clan chief therefore it is considered an armigerous clan.[1] The surname Taylor is also considered a sept of the Clan Cameron of the Scottish Highlands who are descendants of Taillear Dubh na Tuaighe (b.1550), see: Taylor sept.

Origins of the clan

Stem arms of Clan Tailyour clansmen
Crest of the Chief of Clan Tailyour (in abeyance)

Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia. 1994.

Arms of the Chief of Clan Tailyour (in abeyance)

Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia. 1994. The surname Tailyour is derived from the French tailler which means to cut.[1] In Latin it is rendered as cissor.[1] In around 1137 Walter Cissor received a grant of land from David I of Scotland.[1] The historian George Fraser Black states that Taylor is a very common name in early Scots records.[1] In 1276 Alexander le Taillur is listed as valet to Alexander III of Scotland.[1]

Wars of Scottish Independence

In 1296 Bryce le Taillur was one of the Scottish prisoners at the capture of Dunbar Castle.[1] In the same year six people of this name appear on the Ragman Rolls, rendering homage to Edward I of England, from counties as far apart as Angus and Roxburgh.[1]

15th, 16th 17th and 18th centuries

In the Latin form of then name Cissor, both Donald Cissor and Bricius Cissor were witnesses to a deed in Inverness in 1462.[1] In around 1552 Gillepatrick Tailzeour was sergeant of Dornoch.[1] The name is also found rendered as Macintaylor and in 1613 several Macintaylors were fined for sheltering outlawed members of the Clan Gregor.[1]

James Taylor, born 1753 in Lanarkshire is credited with the first practical application of steam power to vessels for inland navigation.[1] The great paddle steamers which would later carry passengers and freight on the rivers of North America were derived from Taylor's original work.[1]

Castles

References

See also

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI