The Evolution of the
Kilt
From Ancient Times to 1600
© 1997
and 2002 Kass McGann
léine and brat

The Highland Scots emigrated
from Ireland around 375 ce. They
displaced
the native Picts and made the Highlands their own. From their native land,
they brought Irish dress. This consisted of a
léine [LAY-na]
and a
brat.
Léine is the modern Irish
word for shirt. In antiquity, the
léine was similar to a
linen undertunic, although silk is occasionally mentioned. It was usually
white or unbleached, often decorated with red or gold embroidery at the neck
and cuffs, and sometimes hooded as well. A woman wore
it long; a man’s
léine ended at his knees. In the earliest
times, the
léine probably had no shape at all. However, in
the Norman era, it gained definition in the waist and by the Elizabethan age,
it had become a full pleated smock made from at least
7 yards of fabric. It was always made of linen and its color was invariably
yellow. The English referred to it as the "saffron shirt" and in 1537 Henry
VIII banned its use in Ireland (saffron was, and still is, a very expensive spice;
its use as a dye was a luxury reserved for
nobility, not the common Irish). By this time, the
léine had
also developed long, training sleeves. It has been pictured as long and
flowing, the length hitched up over a belt. Other depictions, particularly
in Ulster and the islands nearest Scotland, portray it to reach only to mid-thigh,
with wide sleeves and an elaborately pleated skirt
like a short kilt. However, it was never made of wool or plaid material. Sometimes
trews were worn underneath and a short jacket on top.
The brat is a rectangular piece of cloth thrown around
the body and
fastened on the breast or shoulder by a brooch. Both men and women wore
them. The brat could be wrapped around the shoulders or looped under
the sword arm for better maneuverability. Brats were worn in varying
lengths depending upon the occasion and the rank
of the wearer. Some tales speak of the Queen's brat dragging on
the ground behind her chariot. They were also worn in a good many
colors, “variegated” and “many-colored” being mentioned in the ancient
tales. Because the number of colors one could wear was restricted
by one’s rank, a many-colored brat was a sure sign of nobility. In
the Táin Bo Culaigne, King Conor Mac Nessa of Ulster’s costume
is described: “He wore a crimson, deep-bordered, five-folding tunic; a
gold pin in the tunic over his bosom; and a brilliant white shirt, interwoven
with thread of red gold, next to his white skin.” “Five-folding” has also
been rendered as “wrapped five times.” The Irish word used
here, “filleadh” is also used in the word for kilt, “filleadh beag.”
At this point, it would help to define a few terms in their
original
usage. The word “plaid” does not mean in Gaelic what it does is English. Plaide in
Gaelic means a blanket. In some Middle English quotations, plaid is
used as a verb, meaning "to pleat.” Therefore, a “plaid” refers to a blanket
or something that is pleated, not the striped material associated with the Highland
Scots. The Gaelic word for
plaid as we know it is breacán. This can mean speckled, dappled,
striped and spotted as well as “plaid.” The second word we must define
is “tartan.” This also does not refer in any way to
a co lour or pattern. Tartan, from the French “tiretaine,” indicates
a kind of cloth irrespective of its color and it is taken to mean a type of
light wool. Tartan also referred to a silk/wool
blend. To distinguish between the old uses of these words and the modern
uses, these words will appear in italics when the old use is intended.
The Léine Changes
Scottish literature
does not make much mention of Scottish Highland dress
before 1600. The most common statement is that they were “dressed in the
Irish style”: probably in a
léine and
brat. The
lack of any reference to differences between Scottish and Irish dress implies
that there were none. H. F. McClintock, in his great source
work
Old Irish and Highland Dress, lists a number of quotes in which Highland
clothes are mentioned. The earliest reference is from Magnus Berfaet’s Saga in
1093. This quote mentions that men wore short tunics with an upper garment
and went barelegged. This can be taken to be the same
shirt and mantle (
léine and
brat) combination mentioned
above. Later quotes further elucidate this.
However, the léine seems to be quite different
from the
contourless tunic we saw earlier. In the sixteenth century, the léine is
in variably dyed with saffron and made from no less than 7 yards of
linen. For further information, see "Man's Léine".
John Major’s History of Greater Scotland (1521) describes
the “Wild Scots” (Highland Scots) as “from the middle of the
thigh to the foot they have no covering for the leg, clothing
themselves with a mantle instead of an upper garment and a shirt
dyed with saffron.” Sound familiar?
The Lord High Treasurer’s account of materials for a Highland
dress made for King James V in 1538 lists a varicolored velvet
short jacket with green lining, a pair of tartan trews, two or
more long shirts sewn with silk and ornamented with ribbons to
the wrists. There is no mention made of any kind of plaid as
we know it.
Jean de Beagué (1556) in L’histoire de la Guerre d’Écosse (The
History of the Scottish War) says of certain Highlanders
present at the French siege of Haddington in 1549: “They
wear no clothes except their dyed shirts and a sort of light
woolen rug of several
colors.”
Lindsay of Pitscottie in 1573 wrote: “They be clothed
with ane mantle, with ane schirt saffroned after the Irish manner,
going barelegged
to the knee.”
An illustration by Lucas de Heere, circa 1577, raises some curious
questions
about pre-17th century Highland Dress. The original watercolor print has
been lost, but a reprint of it resides in the Library of Ghent University and
in the British Museum. Unfortunately, the reprint is in black and white
and the original color information is not know.
In
this picture (click to enlarge), we see the Highlander wearing
his brat in the usual manner. However, his léine appears
to be missing. On his upper body, he wears a checked or
cross-hatched jacket, not unlike the woolen
or leather ionar we have seen on léine wearers. The
most puzzling part is a horizontal line that appears to cross the Highlander's
thighs. This has often been interpreted as "short trews" or "a covering
for the thighs of the simplest kind" (see Bishop Lesley's writing, below). Lucas
de Heere is known for the descriptive quality of his pictures. Yet these "shorts" seem
to be one simple line rather than the detailed illustrations we have come to
expect.
I contend that this horizontal line is exactly that, and nothing
more. From the black and white photo we can discern the
texture of the back of
the legs. That above the "line" greatly resembles that below. Therefore,
the line was drawn in later. The shading on the back of the thighs more
closely resembles the back of bare thighs than the back
of woolen shorts. Shorts would have been baggy, not skin-tight. De
Heere, with his attention to detail, would have certainly included wrinkles had
the figure been wearing "short trews."
Why would someone tamper with a historical drawing? The
Victorians, in particular, had no problem with amending archeological
evidence to suit
their purposes. In many cases, "shirts" have been drawn on pictures of
topless aboriginal women and "skirts" have been placed over the loins of naked
men. In this case, it is the latter.
In Rome, Bishop Lesley published a treatise on things Scottish
in 1578. He says: “All, both nobles and common people,
wore mantles of one sort (except that the nobles preferred those
of several colors). These were long and flowing, but capable
of being neatly gathered up at
pleasure into folds. I am inclined to believe that they were the same as
those to which the ancients gave the name of bracchæ. Wrapped
up in these for their only covering, they would sleep comfortably. They
had also shaggy rugs, such as the Irish use at the present day, some fitted for
a journey, others to be placed on a bed. The rest of their garments consisted
of a short woolen jacket, with the sleeves open below
for the convenience of throwing their darts, and a covering for the thighs of
the simplest kind, more for decency that for
show or defense against cold. They made also of linen very large shirts,
with numerous folds and wide sleeves, which flowed abroad loosely
to their knees. These the rich colored with saffron and others smeared
with some grease to preserve them longer clean among the toils and exercises
of a camp, which they held it of the highest consequence to practice continually. In
the manufacture of these, ornament and a certain attention to taste were not
altogether neglected, and they joined the different parts of their shirts very
neatly with silk thread, chiefly or a red or green color.”
In James Aikman’s 1827 translation of George Buchanan’s 1581 History
of Scotland: “They delight in variegated garments,
especially stripes, and their favorite colors are purple
and blue. Their ancestors
wore plaids of many colors, and numbers still retain this custom but
the majority now in their dress prefer a dark brown, imitating nearly the leaves
of the heather, that when lying upon the heath in the day, they may not be discovered
by the appearance of their clothes; in these wrapped rather than covered,
they brave the severest storms in the open air, and sometimes lay themselves
down to sleep even in the midst of snow.”
Nicolay D’Arfeville, the cosmographer to the King of France,
published
a volume in 1583 called The Islands and Kingdom of Scotland. “[The ‘wild’ (Scots)]
wear like the Irish a large and full shirt, colored with saffron, and over this
a garment hanging to the knee, of coarse wool, after the fashion of a cassock,
they go bareheaded, and let their hair grow very long, and wear neither hose
nor shoes, except some who have boots made in an old-fashioned way, which come
as high as their knees.”
Therefore, Irish and Scottish dress would be nearly indistinguishable
before 1600. Regional differences may have existed, but
no documentation
attests to what they were. In fact, many writers and painters mistakenly
labeled their subjects “Irish” when they were really Highland Scots, and vice
versa.
top | next
References
Dunbar, J. Telfer.
History of Highland Dress. Philadelphia:
Dufour
Editions, 1964.
Glen, Duncan, ed.
Whither Scotland? London: Victor
Gollancz Ltd., 1971.
Grimble, Jan.
Scottish Clans and Tartans. New York: Tudor
Publishing Co., 1973.
McClintock, Henry Foster.
Old Irish and Highland Dress. Dundalk: Dundalgan
Press, 1943.
Norris, Herbert.
Costume and Fashion: The Evolution of European
Dress through the Earlier Ages. London: J.M.
Dent & Sons, Ltd., 1924.
© 1997 and 2002 Kass McGann — The
Author of this work retains full copyright for this material.
Permission is granted
to make and distribute verbatim copies of this document for non-commercial
private research or educational purposes provided the copyright
notice and this permission notice
are preserved on all copies.
This information
was taken and reformatted from the original which can be found
at Reconstructing
History.