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A ''ram in the sea'' is said to have been an emblem on the seal of Ramsay Abbey in ] in the 11th century. When ], travelled north to claim the throne of ] in 1124, he was accompanied by many young ] noblemen keen to share in their overlord’s heritage. These may have included Sir Symon de Ramesie (] Simon of ]) who received a grant of land in ] from David and who witnessed important charters, including one to the monks of ] in 1140. A ''ram in the sea'' is said to have been an emblem on the seal of Ramsay Abbey in ] in the 11th century. When ], travelled north to claim the throne of ] in 1124, he was accompanied by many young ] noblemen keen to share in their overlord’s heritage. These may have included Sir Symon de Ramesie (] Simon of ]) who received a grant of land in ] from David and who witnessed important charters, including one to the monks of ] in 1140.


Actually the Ramsays of Nordic countries have another explanation to the origin of "Ramsay". In the Icelandic language (hraems-ay) Rams-ay means ravens island. This means that the black bird in Ramsay arms comes from a raven. If we look at an old coat of arms from the 13th century (Adam Ramsay 1290) the "eagle" looks more like a "raven".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rammac.eu/vapnet.htm|title=Olika Ramsay vapen}} In Swedish. Good pictures of the crest etc though.</ref> Actually the Ramsays of Nordic countries have another explanation to the origin of "Ramsay". In the Icelandic language and in ] (hraems-ay) Rams-ay means ravens island. This means that the black bird in Ramsay arms comes from a raven. If we look at an old coat of arms from the 13th century (Adam Ramsay 1290) the "eagle" looks more like a "raven".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.rammac.eu/vapnet.htm|title=Olika Ramsay vapen}} In Swedish. Good pictures of the crest etc though.</ref>
The origin of Ramsays may be Viking from "Ravens Island" who settled in Normandy. In a Ramsay chronicle by Anders Ramsay (Finland) mentions that one Ramsay participated in the First Crusade to Jerusalem. At that time many knights came from Normandy - but not from Scotland. The origin of Ramsays may be Viking from "Ravens Island" who settled in Normandy. In a Ramsay chronicle by Anders Ramsay (Finland) mentions that one Ramsay participated in the First Crusade to Jerusalem. At that time many knights came from Normandy - but not from Scotland.



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Clan Ramsay
Crest: A unicorn's head couped Argent armed Or
MottoOra et labora
Profile
RegionLowlands
DistrictMidlothian
Plant badgeblue harebell
Chief
The Rt. Hon. James Hubert Ramsay
The 17th Earl of Dalhousie
SeatBrechin Castle
Historic seatDalhousie Castle
Ramsey tartan as illustrated in the Vestiarium Scoticum of 1842.

Clan Ramsay is a Lowland Scottish clan of Anglo-Norman origin. The clan can be traced to the 12th century in Scotland.

History

Origins

A ram in the sea is said to have been an emblem on the seal of Ramsay Abbey in Huntingdon in the 11th century. When David, Earl of Huntingdon, travelled north to claim the throne of Scotland in 1124, he was accompanied by many young Norman noblemen keen to share in their overlord’s heritage. These may have included Sir Symon de Ramesie (Sir Simon of Ramsey) who received a grant of land in Midlothian from David and who witnessed important charters, including one to the monks of Holyrood in 1140.

Actually the Ramsays of Nordic countries have another explanation to the origin of "Ramsay". In the Icelandic language and in Old Norse (hraems-ay) Rams-ay means ravens island. This means that the black bird in Ramsay arms comes from a raven. If we look at an old coat of arms from the 13th century (Adam Ramsay 1290) the "eagle" looks more like a "raven". The origin of Ramsays may be Viking from "Ravens Island" who settled in Normandy. In a Ramsay chronicle by Anders Ramsay (Finland) mentions that one Ramsay participated in the First Crusade to Jerusalem. At that time many knights came from Normandy - but not from Scotland.

Branches

The de Ramesie family prospered, and by the 13th century there were five, or even six, major branches: Dalhousie (Midlothian), Auchterhouse (Angus, aka Forfarshire), Bamff (Perthshire), Forthar (Fife), Clatto (Fife) and, probably, Colluthie (Fife). Peter de Ramsay, son of Nessus de Ramsay of Forthar, was appointed Bishop of Aberdeen in 1247 and, before his death in 1256, like William de Ramsay of Dalhousie, he was a member of the king’s council in 1255 during the minority of Alexander III of Scotland. William's son, or perhaps his grandson, also called William, appears on the Ragman Roll, swearing fealty to Edward I of England in 1296 as Ramsay de Dalwolsy, along with ten other Ramsay lairds from Angus, Fife, Midlothian and the borders.

14th century and Wars of Scottish Independence

Dalhousie later declared for King Robert the Bruce, becoming one of the signatories to the open letter to the pope, now known as the Declaration of Arbroath, which declared Scotland’s independence in 1320. He had at least two sons, William and Alexander. Alexander was a renowned knight, and for his many services he was made Sheriff of Teviotdale in 1342. This aroused the jealousy of the Clan Douglas, who claimed the office as their own. Sir William Douglas of Liddesdale fell upon Alexander with a strong force of men and imprisoned him in Hermitage Castle, where he starved to death. Alexander’s brother, William, also endured captivity when he was captured at the Battle of Neville's Cross in 1346, but William lived to tell the tale.

Sir John Ramsay of Auchterhouse fought in William Wallace's campaign (1297-1303) and with Edward Bruce during the Scottish conquest of Ireland (1317). Sir William Ramsay of Colluthie, who was captured by the English both at Battle of Neville's Cross (1346) and when he fought for the French at Poitiers (1356), was created Earl of Fife in 1358 by King David II.

In 1400, Sir Alexander Ramsay held Dalhousie Castle in Midlothian against a siege by Henry IV of England, and resisted so resolutely that the English were forced to withdraw. This is mentioned in Shakespeares Henry IV part I.

16th century and Anglo-Scottish Wars

During the Anglo-Scottish Wars Sir Alexander's descendant and namesake, Alexander Ramsay, was killed at the Battle of Flodden Field in 1513, when Dalhousie passed to his son, Nicolas, who was to be a staunch supporter of Mary, Queen of Scots. After Mary’s final defeat the Ramsays acknowledged her son as James VI. They were later to be handsomely rewarded for saving that monarch’s life.

17th century and Civil War

In 1600, John Ramsay, one of Nicolas’s great-grandsons and a page to James VI, killed the Earl of Gowrie and his brother, Alexander Ruthven, who were accused of the Gowrie Conspiracy, an attempt to kidnap the king. John was knighted and later created Viscount Haddington (1606) and Earl of Holderness (1621) by a grateful king. He died in 1626 and, as none of his children survived him, his line became extinct.

Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Ramsay, recruited by his brother Colonel Andrew Ramsay, commanded the Scottish forces at the Battle of Kringen in 1612 on the ill-fated expedition to Sweden to form a Scottish regiment for King Gustavus Adolphus.

George Ramsay, Holderness’s eldest brother, also attained high rank when he was created Lord Ramsay in 1618. Ramsay’s eldest son, William, opposed the religious policies of Charles I of England, Scotland and Ireland and raised a cavalry regiment for Parliament. He fought at the Battle of Marston Moor, and was part of General David Leslie's force which surprised James Graham, 1st Marquess of Montrose at the Battle of Philiphaugh in 1645. He had been created Earl of Dalhousie in 1633.

18th and 19th centuries

The Ramsays were thereafter to continue in military and public service down to the present day. They served in all the great campaigns of the 18th and 19th centuries on the continent, in Canada, and in India. The 9th Earl of Dalhousie was Governor General of British North America from 1819 to 1828, and commander-in-chief of India from 1829 to 1832. His son, James Broun-Ramsay also served as Governor General of India from 1847 to 1856, during a period of great expansion of British interest on the sub-continent. He was created Marquess of Dalhousie in 1849, but this title died with him in 1860, although the older earldom passed to a cousin from whom the present Earl descends.

Many other branches of the family have also produced persons of distinction and rank. Admiral the Honourable Sir Alexander Ramsay, the younger son of the 14th Earl of Dalhousie, married Her Royal Highness Princess Victoria of Connaught, granddaughter of Queen Victoria. Their son, the late Captain Alexander Ramsay of Mar (Aberdeenshire), and his wife, the Lady Saltoun, chief of the Frasers, are, by the Queen’s personal wish, members of the royal family. Sir Gilbert Ramsay of Bamff, descended from Neis de Ramsay, physician to Alexander II of Scotland around 1232, was created a Baronet of Nova Scotia in 1666. Sir John Ramsay of Balmain (Kincardineshire), who was created Lord Bothwell in 1485, forfeited that title for treason in 1488 and it was later granted to the Hepburns; the Balmain Ramsays restored their fortunes by being created baronets, first in 1625 and again in 1806.

Brechin Castle circa 1880.
Dalhousie Castle.

Castles

Other achievements

Fighting was not the only talent of this family. Andrew Ramsay, better known as the Chevalier de Ramsay, left Scotland for France in 1708. His academic excellence was soon recognized, and he became mentor to the Prince de Turenne. The King of France appointed him a Knight of the Order of Saint Lazarus, and for a time he was tutor to both the Jacobite princes, Charles Edward Stuart and Henry Benedict Stuart. Allan Ramsay, the great 18th century poet, and his son, the distinguished portrait painter, were descended from the Clan Lairds of Cockpen, cadets of the chiefly house. In 1972, Dalhousie Castle was converted to a hotel, and the clan seat became Brechin Castle in Angus.

Timeline

  • 2003 — Dalhousie Castle in Bonnyrigg, Midlothian, was sold to Von Essen Hotels.
  • 1999 — Simon Ramsay, 16th Earl of Dalhousie and former Governor General of Rhodesia and Nyasoland, died on July 15 at age 84.
  • 1972 — Dalhousie Castle was converted into a hotel.
  • 1568 — Laird of Dalhousie fought alongside Mary, Queen of Scots, at Langside, Glasgow, where Mary's army was defeated.
  • 1563 — Mary, Queen of Scots, stayed at Dalhousie Castle before continuing to Roslin (Confirmed by the Marie Stuart Society in 2003).
  • 1320 — William Ramsay became a signatory to the Declaration of Arbroath in which Scottish Barons appealed to the Pope for aid against English oppression.
  • 1314 — On June 24, William Ramsay joined forces with King Robert the Bruce to defeat Edward II of England at Bannockburn.
  • 1296 — King Edward I of England stayed at Dalhousie Castle before the Battle of Falkirk when Sir William Wallace was defeated.
  • 1280 — Ramsay Dalhousie (Ramsay de Dalwolsey) built the inner Keep with Vaults and the bottle dungeon.
  • 1140–1280 — The Ramsays acquired large estates by marriage to the heiress of the Maules, Norman mercenaries who were employed by King David and thus secured royal grants of land in Midlothian and the Carse of Gowrie.
  • 1140 — Simon Ramsay (Simundus de Ramseia), a French nobleman under King David, was the first to land at Dalhousie. The Ramsays became notorious border raiders and for-hire cutthroats.
  • 1090 — The Viking and/or his son joined King Malcolm III of Scotland, and survived by robbing the natives.
  • 1066 — A German Viking, the progenitor of the Ramsay clan, sailed with Duke William II to England, and fought alongside Norman troops at the Battle of Hastings. The Ramsay Black Eagle battle emblem was produced.

Dalhousie branch

The Ramsays of Dalhousie (or Dalwolsie) in Midlothian were a branch of the main line of Scottish Clan Ramsay of whom the earliest known is Simon de Ramsay, of Huntingdon, England, mentioned in 1140 as the grantee of lands in West Lothian at the hands of David I. A Sir William de Ramsay of Dalhousie swore fealty to Edward I in 1296, but is famous for having in 1320 signed the letter to the pope asserting the independence of Scotland; and his supposed son, Sir Alexander Ramsay (d. 1342), was the Scottish patriot and capturer of Roxburgh Castle (1342), who, having been made warder of the castle and sheriff of Teviotdale by David II, was soon afterwards carried off and starved to death by his predecessor, the Douglas, in revenge. Sir John Ramsay of Dalhousie (1580-1626), James VI's favorite, is famous for rescuing the king in the Gowrie conspiracy, and was created (1606) Viscount Haddington and Lord Ramsay of Barns (subsequently Baron Kingston-upon-Thames and Earl of Holderness in England). The barony of Ramsay of Melrose was granted in 1618 to his brother George Ramsay of Dalhousie (d. 1629), whose son William Ramsay (d. 1674) was made 1st earl of Dalhousie in 1633.

Clan profile

Chief

The current chief of Clan Ramsay is James Ramsay, 17 Earl of Dalhousie.

Symbols

Clan members may show their allegiance to their clan by wearing a crest badge and clan badge. Crest badges usually contain the chief's heraldic crest and motto which are encircled by a strap and buckle. The crest and motto within the badge are the heraldic property of the clan chief alone. By wearing such crest badges, clan members show their allegiance to their chief. The crest badge suitable for a member of Clan Ramsay contains the crest: A unicorn's head couped Argent armed Or, and the motto ORA ET LABORA (from Latin: "pray and work"). Another clan symbol is the clan badge, or plant badge. These badges consist merely of sprigs of a specific plant, sometimes worn behind the crest badge on a bonnet. The clan badge of Clan Ramsay is Blue Harebell.

The most popular of the tartans attributed to the surname Ramsay is derived from one titled Ramsey in the Vestiarium Scoticum published in 1842. Though the Vestiarium has been proven to be a Victorian era hoax many of today's clan tartans are derived from it. The Vestiarium provides both an illustrative plate, and a written description of the sett, however the plate and description contradict each other.

Branches and septs

Sept names attributed to the clan include: Brechin, Brecheen and Maule.

The Ramsay family has also been introduced to Swedish and Finnish nobility. The forefather of the Ramsays of Sweden and Finland was Hans (Joan) Ramsay, who came to Sweden 1577. He was naturalized 1633 and the family introduced to the Swedish nobility in 1634. There are currently two branches of the family in Finland: untitled branch and baronial branch. The traditional home of the Ramsay family in Finland has been the Espoo manor.

See also

References

  1. "Clan Ramsay". Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs. Retrieved 2008-09-30.
  2. "Clan Ramsay History". Clan Ramsay Association of North America. Retrieved 2008-09-30.
  3. "Olika Ramsay vapen". In Swedish. Good pictures of the crest etc though.
  4. Bamff Charters A.D. 1232-1703, James Ramsay 1915

External links

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