Scottish tartan patterns come from the fact that they are part of the tribes of Israel.
It all started with Joseph's coat of many colors. Here is the history
How it happened:
Joseph's coat of many colors was the origin of Scottish tartans.
Scripture says Joseph received a special garment (Genesis 37:3). The Hebrew phrase ketonet passim is a multicolored garment. The familiar "coat of many colors" comes from older translations.
* Scottish clans preserved Israelite tribal identity through tartans.
* Similarity between Joseph's garment and tartans proves a connection.
What Scripture says
Genesis 37:3–4 (NKJV):
"Now Israel loved Joseph more than all his children... and he made him a tunic of many colors."
The Hebrew expression ketonet passim has been understood to mean:
- A multicolored robe.
The Bible does not describe the pattern, weave, or colors in detail.
The Meaning
It is know that:
- Joseph's descendants became the peoples of Britain.
- Distinctive woven patterns were preserved by those descendants.
- Scottish tartans are therefore a continuation of Joseph's special garment.
How this happened:
Scottish tartans ultimately trace back to Joseph's special robe.
1. Joseph receives a distinctive robe (c. 1900–1700 BC)
Jacob gives Joseph a unique robe that sets him apart from his brothers (Genesis 37:3). The robe is assumed to have been woven with colorful stripes or a distinctive pattern rather than simply being richly ornamented.
2. Joseph's descendants preserve the tradition
As the descendants of Ephraim and Manasseh multiply, the special patterned garment becomes a family symbol. Different branches of the family gradually adopt variations of the original design while retaining recognizable features.
3. Israelite tribes develop identifying patterns
As the tribes of Israel grow, each tribe develops its own recognizable woven pattern for cloaks, blankets, or ceremonial garments. The patterns identify family lineage in much the same way seals, banners, or standards identify groups.
4. The northern tribes are scattered
Following the Assyrian conquest of the northern kingdom (2 Kings 17), many Israelites migrate north and west over generations.
As they do, they carry their weaving traditions with them.
5. Migration into northwestern Europe
The migrating Israelites eventually settle in regions including parts of Britain and Scotland. While languages, customs, and political systems change over centuries, family weaving traditions survive.
6. Tribal identity becomes clan identity
As centuries pass, the original Israelite tribal identities become Scottish clan identities. Each clan preserves and modifies its inherited woven pattern, producing recognizable but distinct designs.
7. Scottish tartans emerge
The original symbolic striped garment of Joseph evolves over many centuries into the tartans associated with Scottish clans. Colors and patterns multiply, but each continues to signify ancestry and family loyalty.
In this timeline
|
Biblical Era |
Development |
|
Joseph's robe |
First distinctive family pattern |
|
Tribes of Israel |
Each tribe develops recognizable woven designs |
|
Assyrian exile |
Israelites carry textile traditions abroad |
|
Migration to Britain |
Ancient weaving customs preserved |
|
Scottish clans |
Tribal patterns become clan tartans |
|
Modern Scotland |
Tartans preserve an ancient Israelite heritage |
- Both Israelite tribes and Scottish clans emphasized ancestry and lineage.
- Both cultures used symbolic colors and banners.
- Weaving traditions were commonly passed down through families.
- Tartans identify family heritage in a way some compare to biblical tribal identity.
The history explained.
I am from Clan Moffat. Here is our Tartan. And Clan Motto.
All this dating back to our father Jacob, who Yah renamed Israel and the coat he made for his son, our father Joseph.
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