Saturday, August 12, 2023

The Collision of Cultures during the Times of Rob Roy MacGregor

Statue of Rob Roy 
It wasn’t until I moved to Minnesota that I came to understand my ancestral history as a descendant of Rob Roy MacGregor, the legendary hero/outlaw--a hero to the people, but a thorn in the side of the corrupt British overlords.

Growing up in Central New Jersey, I saw little evidence of the native peoples who originally populated that land. The Raritan River rolled through our area, but I never grasped that the Raritan took its name from the Native American tribe that once occupied this region 300 years earlier.


In coming to Minnesota in the 1970s, the past was quite near at hand. The Battle of the Little Big Horn, that ended Custer’s ambitious and wreckless life, took place only 100 years earlier. Reservations and Native peoples are still all around us here, with tribal communities that continue to carry on many of the practices of their forebears. 


What I eventually came to understand was that the Scottish clan system was very similar to the tribes that lived on the land and organized their lives in a manner utterly different, with lawyers and title deeds to property and all the associated red tape. Scotland in earlier times was much like the West before the intrusion of “civilization.” 

 

During the era of Sitting Bull, Crazy Horse and the Ghost Dancers there was a collision of cultures, with much misunderstanding and many unfortunate outcomes. I learned these things here in Minnesota, and recognized that this is what had happened in Scotland during the time of the Highland MacGregors. For nearly a century it was legal to shoot a MacGregor on sight.


In 1827 Sir Walter Scott wrote a novel titled Rob Roy, which showcased the stark contrasts between English urban society and the rugged Highland landscape. This contrast served as a central theme that highlighted the cultural, social, and value differences between these two worlds. These differences played a significant role in shaping the characters' perspectives, motivations, and decisions throughout the novel.


Engraving of Rob Roy
Last night I decided to go back in time and ask Rob Roy himself about the difference between English urban society and life amongst the Highland clans. Here was Rob Roy's reply.

"Ah'll tell ye, th' rugged Highland landscape is a stark shift awa' frae th' English urban scene. Th' Highlands are wild, untamed, an' marked wi' th' independent clan system. Th' Highland clans hae their ain complex social structures, an' loyalty tae yin's clan chief is o' utmost importance. We Highlanders che
rish notions like honor, loyalty, an' rugged individualism. Oor way o' life is closely bound tae th' land, an' oor traditions are deeply rooted in a strong link tae oor environment."

"On th' ither haun, English urban society is bound tae commercial an' financial pursuits, social hierarchy, an' a mair centralized form o' governance. Th' English value stability, convention, an' a sense o' propriety. It's aw aboot a sense o' order, decorum, an' adherin' tae social norms." 

"As ye can ken, me heart bides in th' Highlands." 

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