COMMENTARY:
In addition to the
History known as "The Green Book," produced by the former
UK Clan Macnab Society (now disbanded), there is another very
short and seemingly excellent history contained in a relatively
recent book published by Barnes and Noble entitled SCOTTISH
CLAN & FAMILY ENCYCLOPEDIA.
The authors of this publication seem to us to be exceedingly well qualified to publish on this subject. They are George Way of Plean, LLB, SSC, Baron of Plean and Secretary of The Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs and Romilly Squire, Heraldic Artist, Court of Lyon and Deputy Secretary of The Standing Council. In addition to these well qualified gentlemen, the book has a foreword by the Rt Hon. The Earl of Elgin KT. Convenor, Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs.
The two aforementioned
versions of the Clan's history, presented on various pages of
this website, are offered because not every member has an opportunity
to view them at their orginal source. For instance, the Barnes
and Noble book has a hefty price tag and the "Green Book,"
as everyone knows by now, has been out of print for several years.
It might be noted here that many other short or one page versions
of the Clan's history are in circulation and have been published
by many sources for various reasons, usually commercial in nature.
Clan Macnab Society, Inc. felt that these two versions, which
have much similarity in content, would be of most interest to
our members.

The name Macnab derives
from the Gaelic 'Mac An Aba', 'child of the abbot'. According
to tradition, the progenitor of this great clan was Abraruadh,
the Abbot of Glendochart and Strathearn, the younger son of King
Kenneth Macalpine. Abraruadh, the Red Abbot, was descended from
King Fergus of Dalriada and a nephew of St Fillan, founder of
the monastery in Glendochart in the seventh century.
One of the earliest records of the family is to be found in a
charter of 1124. Malcolm de Glendochart was one of the Scottish
noblemen who submitted to Edward I of England and his name appears
on the Ragman Roll of 1296. Angus Macnab was brother-in-law of
John Comyn, murdered in 1306 by Robert the Bruce, and he joined
with Macdougall of Lorn in campaign against the king which almost
led to his capture at Dalrigh in Strathfillan in 1306. When Bruce's
power was consolidated by the victory at Bannockburn in 1314,
the Macnab lands were forfeit and their charters destroyed.
The fortunes of the clan were to some degree restored in 1336,
when Angus's grandson, Gilbert, received a charter from David
II. When the Lord Lyon considered the succession of the Macnab
chiefs in 1954, he ruled that Gilbert should be considered the
first undisputed chief (although he was perhaps the twentieth).
Gilbert was succeeded in his lands of Bothmachan or Bovain by
his son, Sir Alexander, who died around 1407. By this time the
Macnab lands included Ardchyle, Invermonichele and Downich. In
1522 the lands of Ewer and Leiragan were granted to Mariat Campbell
by her husband, Finlay Macnab, who died at Eilean Ran on 13 April
1525. His second son, John, succeeded to the estates and married
Eleyn Stewart. John's son, Finlay, married twice and had a daughter
and two sons by his first marriage and, it is believed, another
ten sons by his second. The eldest of the issue of the second
marriage, John Roy or Bain, the red or fair, is the ancestor of
the present chief. Finlay was a man of peace intent upon protecting
his lands and people from being plundered by the foraging royalist
forces of Montrose in the mid 1640s. His son, known as 'Smooth
John', did not follow his father's peaceful ways, and led the
Macnabs to join Montrose and contributed to the royal victory
at Kilsyth. He was appointed to garrison Montrose's own Castle
of Kincardine. General Lesley besieged the castle, but the whole
garrison broke through the Covenanter lines and fought their way
clear. John was, however, captured and taken to Edinburgh where
he was sentenced to death. He contrived to escape on the eve of
his execution and led three hundred of his clansmen at the Battle
of Worcester in 1651.
Robert, the fourteenth chief,
was apprenticed to study law under Colin Campbell of Carwhin,
and he married the sister of John Campbell, Earl of Breadalbane.
This strong Campbell connection constrained him from supporting
the Jacobite rising in 1715, although many of his clansmen drew
their swords for the 'Old Pretender'. The fifteenth chief, a major
in the Hanoverian army, was taken prisoner by Jacobite forces
after the Battle of Prestonpans and confined in Doune Castle.
Francis Macnab succeeded as sixteenth chief, and although within
the clan he is renowned as a notable producer and consumer of
whisky, he is more generally known as 'The Macnab' of Raeburn's
outstanding portrait. He inherited a great burden of debt, and
despite considerable personal efforts, he owed over 35,000 pounds
when he died in 1816. He had never married, and was succeeded
by his nephew, Archibald, who made desperate efforts to extricate
the estate from debt. In 1823 a writ of foreclosure was issued,
and Archibald was forced to flee to Canada, where he eventually
obtained a grant of land in the Ottawa River Valley. Eighty-five
settlers came to the estate, which he renamed Macnab. When an
official enquiry was threatened into allegations of excessive
rents there, he fled to Orkney, then to London, and finally to
France, where he died in 1860. Sarah Anne, the eldest of his children,
was recognised as the eighteenth chief, but she died unmarried
in Italy in 1894.
It was established that the Arthurstone branch of the chiefly
family was now entitled to succeed and the de jure chiefship passed
to James William Macnab. He served in the East India Company and
was succeeded by his eldest son, James Frederick, rector of Bolton
Abbey. His only son, James Alexander, succeeded as twenty-first
de jure chief. In 1954, he relinquished the chiefship to his uncle,
Archibald Corrie Macnab, who had acquired the Killin estate to
enable him to become the tweny-second de facto chief. Archibald
died in 1970 when the succession reverted to James Charles, the
eldest son of James Alexander, who is the present and twenty-third
chief. ......End