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Clan Fleming
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| Clan Fleming | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Motto | Let The Deed Shaw[1] | ||
| Profile | |||
| Region | Lanarkshire | ||
| Plant badge | None | ||
| Clan Fleming no longer has a chief, and is an armigerous clan | |||
| Historic seat | Cumbernauld Castle[2] | ||
| Last Chief | Charles Fleming, The 7th Earl of Wigtown | ||
| Died | 1747 | ||
| |||
| |||
Clan Fleming is a Lowland Scottish clan and is officially recognized as such by the Lord Lyon King of Arms.[3] However, as the clan does not currently have a chief that is recognized by the Lord Lyon King of Arms it is therefore considered an armigerous clan.[3]
History
[edit]Origins of the clan
[edit]The surname Fleming is derived from the French, le Fleming, which indicates that the family originated in Flanders.[3][4] The heartland of this once powerful medieval county is now in Belgium, with smallers parts in the Netherlands and France.[3] During the latter part of the twelfth century the Flemish were enterprising merchants who traded with England, Scotland and Wales.[3] A distinguished Flemish leader named Baldwin settled with his followers in Biggar, South Lanarkshire under a grant of David I of Scotland.[3] Baldwin became Sheriff of Lanark under Malcolm IV of Scotland and William the Lion and this office appears to have been hereditary for some time.[3]
Wars of Scottish Independence
[edit]In 1296 nine Flemings signed the Ragman Rolls swearing fealty to Edward I of England.[3] However, one of the signatories was Sir Robert Fleming who was one of the first people to join Robert the Bruce after the death of the Comyn in 1306.[3]
In 1342 Sir Malcolm Fleming of Cumbernauld was created Earl of Wigtown by David II of Scotland for helping to keep him safe from Edward Balliol and the English.[3] In 1371 Sir Malcolm's grandson, Thomas Fleming, sold the earldom to Archibald Douglas, Lord of Galloway and this was confirmed by Robert II of Scotland.[3]
15th century
[edit]Sir Malcolm Fleming of Biggar and Cumbernauld was knighted by Robert III of Scotland.[3] In 1423 he was one of the hostages used for the release of James I of Scotland from the captivity of the English.[3] This Sir Malcolm Fleming was a counsellor and friend of William Douglas, 6th Earl of Douglas and was a member of the party that went to Edinburgh Castle with Douglas, on the invitation Governor Livingstone and Chancellor Crichton in November 1440, where Douglas, his brother David and Fleming were arrested, briefly tried and then beheaded.[3] As a result, his younger son, Sir Robert Fleming, forfeited the lands that had been returned to him by James II of Scotland because his father had died at the faith and peace of His Majesty.[3] Sir Robert Fleming was created a Lord of Parliament before 1460.[3]
16th century
[edit]Sir Robert's grandson, John Fleming, 2nd Lord Fleming, was appointed as a guardian to James V of Scotland during the king's infancy in July 1515.[3] In 1517 John became Chancellor of Scotland.[3] However while he was out hawking on 1 November 1524, he was assassinated by John Tweedie of Drummelzier (chief of Clan Tweedie) and others.[3] Malcolm Fleming, 3rd Lord Fleming was Great Chamberlain of Scotland and married Lady Janet Stewart, daughter of James IV of Scotland.[3] This Malcolm Fleming was killed at the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh in 1547.[3]
In 1548 James Fleming, 4th Lord Fleming accompanied the young Mary, Queen of Scots to France where she married the heir to the throne.[3] He was Great Chamberlain of Scotland for life and was one of eight commissioners to the royal wedding in 1558.[3] However he died of suspected poisoning two weeks later in Paris.[3]
17th century
[edit]In 1606 John the sixth Lord Fleming was created Earl of Wigtown.[3]
18th century and Jacobite risings
[edit]The Clan Fleming were Jacobites and the 6th earl attended James II of England and VII of Scotland after the Glorious Revolution of 1688.[3] Fleming opposed the Treaty of Union and voted against every article in the Parliament of 1706.[3] During the Jacobite rising of 1715 he was arrested by the governor of Edinburgh Castle.[3] Charles Fleming had succeeded his brother as the earl but when he died in 1747 the title became dormant.[3]
Modern history
[edit]According to the Collins Scottish Clan and Family Encyclopedia, Alexander Fleming who discovered Penicillin is the most distinguished bearer of the name in recent times.[3]
Another famous member of the clan is Commander Ian Fleming who was both an extremely successful intelligence officer of the wartime Naval Intelligence Directorate, the author of the James Bond books, and a well known high society clubman, with homes in Oxfordshire, Chelsea and Jamaica.
Clan castles
[edit]
Castles that have been owned by the Clan Fleming include amongst many others:
- Biggar Castle, which was on the High Street of Biggar, South Lanarkshire was once a strong castle that dates from the thirteenth century.[2] Nothing now survives of the castle which was long held by the Flemings who were descended from Baldwin of Biggar.[2] They moved to Boghall Castle in the fourteenth century.[2]
- Boghall Castle, on the south side of Biggar, Lanarkshire, mostly dates from the sixteenth century although there was an older stronghold on the site.[2] Two D-shaped towers survive but the rest is ruinous.[2] Edward II of England stayed at Boghall in 1310.[2]
- Cumbernauld Castle in Cumbernauld, central Scotland, was a strong castle, most of which is now gone apart from the vaulted chambers and some other fragments that are built into Cumbernauld House.[2] The castle was originally held by the Clan Comyn but passed to the Flemings in 1306.[2] Mary, Queen of Scots visited the castle and the National Covenant was signed there in 1646.[2] The castle was burned in 1746 by government dragoons during the Jacobite rising of 1745.[2]
References
[edit]- ^ a b Clan Fleming Profile scotclans.com. Retrieved 29 November 2014.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Coventry, Martin. (2008). Castles of the Clans: The Strongholds and Seats of 750 Scottish Families and Clans. pp. 198 - 199. ISBN 978-1-899874-36-1.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad Way, George and Squire, Romily. (1994). Collins Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia. (Foreword by The Rt Hon. The Earl of Elgin KT, Convenor, The Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs). pp. 387 - 388.
- ^ cf. F. Lawrence Fleming: Did the Flemings come from Flanders?, PDF, 2015
Clan Fleming
View on GrokipediaClan Fleming is a Lowland Scottish clan of Flemish origin, established through 12th-century settlers granted lands by King David I, with Baldwin of Biggar receiving the lordship of Biggar and appointment as Sheriff of Lanark.[1][2] The clan's progenitor line traces to early Flemish nobles like Theobald the Fleming, who obtained territories along the Douglas Water between 1147 and 1160, primarily in the Upper Ward of Lanarkshire.[3] The Flemings participated in pivotal Scottish conflicts, including the Wars of Independence, where knight William le Fleming rendered homage to Edward I in 1296, and later generations supported the Bruce cause.[3] Sir Malcolm Fleming's loyalty to David II earned him creation as Earl of Wigtown in 1342, elevating the family's noble status, though the earldom line ended with the death of the 7th Earl in 1747, leaving the clan armigerous without a chief.[2][4] The clan's heraldic symbols include a crest of a goat's head erased argent armed or and the motto Let the Deed Shaw, derived from Robert Fleming's declaration at Blackfriars Church in Dumfries in 1306.[5][4] Key holdings encompassed Boghall Castle, constructed in the 14th century and now in ruins, symbolizing the clan's historical prominence in the region.[3]
Origins and Etymology
Flemish Roots and Name Origin
The surname Fleming derives from the Old French descriptor le Fleming or flamanc, signifying an individual originating from Flanders, the medieval county corresponding to parts of modern-day Belgium and northern France known for its textile industry and mercantile prowess.[6] This ethnic byname emerged in Norman-influenced regions of Britain as early as circa 1150, applied to immigrants distinguished by their Low Countries heritage rather than local ties.[6] Empirical records, such as 12th-century English and Scottish charters, confirm its use to identify bearers as Flemish natives, often linked to skilled artisans, traders, or warriors rather than solely elite nobility.[7][3] Flemish migration to Scotland intensified in the 12th century under King David I (r. 1124–1153), who actively recruited continental settlers, including Flemings displaced from England following Henry II's 1154 ascension and suppression of Stephen loyalists.[8] David's charters document land grants to Flemish families in strategic areas like the Upper Ward of Clydesdale, prioritizing economic incentives such as wool export networks—Flanders' expertise in cloth production complemented Scotland's nascent sheep farming—and military obligations to secure borders against Gaelic unrest.[9][10] These settlers, evidenced in ecclesiastical chartularies like those of Paisley and Kelso under variants such as Flandrensis, integrated as landowners through pragmatic royal policy rather than mythic conquest narratives, fostering burgh development and feudal tenures.[11][12] This causal influx of Flemish migrants, driven by trade synergies and service-for-land exchanges, laid the groundwork for families like the progenitors of Clan Fleming, who transitioned from immigrant status to hereditary estates without reliance on unsubstantiated aristocratic pedigrees.[13] Primary charter evidence underscores their role in Scotland's feudal consolidation, countering interpretations that overemphasize pure knightly importation amid broader patterns of continental economic migration.[2][14]Early Settlement in Scotland
Baldwin Fleming, also recorded as Baldwin Flandrensis, arrived in Scotland as a Flemish immigrant during the reign of King David I (1124–1153) and received grants of land centered on Biggar in Lanarkshire, establishing the family's initial territorial base in the Upper Clydesdale region.[15] These grants formed part of David I's deliberate policy to colonize and feudalize the Scottish Lowlands by importing skilled settlers from Flanders, who brought expertise in agriculture, drainage, and administrative governance suited to transforming underdeveloped border territories into productive feudal holdings.[9] By 1150, Baldwin appears as a witness to a charter of Bishop Robert of St Andrews, and he constructed a motte at Biggar, indicative of his role in securing and developing the area against local resistance.[15] Baldwin's son or close kin, Theobald the Fleming, expanded the family's holdings through a grant of land along the Douglas Water in Douglasdale, confirmed between 1147 and 1160 by the Abbot of Kelso, with Baldwin serving as sheriff of Lanark in associated transactions.[12] This acquisition, documented in ecclesiastical charters, underscores pragmatic feudal alliances with the crown and church, where military and administrative service—such as Baldwin's sheriffship by 1162—earned tenurial rights in exchange for loyalty and land management.[16] The Flemings' integration into Scottish society thus proceeded via these 12th-century charters, reflecting causal incentives like royal favoritism toward Flemish proficiency in estate improvement over native Gaelic systems, rather than any earlier undocumented presence.[11] By the mid-12th century, such service positioned the family as emerging nobility, with records attesting to their role in stabilizing the region through knightly obligations and burghal developments, absent romanticized narratives of conquest.[9]Historical Timeline
Establishment and Wars of Scottish Independence (12th-14th Centuries)
The Fleming kindred first consolidated territorial influence in central Scotland amid the upheavals of the late 13th and early 14th centuries, primarily through allegiance to Robert Bruce during his bid for the throne. Robert Fleming, lord of Cumbernauld and a vassal of the Steward family, emerged as an early adherent to Bruce following the killing of Red Comyn at Dumfries on 10 February 1306, providing crucial noble backing in a kingdom fractured by rival claimants and English intervention.[17][18] This support positioned the Flemings against pro-Balliol and Comyn factions, whose forfeitures enabled royal redistribution of estates to loyalists; Robert Fleming thereby acquired the barony of Cumbernauld, previously held by Comyn affiliates, as a direct reward for fidelity amid Bruce's guerrilla campaigns.[18][19] Robert Fleming perished shortly before the pivotal Battle of Bannockburn on 23–24 June 1314, leaving his son Malcolm to sustain the family's martial commitments. Malcolm Fleming fought at Bannockburn, contributing to Bruce's tactical triumph over Edward II's larger English host of approximately 20,000, which halted southern incursions and paved the way for de facto Scottish sovereignty.[17] In the ensuing consolidation phase, King Robert I granted Malcolm the barony of Kirkintilloch in Dunbartonshire for "homage and service," as recorded in a charter datable to 1315×1321, augmenting holdings in the Lennox region and underscoring the Flemings' role in securing Bruce's northern flanks against residual English and domestic opposition.[20] Post-Bannockburn land reallocations further entrenched the Flemings in Upper Clydesdale, including estates around Biggar in Lanarkshire, seized from English sympathizers or forfeited rebels during the 1315–1318 campaigns that reclaimed southern territories.[21] These acquisitions reflected pragmatic royal strategy—rewarding reliable vassals like the Flemings, who lacked the extensive rival networks of houses such as the Comyns—yet exposed them to reprisals; internal Scottish schisms persisted, with Balliol-backed incursions under Edward Balliol from 1332 testing loyalties anew. Malcolm's adherence to David II at the Battle of Halidon Hill on 19 July 1333, despite heavy Scottish losses to English longbows, affirmed continuity, though it highlighted the clan's vulnerability in attritional warfare against superior artillery and alliances.[17] By the 1340s, amid David II's ransom demands following his 1346 capture at Neville's Cross, Malcolm Fleming attained the earldom of Wigtown circa 1341, incorporating Galloway lordships vacated by the Balliol forfeiture, thereby elevating the family's strategic assets in southwestern Scotland.[22] This ennoblement, while bolstering prestige, entailed ongoing risks, including Malcolm's own imprisonment after Neville's Cross—where Scottish forces numbering around 12,000 suffered rout—before his escape, illustrating how Bruce loyalists navigated forfeitures and recoveries without the blanket security of unchallenged hegemony.[17] The Flemings' contributions, though valorized in Stewart-aligned chronicles, comprised targeted feudal obligations rather than disproportionate feats, aiding national survival through sustained, if hazardous, service amid pervasive factionalism.[22]Rise to Nobility and Lordship (15th Century)
Robert Fleming, the sole surviving son of Sir Malcolm Fleming of Cumbernauld and Biggar—who was executed in 1440 for treasonous involvement in the Black Dinner alongside the Earl of Douglas—sought to rehabilitate his family's fortunes under the young James II.[23] Appointed Master of the King's Household, a position entailing close administrative oversight of royal affairs, Fleming demonstrated loyalty during the turbulent minority of James II, marked by noble factionalism and threats from powerful magnates like the Douglases.[24] In recognition of this service, James II elevated him to the peerage as Lord Fleming around 1451, granting him a seat in Parliament and formal lordship over ancestral lands previously at risk of permanent forfeiture.[24] [23] This ennoblement exemplified how 15th-century Scottish monarchs rewarded merit-based allegiance amid feudal instability, rather than mere inheritance; Fleming's restoration hinged on proven utility to the crown in stabilizing royal authority against overmighty subjects, countering narratives that privilege unearned lineage over demonstrable contributions.[24] The title's creation, dated variably but confirmed before 1460, solidified the Flemings' noble status, enabling expanded influence in governance and land tenure.[2] Concomitant with peerage elevation, the Flemings managed estates like Cumbernauld—acquired in the prior century via royal grant from Robert II around 1371—with administrative acumen evidenced by surviving charters that detail land transactions, tenurial obligations, and fiscal arrangements.[8] [25] These documents, spanning the 14th to 15th centuries, reveal efficient oversight of feudal revenues and fortifications, such as the ongoing development of Cumbernauld Castle, which underpinned economic resilience during periods of royal minority and baronial unrest.[25] Such records underscore the clan's role in sustaining crown loyalty through practical estate governance, prioritizing empirical land yields over speculative noble pretensions.[25]Tudor-Era Involvement and Feuds (16th Century)
Malcolm Fleming, 3rd Lord Fleming, held the position of Lord Chamberlain to King James V and commanded Scottish forces against the English invasion known as the Rough Wooing, initiated by Henry VIII and continued under Edward VI to enforce a marriage alliance. He was killed on 10 September 1547 at the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh, where English troops decisively defeated the Scots, leading to significant territorial vulnerabilities and the subsequent dispatch of Mary Queen of Scots to France.[2] His death exemplified the clan's commitment to royalist defense amid Tudor expansionist pressures, though it contributed to the loss of influence during a period of Scottish instability.[26] James Fleming, 4th Lord Fleming, succeeded his father and served as Great Chamberlain of Scotland, escorting the infant Mary Queen of Scots to France in 1548 alongside Lord Erskine, entrusted with her safety en route to her betrothal with the Dauphin Francis.[11] This role underscored the Flemings' continued proximity to the throne, reinforced by the presence of Malcolm's daughter, Mary Fleming, as one of the queen's four principal ladies-in-waiting from childhood.[27] However, James died in France on 18 December 1558 without returning, leaving his young son John as 5th Lord amid escalating factional strife.[28] The Flemings' loyalty to Mary drew them into partisan conflicts, including a longstanding border feud with the Tweedie clan of Drumelzier, which had earlier seen the assassination of John Fleming, 2nd Lord, in 1524 by John Tweedie over disputed lands and marriages.[29] This violence reflected the clan's aggressive defense of estates, often escalating into retaliatory raids verified in legal charters granting compensatory lands in Glenholm.[30] By the 1560s, support for Mary's cause against Protestant regents led to forfeitures; in 1568, Regent Moray seized Boghall Castle, the family's principal seat, and in 1569 royal forces confiscated livestock including 8 oxen, 13 cows, and a bull, marking tangible losses from political alignment.[31] Such actions highlight both royal court influence and the costs of clan partisanship, with empirical records of estate seizures underscoring the era's causal links between allegiance and dispossession.[32]Civil Wars and Royal Service (17th Century)
The Flemings, led by John Fleming, 2nd Earl of Wigtown (1589–1650), demonstrated consistent royalist allegiance during the Bishops' Wars and ensuing civil conflicts, signing the Cumbernauld Band on 5 November 1640 alongside James Graham, Marquis of Montrose, and other nobles to pledge opposition to the Covenanters' National Covenant and defense of King Charles I's prerogative against parliamentary encroachments.[33] This secret association reflected the clan's prioritization of monarchical authority and established hierarchies over the radical Presbyterian reforms demanded by Covenanting factions, which threatened aristocratic land rights and ecclesiastical influence in Scotland.[34] The 2nd Earl's hospitality to Charles I at Cumbernauld House further underscored this commitment, positioning the family amid royal efforts to rally support north of the border amid mounting tensions.[35] As hostilities escalated into the Wars of the Three Kingdoms, Fleming kin aligned with Montrose's royalist campaigns against Covenanting forces, suffering losses including verifiable casualties in skirmishes tied to the 1644–1645 Highland uprisings, where Montrose's forces inflicted defeats at Tippermuir and Inverlochy but faced reprisals that led to concealments and forfeitures for supporters like Lord Fleming.[36] The clan's conservative orientation—rooted in feudal obligations to the crown and aversion to the Covenanters' leveling tendencies toward nobility and episcopacy—yielded short-term estate protections through royal favor, yet invited attainders and fines under the Commonwealth regime post-1650, as Parliamentarian victories dismantled royalist networks.[37] Empirical records of these attainders, drawn from parliamentary acts, highlight how such loyalties preserved territorial integrity against revolutionary confiscations but exposed vulnerabilities to factional reprisals without broader royalist success. Following the Restoration of Charles II in 1660, John Fleming, 3rd Earl of Wigtown (c.1612–1665), facilitated the transition by securing an Act of Exchequer on 24 June 1661, which ordained restitution of prior royal grants and honors, affirming the clan's service amid the monarchy's reinstatement.[38] Admitted as a burgess and guild brother of Edinburgh on 8 October 1660, the 3rd Earl embodied the Fleming continuity in royal service, leveraging familial networks to reclaim properties impacted by interregnum penalties. This pragmatic alignment with the restored Stuart regime temporarily stabilized holdings in Lanarkshire and beyond, countering the disruptive egalitarianism of prior upheavals, though underlying tensions foreshadowed future dynastic challenges without implying inevitable decline.[39]Jacobite Support and Attainder (18th Century)
John Fleming, 6th Earl of Wigtown, upheld the family's longstanding allegiance to the House of Stuart by accompanying James VII into exile in France following the Glorious Revolution of 1688.[40] This act of loyalty positioned the Flemings as early adherents to Jacobitism, a movement rooted in restoring the deposed Catholic monarch and his heirs against the Protestant succession established by the 1689 Claim of Right and subsequent parliamentary settlements. The 6th Earl's opposition extended to the 1707 Act of Union, which he resisted as a perceived erosion of Scottish sovereignty under Hanoverian rule, reflecting a broader conservative commitment to divine-right monarchy over contractual constitutionalism.[2] The clan's Jacobite involvement intensified during the 1715 rising, led by James Francis Edward Stuart (the Old Pretender). Family members, including the 6th Earl's brother Charles Fleming, participated actively; Charles remained in France after the rebellion's collapse at Sheriffmuir on 13 November 1715, evading capture but marking the Flemings' entanglement in what proved a strategically flawed campaign reliant on inadequate Highland mobilization and English Catholic support.[33] By the time of the 1745 rising under Charles Edward Stuart (the Young Pretender), Charles had succeeded as 7th Earl following the 6th Earl's death on 10 February 1744. The 7th Earl joined the Jacobite forces, contributing to their initial advances but ultimately facing defeat at Culloden on 16 April 1746, where superior Hanoverian artillery and discipline overwhelmed the outnumbered rebels.[33] In the aftermath, Parliament passed attainder acts targeting key Jacobites, including the 7th Earl, who was convicted of high treason in absentia. His estates—encompassing thousands of acres in Wigtownshire, Lanarkshire, and associated holdings like the barony of Biggar—were forfeited under the 1746 Forfeited Estates Act, auctioned off to creditors and government allies by 1755, yielding over £100,000 in proceeds that funded infrastructure but irreparably fragmented Fleming patrimony.[33] While Jacobite loyalty embodied principled resistance to perceived illegitimacy in the succession, the risings' repeated military failures—stemming from logistical deficits, divided alliances, and underestimation of British resolve—inflicted pragmatic ruin, prioritizing ideological purity over viable defense of ancestral lands and exacerbating the clan's economic marginalization without restoring the Stuarts.[2] The 7th Earl died in exile on 16 May 1747, his title extinguished, underscoring the causal link between rebellion and forfeiture as a deterrent mechanism that prioritized state consolidation over romanticized restorationism.[33]Post-Union Decline and Dispersal (19th-20th Centuries)
The death of Charles Fleming, the 7th Earl of Wigtown and last recognized chief, in 1747 without male heirs left Clan Fleming without centralized leadership following the Jacobite attainders.[17] This vacuum persisted, rendering the clan armigerous under the Lord Lyon King of Arms, with no successor petitioning for chiefly recognition in the intervening centuries.[4] Absent a chief to rally estates or kin, familial branches fragmented amid post-Union economic shifts, including enclosure acts and industrial displacement in Lowland Scotland. Remaining Fleming holdings, encumbered by debts from forfeited titles and legal reversals, underwent forced sales in the 19th century. The Cumbernauld estate, inherited through cadet lines, was auctioned in 1875 for £160,000 to settle obligations.[41] Biggar properties, once core to the clan's Lanarkshire influence, saw progressive subdivision and alienation, with burgh lands parceled to adjacent owners by mid-century, reflecting broader agrarian rationalization.[42] These transactions eroded territorial cohesion, scattering septs into tenancy or urban migration. Emigration records document widespread dispersal to British dominions, driven by Highland and Lowland clearances alongside opportunities in colonial agriculture and industry. Shipping manifests from Glasgow and other ports list hundreds of Flemings departing for Canada and Australia between 1820 and 1900; for example, Charles Fleming's family sailed to Australia aboard the Eastern Monarch in 1883. U.S. immigration logs similarly trace Lanarkshire-born Flemings to settlements in Pennsylvania and Ontario by the 1840s, often as laborers or farmers, per passenger lists.[43] This exodus, corroborated by 1881 and 1901 censuses showing surname concentrations diluting outside traditional parishes, underscored socioeconomic dispersal over organized clan structures.[44] Into the 20th century, residual kin integrated into military service and urban professions, with World War I enlistment rolls noting Flemings from scattered Scottish locales enlisting in Lanarkshire regiments, yet without clan-wide mobilization.[11] By mid-century, the surname's prevalence in Scotland had halved from 1801 peaks per vital statistics, signaling assimilation and minimal communal ties until external revivals.[45] This era marked the clan's effective transition from noble house to dispersed ethnicity, unmoored by estates or authority.Territories, Castles, and Estates
Principal Holdings in Lanarkshire
The principal holdings of Clan Fleming in Lanarkshire centered on the Upper Ward, with Biggar as the foundational estate granted to Baldwin the Fleming by King David I between 1124 and 1153. Baldwin, a Flemish settler, received the lordship of Biggar and was appointed sheriff of Lanarkshire, establishing the family's territorial base in the strategically positioned Upper Clydesdale region near the Anglo-Scottish border.[1][46] This grant facilitated control over arable lands suited to mixed farming, contributing to economic stability through grain production and livestock rearing in the fertile straths of the Clyde.[47] By the 14th century, the holdings expanded through royal favor and military service, as evidenced by charters to David Fleming of Biggar in 1362, which confirmed annual rents and additional properties in the vicinity.[48] The Upper Ward territories, encompassing parishes around Biggar, provided defensive advantages against border incursions, with the Flemings leveraging their position for royal sheriff duties and feudal obligations that bolstered clan influence. However, this reliance on tenure-bound grants exposed the estates to forfeiture risks, as feudal customs prioritized royal prerogative over hereditary security, limiting long-term accumulation absent continuous loyalty.[12] The extent of these Lanarkshire lands peaked during the 16th and 17th centuries, integrating adjacent baronies through marriage and purchase, though precise acreage surveys from the era remain scarce; qualitative records describe "large territories" supporting a baronial household with manorial rights over tenant farms.[3] Agricultural output from these holdings underpinned the clan's role in provisioning lowland Scotland, yet vulnerabilities in feudal tenure—such as dependence on crown confirmation—contributed to later erosions, as shifting royal policies could revoke grants without compensating for invested improvements in drainage or enclosure.[49]Key Castles and Their Significance
Boghall Castle, constructed by the Fleming family in the 13th or 14th century near Biggar in Lanarkshire, served as a primary seat for the clan, replacing the earlier Biggar Castle.[3][19] Positioned on lands granted to early Flemings like Theobald the Fleming along the Douglas Water, it functioned as an administrative and defensive stronghold amid regional feuds and border tensions.[49] Archaeological evidence reveals substantial stone ruins, indicating a fortified structure typical of lowland Scottish tower houses, though its defensive efficacy waned with the rise of gunpowder artillery by the 16th century.[50] The castle fell into ruin following neglect by later inheritors, including the Elphinstone family through marriage alliances, with no major preservation efforts documented beyond basic site surveys.[50] Cumbernauld Castle, built by the Flemings in the 14th century in central Scotland, emerged as another key holding, spanning approximately 9 acres and ranking among the largest fortifications of its era.[51] Its strategic location facilitated control over trade routes and provided a robust base during the clan's rise to nobility, with thick walls and vaulted chambers underscoring effective defensive design against medieval sieges.[52] The castle hosted clan chiefs, including those who inherited it through familial succession, symbolizing the Flemings' integration into Scotland's feudal power structure.[4] However, it endured repeated conflicts, culminating in destruction by Oliver Cromwell's forces during the 1650s campaigns, leaving only fragmentary remains like vaulted undercrofts visible today.[8] Post-demolition, the site's cultural legacy persists in historical sketches from circa 1550, but modern preservation is limited to archaeological notes rather than restoration.[51] These castles exemplified the clan's territorial influence, with Boghall anchoring Lanarkshire operations and Cumbernauld extending reach northward, though both ultimately succumbed to military obsolescence and civil upheavals, as evidenced by their ruined states and absence of intact defensive features.[3][51]Heraldry, Symbols, and Traditions
Coat of Arms, Crest, and Motto
The historical coat of arms associated with the chiefs of Clan Fleming, such as the Lords Fleming and Earls of Wigtown, is blazoned as Gules, a chevron within a double tressure flory-counterflory Argent.[5] This design features a red field with a white chevron bordered by a double ornamental frame of fleurs-de-lys, reflecting the clan's noble status and feudal alliances in medieval Scotland. Some armorial records vary the tinctures, depicting the chevron and tressure as Or on a Gules field, but the Argent version aligns with descriptions tied to the Fleming lords of Cumbernauld and Biggar from the 14th century onward.[53] These arms evolved from the continental heraldic traditions brought by Flemish settlers in the 12th century, prioritizing practical battlefield identification over symbolic embellishment, as evidenced by their use in royal charters and peerage grants.[4] The crest, worn by clan members in badges, consists of a goat's head erased Argent, armed Or.[5] This element, distinct from the shield, symbolizes tenacity and vigilance, qualities attributed to the clan's role in Scottish border defense. Historical records link it to the Biggar branch, with no confirmed grants altering it under the Lord Lyon King of Arms, as the clan remains armigerous without a recognized chief since the 18th century.[4] The clan motto, "Let the deed shaw," translates from Scots to "Let the deed show," emphasizing actions over words as a measure of worth.[49] It appears in association with the arms from at least the 15th century, during the tenure of chiefs like Malcolm Fleming, 3rd Lord Fleming, underscoring a pragmatic ethos rooted in the clan's service to the Stewart monarchy.[54] This phrase, devoid of later romantic interpretations, served heraldic utility in distinguishing allegiances amid feudal conflicts.[55]Clan Tartan and Regalia
The Clan Fleming possesses no historically documented tartan, as the practice of assigning specific plaid patterns to clans originated in the 19th century amid a broader romanticization of Scottish Highland culture, rather than reflecting pre-modern usage.[56] This Victorian-era development, influenced by literary figures like Sir Walter Scott and royal patronage under Queen Victoria, lacked empirical ties to earlier Lowland clans such as the Flemings, whose prominence predated standardized tartan associations by centuries.[57] [58] With the clan chiefship dormant since the death of the 6th Earl of Wigtown in 1747, no authoritative tartan was ever adopted during the period of active chiefly leadership, precluding any claim to ancient evidentiary basis.[56] Modern clan societies, recognizing this gap, advise members to wear district tartans like that of Lanarkshire—corresponding to the clan's core territories—or, as a historical sept connection, the Murray of Atholl tartan, rather than endorsing fabricated clan-specific designs.[58] [59] While some commercial weavers offer patterns labeled "Fleming," these remain unregistered with the Scottish Register of Tartans and lack endorsement from recognized Fleming organizations, highlighting the invented nature of such post-20th-century creations.[60] Clan regalia for Fleming adheres to heraldic protocols established by the Lord Lyon King of Arms for armigerous clans without a sitting chief, emphasizing badges derived from verified armorial bearings over novel inventions.[2] The primary item is the crest badge, depicting a goat's head erased argent armed or, set within a strap and buckle bearing the motto "Let the Deed Shaw," which members may wear on bonnets or pins to signify affiliation.[61] These elements trace directly to the clan's matriculated arms in the Public Register of All Arms and Bearings, providing a causally grounded continuity of identity post-dispersal, distinct from the ahistorical elaboration seen in tartan traditions.[62] Such regalia fosters communal recognition without fabricating pre-existing customs, prioritizing heraldic authenticity over symbolic proliferation.Notable Members and Branches
Medieval and Early Modern Chiefs
The lineage of Clan Fleming chiefs traces back to Theobald le Fleming, a Flemish noble who received lands in Tweeddale from King David I between 1126 and 1153, establishing the family's territorial base in Lanarkshire.[63] Early chiefs included Robert Fleming of Cumbernauld, who held Fulwood and supported the Stewart affinity, and his son Sir Malcolm Fleming, executed in 1316 for alleged treason after initially aiding Robert the Bruce, including reportedly presenting the severed head of John Comyn to affirm allegiance.[64] This act of loyalty to Scottish sovereignty came at personal cost, highlighting the risks of medieval political intrigue where revelations to English forces led to summary justice without trial, as evidenced by contemporary chronicles.[8] A later Malcolm Fleming, great-grandson of the executed chief and sheriff of Dumbarton, was elevated to 1st Earl of Wigtown in 1341 by David II for safeguarding the king against Edward Balliol's forces during the Second War of Scottish Independence.[65] Serving as Justiciar south of the Forth, he exemplified military and administrative contributions to royal stability amid Anglo-Scottish conflicts.[65] His son Thomas, 2nd Earl, succeeded but died without issue around 1382, leading to the sale of the earldom to the Douglases in 1372, an economically pragmatic move critiqued in some accounts for diminishing comital prestige but averting further feud-related losses. The family's resilience persisted through cadet lines, with Robert Fleming of Biggar created 1st Lord Fleming around 1451 by James II for service as Master of the Household, consolidating estates like Boghall Castle despite ongoing border violence.[24] John Fleming, 2nd Lord (c. 1465–1524), advanced clan fortunes as one of the guardians of the infant James V in 1515 and Chancellor from 1517, stewarding royal estates amid the minority's factional strife.[19] His tenure emphasized fiscal oversight, though internal feuds, such as rivalries with Hamiltons, underscored the violence that plagued noble stewardship, often prioritizing kin loyalty over broader economic development.[2] Successor Malcolm Fleming, 3rd Lord (c. 1494–1547), held the hereditary office of Chamberlain and supported Mary Queen of Scots' mother, but fell at the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh in 1547 fighting English invaders, a sacrifice for national defense lauded in peerage records yet reflective of shortsighted military commitments that strained resources.[66] In the early modern era, James Fleming, 4th Lord (d. 1558), continued chamberlain duties under Mary, while John Fleming, 5th Lord (d. 1572), backed her queenship against Protestant rebels, facing imprisonment but preserving traditional allegiances. The 6th Lord, John Fleming (1567–1619), was advanced to Earl of Wigtown in 1606 by James VI and I, rewarding diplomatic service, though the title's revival highlighted persistent debts from prior feuds and wars.[67] Subsequent earls, including John, 3rd Earl (d. 1664), navigated civil wars with royalist leanings, their loyalty to Stuart causes praised for upholding monarchical continuity but critiqued for exacerbating financial ruin through avoidable conflicts rather than estate diversification.[68] The chiefly line's martial focus yielded territorial gains like Cumbernauld but incurred heavy losses from attainders and sales, as peerage genealogies attest, balancing preservation of Scottish independence against the causal toll of feud-driven isolation.[69]Branches and Associated Families
The principal cadet branches of Clan Fleming trace their origins to the medieval holdings in Lanarkshire, with genealogical records confirming lines descending from Baldwin fitz Alan, the early 12th-century progenitor associated with Biggar. The Biggar line, documented through royal charters from David I's reign (1124–1153), held core estates including Biggar and Boghall, evolving into a baronial family by the 14th century under figures like Sir David Fleming, who fathered Malcolm Fleming, the first Earl of Wigtown (created 1341).[18] [70] A key collateral branch emerged at Cumbernauld, granted to Robert Fleming in the 14th century by Robert the Bruce's successors, as evidenced by surviving land charters confirming Fleming tenure from circa 1320 onward; this line produced Lords Fleming of Cumbernauld, with Sir Malcolm Fleming of Cumbernauld (executed 1440 at the Black Dinner) exemplifying its prominence before merging into the earldom.[71] [51] The Wigtown (later Wigton) earldom, elevated from these Lanarkshire roots, represented the chief line until its attainder in 1716 following John Fleming, 6th Earl's, Jacobite involvement, after which cadet descendants scattered without verified septs or associated families beyond direct patrilineal offshoots.[4] [33] Post-attainder dispersal patterns, recorded in escheat documents and emigration logs from the early 18th century, show Fleming kin relocating to Ulster plantations and North American colonies, such as Virginia by 1730, though parish records and probate filings link only sporadic individuals to Lanarkshire origins without broader clan-wide DNA corroboration or empirical sept affiliations like unverified claims to Sloss (lacking charter evidence).[72] Modern genealogical assertions of unrelated Fleming variants as clan branches, often promoted by commercial vendors, lack substantiation in primary sources such as the Register of the Great Seal or family charter collections, emphasizing instead the clan's confinement to documented Lanarkshire descendants.[56][73]Modern Clan Revival and Associations
20th-21st Century Developments
In the 20th century, Clan Fleming, lacking a recognized chief since the death without male heirs of John Fleming, 6th Earl of Wigtown, in 1747, retained its status as an armigerous clan under the authority of the Lord Lyon King of Arms.[4] This recognition affirmed the clan's historical arms and territorial associations without requiring a living chief, enabling descendants to pursue voluntary cultural and genealogical revival independent of feudal structures.[2] The Lord Lyon's office has consistently classified it as such, distinguishing it from unrecognized names while highlighting the post-Jacobite vacancy in leadership.[74] Significant emigration of Fleming families, including those tracing descent from the Lanarkshire holdings, occurred during the 19th and early 20th centuries amid Scotland's economic challenges, such as rural depopulation and industrial shifts.[63] Records indicate settlements in North America—particularly the Carolinas, Virginia, Nova Scotia, and Newfoundland—and Australia, where individuals like Charles Fleming arrived in 1883 seeking escape from poverty and urban conditions. [49] These diaspora communities preserved surname traditions amid broader Scottish outflows, with 20th-century migrations continuing post-World Wars due to employment opportunities in settler colonies.[63] Genealogical interest in the clan surged in the early 20th century through historical compilations referencing Lanarkshire estates and Flemish origins, fostering awareness among scattered descendants prior to formalized groups.[75] This groundwork, drawing on archival land grants and peerage records, underscored the clan's enduring Lowland identity despite chieflessness, paving the way for 21st-century heritage initiatives without reliance on official petition for a new chief.[17]Clan Societies and Heritage Efforts
The Clan Fleming Scottish Society was founded in 2023 as an international organization dedicated to uniting descendants of the Lowland Scottish Fleming family and others interested in its heritage, particularly amid the clan's armigerous but chiefless status recognized by the Lord Lyon King of Arms.[76] The society's efforts emphasize grassroots preservation through education on verified historical records, countering the dilution of clan identity in popular narratives.[77] Key activities include research into the clan's original Lanarkshire estates, such as those held by founder Robert Fleming (born before 1280, died before 1314), and analysis of medieval charters to substantiate lineage and holdings.[4] It promotes accurate history via online blogs, including a September 2023 post examining Lowland traditions of clans, kilts, and tartans, while critiquing unsubstantiated elements like vendor-invented Fleming tartans that lack pre-19th-century evidence.[78][60] The society also dispels broader myths through dedicated resources, prioritizing empirical documentation over romanticized folklore.[56] These initiatives foster communal identity without a chief by building networks, such as a dedicated Facebook group for supporters, and engaging in public outreach to highlight the clan's documented contributions.[79] As of 2024, ongoing developments include sustained online education and affiliations with bodies like the Council of Scottish Clans & Associations, reinforcing heritage based on primary sources rather than commercial adaptations.[80]References
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Dictionary_of_National_Biography%2C_1885-1900/Fleming%2C_John_%28d.1572%29
- https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page:Dictionary_of_National_Biography_volume_19.djvu/285
- https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Fleming_%28Earl_of_Wigtown%29_arms.png