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Fairy Flag




The Fairy Flag (in Scottish Gaelic, ''An Bratach Sith'') is a fragment of cloth owned by the Clan MacLeod and preserved at Dunvegan Castle on the Isle Of Skye in Scotland , where it is on display.


LEGENDS


The name ''fairy flag'' comes from many legends in which the cloth was connected to the Sidhe , a Gaelic term for various supernatural beings sometimes referred to as ''the Shining Folk''.

In one such story, the chieftain's son was wrapped in the cloth by a fairy lady; in another, the chieftain took a fairy woman as a wife and she brought the cloth to the marriage; in a third, the banner was brought to Dunvegan by a MacLeod chieftain after years spent with the Sidhe.

Another legend says that, if unfurled, the flag will save the clan from disaster. This can only be done three times. Supposedly, the flag has been unfurled twice in the past, although accounts differ on exactly when.


ORIGINS


The Dunvegan castle web site states that the flag is made from silk and originated in the Middle East ("Syria or Rhodes") some time between the fourth and seventh centuries CE . A related legend holds that King Harald HardrĂ¥de acquired the flag while raiding in the Middle East, making it his own banner and naming it ''Land-ravager''. Harald died in 1066 at the Battle Of Stamford Bridge near York , England; a MacLeod legend says clansmen at the battle brought the flag to Skye.


EXTERNAL LINKS




SOURCE


  • "The MacLeods of Dunvegan, From the Time of Leod to the End of the Seventeenth Century" By The Rev Canon R. C MacLeod of MacLeod.