Thistle (pronounced this-uhl)
(1) Any of numerous perennial composite plants of the genera Cirsium, Cynara, Carduus, Onopordum and related genera, having prickly-edged leaves, pink,
purple, yellow, or white dense flower heads, and feathery hairs on the seeds:
family Asteraceae (composites).
(2) A common term for many other prickly plants.
(3) The national emblem of Scotland since
the fifteenth century.
(4) As
the Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle (1687), a United Kingdom
order of chivalry associated with Scotland; the word denoting membership of
this order.
Pre 900: From the Middle English thistel, from the Old English thīstel (the earlier form was þistel). The origin was probably the Proto-Germanic þistilaz & thistilaz, the source also of the Old Saxon thistil, the Old High German distil
& thīstil, the German Distel,
the Old Norse þistell & thīstill, the Scots
thrissel, the Danish tidsel, the Dutch distel and the Icelandic þistill. The root is uncertain origin but may have
been an extended form of the primitive Indo-European (s)teyg & steig- (to prick, stick, pierce). The adjective is thistly and the noun plural thistles.
Insignia of The Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle.
The Most Ancient and
Most Noble Order of the Thistle is an order of chivalry of the United Kingdom
which, unusually, is one of a small class in the personal gift of the sovereign
whereas most are conferred on the basis of a recommendation from the various
governments where the British monarch remains head of state. The order was founded in 1687 by King James
VII of Scotland (1633-1701; James II of England and Ireland) who at the time
asserted it was a revival of an earlier order but historians doubt the claim,
the royal warrant of 1687 containing some dubious history and most doubtful
chronology. Nor is there any documentary
evidence to support the idea an award in some way linked to the thistle was instituted
after the Scottish victory at the Battle of Bannockburn in 1314, the earliest vaguely
plausible claim dating from the fifteenth century when James III (1451-1488) adopted
the thistle as the royal insignia and minted coins depicting thistles. There’s nothing however to support any link
with knighthoods or other orders of chivalry and all that is certain is that
the thistle became established as an emblem of Scotland, attached firstly to
the royal court and later to the national identity.
The troublesome Bull Thistle.
Not discouraged by tiresome, inconvenient history, in 1687 James VII issued letters
patent for an order of knighthood "reviving
and restoring the Order of the Thistle to its full glory, lustre and
magnificency". Intended to be
exclusive, membership was limited to twelve but James was deposed in the Glorious Revolution (1688) and no appointments
to the order were made beyond the original eight although the exiled House of
Stuart continued to issue what came to be referred to as “the Jacobite Thistle”,
these not acknowledged by the British Crown.
The award of the Thistle resumed in 1704, before even the 1707 Acts of
Union under which the kingdoms of England and Scotland united as a single
sovereign state known as Great Britain.
In the
UK’s order of precedence, Knights and Ladies of the Thistle rank second only to
the Order of the Garter and the wives, sons, daughters and daughters-in-law of
Knights of the Thistle also can rise a few notches on the order of precedence,
a courtesy not extended to any relative of a Lady of the Thistle, something
which must be seen as an anomaly in the early twenty-first century but which
probably cannot easily be reformed in isolation, any alteration in these things
likely to trigger a chain-reaction of events in a system designed to resist
change. The television show Yes Minister did offer an alternative
explanation for the mechanism for awarding the Thistle, suggesting “…a
committee sits on it”.
Sir Robert Menzies (1894–1978; prime minister of Australia 1939-1941 & 1949-1966) in his Knight of the Thistle robes.
Like the Most Noble Order of the Garter (1348)
and the Royal Victorian Order (1896), the Thistle lies in the personal gift of
the sovereign rather than being an award made by governments as is the case
with most honors. Unusually too, the
Thistle is geographically specific, awarded only to those with some connection
to Scotland, although, they need not be actually Scottish. The equivalent Irish Order, the Most
Illustrious Order of St Patrick (1783) was for those with an association with
Ireland handled in a similar manner to the Thistle but awards were restricted
after independence was granted to Eire (southern Ireland) in 1922 and the order
has been dormant (though not abolished) since 1936. This follows the practice applied to imperial
honors tied to particular colonies of the Raj and the old British Empire, the
Indian (the Most Exalted Order of the Star of India (1861) & the Most
Eminent Order of the Indian Empire (1878)) and Burmese (the Order of Burma
(1940)) orders dormant since the respective grants of independence in
1947 & 1948. Presumably, were
Scotland to become an independent state, the Thistle too would lapse into a
similar state of abeyance.
Clan Lindsay car seat covers.
Clan Lindsay is a Scottish clan of the Scottish Lowlands although the origins of the Lindsay name lie in England, south of the border. Lindsay is a toponym (a word derived from the name of a locality), itself drawn from the Old English toponym Lindesege (Island of Lind), a reference to the city of Lincoln, in which Lind is the original Brittonic form of the name, the “island” referring to Lincoln being an island in the surrounding fenland. Under Roman occupation, the area in Lincolnshire now occupied by the city of Lincoln was known as Lindum Colonia, shortened in the Old English to Lindocolina and later to Lincylene, Lindum a Latinized form of a native Brittonic name which had been reconstructed as Lindon (pool or lake). In the late nineteenth century, as the modern convention in the Western World (Christian name + Surname) became (more or less) standardized, like many others, surnames Lindsay and Lindsey began to be used as given names although it wasn’t until the mid-1960s that it became common in the Commonwealth to use them for girls, a trend which spread quickly to the US and by late in the century, the use for boys rapidly declined, the two trends presumably not unrelated.
Lindsay Lohan in tartan for Freaky Friday (2003) costume test photos (left), the Clan Lindsay tartan garden flag with swan crest, augmented by the thistle (national flower of Scotland) emblems (centre) and Clan Lindsay T-Shirt with stylized thistle (right). The Clan Lindsay motto is Endure Fort (Endure Bravely).
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