| Clan MacNab |
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The name Macnab is from the Gaelic "Mac an Abba", meaning sons or children of the Abbot and, according to tradition, the chiefs were
descended from the younger son of Kenneth McAlpine, King of the Scots who
united the Scots and the Picts. The surname "Macnab" was first found
in a document dated 1124 AD in the reign of David I.
One such story concerns Clan McNeish, who in 1612 occupied the crannog (a small manmade island dating back to prehistoric times) on Loch Earn. The McNeishes allowed no other boat on the loch other than their own and, as traditional enemies of the MacNabs from Killin, they relied mainly on plunder. So it was, on that day in 1612, that they waylaid a MacNab servant, said to be returning from Crieff with Christmas provisions for his chief. Back home at Killin the MacNabs plotted revenge and on Old Year's Night four sons of the seventh Laird of MacNab led by lain MacNab carried a boat some eight miles up and over Glen Tarken and down into Loch Earn. Their attack on the island surprised the Neishes and all but one small boy were massacred. The severed head of the Neish chieftain was one of those carried back to the MacNab stronghold in Killin. Clan MacNab is said to have commemorated this event by the incorporation into their clan crest of such a head.
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