Talk:Clan Logan

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Well, I started it, if anyone wants to expand or make it look better, or sound better, please do. I'm gonna have to learn how to get pics up to get the "passion nail piercing a man's heart" up. Highlandlord 20:14, 9 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

Looks nice, added back that it is a Highland Clan, as well as a Lowland, everything I've read tells me they have both so. Highlandlord 02:01, 22 August 2006 (UTC)[reply]

I am the Vice-President of The Clan Logan Society (Frank Logan), I am also the author of the "Clan MacLennan Controversy" piece which was writen for the CLS newsletter "Our Valour", as well as the short forword before the text by James Logan, which was taken from our CLS website http://www.clanlogansociety.com/history.html .


Hoc Majorum Virtus

Sgt Frank Logan, CD (retired) Vice President Clan Logan Society


Hello. I hope someone reads this. I have a more intricate Clan Logan crest that might be a suitable replacement to the "acceptable" one pictured on the page. I don't know how to re-size a photo in wiki-code File:Clan Logan.jpg I can clean the picture up, and take one with a better camera later, but I thought it would be a better crest for the page. Cds56 (talk) 19:48, 27 April 2011 (UTC)[reply]

"...campaigning against the Moors, in the Kingdom of Granada"[edit]

The narrative here contains a number of historically questionable elements, relying principally on a spurious interpolation from John Barbour's 'Bruce,' and some modern factoids. 'Castillo de la Estrella' is a modern name for the castle at Teba. It is not historical. It is not certain at what point in the siege of Teba the Scots party came to grief. There is evidence it might not have been during the so-called 'Battle of Teba.' The 'thrown heart' is an imaginary episode borrowed from an allegorical poem of the C15th and appears inserted into the 'Bruce'in the first printed edition of 1571 (The exhortation quoted does not come from Duncan or any other edition of the Bruce but apparently from a Victorian biographical dictionary of the 1850s). It would better simply to omit all the material referred to above and simply say that the two Logan brothers, Sir Robert and Sir Walter, were recorded in Barbour's poem as dying alongside Douglas in Spain and leave it at that. JF42 (talk) 13:16, 19 January 2024 (UTC)[reply]