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  2. List of tartans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_tartans

    The following table includes those government tartans worn by UK military units as from the 2006 creation of the Royal Regiment of Scotland onwards. Some other units may wear a named clan tartan without it being defined by this standard; these are covered in a second table below.

  3. Regimental tartan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regimental_tartan

    The earliest image of Scottish soldiers wearing tartan (belted plaids and trews); 1631 German engraving by Georg Köler.[a]Regimental tartans are tartan patterns used in military uniforms, possibly originally by some militias of Scottish clans, certainly later by some of the Independent Highland Companies (IHCs) raised by the British government, then by the Highland regiments and many Lowland ...

  4. Scottish Register of Tartans - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Register_of_Tartans

    The Scottish Register of Tartans (SRT) is Scotland's official non-ministerial department for the recording and registration of tartan designs, operating since 5 February 2009. As a governmental body, SRT is headquartered at General Register House in Edinburgh and is a division of the National Records of Scotland (NRS), formerly of the National ...

  5. Tartan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tartan

    Tartan is both a mass noun ("12 metres of tartan") and a count noun ("12 different tartans"). Today, tartan refers to coloured patterns, though originally did not have to be made up of a pattern at all, as it referred to the type of weave; as late as the 1820s, some tartan cloth was described as "plain coloured ... without pattern".

  6. Scottish Tartans Authority - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Tartans_Authority

    The Scottish Tartans Authority (STA) is a Scottish registered charity dedicated to the promotion, protection and preservation of Scotland's national cloth. Founded in 1995, the charitable purposes of the Authority are: to protect, preserve, conserve, promote and explain the culture, traditions and uses of Scottish Tartans and Highland Dress; and

  7. Scottish Tartans Society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_Tartans_Society

    STWR's database, also called the Scottish Tartans World Register, was based upon the Register of All Publicly Known Tartans, and included about 3,000 tartan designs. [7] The STWR's data has been subsumed into that of the Scottish Register of Tartans (SRT) in Edinburgh, which is the Scottish government's official register of tartans.

  8. Tartan Day - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tartan_Day

    The Scottish Government (sometimes the broader Government of the UK), along with regional Scottish governmental bodies (including city councils of Edinburgh, Glasgow, and Aberdeen) and industry organisations, have capitalised on opportunities to promote Scottish tourism and business interests by directly participating in Tartan Day/Week ...

  9. Royal Regiment of Scotland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Regiment_of_Scotland

    Regimental flag of the SCOTS. The Royal Regiment of Scotland (SCOTS) is the senior and only current Scottish line infantry regiment of the British Army Infantry.It consists of three regular (formerly five) and two reserve battalions, plus an incremental company, each formerly an individual regiment (with the exception of the former first battalion (now disbanded and reformed into the 1st Bn ...