For our Sinclair DNA friends who hail from Islay -
Bagpipes "Farewell to the Laird of Islay" played by Andrew Carlisle
Monday, December 3, 2012
Farewell to the Laird of Islay
Tuesday, November 27, 2012
St Clair Sinclair DNA L193
The L193 marker has led to a great deal of understanding for one lineage of our family, the descendants of Alexander Sinkler. Alexander came over in 1698. He was born in Glasgow about 1666. This video and recent discoveries make it clear that Alexander's family likely never spent time in the highlands. Instead, we were likely in the border regions and then, further back, in England.
Click here if you can't see the video above.
Click here if you can't see the video above.
Sinclair DNA Video
A quick overview of ancient DNA discoveries in the last few years.
If you have trouble seeing the above video, click here.
Recent discoveries in the field are adding new understanding to our Sinclair DNA study and, of course, many others around the world.
If you have trouble seeing the above video, click here.
Recent discoveries in the field are adding new understanding to our Sinclair DNA study and, of course, many others around the world.
Sinclair DNA Exposing Some Myths
This slide show hosted on Slide Share helps to explain some of the myths of the Sinclair family. Our Sinclair DNA study is adding a bright light to many of these myths.
For instance:
Sinclair Dna from Steve Clair
If you can't see the one above, click here.For instance:
- There weren't Templars at Bannockburn.
- The stone in Rosslyn Chapel which refers to William de St. Clair as a Knight Templar was put there in the 20th Century.
- The Westford Knight is difficult to see, but the sword there is very convincing.
- The Newport Tower is very convincing, but there's no evidence it was built by Sinclairs.
- The carving of "two knights on a horse" in Rosslyn is one man on a horse and one behind. I've seen it in person.
- Some Sinclairs testified against the Templars in Scotland, but some testified on their behalf.
- Our Sinclair DNA study is beginning to prove the real facts of our family.
Thursday, November 8, 2012
In Praise of FTDNA
What Family Tree DNA has made available has been incredible for the St. Clair Family:
- We've found a path towards the true history of our family. We don't all descend, as the dusty old books say, from Rollo or William the Conqueror. We have 12 distinct lineages, and a much more complex history.
- FTDNA's Family Finder test has helped 3 of our family members solve, or start to solve, their questions about adoption.
- With continued SNP testing, we're getting much closer to "connecting the branches to the leaves" as Bennet Greenspan said. In two cases, we feel there's a chance we may solve the entire history of family lines back to the very early medieval period. None of this would have been possible without the ongoing advancements of FTDNA.
That list could go on an on. When I think back to the time 10 years ago, before Stan St. Clair and I took the first tests in the family, genealogy was so inexact. People argued over competing documents and made wild claims. And no one had any certainty before the 1600s.
Now, using FTDNA and SNP research, many of us have a direction of where to look and when we might connect to much older records.
By making the complicated science of DNA easy for the masses, Family Tree DNA has truly helped genealogists overcome brick walls in their families.
Wednesday, October 31, 2012
Sinclair DNA in East Lothian, Scotland
I recently got back from a whirlwind trip around East Lothian Scotland. Among the stops were Dirlton Castle, second castle of the de Vaux in Scotland.
The de Vaux's first (named Tarbet Castle) was on Fidra Island, formerly called Elbottle, about a mile off-shore in the Firth of Forth. All this land (the barony of Dirleton) was given to the de Vaux family by King David I of Scotland. Later, the island was given by William de Vaux to Dryburgh Abbey in 1220. Dryburgh is the beautiful Border Region abbey founded by Hugh de Morville.
Sinclair DNA is very interested in the de Morvilles, the St Clairs of Herdmanstoun, the de Vaux, the Seatons and the Giffards. Note some of the witnesses of the gift of Fidra Island (Elbottle) to Dryburgh Abbey -

Wikipedia page on Fidra / Elbottle - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fidra
Source for Fidra gift information -
PoMS, H3/586/4 (http://db.poms.ac.uk accessed 03 November 2012)
The de Vaux's first (named Tarbet Castle) was on Fidra Island, formerly called Elbottle, about a mile off-shore in the Firth of Forth. All this land (the barony of Dirleton) was given to the de Vaux family by King David I of Scotland. Later, the island was given by William de Vaux to Dryburgh Abbey in 1220. Dryburgh is the beautiful Border Region abbey founded by Hugh de Morville.
Sinclair DNA is very interested in the de Morvilles, the St Clairs of Herdmanstoun, the de Vaux, the Seatons and the Giffards. Note some of the witnesses of the gift of Fidra Island (Elbottle) to Dryburgh Abbey -
- Alexander Seaton
- Henry Sinclair
- John of Fenton
- Nocholas of May
- Patrick of Herdmanstoun
- Robert of Keith
- and others

Wikipedia page on Fidra / Elbottle - http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fidra
Source for Fidra gift information -
PoMS, H3/586/4 (http://db.poms.ac.uk accessed 03 November 2012)
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Sinclair DNA on Family Tree DNA, Our Most Listened-to Blog Talk Radio Show
I've hosted quite a few Blog Talk Radio shows about our Sinclair family DNA study. Of them all, the one with the most listeners featured Bennett Greenspan, one of the founders of Family Tree DNA.
Click here to launch the show.
Bennett makes this complex subject easy. I highly recommend listening in, no matter what level you are in your own DNA.
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