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A page from The Bannatyne Manuscript.(National Library of Scotland)George Bannatyne (1545–1608), a native of Angus, Scotland, was an Edinburgh merchant and burgess. [1] He was the seventh of twenty-three children, including Catherine Bannatyne, born of James Bannatyne of Kirktown of Newtyle in Forfarshire and Katherine Tailefer. [2]
Bannatyne Club, founded by Walter Scott, in memory of George Bannatyne; Bannatyne Manuscript, collected by George Bannatyne; Bannatyne manuscript (Clan MacLeod) Bannatyne (company) a company operating a UK chain of health clubs; So Long, Bannatyne, an album by The Guess Who; Bannatyne v Overtoun, a 1904 Scottish legal case
The Bannatyne Manuscript is an anthology of literature compiled in Scotland in the sixteenth century. It is an important source for the Scots poetry of the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. The manuscript contains texts of the poems of the great makars , many anonymous Scots pieces and works by medieval English poets.
Ballantyne is a surname of Scottish Gaelic origin, with variant spellings Balentyne, Ballantine, Ballintine, Ballentyne, and Ballendine. [1] Other variants include Bellenden and Ballentine, [2] and Bannatyne and Ballantyne have been interchangeably even by the same person at different times.
Andrew Bannatyne, Scottish-Canadian politician, 1829–1889; Very Rev Colin Bannatyne (1849-1920) twice Moderator of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland; Duncan Bannatyne, 1949 –, Scottish entrepreneur; George Bannatyne, 1545–1608, collector of Scottish poems; James Bannatyne, 1975 –, New Zealand football player
The Bannatyne Club, named in honour of George Bannatyne and his famous anthology of Scots literature the Bannatyne Manuscript, was a text publication society founded by Sir Walter Scott to print rare works of Scottish interest, whether in history, poetry, or general literature. The club was established in 1823 and printed 116 volumes before ...
Bannatyne v Overtoun [1904] AC 515 (also called General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland v Lord Overtoun: Macalister v Young 1904 7 F (HL) 1 and known as the Free Church case), was a protracted legal dispute between the United Free Church of Scotland (which was a union in 1900 of the majority Free Church of Scotland with the United Presbyterian Church of Scotland) and the minority of ...
The Bute Mazer The Bute Mazer's later whale bone cover. The Bute Mazer, also known as the Bannatyne Mazer is a medieval communal feasting cup of a type known as a mazer.The wood bowl and the elaborate silver-gilt "boss" in the centre are dated "fairly firmly" to between 1314 and 1327 from the heraldry, [1] with the rim and cover about 1500. [2]