Plate No. 039tartan
First documented
c. 3rd century AD
Fiber
wool
Weave
2/2 twill
Family
tartans

Plate No. 039 · tartan

Falkirk Tartan

The Falkirk tartan is the earliest tartan-like cloth found in Britain: a scrap of woolen check from the third century AD, discovered near the Antonine Wall stuffed into the mouth of an earthenware pot that held nearly two thousand Roman coins. Its check is the simplest possible, two tones of undyed wool, the light from ordinary fleece and the dark from the wool of darker sheep. The fragment is held by the National Museum of Scotland, and its pattern is the same border check that Border shepherds were still weaving fifteen centuries later.

Illustration: an archaeological scene of a Roman era earthenware pot half buried in dark peaty soil with a scrap of ancient undyed brown and cream checked wool at its mouth, coins spilling, a stone wall fragment beyond, third century Britain
An archaeological scene of a Roman era earthenware pot half buried in dark peaty soil with a scrap of ancient undyed brown and cream checked wool at its mouth, coins spilling, a stone wall fragment beyond, third century Britain.

Named for

Named for Falkirk, the town near the Antonine Wall where the fragment was unearthed.

In the record

  • c. 250 ADThe cloth was used to stopper a pot of nearly 2,000 Roman coins, preserving it for seventeen centuries.

From the journal

  1. 1.Falkirk tartan, Wikipedia
  2. 2.Border tartan, Wikipedia