Barclaigh
Norman barons who built one of the great Scottish landed families — and gave Russia a field marshal
| Clan name | Clan Barclay |
| Gaelic name | Barclaigh |
| Name meaning | From the Norman place name Berkeley in Gloucestershire — brought to Scotland with the Norman influx under David I in the 12th century |
| Motto | Aut agere aut mori (Either action or death) |
| Territory | Gartly and Towie (Aberdeenshire), Urie (Kincardineshire), Mathers (Kincardineshire) |
| Origin | Gartly, Aberdeenshire; Urie, Kincardineshire |
The Barclay family in Scotland descends from Walter de Berkeley, who came north from England in the train of David I in the 12th century. The family established themselves in Kincardineshire and Aberdeenshire, building a landed presence in the northeast that endured for centuries.
The Barclays of Urie became prominent in the 17th century through an unexpected route: Robert Barclay of Urie (1648–1690) became one of the most significant theological intellectuals of the early Quaker movement. His 'Apology for the True Christian Divinity' (1675) remains a foundational text of Quaker thought. His son Robert Barclay was the first English-appointed governor of East New Jersey, briefly establishing a Barclay family connection to colonial America.
The most famous Barclay of the modern era was a Russian field marshal — Prince Michael Andreas Barclay de Tolly (1761–1818), commander-in-chief of the Russian Imperial Army. His Scots-descended family had settled in the Baltic provinces generations earlier. Barclay de Tolly commanded the Russian army in the early stages of Napoleon's 1812 invasion, implementing the strategic retreat that ultimately destroyed the Grande Armée before Kutuzov arrived to take official command.
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Subscribe Free →The Barclays spread through the British world through trade and emigration, with the name common in North America and Australia. The banking dynasty Barclays Bank (founded 1690) is connected to a Quaker banking network that included members of the Barclay family, though the bank's direct lineage is complex.
Barclay descendants in the United States trace to various emigration waves: Quaker settlers in the colonial period, later Scots emigration in the 18th and 19th centuries, and Irish-Scots from Ulster who carried the name west.
National Records of Scotland. Aberdeen City and Shire Archives. The Urie Papers in the National Archives of Scotland. The Religious Society of Friends (Quakers) archives in London for the Quaker branch. Burke's Landed Gentry for the Aberdeenshire and Kincardineshire lines.