The Project Gutenberg eBook of Celtic Scotland This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this eBook. Title: Celtic Scotland A history of ancient Alban Author: W. F. Skene Release date: November 9, 2024 [eBook #74710] Language: English Original publication: Edinburgh: David Douglas Credits: MWS, KD Weeks, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) *** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CELTIC SCOTLAND *** ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Transcriber’s Note: This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects. Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_. Superscripted characters are preceded by ‘^’, and if there are multiple characters they are contained by ‘{ }’. There is a several instances of ‘m’ with a macron, which appears here as ‘m̄’. Footnotes have been moved to follow the chapter in which they are referenced. Footnotes were numbered beginning afresh with each chapter. They have been resequenced across the entire text for uniqueness. On occasion, notes are cross-referenced by number. These references have been changed as well. In Appendix II (pp. 410-427), a lengthy poem is presented with the Gaelic and the English translations on facing pages, so that the reader may readily compare them. They are too wide to give column-wise here. To honor the intent of the author, this section has been reorganized to give each verse and its translation together, the English following the Gaelic in staggered fashion. On the last page of each version, (pp. 426-427), there is, on each page, a _Notes_ section at the bottom. These have been combined to follow the last of the passages. Minor errors, attributable to the printer, have been corrected. Please see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details regarding the handling of any textual issues encountered during its preparation. CELTIC SCOTLAND _Edinburgh: Printed by Thomas and Archibald Constable_ FOR DAVID DOUGLAS. LONDON SIMPKIN, HAMILTON, KENT, AND CO., LIM. CAMBRIDGE MACMILLAN AND BOWES. GLASGOW JAMES MACLEHOSE AND SONS. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ [Illustration: SCOTLAND with the ANCIENT DIVISIONS Of THE LAND. ] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ CELTIC SCOTLAND: A HISTORY OF =Ancient Alban= BY WILLIAM F. SKENE, D.C.L., LL.D. HISTORIOGRAPHER-ROYAL FOR SCOTLAND. VOLUME III. LAND AND PEOPLE. _SECOND EDITION_. EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS 1890 _All Rights reserved_ PREFACE TO THE SECOND EDITION. A new edition of this the third and last volume of Celtic Scotland having now been called for, the author is glad to have this opportunity of correcting any mistakes of the press which have occurred in it. As this volume deals with the early land tenures and social condition of the Celtic inhabitants of Scotland, in which a number of obsolete terms and old Celtic words occur, it is peculiarly liable to mistakes of this kind, and the author has revised the text in this view with great care, but he does not find that he has any material alteration to make in the views he has expressed, or the conclusions he has come to, as these are, in fact, the outcome of years of careful research into this very obscure subject. EDINBURGH, 27 INVERLEITH ROW, _7th July 1890_. PREFACE TO THE FIRST EDITION. This volume completes the task which the author set before himself of illustrating the history of Scotland during the Celtic period, when it bore the name of Alban, and of endeavouring to dispel those fables which have hitherto obscured it. Like the other volumes, this third volume forms in itself a substantive work. Its title is ‘Land and People,’ and its subject, ‘The early land tenures and social condition of the Celtic inhabitants of Scotland’ (vol. i. p. 28). The real history of a country may be said only truly to commence when we come to deal with the social and political organisation of its population. The ethnology of the nations which compose it—the history of its kings, their reigns, and the various wars in which they engaged—the extension or restriction of the frontiers of their kingdom—the introduction of Christianity and the establishment of a Christian Church, are all great landmarks and important features of its history; but still they are merely the outward bulwarks of the kingdom as a whole, and present it to us in its external relations only. Till we know something of the distribution within the country of the various races which formed its population, their relative growth and decay, their social organisation, and the extent to which its peculiar features were preserved, and influenced and coloured the future condition of the entire population formed by the amalgamation of its various elements, we know little of its real history. To supply, at least to some extent, this information is the main purpose of the present volume, which the author fears has been very inadequately carried into effect, and its publication has been from unavoidable causes delayed much beyond the period when it ought to have appeared. It was commenced two years ago, when its progress was interrupted partly owing to his illness, under the depressing influence of which part of the volume has indeed been written, but mainly because the publication of the fourth volume of the Ancient Irish Laws, which was to contain tracts relating to the early land tenure in Ireland, had likewise been unavoidably delayed, and the author felt that, without consulting these tracts, he could not satisfactorily treat of the old tribal system from which the ancient Celtic land tenures in Scotland derived their origin, and without a knowledge of which their true character could hardly be ascertained. The author was, however, at length enabled to complete this part of his volume through the courtesy of the editor, who, with the kind permission of the Lord Bishop of Limerick, chairman of the Brehon Law Commission, communicated to him the proof-sheets of the text and translation of these tracts, but it was not till after this volume had in the main been printed, and was almost through the press, that the fourth volume of the Ancient Laws of Ireland was at length published, and the author had any opportunity of reading the introduction; and thus in compiling that part of his volume he had unfortunately not the benefit of the learned editor’s commentary upon these tracts. The author has to record his thanks to his friends: Mr. Alexander Carmichael for the instructive account of three of the Long Island townships embodied in the last chapter; W. M. Hennessy, Esq., of the Public Record Office, Dublin, for the curious poem relating to the Kingdom of the Isles, with its translation; and Captain Thomas for the old description of the Isles, both printed in the Appendix, Nos. II. and III. He has also, as formerly, to thank Mr. John Taylor Brown for his ready aid in revising his proof-sheets; and he takes this opportunity when completing his work of recording his sense of the valuable assistance and advice he has received throughout from his excellent publisher, Mr. David Douglas. The volume containing the History and Ethnology of the kingdom was brought down to the end of the reign of Alexander the Third, the last of the old dynasty of Celtic monarchs, which terminated with his death in the year 1284, and it is with the same reign that our narrative in treating of the ‘Land and People’ must now commence. EDINBURGH, 27 INVERLEITH ROW, _1st October 1880_. TABLE OF CONTENTS. ------- BOOK III. _LAND AND PEOPLE_. CHAPTER I. SCOTLAND IN THE REIGN OF ALEXANDER THE THIRD. PAGE Consolidation of the provinces of Scotland into one feudal monarchy completed in this reign, 1 Southern frontier of Scotland, 3 English possessions of the Scottish kings, 5 Northern boundary of Scotland, 7 Physical aspect of Scotland in the reign of Alexander the Third, 9 Population of Scotland in the reign of Alexander the Third composed of six races, 15 Indigenous races of the Britons and Picts, 16 Colonising races of Scots and Angles, 17 Intruding races of Danes, Norwegians, and Normans, 18 Influence of foreign races on native population, 18 Foreign elements introduced into population of Pictish and Cambrian territories, 20 Spread of Teutonic people over them, 21 Norwegian kingdom of the Isles, 28 The Gallgaidheal, 29 The Estates of the Realm in 1283, 39 Distinction of population into Teutonic Lowlanders and Gaelic Highlanders, 40 CHAPTER II. THE SEVEN PROVINCES OF SCOTLAND. Old division of Scotia into provinces, 42 Seven provinces in the eighth century, 42 Seven provinces in the tenth century, 44 Districts ruled by kings and afterwards by Mormaers, 49 Petty kings of Argyll and Galloway, 51 Jarl Thorfinn, 52 Mormaers termed by Norwegians, Jarls, 54 Mormaers of Buchan, from the Book of Deer, 55 Toisechs of Buchan, 56 Seven Earls first appear in reign of Alexander the First, 58 Policy of David I. to feudalise Celtic earldoms, 63 Creation of additional earldoms, 66 Earldom of Mar, 68 Earldoms of Garvyach and Levenach, 69 Earldoms of Ross and Carrick, 70 Earldom of Caithness, 71 Seven Earls in the reign of Alexander the Second, 71 Province of Argyll, 78 Seven Earls in the reign of Alexander the Third, 80 State of the land in the reign of Alexander the Third, 83 The Crown demesne, 84 District of Argyll divided into sheriffdoms, 88 CHAPTER III. LEGENDARY ORIGINS. The problem to be solved, 90 Early traditions, 90 Ethnic legends, 91 Linguistic legends, 96 Historical legends, 97 Artificial character of early Irish history, 97 Cymric legends, 100 Legendary origin of transmarine tribes, 104 The Nemedians in Scotland, 105 The Firbolg and Tuath De Danan in Scotland, 105 Pictish legends, 107 The Milesians in Scotland, 108 The race of Ith in Scotland, 111 The race of Colla in Scotland, 113 The last three pagan kings of Ireland in Scotland, 114 How far have these legends a historic basis? 120 Early connection between Scotland and Ireland, 125 The twofold division of the Picts and the establishment of Scone as the capital of the kingdom, 132 CHAPTER IV. THE TUATH OR TRIBE IN IRELAND. Mixed population of Scotland, 135 Sources of information as to their early social state, 136 Tribal organisation of the Gaelic race, 136 Influences affecting the tribe in Ireland, 137 Effect of introduction of Christianity, 138 Land originally held in common, 139 Distinction of ranks in the tribe, 139 The Ri or king, 140 Distinction of ranks arising from possession of cattle, 142 Origin and growth of private property, and creation of an order of territorial chiefs, 144 The Ceile or tenants of a chief, 145 State of the Tuath or territory of a tribe, 147 The Dun or fort, 148 The Mortuath, 149 The Cuicidh or province, 149 The law of Tanistry, 150 Connection between superiors and dependants, 150 The system of fines, 151 The Honor price, 152 System of land measures, 153 Later state of the tribes, 157 CHAPTER V. THE FINÉ OR SEPT IN IRELAND, AND THE TRIBE IN WALES. Origin of the Finé or Sept, 171 The Ciné or kinsfolk, 171 The Ceile or tenants, 172 The Fuidhir or stranger septs, 173 Territorial basis of Finé, 175 The four families of the Ciné or kinsfolk, 176 Members of the four families, 179 The Geilfiné chief, 180 Relation of Geilfiné chief to the Ri Tuath, 184 Law of Succession, 187 Sluaged or hosting, 188 Fosterage, 190 Later state of the Finés, 192 The Tribe in Wales, 197 Fines for Slaughter, 204 The sept in Wales, 205 Fosterage in Wales, 207 CHAPTER VI. THE TRIBE IN SCOTLAND. Early notices of tribal organisation, 209 The tribe among the Picts, 210 The tribe in Dalriada, 212 The tribe in Galloway, 214 Modification of original tribes under foreign influences, 214 Passing of the Mortuath into the Earldom, and the Tribe into the Thanage, 215 Distinction of people into free and servile classes, 216 Classes of freemen, 217 Ranks of bondmen, 220 Measures of land, 223 Burdens on the land, 227 The Cain or Can, 228 Conveth, 232 Expedition and hosting, 234 Assimilation to feudal forms, 236 Tenure in feu-farm, 237 Ranks of society on Crown lands, 238 CHAPTER VII. THE THANAGES AND THEIR EXTINCTION. Review of the Thanages and their conversion into Baronies, 246 Thanages in Moray and Ross, 247 Thanages in Mar and Buchan, 250 Thanages in Angus and Mearns, 257 Thanages in Fife and Fothriff, 267 Thanages in Stratherne, 269 Thanages in Atholl, 270 Thanages in Gowry, 274 Thanages south of the Forth, 277 Toshachdor and Toshachdera, 278 Result of survey of thanages, 281 CHAPTER VIII. THE FINÉ OR CLAN IN SCOTLAND. Clanship in the Highlands, 284 The Highland Line, 285 Break-up of the Celtic Earldoms, 286 Moray, 287 Buchan, 287 Atholl, 288 Angus, 289 Menteath and Stratherne, 290 Mar, 291 Ross, 291 The Gallgaidheal and their lords, 292 Lennox, 300 The Toshachdoracht, 300 First appearance of Clans, 302 Clan Macduff and its privileges, 303 Description of Highlanders—1363-1383, 307 Raid into Angus in 1391, 308 Combat of two clans on North Inch of Perth in 1396, 310 The Clan Chattan and Clan Cameron, 313 The Chief and the Kinsmen, 318 The native-men, 318 Fosterage, 321 The Clan and its Members, 323 CHAPTER IX. THE CLANS AND THEIR GENEALOGIES. State of the Highlands in the sixteenth century, 326 Names and position of the clans, 327 Meaning of ‘Clann,’ and the personal names from which their patronymics were taken, 331 Original importance and position of Clan pedigrees, 334 First change in Clan pedigrees. Influence of legendary history of Scotland, 336 Second change. Influence of Irish Sennachies, 337 Analysis of the Irish Pedigrees, 338 Artificial character of these pedigrees, 346 Third Change. Influence of Act 1597, 346 Spurious Pedigrees, 349 Result of Analysis of Pedigrees, 364 Termination of Clanship in the Highlands, 365 CHAPTER X. LAND TENURE IN THE HIGHLANDS AND ISLANDS SUBSEQUENT TO THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY. Changes in tenure of land, 368 Abolition of Calps, 368 Size of townships, 369 Occupation of townships, 370 Average size of township in Central Highlands, 370 Township in the Islands, 371 Highland deer-forests, 371 Causes affecting the population in the eighteenth century, 372 Townships in the Inner Hebrides in 1850, 374 Existing townships in the Outer Hebrides, 378 APPENDIX. I. Translation of a part of the Book of Clanranald, containing the Legendary History of the Lords of the Isles as given by the MacVurichs, hereditary Sennachies of the Clan, 397 II. Baile Suthain Sith Eamhna, an Irish poem relating to the kingdom of the Isles, with a translation by W. M. Hennessy, Esq., 410 III. The Description of the Isles of Scotland, written 1577-1595, 428 IV. On the Authenticity of the Letters Patent said to have been granted by King William the Lion to the Earl of Mar in 1171, 441 V. On the Earldom of Caithness, 448 VI. Original of the Poem on the Lennox, 454 VII. Comparison between the Highland Clans and the Afghaun Tribes. Written in 1816 by Sir Walter Scott, 456 VIII. Legendary Descent of the Highland Clans, according to Irish MSS., 458 INDEX, 493 ILLUSTRATIVE MAP. Scotland, with the ancient divisions of the land, _to face the Title_ BOOK III. _LAND AND PEOPLE_. ——————●—————— CHAPTER I. SCOTLAND IN THE REIGN OF ALEXANDER THE THIRD. [Sidenote: Consolidation of the provinces of Scotland into one feudal monarchy completed in this reign.] The brightest and most prosperous period in the annals of Scotland was undoubtedly that during which she was under the rule of the dynasty of kings which sprang from the union of the Celtic king Malcolm Ceannmor with the Saxon princess Margaret. It was during this period of upwards of a century and a half that the different provinces of Scotland were welded into one feudal monarchy, and the various races which inhabited them, and upon the allegiance of each of whom the kings of this race had hereditary claims, were fused into one mixed population combining the peculiar qualities of each. The reign of Alexander the Third, the last king of this old Celtic dynasty of Scottish kings, saw the concentration of the various provinces of Scotland into one compact kingdom finally completed by the cession of the Isles in the year 1266. Scotland now presented the same geographical platform which it ever after possessed. The various races which composed its population occupied in the main the same relative position. The kingdom of Scotland could now be no longer viewed as a limited Gaelic kingdom, possessing dependencies peopled by British, Anglic, or Scandinavian communities, but had become a feudal monarchy, the dominant element of which was Teutonic, while the Celtic population was either restricted to the wilder and more mountain regions, or formed the under class of serfs and tillers of the soil. It would seem as if the task of amalgamating the discordant elements of the population, and of concentrating the semi-independent provinces which they peopled, had no sooner been completed than the dynasty which effected it was to pass away, and a war of succession was to follow, which was still further to root up her ancient institutions, and to throw the kingdom still more into the hands of kings and nobility of an alien race. By the death of his only daughter, who had been married to the king of Norway, and of his only son in the same year, Alexander the Third found that unless he had a male heir by a second marriage the succession to the throne would devolve upon a little grand-daughter, the Princess of Norway, then only two years old, and on her the succession was settled in a Parliament held at Scone on the 5th February 1283-4, failing such male issue. In the instrument by which the succession was so settled the magnates of Scotland bound themselves to receive Margaret, daughter of Eric, king of Norway, and of Margaret, daughter of King Alexander, as their lady and heir of the kingdom of Scotia; and to acknowledge her and her heirs as their liege lady, and the true heir of their sovereign in the whole kingdom, and in the island of Man, and all the other islands pertaining to the kingdom of Scotia, as well as in Tynedale and Penrith, and other dependencies of the kingdom.[1] Such were the enlarged limits to which the name of Scotia, once confined to the districts between the Firth of Forth and the river Spey, had now extended; and the dependencies of the kingdom, which had then embraced large semi-independent provinces on the south and west of these boundaries, were now reduced to the recently-acquired Western Isles, and to the small districts of Tynedale and Penrith lying beyond her southern frontier. If this process of consolidation, however, may be said to have been completed in the reign of Alexander the Third, it can only be held to have properly commenced with that of David the First. Prior to his accession, although the rule of the Scottish monarchs had extended itself by degrees over the districts south of the Forth and Clyde, and then west of the Drumalban range and the river Spey, yet the name of Scotia was still confined to the eastern districts between these limits. These districts formed the real nucleus and heart of the kingdom, and were more directly associated with her monarchs as kings of the Scots. [Sidenote: Southern frontier of Scotland.] The extension of their power over the southern districts commenced about a century after the establishment of the Scottish dynasty on the Pictish throne, when, in the year 946, the districts forming the kingdom of Cumbria were ceded by Edward the elder to Malcolm king of the Scots. This kingdom extended, at that time, from the river Clyde to the river Derwent in Cumberland, and to the cross at Stanmore on the borders of Westmoreland and Yorkshire, which separated it from the Northumbrian territories. It embraced the western districts of Scotland from the Clyde to the Solway, the present county of Cumberland, with the exception of that part of it which lies on the south of the river Derwent and formed the barony of Copeland, and the whole of Westmoreland exclusive of the barony of Kendal, which, with Copeland and the western districts as far as the borders of Wales, belonged to the Northumbrian kingdom. Within eighty years afterwards, the districts on the east coast extending from the Forth to the Tweed, and consisting of Lothian and Teviotdale, were ceded to his grandson, another Malcolm. These southern territories were, however, in the position of dependencies on the kingdom of Scotland, lying beyond her proper southern frontier and within that of England, and were on three different occasions entirely separated from the Scottish kingdom:—First during the usurpation of Macbeth and the possession of the greater part of Scotland by the Norwegian Earl of Orkney, whose joint rule certainly did not extend beyond the Forth, while the southern districts remained faithful to the family of Duncan; again during the short reign of Donald Ban; and for a third time after the death of Eadgar, when the territories over which he had ruled as king were divided between his brothers Alexander and David, the former reigning as king over the kingdom north of the Forth and Clyde, while the latter ruled with the title of Earl over these southern dependencies. The southern frontier of the Cumbrian kingdom did not, at this time, extend beyond the Solway, for the Norman king, William Rufus, had, in the year 1092, wrested that part of it which lay between the Solway and the Derwent from Malcolm Ceannmor, and given it to the Norman baron Ranulph de Meschines, while Henry I. erected it, with Westmoreland, in 1132, into the bishopric of Carlisle. The southern boundary of Earl David’s possessions had thus become coincident with the southern frontier of the later kingdom of Scotland. It was only on the accession of David to the throne of Scotland that they became permanently united to the kingdom, and the name of Cumbria, or Cumberland, was restricted to that part of the ancient kingdom of Cumbria which now belonged to England. The connection of the royal family with the ancient line of the Saxon kings, the training and Norman tendencies of David himself, and his marriage with the daughter of an Earl of Northumbria, and widow of an Earl of Northampton, whose mother was a niece of the Conqueror, created a tie between them and the Anglic population of the southern districts which was closer than that which now connected him with the Celtic population of the other portions of the kingdom; and Lothian assumed that prominent position as the most valuable and cherished centre of the interests of the monarchy, which had hitherto belonged to the region between the Forth and the Spey. [Sidenote: English possessions of the Scottish kings.] But while David the First may be held to have established the Solway, the range of the Cheviots, and the Tweed, as the proper southern boundary of the kingdom of Scotland, his marriage gave him claims to territories beyond it, which he was disposed to assert when opportunity offered. During the life of Matilda, his queen, he had enjoyed in her right the earldoms of Northampton and Huntingdon; but on her death, seven years after he had succeeded to the throne of Scotland, the earldom of Northampton passed to her son by her first marriage, Simon de Senlis, while Henry, her son by King David, succeeded to the earldom of Huntingdon. The death of Henry, king of England, in 1135, and the disputed succession between his daughter the empress of Germany and his sister’s son Stephen, Earl of Mortaigne, presented the opportunity King David longed for. He embraced the cause of the empress, who was his niece, and in her name took possession of Northumberland, with the exception of the castle of Bamborough, which he soon after surrendered to Stephen, who confirmed the Honor of Huntingdon to Prince Henry, with Doncaster and the castle of Carlisle in addition to it. In the following year King David again claimed the northern provinces in name of his son Prince Henry, and both Northumberland and Cumberland were yielded to him; but on peace being made between him and Stephen he surrendered Northumberland, retaining, however, Cumberland in England. An attempt, two years afterwards, to regain Northumberland led to the battle of the Standard, in which David was defeated; but a peace was concluded in 1139, when Northumberland was made over to Prince Henry, except the fortresses of Newcastle and Bamborough, which he retained to his death in 1152, when King David had Malcolm, the eldest son of Prince Henry, proclaimed heir to the crown, and presented his second son, William, to the Northumbrian barons as their ruler. Malcolm had not been four years on the throne when he surrendered Northumberland and Cumberland to the king of England, which were annexed to the English crown, while the king restored to him the Honor of Huntingdon. An attempt on the part of his brother and successor, William the Lion, to regain these provinces, led to the war in which he was defeated and taken prisoner in 1173, and Huntingdon was taken from him and given to Simon de Senlis; but on the death of the latter in 1184 it was restored to King William, who bestowed it upon his youngest brother David, afterwards known as David, Earl of Huntingdon, in whose family it remained.[2] The claims of the Scottish kings upon the northern provinces of England were renewed by Alexander the Second, but through the mediation of Cardinal Otho, the Pope’s legate, all questions in dispute between England and Scotland were finally settled by an agreement concluded at York in September 1237. In lieu of the claims made by Alexander upon the earldoms of Northumberland, Cumberland, and Westmoreland, as his hereditary right, and for the dowry he ought to have received with Johanna, the sister of the king of England, whom he had married, King Henry undertook to convey to the King of Scotland in property, lands in the earldoms of Northumberland and Cumberland to the yearly value of two hundred pounds.[3] The lands so settled upon him were Tynedale, also called the barony of Werk, in Northumberland, and the crown demesne in Cumberland, consisting of Penrith and other lands, with the exception of the castle of Carlisle. Such is a short sketch of the attempts made by the kings of Scotland to extend their frontiers to the south; and the result was that in the reign of Alexander the Third the southern boundary of Scotland was the same as it is at present, but Alexander was left in possession of the lands of Tynedale and Penrith beyond it, as a dependency of the kingdom, and they remained with his successor John Baliol, when they were finally lost to Scotland in the war of independence which followed his short and disastrous reign. [Sidenote: Northern boundary of Scotland.] But if the kings of this dynasty struggled vainly to enlarge their boundaries on the south, they were more successful in gradually extending the power of the crown over the northern and western provinces. David I. by successfully defeating and crushing the rebellion of Angus, Earl of Moray, in 1130, terminated the semi-independent state of that province, and no earl of this province was permitted to exist till King Robert Bruce bestowed it upon his nephew Randolph, but its guardianship was committed to different Scottish nobles, under the title of _Custos Moraviæ_.[4] The son of Malcolm MacHeth, who called himself the son of Earl Angus, attempted on the accession of Malcolm IV. to regain the province with the aid of the powerful Regulus of Argyll, but unsuccessfully, and their failure was followed by the northern seaboard, between Inverness and the Spey, where David I. had already planted the royal castle, being to a great extent taken from the native chiefs and given to strangers—a policy still further followed out by his successor William the Lion, who added the district of Ross, in which he built two castles; and the crown continued to maintain its control over these provinces, notwithstanding occasional attempts on the part of the Celtic inhabitants to regain their independence by supporting the pretensions of the families of MacWilliam and MacHeth. The province of Caithness too, which at this time included Sutherland, and had for generations belonged to the Norwegian earls of Orkney, who held it nominally under the king of Scotland with the title of Earl, was at length brought by the same monarch more directly under the power of the crown, and placed in the same position as the other Scottish provinces. By his son Alexander the Second the still more extensive province of Argathelia or Argyll, forming the western seaboard of Scotland, and extending from Loch Long, opening off the Firth of Clyde, to the borders of Caithness, was brought under subjection, so that in the reign of this king the power of the crown was firmly established over the whole mainland of Scotland north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde. The islands, however, which surrounded it still belonged to the kingdom of Norway. The Orkney and Shetland Islands had been colonised by the Norwegians as early as the ninth century. They had been ruled by a line of Norwegian Jarls, who owed submission to the king of Norway alone, and though the succession to these Jarls opened in the reign of William the Lion to two families of Scottish descent, they were still considered as Jarls under the Norwegian crown, and the islands did not become connected with the Scottish kingdom till long after the period we are dealing with. The Western Isles, however, stood in a different position. Although the Norwegian Vikings had to a great extent taken possession of them at the same time that they colonised Orkney, and they had been the subject of frequent contest between the Norwegian Jarl and the Danish kings of Dublin, who had acquired possession of the island of Man, they were still claimed by the Scottish kings as belonging to their kingdom, till the reign of Edgar, when they were formally ceded to the king of Norway. They were at this time along with the Isle of Man under the rule of petty kings of Norwegian descent, and this line of Norwegian kings of the Isles retained the whole till the year 1154, when the kingdom of the Isles was divided, and the islands south of the Point of Ardnamurchan passed under the rule of the Celtic ruler of Argyll, whose claim was derived through a descent in the female line from one of the Norwegian kings of the Isles, but who still held them nominally under the king of Norway. The tie to Norway, however, was becoming weaker and the connection with Scotland stronger, when the unsuccessful attempt of Hakon, king of Norway, to firmly re-establish his power over the whole of the islands in the reign of Alexander the Third, and his defeat and death, led to the cession of Man and the Isles in the year 1266 to the Scottish monarch. And in 1284 we find them settled upon the Maid of Norway as a dependency of the Scottish kingdom. The Western Islands became from this time firmly united to the rest of Scotland, while the island of Man, after being in the following century alternately in the possession of the Scots and the English, finally passed over to the English crown. [Sidenote: Physical aspect of Scotland in the reign of Alexander the Third.] Such then was, in extent, the Scotland of Alexander the Third, and of its physical aspect at this time we can also form a very fair conception. As early as the third century we are told that the Barbarian tribes beyond the bounds of the Roman province in Britain ‘inhabit mountains wild and waterless, and plains desert and marshy, having neither walls nor cities, nor tillage, but living by pasturage, the chase, and certain berries;’ and that ‘many parts being constantly flooded by the tides of the ocean become marshy.’[5] Had the writer of this description ever seen the Scotch mountains, probably ‘waterless’ is the very last epithet he would have thought of applying to them; and though the inhabitants are said to have had neither walls nor cities, yet no doubt every rock and height showed the rude fortification or hill fort, the remains of so many of which are still seen, and every rising ground, with its rude collection of huts, would be surrounded with its rampart of earth and stones. Adamnan, writing in the seventh century, tells us of the fortified residence of the king of the Picts on the banks of the river Ness, with its royal house and gates, of a village on the banks of a lake, and of the houses of the country people. Of the leading physical features of the country he tells us too, of the large inland lakes, Loch Ness and Loch Awe, and of the range of mountains forming the backbone of Britain, or great watershed dividing the eastern and western waters, and separating the Scots from the Picts;[6] and Bede, in the succeeding century, talks of the mountains which separated the southern from the northern Picts, and within which the former had seats.[7] To some extent these features must have still characterised the Scotland of Alexander the Third. The aspect of the country became gradually altered by the hand of man as he advanced in civilisation. The introduction of Christianity, and its rapid spread over the country, would fill it with those rude Celtic monasteries which were everywhere established, and with small Christian colonies, who practised a rude agriculture; forests would be cut down and mosses drained; and in place of ‘those marshy parts of the country, constantly flooded by the tides of ocean,’ would appear those rich carses which border the estuaries of her great rivers. The climate would become ameliorated, towns and villages would spring up, and a more settled mode of life become established among the Celtic tribes which formed her population. An old description of Scotland north of the Firths, written in the first year of the reign of William the Lion, exhibits of course the same great physical landmarks, which do not alter, as still forming the leading territorial boundaries. ‘This region is said to exhibit the form and figure of a man. The chief part of the figure, that is, the head, is in Arregaithel, or Argyll, in the west part of Scotland, on the Irish Sea. His feet are upon the German Ocean. The mountains and deserts of Arregaithel form his head and neck, and his body is the range of mountains called Mound, or the Mounth, which extends from the western to the eastern sea. His arms are the mountains which separate Scotia from Arregaithel. His right side is formed from Moray, Ross, Marr, and Buchan. His legs are these two great and principal rivers the Tay and the Spey. Between the legs are Angus and Mearns, on this side of the Mounth, and other districts on the other side,’ that is, Marr and Buchan, ‘between the Spey and the Mounth.’[8] This description, which is fanciful enough, would place the head of the supposed figure at Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in Scotland. The body is formed by the great range of hills which separated Inverness-shire and Aberdeenshire from the counties of Perth, Forfar, and Kincardine, and which forms, as it were, the backbone of the Grampians, and these are the mountains obviously alluded to by Bede as separating the northern from the southern Picts. The arms are formed by the range of hills which run at right angles, and are the great watershed dividing the eastern and western waters. The southern part forming the left arm now separates Argyllshire from Perthshire, and the northern part, or right arm, divides the western seaboard of Inverness-shire and Ross-shire, which then formed part of Argyllshire, from the eastern districts of these counties, and these are equally plainly the Drumalban range, which in Adamnan’s time divided the Scots from the Picts. Upon this scene, during the period when Scotland was under the rule of this dynasty, two great additional features were introduced. The first consisted of those Norman castles or strongholds, either built by the Norman barons to whom grants of land had been made, and which contributed so greatly to their power in the country, or by the kings of this race upon the crown lands; and around the latter would cluster those groups of dwellings, inhabited by traders and artisans, which, on the banks or at the mouths of navigable rivers, formed the burghs and seaport towns in which the trade and commerce of the country was carried on. The second great feature consisted of those monasteries founded by these kings for communities of regular canons or other monastic orders of the Roman Catholic Church, which, with their stone-and-lime buildings, the extensive tracts of land attached to them, and the industrial habits they fostered, would tend greatly to extend the cultivation of the soil, and to promote the social condition of the people under their influence. We have a somewhat imperfect description of Scotland as it was in the time of Alexander the Third, compiled not long after his death. It commences at the eastern border between England and Scotland, and first names Tyvidale, that is, Teviotdale, with its two royal castles of Rokesborow or Roxburgh, and Geddeworth or Jedburgh, the latter a favourite residence of Alexander the Third. Then follows Lothian, with its castles of Berwick, Edinburgh, Dunbar, and Strivelyn or Stirling. These two provinces extend, it tells us, from the border to Erlesferie and Queneferie, that is, to the Firth of Forth. In the districts which extend in the west from the Clyde to the Solway it names only the new castle built upon the Ayr water, and in Galewey, Anandale the land of the Lord Robert de Brus, the royal castle of Dounfres or Dumfries, that of Kirkcudbright, belonging to William de Ferrers, and the castle of Baleswynton, belonging to John de Cumyn. The central districts are not named, but here was the extensive forest of Ettrick and Traquair separating the eastern from the western districts. Beyond Lothian, it tells us, lay the land of Fif or Fife, in which were the burgh of St. Andrews and the castle of Locres or Leuchars. Beyond the Firth of Tay was the land of Anegos or Angus, in which were the castles of Dundee and Forfar; and then follows ‘a certain waste called the Mounth, upwards of sixty miles long and sixteen broad, across which a most wretched passage can be taken to the north, without food’ (ubi est pessimum passagium sine cibo). Then follows Mar, and Bouwan or Buchan, in which is the burgh of Aberdene with its royal castle. Followed by the land of Morref or Moray, with the castles of Elgyn and Spiny, and then Ross and Cateneys or Caithness.[9] This description seems to follow the coast, as the central districts of Gowry, Atholl, Stratherne, and Menteath are omitted, as well as the district of Arregaithel or Argyll, and the enumeration of the castles is very imperfect. Fordun, however, gives a view of Scotland in his day which is probably equally applicable to the time of Alexander the Third, and in which he seems to break out into enthusiastic admiration of his native country. ‘It is a country,’ he says, ‘strong by nature, and difficult and toilsome of access. In some parts it towers into mountains; in others it sinks down into plains. For lofty mountains stretch through the midst of it from end to end, as do the tall Alps through Europe, and these mountains formerly separated the Scots from the Picts, and their kingdoms from each other,’—a very accurate description of the Drumalban chain, extending through Scotland from south to north. ‘Impassable as they are on horseback, save in very few places,’ he proceeds, alluding here to the passes into Argyll, ‘they can hardly be crossed even on foot, both on account of the snow always lying on them, except in summer-time only, and by reason of the boulders torn off the beetling crags, and the deep hollows in their midst. Along the foot of these mountains are vast woods, full of stags, roe-deer, and other wild animals and beasts of various kinds.... Numberless springs also well up, and burst forth from the hills and the sloping ridges of the mountains, and trickling down with sweetest sound in crystal rivulets between flowery banks, flow together through the level vales, and give birth to many streams; and these again to large rivers, in which Scotia marvellously abounds beyond any other country; and at their mouths, where they rejoin the sea, she has noble and secure harbours. Scotia also has tracts of land bordering on the sea, pretty level and rich, with green meadows, and fertile and productive fields of corn and barley, and well adapted for growing beans, peas, and all other produce; destitute, however, of wine and oil though by no means so, of honey and wax. But in the upland districts, and along the highlands, the fields are less productive, except only in oats and barley. The country is there very hideous, interspersed with moors and marshy fields, muddy and dirty. It is, however, full of pasturage grass for cattle, and comely with verdure in the glens along the watercourses. This region abounds in wool-bearing sheep, and in horses; and its soil is grassy, feeds cattle and wild beasts, is rich in milk and wool, and manifold in its wealth of fish in sea, river, and lake.’[10] We can thus, in some degree, picture to ourselves the Scotland of this period. Instead of the large tracts of cultivated land and the modern mansions of its possessors surrounded by plantations, we should see forests of trees of native growth, from amid which, or on their margin, would rise the towers of the royal castles, or those of the Norman barons. We should see small patches of cultivated land, interspersed with long stretches of barren heath. In sheltered valleys we should find the seats of the early bishoprics of the Celtic Church, and the more imposing monasteries of the regular clergy and monastic orders subsequently introduced, surrounded by a greater extent of cultivated land, and with the huts of the occupiers of the soil clustering round. On the banks of the navigable rivers, or at their mouth, we should find settlements of the trading and industrial population protected by rude walls; and we should find the northern and western districts exhibiting very much the same characteristics as they did during the succeeding centuries:—the two great leading mountain chains of the Mounth and Drumalban forming a succession of hunting-grounds or forests, left to the red-deer and other game; the minor chains leading from them to the south-east and north-east terminating abruptly on the lowland plains, and forming a great mountain barrier, extending on the south in an oblique line from Ben Lomond to the great range of the Mounth near Stonehaven, and on the north from the same range at Ballater to the river Nairn, through which the great rivers rising among the western hills pour their waters, through narrow gorges which form the passes into the mountain region. Within this line the country would be mainly used for pasturage, and its natural defences would render but few artificial fortifications necessary. [Sidenote: Population of Scotland in the reign of Alexander the Third composed of six races.] During the period when the boundaries of Scotland had been thus extended by the kings of this dynasty, its population was composed of several distinct races, partly of Teutonic and partly of Celtic origin, forming a people of very mixed descent, in which the Teutonic element was gradually predominating more and more over the Celtic, and either absorbing the latter or confining it to the more barren and mountain regions of the country. The constituent elements of this population bore six different names. These were the Picts and the Cumbrians or Britons, the Scots and Angles, the Norwegians, and the Franks or Normans, and we find them distinguished by these names under the rule of the Scoto-Saxon monarchs, till they gradually become merged in the general name of Scots. Thus the charters of Eadgar and Alexander the First are addressed to their subjects, both Scots and Angles. Those by David the First and Malcolm the Fourth sometimes to Scots and Angles, at other times to Franks or Normans and Angles, and frequently to Franks and Angles, Scots and Galwegians or Picts, while in the charters of the subsequent kings these distinctions disappear. When the whole force of the kingdom was called out by David the First at the invasion of England which terminated in the disastrous battle of the Standard, we find that his army, according to Richard of Hexham, was composed of Normans, Germans, Angles, Northumbrians and Cumbrians of Teviotdale, of Lothian, of Picts commonly called Galwegians, and of Scots,[11] while, according to Ailred, the army was arranged in the following battalions. The first was composed of the Galuenses or Galwegian Picts; the second of the Cumberenses and Teviotdalenses or Britons of Strathclyde and Teviotdale; the third of the Laodonenses, Insulani, and Lauernani, that is, a mixed battalion of Angles of Lothian, Norwegians of the Isles, and the Gaelic people of the Lennox; and the king had in his own battalion the Scotti and Muravenses, that is, the people of Scotland between the Forth and the Spey and of the great province of Moray, which he had recently subjected, beyond it, and along with them ‘Milites Angli et Franci,’[12] or Saxon and Norman barons. [Sidenote: Indigenous races of the Britons and Picts.] Of these races two only were indigenous, and the rest were intruders. To the indigenous races belonged the Cumbrians or Britons south of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, and the Picts, who originally inhabited the whole country north of these estuaries, as well as Galloway and a considerable part of Ireland. Both belonged to the Celtic race, the former to that branch of it, the dialect of which is represented by the Welsh, Cornish, and Breton, and perhaps in the main most nearly approached the Cornish in the form of their speech. But whether the Picts were altogether a homogeneous people may perhaps be a question. From the time when they first became known to the Romans, they appear throughout as divided into two branches; but whether the expression of the Roman historian, when he terms these two divisions of the Pictish people two nations, indicates any diversity of race, or whether, as the language of Bede rather implies, the distinction was simply geographical, certainly in one important respect they for a time showed a material difference, for the southern Picts adopted Christianity at a much earlier period than the northern Picts, and they were so far disunited that the conversion of the former did not imply that of the whole nation, and for a century and a half, while the southern portion were nominally Christian, the northern half remained Pagan. Every circumstance, however, connected with them, tends to show that the Picts who inhabited the northern and western regions of Scotland, as well as Galloway and the districts in Ireland, belonged to the Gaelic race and spoke a Gaelic dialect, while the southern Picts, placed between them and a British people, present features which appear to assimilate them to both; and the conclusion we came to was that they were probably originally of the same Gaelic race, while a British element had entered into their language, either from mixture with that people, or from some other influence arising from their contact. [Sidenote: Colonising races of Scots and Angles.] The sixth century brought in both an additional Gaelic and a Teutonic element into the population of this part of Britain, for in the beginning of that century a colony of Scots from Ireland, who were undoubtedly a Gaelic people, settled on the barren coasts on the north side of the Firth of Clyde, and the same century saw the eastern seaboard, extending from the Tweed to the Firth of Forth, in possession of the Angles of Northumberland; while there is reason to believe that some parts of the country between these limits had been previously partially settled by Frisian tribes belonging to the great Saxon confederation. [Sidenote: Intruding races of Danes, Norwegians, and Normans.] In the ninth century the great outburst of piratical adventurers from the Scandinavian shores brought first the Danes and afterwards the Norwegians to Scotland, and the latter not only colonised the Orkney and Shetland Islands but became masters of the Western Isles, and from time to time of considerable districts on the mainland of Scotland. During the reigns of the earlier kings of this dynasty the Saxon influence was largely increased by those who either took refuge in Scotland from the power of the Norman Conqueror or were attracted by the connection of these kings through their mother with the Saxon royal family; while David the First introduced the Norman barons, who obtained large tracts of land on both sides of the Firths of Forth and Clyde under his auspices and that of his immediate successors. [Sidenote: Influence of foreign races on native population.] In estimating the extent to which these foreign elements influenced the original inhabitants, and how far they formed a permanent ingredient in the mixed population, it is necessary to keep in view the circumstances under which they obtained a footing in the country, and the peculiar features which characterised the intruders. Did they enter the country as colonists or as conquerors? If the former, did they come as military colonists? or did they bring their wives and families with them? Or, if the latter, did they amalgamate with the conquered population so as to form one people, the language and institutions of one or other obtaining the mastery over the whole? or did they exterminate or drive them out? or were the remains of the conquered people retained as a servile class under the conquerors? The first recorded settlements which have a historical basis were those of the Scots on the west coast and of the Angles on the east. Of these the Scots appear to have come more as colonists than as invaders. They were a tribe of Scots who came from the district of Dalriada in Ireland in the beginning of the sixth century, and brought that name with them which was applied to the southern part of the great western district of Argyll. They belonged to the same Gaelic race as the Pictish tribes among whom they were settled, and the oldest tradition as reported by Bede cannot tell whether ‘they secured to themselves these settlements by fair means or by force of arms.’[13] The conversion of the northern Picts to Christianity by the Irish missionary St. Columba, and the establishment of a Christian church among them under Scottish clergy, now formed a bond of union between them; and it is recorded by Bede that up to the time when he wrote his History their mutual boundaries had remained unaltered. In the same century the Angles of Bernicia, under the sons of Ida, who had founded that kingdom, obtained possession of the districts extending along the east coast as far as the Firth of Forth. They were a Pagan people, conquering a Christian population of a different race and language from themselves; and there seems little reason to question that this settlement was only effected after a fierce and prolonged struggle between the Angles and the native population, by which, after varied fortunes on either side, the latter were eventually either exterminated or driven into the more hilly and barren regions on the west. There were thus formed four distinct kingdoms, which remained independent of each other during the sixth, seventh, and eighth centuries, viz. those of the Picts and of the Cumbrian Britons consisting of the two indigenous races, and those of the Scots of Dalriada and Angles of Bernicia established by two of the intruding peoples; and their mutual boundaries had remained unaltered down to the period when Bede wrote in the eighth century. [Sidenote: Foreign elements introduced into population of Pictish and Cumbrian territories.] It was not till the ninth century that those changes in their relative position commenced which ultimately led to their fusion into one mixed population. A revolution in that century led to a dynasty of kings of Scottish descent being permanently placed on the Pictish throne, and to a Scottish element being largely and to an increasing extent introduced into the Pictish population. The capital of the Pictish kingdom had at this time been Scone, and around this central point the new Scottish monarchy had its chief influence, and in the neighbouring districts the new Scottish population would be most numerous. The province of Fife seems to have been considered as their main seat, and they appear to have spread over the central districts of the region extending from the Forth to the great barrier of the Mounth, while the more independent portion of its Pictish population appear at its two extremities in the _firu Fortren_ or men of Fortren, who had their chief stronghold in Dundurn at the eastern end of Lochearn, and in the _viri de Moerne_ or men of Mearns, whose principal fortress was _Dunfother_ or Dunnottar at Stonehaven. These Scots and Picts, belonging to the same Gaelic race and speaking kindred dialects, would amalgamate readily enough, and they would probably be found at this time established alongside of each other in homesteads some of which would be Scottish and others Pictish,—a state of matters of which we find examples in northern Russia, where the earlier Finnish population and the intruding Slavs occupy respective villages, and in parts of Greece, where the distribution of the Albanian and the Greek population presents the same features. This view of the distribution of the Scottish and Pictish communities in the new kingdom of Alban, to which the name of Scotia was soon applied, will to some extent account for the strange interlacing in this part of the country of the three earliest dioceses of Dunkeld, of Abernethy, afterwards represented by the dioceses of Dunblane and Brechin, and of St. Andrews,—the two former being traditionally connected with the Pictish name, and the latter closely identified with the Scottish people. Diocesan boundaries are usually found to reflect more ancient ethnic divisions. The Scottish dynasty of kings had not occupied the Pictish throne for more than sixty or seventy years when the failure of the line of British kings of the Strathclyde Britons, and the election of a brother of the Scottish king to be their successor, placed a similar dynasty of Scottish kings on the throne of the Cumbrian kingdom, and made its eventual cession to the Scottish monarch a more natural and easy arrangement; and the cession of Lothian in the following century completed the territorial formation of the later Scottish kingdom. [Sidenote: Spread of Teutonic people over them.] Such being the state of matters when the dynasty of kings sprung from the union of Malcolm Ceannmor with the Saxon Princess Margaret ruled over this kingdom, we find when we reach the reign of Alexander the Third that a great change has taken place. The British speech has entirely disappeared from the district forming the ancient Strathclyde kingdom, and their population now speak the same Northumbrian or northern dialect of English with the people of Lothian; while this Teutonic language has likewise spread over the eastern districts extending from the Forth to the Moray Firth, where in the reign of Malcolm Ceannmor that Celtic king had had to interpret the Saxon speech of his queen to its inhabitants, and the indigenous Gaelic vernacular was now confined to the mountain regions of the North and West north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, while the people of Lennox and Galloway, within the limits of the ancient Cumbrian kingdom, likewise retained their Gaelic speech. There had, therefore, taken place in these districts a silent revolution, of which history has taken little note. Besides the violent or organic changes produced in a population by the invasion or colonisation of a foreign people which history marks, and the effects of which we can trace in the events recorded in the annals of the country, there is another silent and inorganic spread of one race over the territory of another, the eventual results of which are apparent enough, and the causes which led to it may be divined, but the steps of its progress are less easily marked. In the one, whole nations or tribes take possession of part or the whole of new districts; in the other, they spread not collectively but in families or groups. In the one, the inroad is effected by force or by direct convention. In the other, it is the result of natural causes arising from the contact of two races possessing different qualities and states of civilisation, and from the influence which the force of character of one people may exercise over another. Their influence, too, upon the spoken language and the place-names of the people presents itself in different aspects. In the one, the language of the invading people is established as the language of the country when the subject population has been exterminated or driven out, and the older place-names are either adopted into the language or changed at once. In the other, the silent and gradual inorganic colonisation changes by degrees the spoken language, but not the bulk of the place-names. The great natural features of the country usually retain the names imposed upon them by its original inhabitants, but those of the homesteads occupied by the colonising race assume the forms of their language, and those applicable to the dwellings of man only remain unchanged when the original people have lingered longer, or when the name is expressive of some common natural feature, which has been readily adopted as such by the intruders. Topography thus affords us some help in indicating the presence of the stranger, and marking the extent to which the race to which he belongs has spread over the country. When Earl David, as Prince of Cumbria, proposed to restore the ancient church of Glasgow, and asked the elders and wise men of Cumbria to inquire into the ancient possessions of that church, they told him that after Kentigern, the founder of the church, and several of his successors, had passed to God, ‘various seditions and insurrections rising all around not only destroyed the church and its possessions, but, laying waste the whole country, delivered its inhabitants into exile. Thus, also, all good being exterminated, after a considerable interval of time different tribes of different nationalities pouring in from different parts inhabited this deserted country, but being of separate race, speaking a dissimilar language, and living after different fashion, not easily agreeing among themselves, they maintained paganism rather than the cultivation of the faith. The Lord, however, who wills that none should perish, was pleased to visit, in his clemency, these unhappy inhabitants of a condemned habitation, irrationally dwelling after the manner of beasts. In the days of Henry, king of England, Alexander reigning as king in Scotia, God sent them David, brother-german of the foresaid king, as prince and leader, who corrected their obscene and wicked contagion, and bridled their contumelious contumacy with nobleness of soul and inflexible severity.’[14] This picture, coloured no doubt to deepen the shade of the past, and to brighten the prospects of the country under David’s rule, still sufficiently indicates the belief that the British inhabitants had to a great extent deserted the country, and that it had been repeatedly laid waste by foreign nations, who had eventually settled in the country. The allusion to the paganism of some refers probably to the Norwegians and Danes, the former of whom in 870 besieged their capital Alclyde, now Dumbarton, and destroyed it after a few months’ siege, and carried a great host of prisoners with them to Ireland into captivity, and five years afterwards the Britons of Strathclyde and Picts of Galloway were ravaged by the Danes of Northumberland. A Welsh chronicle, attributed to Caradoc of Llancarvan, tells us that in ‘891 the men of Strathclyde, who would not unite with the Saxons, were obliged to leave their country, and go to Gwynedd or North Wales.’[15] In 945 it was ravaged by Edmund, king of Wessex, and ceded to the Scots. In 1000, Ethelred, king of Wessex, entered Cumbria, ravaged it nearly all, and it was again laid waste; and in 1070, Gospatric, Earl of Northumbria, having collected a considerable force, made a furious incursion into the Cumbrian kingdom, then under the dominion of the Scottish king Malcolm, spreading slaughter and conflagration on all sides. These notices sufficiently bear out that feature in the dark picture of the past history of the British kingdom, and we may well believe that under these repeated devastations, and under the Scottish dominion, its Welsh population, isolated in the north between Picts, Scots, and Angles, and harassed by incessant invasions, would gradually retreat to their mother country of Wales, and that their neighbours would gradually settle in the partially deserted country. There are some indications of earlier settlements among them of Frisians, who left their name in Dunfres, the town of the Frisians, as Dunbreatan or Dumbarton is the town of the Britons,[16] and the subjection of the Cumbrian kingdom to the Angles of Northumbria for thirty years prior to 685 must have had an effect on its population; but, be this as it may, the neighbouring Anglic population, attracted by her fertile plains and valleys, appear at a later period to have made their way into the upper valley of the Tweed and Teviot, and along the banks of the great watercourse of the Clyde, and to the plains of Renfrew and Ayr, where they have left evidence of their settlements in the numerous Saxon place-names ending with the generic terms of _ton_ and _hame_, while the northern district, where the limits of the Cumbrian kingdom penetrated into the mountains—the district surrounding the romantic lake of Loch Lomond—seems soon to have acquired a Gaelic population, and became known as the Levenach or Lennox. The Gaelic population of Galloway at the same time appear to have encroached upon the southern limit of Ayrshire and peopled the district of Garrick with a Gaelic race. Extensive territories too were granted by Earl David to his Norman followers. The great district of Annandale was given to De Bruce. The adjacent districts of Eskdale and Ewisdale were filled with Normans. The De Morevilles obtained Cuninghame or the northern district of Ayrshire, and the Norman Fitzallan, who became the Steward of Scotland, acquired Strathgryff, or Renfrew and part of Kyle. These Norman barons settled their Northumbrian followers on their lands, and thus almost the whole of the ancient kingdom of the Cumbrian Britons became soon entirely Saxonised. A similar process seems to have commenced in the eastern districts north of the Forth after the union of the Celtic monarch with the Saxon princess had given the Saxon influence predominance in the country, and stamped his children with the character and feeling of Saxon monarchs, which soon produced a similar result. We find Saxon barons, who fled to Scotland from the power of the Norman Conqueror, acquiring lands in the province of Fife. The burghs founded by the kings of this race on the crown lands were filled with Saxon and Flemish traders, and the latter people obtained grants of land. Thus we find Malcolm the Fourth granting the lands of Innes ‘Beroaldo Flandrensi,’ and David, Earl of Huntingdon, grants lands in Garrioch to Malcolm, son of Bertolf, a Flemish name, and his charter is addressed to ‘all good men of his kingdom, French or Normans, English or Angles, Flemish and Scotch.’[17] The great religious houses established by them brought southern ecclesiastics into the northern parts of the kingdom, who were accompanied by a southern following; and on the extensive church lands we find the sole remains of the Celtic population appearing as serfs, under the Celtic appellations of ‘Cumlawes’ and ‘Cumherbes,’[18] and large territories speedily passed into the possession of Norman barons, who settled them with their own followers. In the scanty records which throw light upon the history of the land in these districts, we can see the Gaelic name of the land-owners gradually becoming more and more restricted, and retreating before the Teutonic settlers. We can see more and more of the land becoming feudalised, and being held by the followers of the barons in military tenure. The church lands, forming a large proportion of the whole, became in fact agricultural colonies of strangers. In the crown lands alone the older land tenures maintained their position for a time, though there too the increasing importance of the royal burghs, and the gradual advance of their Saxon inmates into the surrounding land, soon carried the Saxon tongue into them; and thus the old Celtic kingdom of Alban or Scotia, extending from the Firth of Forth to the river Spey, had in the reign of Alexander the Third assumed an entirely Teutonic aspect, while what Fordun tells us of Malcolm the Fourth, that ‘having gathered together a large army, the king removed the rebel nation of the Moravienses from the land of their birth, as of old Nebuchadnezzar, king of Babylon, had dealt with the Jews, and scattered them throughout the other districts of Scotland, both beyond the mountains,’ that is, the Mounth,‘and on this side thereof, so that not even one native of that land abode there, and installed therein his own peaceful people,’[19] is probably to some extent true in so far as regards the inhabitants of the plain country extending from the Spey along the southern shore of the Moray Firth to the river Nairn, in which the royal castles of Elgin, Forres, and Nairn were situated, and which formed the three small sheriffdoms of these names. It is not at all unlikely that that king, or his successor William the Lion, should have adopted the policy of interposing between the native population, ‘who,’ Fordun tells us, ‘would, for neither prayers nor bribes, neither treaties nor oaths, leave off their disloyal ways, or their ravages among their fellow-countrymen,’ and the frontier of the province a tract of country, garrisoned, as it were, with the more settled people of the lowlands. [Sidenote: Norwegian kingdom of the Isles.] But if this silent and gradual immigration of the Teutonic people thus took place into the southern and eastern districts of the country north of the Forth and Clyde, and either absorbed its Celtic inhabitants or gradually drove them back into the more mountainous regions, the latter were exposed to a more direct assault from another people of Teutonic race on the north and west, which, however, did not produce the same permanent effect upon the population. This was that strange and sudden appearance in the northern and western seas of a piratical horde of sea-robbers, which issued from the Scandinavian countries lying to the north of Germany. The first to make their appearance were the Danes, and though they repeatedly ravaged the Western Isles and destroyed the Christian monasteries, they effected permanent settlements only in Ireland, and in the northern provinces of England forming the ancient kingdom of Northumbria. They were followed by the Norwegians, who appear to have been more attracted by the islands surrounding Scotland, and thus came more immediately in contact with the Gaelic population of Scotland. They entirely occupied the islands of Orkney and Shetland, which they colonised; and took possession of the Western Isles, without, however, driving out or absorbing the previous inhabitants of Gaelic race. By the Gaelic people these northern ravagers were termed either _Geinnte_ or Gentiles as being pagans, or _Gall_ or Strangers as being foreigners, and the two races of the Danes and Norwegians were distinguished by the terms _Dubhgeinnte_ or _Dubhgall_, that is, black pagans or black strangers, and _Finngeinnte_ or _Finngall_,[20] white pagans or white strangers, and the Western Islands were termed _Innsigall_, or the Islands of the Strangers, while the Norwegians themselves called them the Sudreys or Southern Islands, to distinguish them from the Nordereys or Northern Islands, that is, the Orkney and Shetland Islands.[21] [Sidenote: The Gallgaidheal.] That the Norwegians did not so thoroughly colonise the Western Isles and absorb its Gaelic population, as was the case with the Orkney and Shetland Islands, may have arisen from their finding in the former a more dense population, and also that they appear to have used the Sudreys more as a kind of stepping-stone to other settlements, or as temporary strongholds, rather than as places for lasting settlements, and thus their Norwegian population was generally of a more transient and fluctuating character;[22] but this was mainly true of the earlier period of their occupation only, and a more important ground of difference arose from the Gaelic population of the Western Isles more nearly assimilating themselves to the character of the Norwegian sea-robbers. They seem to have submitted easily to their rule, and to have adopted their habits, so that when one of the great Norwegian Vikings, Ketill Flatnose, succeeded in establishing a petty kingdom in the Isles in opposition to the rapidly increasing power of Harald Harfager, the first monarch who acquired the dominion of all Norway, we find the Isles said by the Sagas to be in the possession of Scotch and Irish Vikings, and Ketill appears in the Irish Annals under the name of Caittil Finn as the leader of a people called the Gallgaidheal, a name applied to those Gaidheal who became subject to the Norwegians, and conformed to their mode of life. Harald, however, eventually conquered both the Orkney Islands and the Sudreys or Western Isles. The former came under the rule of a line of Norwegian Jarls, who, by the marriage of one of them with the daughter of ‘Dungadr, Jarl of Katenes,’ that is, of Duncan, the Celtic Mormaer of Caithness, added that province to their dominions; and the Norwegian population seem to have as completely colonised the eastern and level part of Caithness as they did the Orkney Islands. Harald appears to have governed the Western Isles by Norwegian Jarls, but his hold upon them was slight, and apparently ceased with his death, and they became merely the haunt of stray Vikings until the middle of the following century, when their possession was contested between the Danes of Dublin and Limerick, who had got a firm hold of the Island of Man, and the Norwegian Jarls of Orkney. One of the principal leaders of the Danes of Dublin, Anlaf Cuaran, had become connected with the Scottish King Constantine, and appears to have exercised some authority over the islands; but at the great battle of Brunanburgh, in which he and his father-in-law Constantine were engaged, we find the death of Geleachan, King of the Isles, recorded, as well as that of Cellach, a prince or Mormaer of Scotland,[23] names which undoubtedly show a Gaelic form. Soon after we find Maccus or Magnus, son of Aralt, a leader of the Danes of Limerick, called King of Many Islands, and a struggle took place between his brother and successor Godfred, son of Aralt, called King of Innsigall, and Sigurd, Norwegian Jarl of Orkney, for the possession of the western Isles, when the former was slain by the Gaelic people of Dalriada or Argyll, and the Isles were acquired by the Orkney Jarl, who soon after added to his territories the western and northern districts of Scotland. His territories are said in the Sagas to have consisted, besides Orkney and the Sudreys, of Katanes, Sudrland, Myrhaevi or Moray, and Dali or the glens of Argyll, on the west, and we find a Jarl Gilli apparently ruling the Isles, whose principal seat was the island of Coll, and whose name has a Gaelic form.[24] He pays scatt or tribute to Sigurd, and obtained his sister in marriage. Under Sigurd’s son Thorfinn, the most powerful of the Orkney Jarls, after the defeat and death of King Duncan in 1040, the whole of the northern districts of Scotland, as far as the river Tay, fell under the power of the Norwegians, who likewise possessed the Sudreys or Western Isles and the Gaelic district of Galloway, while Macbeth, the Mormaer of Moray, ruled as king over the dominions left to him, and the other districts south of the Firths of Forth and Clyde adhered to the family of Duncan; but on the death of Thorfinn, we are told that the additional territories acquired by him fell back to their native lords. Malcolm, the son and heir of Duncan, succeeded in defeating and killing the usurper Macbeth, and his successor Lulach, also of the family of the Mormaers of Moray, and establishing himself as king over the same territories which had been possessed by his father. The Western Isles pass for a time under the power of an Irish king of Leinster, which shows how powerful the Gaelic element in their populations still was, and on his death fell under the authority of the Crown. At this time the Isle of Man was in the possession of the Danish kings of Dublin, but a powerful Norwegian Viking who had joined the expedition of Harald, king of Norway, in 1066, with his followers, and fought at the battle of Stamford Bridge, succeeded after that defeat in driving the Danes out of Man and extending his power over the Western Isles, where he founded a new dynasty of Norwegian kings of the Isles. He is termed in the Chronicle of Man Godred Crovan, and, in the Irish Annals, Goffraig Meranach, king of the Galls of Dublin and the Isles, where his death,[25] which, according to the Chronicle of Man, took place in the island of Isla, is recorded in 1095. The Isles had, however, two years before been invaded by Magnus, king of Norway, and brought under his dominion, and were eventually formally ceded to him by King Eadgar in the beginning of his reign, who thus, for a time, terminated their nominal connection with the Scottish kingdom. After the death of King Magnus, we find the leading men of the Isles applying to the king of Ireland to send them some person of worth of the royal family to act as their king till Olave, the son of Godred, should grow up, and Donald, son of Tadg, was sent, who is said in the Annals of Innisfallen to have acquired the kingdom of Innsigall by force,[26] but was driven out when the king of Norway sent a Norwegian named Ingemund. But on his attempting to have himself appointed king, he was attacked and slain by the chief men of the Isles, and Olave, the son of Godred Crovan, was established as king over all the Isles, and ruled them for forty years. The Norwegians at this time still possessed the western seaboard of Scotland north of the Firth of Clyde, and the district of Galloway. According to the Red Book of Clanranald, ‘All the islands from Manann, or the Isle of Man, to Arca, or the Orkneys, and all the bordering country from Dun Bretan, or Dumbarton, to Cata, or Caithness, in the north, were in the possession of the Lochlannach or Norwegians, and such of the Gaedhal of those lands as remained were protecting themselves in the woods and mountains.’[27] This is probably a true picture of the relative position of the Norwegian and the Gaelic population at this time, and is no doubt equally applicable to the district of Galloway; but, during the rule of Olave over the Isles, a simultaneous effort seems to have been made by the Gaelic inhabitants of both districts to free this mainland border country from the presence of the Norwegians. The leader of the native Gaelic population of Argyll was Somerled, and of that of Galloway was Fergus. The former bears certainly a Norwegian name, but the names of father and grandfather have been preserved. He was son of Gillebride, son of Gille-adomnan, and these names are of too purely a Gaelic form to indicate anything but a Gaelic descent, and they are said in the Book of Clanranald to have taken refuge from the Norwegians in Ireland, and to have had a hereditary right to the mainland territories possessed by the latter. The name of the father of Fergus of Galloway has not been preserved, but his own name is a purely Gaelic form, and his personal qualities probably raised him to the leadership of the Gaelic population. Macvurich describes Gillebride, the father of Somerled, as being present at a conference held by the Macmahons and Maguires in Fermanagh, and obtaining help from them to regain his inheritance in Scotland. He went over to Scotland with his son Somerled and a band of followers, and when in the mountains and woods of Ardgour and Morvern, they were surprised by a large force of Norwegians, who were, however, eventually defeated by Somerled and his party; and, adds Macvurich, ‘he did not halt in the pursuit until he drove them northward across the river Sheil, and he did not cease from that work until he cleared the western side of Alban from such of the Norwegians as had acquired the dominion of the islands, with the exception of the island called Innsigall, and he gained victory over his enemies in every field of battle.’[28] We have no record of what took place in Galloway, except that the result appears to have been the same, for we find the people of Galloway joining the army of King David at the Battle of the Standard under their Celtic leaders, and Fergus fully established in his reign as Lord of Galloway. The Norwegians, however, were not allowed even to retain quiet possession of the Isles, and Somerled, who now appears as Regulus of Argyll, succeeded in eventually wresting the Southern Isles from them. Macvurich tells us that after he had cleared the mainland of the Norwegians ‘he spent some time in war, and another time in peace,’ and during one of these intervals peace appears to have been concluded between the leaders of the Gaelic population and the Norwegian king Olave, for the latter married Afreca, daughter of Fergus, the Celtic lord of Galloway, by whom he had a son, Godred, and gave one of his own daughters to Somerled, the Celtic Regulus of Argyll, in marriage, who had by her four sons, Dubhgal, Reginald, Angus, and Olave.[29] During the reign of Olave he is said by the Chronicle of Man to have ‘lived upon such terms of union with all the kings of Ireland and Scotland that no one dared to disturb the kingdom of the Isles as long as he was alive;’ but after his death the two populations came again into conflict, which resulted in the Gaelic population of Galloway maintaining their independence, and those of Argyll adding a large portion of the Islands to the dominions of their leader. Olave was slain in the island of Man by the sons of his brother Harold, who had formed a conspiracy against him in the year 1152, upon which, we are told in the Chronicle of Man, the conspirators divided the land among themselves, and a few days afterwards, having collected a fleet, they sailed over to Galloway, intending to conquer it for themselves. The Galloway men, however, formed themselves in a body and assailed them with great impetuosity; whereupon they speedily fled in great confusion, and either slew or expelled from it all the men of Galloway who were resident within the island.’[30] In the following year Godred, the son of Olave, arrived with some ships from Norway, and was elected by the chiefs of the Isles as their king; but he was no sooner secure in his kingdom than he became tyrannical to his chief men, some of whom he dispossessed, and others he degraded from their dignities. One of the most powerful of these, Thorfinn, son of Otter, went to Somerled and asked to have his son Dubhgal, whose mother was King Olave’s daughter, that he might set him on the throne of the Isles, and taking him through the Isles he forced the chiefs to acknowledge him for their sovereign, and to give hostages for their allegiance. Another of these chiefs called Paul fled privately to Godred, who seems to have been in Man, and told him what had taken place, when he immediately collected his followers, got his ships ready, and sailed to meet the enemy. Somerled, too, collected a fleet of eighty vessels, and a sea-battle was fought between Godred and Somerled, during the night of the Epiphany, with great slaughter on both sides, and next morning they came to a compromise, and divided the sovereignty of the Isles, ‘so that from that period they have formed two distinct monarchies till the present time.’[31] Somerled was slain, as we know, at Renfrew in the year 1164, and on his death his eldest son Dubhgal appears to have succeeded him in his mainland territories, while his possessions in the Isles fell to his second son Reginald with the Norwegian title of king. Godred died in the Isle of Man in the year 1187, and was succeeded by his eldest son Reginald. There thus came to be two Reginalds reigning over the Isles at the same time, the Norwegian Reginald the son of Godred, and the Celtic Reginald the son of Somerled. Both bore the title of King of the Isles, and thus they are often confounded. There is preserved in the Book of Fermoy a curious poem which throws some light on the state of the Isles at this time.[32] It consists mainly of a panegyric on the Norwegian Reginald, but appears to allude likewise to the other Reginald. When the Isles were divided, those which lie south of the Point of Ardnamurchan appear to have fallen to the share of Somerled, and his son Reginald seems to have had his chief seat in the island of Isla. The Isles retained by the Norwegians consisted of Skye, the Long Island, and the islands of Tyree and Coll. The latter island of Coll, which we find was the chief seat of the Jarls who had ruled the Isles under the king of Norway prior to the establishment of the Norwegian kingdom of the Isles, appears to have remained as the chief seat of the Norwegian Reginald, for he is addressed in the poem as king of Coll. The islands of Arran and Bute in the Firth of Clyde appear to have been shared between the two Reginalds, the Norwegian retaining Arran, which forms a prominent feature in the poem under the poetic name of _Eamain Abhlach_ or Eamania of the apple-trees,[33] and Bute passing over to the Celtic Reginald. It is unnecessary for our present purpose to follow the history of the Western Isles further. Suffice it to say that Argyll came under the power of the Crown in 1222, when Alexander the Second firmly established his authority over this extensive western region. In 1196 William the Lion had brought the great northern district of Caithness under subjection, and severed the southern half of it, which he placed under a Scotch lord, and in the same reign of Alexander the Second, the restricted earldom of Caithness passed into the possession of a branch of the Celtic family of the Earl of Angus, and he died in the island of Kerreray while endeavouring to wrest the Isles from Norway. In the following reign the whole kingdom of the Isles passed into the possession of the Scottish monarch, the last Norwegian king of Man having died in 1265, and the Isles being formally ceded to Alexander the Third in 1266; and thus the power of the Norwegians entirely disappeared from the mainland of Scotland and from the Western Isles, the islands of Orkney and Shetland alone remaining as a dependency of the kingdom of Norway. During the entire duration of this Norwegian kingdom of the Isles, we see the frequent appearance of a subordinate body termed the Princes or Chiefs of the Isles,[34] whose recognition of the authority of the king was necessary to his assumption of that position. We see them electing a king and occasionally deposing a king; and that this body consisted of persons partly of Norwegian and partly of Gaelic descent is evident, from their sometimes deferring to the authority of the king of Norway, and at other times appealing to Ireland for aid. When the Norwegian influence was paramount, they would accept the control of the Norwegian monarch. When the Gaelic influence predominated, they seem invariably to have fallen back upon the kindred Gael of Ireland, and come under their influence. The inferior population of the Isles throughout was probably Gaelic, who formed the actual occupiers of the soil under superior lords, some of Norwegian and some of native descent. When the partition of the kingdom of the Isles took place between Olave and Somerled, the Southern Isles, which thus passed under the rule of a native lord, would naturally attract to them the Gaelic population, both chiefs and people, while the chiefs of Norwegian descent would as naturally withdraw to the Northern Isles, which remained under Norwegian rule; and thus the Norwegian population would become more restricted to these islands, while that of the Southern Isles would become more purely Gaelic; accordingly we find the Norwegian place-names in Skye and the Long Island are more numerous and more thoroughly spread over the Isles than in the islands south of the Point of Ardnamurchan, a result we might also naturally expect from the Norwegian occupation of the former having lasted a century longer than that of the latter. We should also expect to find that after the partition of the Isles the Northern Islands would become comparatively deserted by the lower class of the population, the actual occupiers of the soil; and the condition of these islands at this time may be gathered from the Chronicle of Man, where it tells us that the Norwegian king Reginald ‘gave his brother Olave the island which is called _Leodhus_ or Lewis, which though larger than any of the other isles is mountainous, rocky, and almost entirely inaccessible. It is of course thinly peopled, and the inhabitants live mostly by hunting and fishing. To this island Olave retired, and lived in the way of poverty. Seeing the island could not support him and his followers, he went confidentially to his brother Reginald, who was at that time resident in the Islands, and thus accosted him: Brother, my lord and sovereign, thou art conscious that the kingdom of the Isles is my birthright, but as the Almighty hath appointed thee to rule over them, I neither envy nor begrudge thee this royal dignity. Let me now only entreat thee to appoint me some portion of land in the Islands, where I may live creditably with my people; for the island of _Leodhus_, which thou hast given me, is insufficient for my maintenance.’[35] Apparently Reginald saw no way of satisfying his demand, and found an easier solution in making him prisoner and sending him to King William the Lion, who imprisoned him during the rest of his reign. We likewise see from the Chronicle of Man that there was frequent intermarriage between the two races who occupied the islands, and this would not only lead to the introduction of personal names of Norwegian form into families of pure Gaelic descent in the male line, but must to a great extent have altered the physical type of the Gaelic race in the islands; but there is no reason to suppose that, after the entire defeat of the Norwegians in the reign of Alexander the Third, and the cession of the kingdom of the Isles to him, there remained in them many families of pure Norwegian descent, and from the population of Scotland, as we find it in his reign, the Norwegian element, never probably a very permanent and essential ingredient, must now have entirely disappeared. [Sidenote: The Estate of the Realm in 1283.] When the ‘Communitas’ or Estates of Scotland met at Scone on the 5th of February 1283, to regulate the succession to the crown, we find that the great holders of the land in Scotland consisted at this time, first, of thirteen of the great hereditary earldoms, one of which was held by a family of Anglic descent, and four by Norman barons who had succeeded by inheritance in the female line to the ancient Celtic earls; and, secondly, of twenty-four barons, of whom eighteen at least represented the Norman baronage of the kingdom, while the Celtic element is represented only by three families descended from Somerled, the great Celtic Lord of Argyll;[36] and when Edward the First placed the whole of Scotland under four justiciaries in 1305, we find the country south of the Firths of Forth and Clyde still divided into the two great districts of Lothian and Galloway, but the lands beyond the Scottish Sea, that is, north of these firths, are now for the first time differently grouped, one division consisting of the country between the river of Forth and the mountains, and the other of the lands beyond the mountains, or that part of the country to which the Gaelic population was now restricted.[37] [Sidenote: Distinction of population into Teutonic Lowlanders and Gaelic Highlanders.] The account given by Fordun of the distribution of the population in his day entirely corresponds with this. He says—‘The manners and customs of the Scots vary with the diversity of their speech, for two languages are spoken amongst them, the Scottish and the Teutonic, the latter of which is the language of those who occupy the seaboard and plains, while the race of Scottish speech inhabits the highlands and outlying islands. The people of the coast are of domestic and civilised habits, trusty, patient, and urbane, decent in their attire, affable and peaceful, devout in divine worship, yet always prone to resist a wrong at the hands of their enemies. The highlanders and people of the islands, on the other hand, are a savage and untamed nation, rude and independent, given to rapine, ease-loving, of a docile and warm disposition, comely in person but unsightly in dress, hostile to the English people and language, and, owing to diversity of speech, even to their own nation, and exceedingly cruel. They are, however, faithful and obedient to their king and country, and easily made to submit to law if properly governed.’[38] This description is no doubt to some extent coloured by the predilections of one who himself belonged to the low-country population, but it is not greatly unlike the prejudiced view taken of the characteristics of the Celtic population by late historians, and the struggle between the prejudices of the old historian against the Highland population and his reluctant admission of their better qualities is apparent enough. We thus find a Gaelic-speaking people in the Highlands and a Teutonic-speaking people in the Lowlands. The language of the former is at an earlier period termed Albanic, and afterwards Scotch, the language of the latter is by the native writers prior to the sixteenth century usually termed Inglis; but in the sixteenth the progress of a literature in the latter tongue led to those who used it calling it Scotch, while they applied to the Celtic dialect, formerly called Scotch, the epithet of Irish corrupted into Erse. The Celtic part of the population has never given any other name to their language than Gaelic, and term the language of the Lowlanders _Beurla Sassannach_, or the Saxon tongue. It is the social history and position of this portion of the population with which we have now to do. CHAPTER II. THE SEVEN PROVINCES OF SCOTLAND. [Sidenote: Old division of Scotia into provinces.] During the Celtic period of her history we find Scotland exhibiting a distribution of her population in separate districts, which is very analogous to what existed in Ireland at the same period. The latter country appears from a very early period to have been divided into five provinces, and these provinces of Udlah or Ulster, Laighean or Leinster, Mumhan or Munster, and Connacht or Connaught, with Midhe or Meath, were ruled by provincial kings under the Ardri, or supreme king of Ireland, who had his royal seat at Teamhar or Tara in Meath. [Sidenote: Seven provinces in the eighth century.] In the same way the earliest account we possess of the provincial distribution of the population of Scotland tells us that Transmarine Scotland,[39] or the country north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, was anciently divided by seven brothers into seven provinces, and that the principal of these was _Enegus_ with _Moerne_, so called from _Enegus_, the firstborn of the brothers. This name of _Enegus_ or Angus, now represented by the county of Forfar, is no doubt the same with the ancient Celtic personal name of Angus; and _Moerne_, now called Mearns, or the county of Kincardine, is a corruption of the old Gaelic name _Maghgherghin_, that is, the plain of Gergin, and is alluded to under that name in one of the old Lives of St. Patrick.[40] The second province was _Adtheodle_ and _Gouerin_, or Atholl and Gowry. The old form of this name of _Adtheodle_ was _Athfodla_, in which form it appears in the Annals of Tighernac, and _Gouerin_ was probably _Gabhrin_, a name analogous to the old name of the district of Ossory in Leinster, which is called Gabhran, pronounced Gowran.[41] The third was _Sradeern_ and _Meneted_, or Stratherne and Menteath, and there seems no doubt that the former is the district which appears so frequently in the Irish Annals under the name of Fortren.[42] The fourth was _Fif_ with _Fothreve_. The old form of the former name was _Fibh_. The latter name has entirely disappeared, but was preserved in the deanery of Fothri, in the diocese of St. Andrews. The two together embraced the entire peninsula between the Firths of Forth and Tay, and the line of division between _Fibh_ on the east and _Fothreve_ on the west extended from the eastern boundary of the county of Fife on the Tay to the mouth of the river Leven on the Forth. The fifth province consisted of Mar and Buchan, which still bear these names and form the modern county of Aberdeen. The sixth was Muref and Ros. The old form of the former name was _Moreb_, and was applied to a large territory extending along the southern shore of the Moray Firth from the river Spey, and across the entire country to the Western Sea. It was anciently separated from Ros by the river of Beauly, the passage across which was by a ford termed the Stockford,[43] and the name, which signifies in old Gaelic a promontory, was very applicable to the peninsula stretching into the Moray Firth between the Firths of Cromarty and Dornoch. The seventh province was Cathanesia, within and beyond the mountains, for the mountain called Mound divides Cathanesia into two parts. This is the range now called the Ord of Caithness. The old form of the name is _Caith_, from which the Norwegians formed the name _Katanes_, compounded of that syllable with the Norwegian word _nes_, signifying a promontory, and applied it to that part of the province which lay to the north of the mountains, while they termed the southern half _Sudrland_, from which comes the modern name of Sutherland. Each province thus consisted of two districts, forming in all fourteen, and the old description proceeds to tell us that these seven brothers who thus divided the country might be considered as seven kings who had under them seven inferior kings, making fourteen in all, and that the seven kings divided the kingdom of Alban into seven kingdoms, in which each reigned in his own time.[44] As the western region, which formed the Scottish kingdom of Dalriada, is here omitted, while it includes the district of Caithness, which soon after the ninth century passed into the possession of the Norwegian Earls of Orkney, it is obvious that this description applies in the main to the territory of the Pictish kingdom prior to the accession of the Scottish dynasty which united it with Dalriada; and we find mention during this time of the petty kings of _Athfodla_ or Atholl, and of _Fortren_ or Stratherne,[45] while during the last century of the independent existence of the Pictish monarchy, the _Ardri_, or supreme king, had his principal seat at Scone in the district of Gowry. [Sidenote: Seven provinces in the tenth century.] The old descriptions then give us another legendary version of these seven provinces, which the author says were described to him by Andrew, bishop of Caithness, a Scotsman by birth, and a monk of Dunfermlyn, who flourished at the time it was compiled, viz., in the first year of the reign of William the Lion; and if the first account applies to the Pictish kingdom prior to the ninth century, it is equally clear that this latter account must be referred to the kingdom of Alban or Scotia which succeeded it, for it omits altogether the province of Cathanesia, which had now passed into the possession of the Norwegians, and substitutes for it a province termed Argathelia, which must have included within its bounds the territory which had formed the ancient Scottish kingdom of Dalriada. The bishop describes the provinces more by their natural boundaries than by the two large districts included in each. According to his account, the first kingdom or province extended from that great water, termed in Scotch _Froch_, that is, Forth, in British or Welsh _Werid_, in Roman (by which he evidently means Anglic) _Scottewatre_, or the Scottish Water, which divides the kingdoms of Scotland and England, and flows past the town of Strivelin or Stirling, as far as that other great river which is called Tae, or the Tay. This province corresponds in extent with the third province of the first list, which includes Stratherne and Menteath. His second province extends to _Hilef_, as the sea encircles it till it reaches a mountain on the north plain of _Strivelin_ or Stirling, which is called _Athrin_, by which Athrie in the gorge of the Ochils can alone be meant. The district of Gowry is situated between the river Tay and the Isla, if that river be meant by the _Hilef_, but its eastern boundary is the small stream called the Liff, which is believed to have been formerly the channel through which the Isla reached the sea instead of flowing into the Tay, and that part of this province which is encircled by the sea points plainly to the great peninsula between the Firths of Tay and Forth. This province, therefore, does not entirely correspond with any of the provinces in the first list, but is formed of its fourth province of Fife and Fothreve, with the addition of Gowry. The bishop’s third province extends from Hilef to the Dee, and corresponds with the first province in the first list, containing the district of Angus and Mearns. His fourth province extends from the Dee to that great and wonderful river termed the _Spe_ or Spey, the greatest and best of all Scotia. This province, therefore, corresponds with the fifth province in the first list containing Mar and Buchan. The fifth province extended from the Spey to the mountain _Bruinalban_ or Breadalbane, and corresponds with that part of the second province of the first list termed _Adtheodle_ or Atholl. The sixth province is Muref and Ros, which is the same with the sixth province in the first list; and the seventh is _Arregaithel_. The changes thus produced upon the provincial distribution of the population by the formation of the kingdom of Alban or Scotia in the ninth century were, first, that in place of the province of Fife and Fothreve, we now find a larger province, including Gowry, with Scone, the royal seat of the _Ardri_, or supreme king; and here, probably, the chief settlements of the Scots had been made, and the chief power and influence of the kings of Scottish race were formed. It lay between the provinces of Stratherne and Menteath or _Fortren_ on the south-west, and of Angus and Mearns or _Maghgherghinn_ on the north-east, where, during the period of this dynasty, the men of Fortren on the one hand and the men of Mearns on the other appear as a separate people, and probably represented those remains of the older population which still preserved a separate existence. The separation of Atholl from Gowry, and the fact that the first five provinces are described by their natural boundaries, while the sixth retains its older designation of Muref and Ros, rather points to the great mountain barrier which separates the Highlands from the Lowlands now assuming greater significance in the tribal distribution, the population within it being less affected by the change of dynasty and retaining more of their older constitution. Thus we find at this period the older title of _Ri_ or king still appearing in the province of Moray only.[46] The great change, however, in this list is the disappearance of Cathanesia or Caithness and Sutherland from the provinces, and the substitution of Arregaithel for it. The former had become in the tenth century a possession of the Norwegian Jarls of Orkney, and the separate petty kingdom of Dalriada had ceased to exist. The name of Arregaithel, however, must not be held as synonymous with that of Dalriada, but appears to have been applied to a much larger district than that which formed that small kingdom. In a former part of the description, the author terms it the principal or largest part of the country on its west side, over against the Irish Sea, and talks of the mountains which separate it from Scotia; and we can see from the references to it in one of the statutes of William the Lion, in the first year of whose reign this description was written, that it comprised, in fact, the entire western seaboard of Scotland, and included not only the territory which had formed the kingdom of Dalriada, but also the western districts of the province of Moray and Ross. In this statute a distinction is drawn between the country situated between the Forth, the river Spey, and Drumalban, and the districts beyond these limits, which consist of Moravia or Moray, Ros, Katanes or Caithness, Ergadia, and Kintyre. Ergadia here is merely the Latin form of _Arregaithel_, and Kintyre had been separated from it when the Western Isles were ceded in the end of the eleventh century to Magnus, king of Norway, who, by a stratagem, included it in the Norwegian kingdom of the Isles. We find, however, in the same statute ‘Ergadia which belongs to Scotia’ or the southern part of it, distinguished from ‘Ergadia which belongs to Moravia,’ or that part which formed the western districts of Moray; and in a charter by King Robert the Bruce reviving the old earldom of Moravia, it is said to extend to the boundary of ‘northern Ergadia, which belongs to the Earl of Ross.’[47] The author of the description, who is usually supposed to have been Giraldus Cambrensis, but whose etymologies show him to have been evidently a Welshman and acquainted with the Welsh language, gives us four interpretations of the name Arregaithel. He says it is so called as ‘the margin of the Scots or Irish,’ for all the Irish and Scots are generally called Gattheli, from their original leader _Gaithelglas_; or because the Scotti Picti first peopled it after their return from Ireland;[48] or because the Irish occupied these parts after the Picts; or, what is more certain, because that part of the country of Scotia is more closely connected with the country of Ireland. In the Irish Annals the form of the name is _Airergaidhel_, _Airer_ signifying a district.[49] The Scotch form is _Earrgaoidheal_ from _Earr_, a limit or boundary, and this approaches most nearly to the form of the name in the old description, with its etymology of margin or limit of the Gael. The oldest name is that probably in the Albanic Duan, where it is termed _Oirir Alban_, or the coast lands of Alban, from _Oirthir_, a coast or border; and we find the name _Oirir_ applied to it in the Book of Clanranald, which distinguishes the _Oirir a tuath_, or northern Oirir, and the _Oirir a deas_, or the southern Oirir, from each other. The name given to this district by the Norwegians was _Dali_ or _Dalir_, the Dales, and Somerled, the Regulus of Arregaithel, and his family, are termed in the Orkneyinga Saga the _Dalveria Aett_, or family of the Dales.[50] [Sidenote: Districts ruled by kings and afterwards by Mormaers.] Such being the territorial divisions of Scotland at this period, we find, in place of each province being under the rule of a _Ri_ or king, with a subordinate division under a sub-king that, with the exception of _Arregaithel_ or Argyll, the rulers of the whole of these districts now bear the name of Mormaer or great Maer or Steward, while the Mormaer of Moreb or Moray appears occasionally under the title of _Ri_ or king. These Mormaers held a position in the scale of power and dignity inferior only to the _Ardri_ or supreme king. Thus, in narrating the great battle fought in 918 between the Danes and the people of Alban, in the reign of Constantin, son of Aedh, king of Alban, the Irish Annals tell us that neither their king nor any of their Mormaers fell by him;[51] and the Pictish Chronicle mentions in the same reign the death of Dubucan, son of Indrechtaig, Mormaer Ængusa, or of Angus.[52] In 965 Dubdon Satrapas Athochlach, that is, Governor of Athole, by which title the Mormaer is probably meant, fell in battle, according to the Pictish Chronicle. The same chronicle records in the reign of Cullen, who died in 970, the death of Maelbrigdi, son of Dubucan the Mormaer of Angus; and in 976 Tighernac tells us that three Mormaers of Alban, whose names he gives us as Cellach son of Findgaine, Cellach son of Baredha, and Duncan son of Morgaind, took part in a foray by one of the petty kings of Ireland against another.[53] The reign of Malcolm the Second, who ascended the throne in 1004, and whose thirty years’ rule over Alban was distinguished by the acquisition of the cismarine territories south of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, throws still further light upon the position of these provincial rulers. In the early part of his reign the great conflict took place between the Danes of Dublin and the native Irish under their great king Brian Boroimhe, which was to determine whether the Galls or foreign hordes of Scandinavia or the native Gaedheal were to retain possession of Ireland; a conflict terminated in favour of the Gaedheal when the battle of Clontarf was won in the year 1014 by Brian, the _Ardri_, or supreme king of Ireland, though, like some other victorious generals, he lost his own life in the struggle. In this great conflict we find the people of the provinces taking part on both sides; those in the possession of the Norwegians siding with the Danes, and those under native rule taking part with King Brian. To the assistance of the Danes came Sigurd, Norwegian Earl of Orkney, with the host of the Orkneys and of the Norwegian Islands, the Galls or Norwegians of Caithness and Mann. Skye, Lewis, Kintyre, and _Oirergaidhel_ or Argyll, are especially mentioned as being on the Danish side. On the other hand, ten Mormaers followed Brian with foreign auxiliaries, who probably represented the districts in Alban under native rule, and the leading man among them appears to have been Donald, son of Eimin, son of Cainnech, Mormaer of Mar, who fell in the battle of Clontarf.[54] In this reign the Mormaers of Moreb or Moray come very prominently forward, and show us the title hereditarily borne by a very powerful family, which eventually placed two of its members on the throne. The first who appears is Findlaec the son of Ruadri, Mormaer Moreb, whose death is recorded at 1020, when he was slain by the sons of his brother Maelbrigdi. This Findlaec is obviously the Finnleikr Jarl who is mentioned in one of the Norse Sagas as defending his district in Scotland against Sigurd the Norwegian Jarl of Orkney, who eventually conquered Myrhaevi of Moray and Ross.[55] In 1029 the death of Malcolm, son of Maelbrigdi, son of Ruadri, is recorded, when he bears the title of Ri or king. He is obviously the son of that Maelbrigdi, the brother of Findlaec; and in 1032 Gillacomgan, son of Maelbrigdi, Mormaer of Moreb, was burnt with fifty of his men. The son of Findlaec was Macbeth, who afterwards usurped the throne of Scotland, and the son of Gillacomgan was Lulach, who succeeded him for the short space of three months.[56] [Sidenote: Petty kings of Argyll and Galloway.] In the same reign we find also the petty kings of _Arregaithel_ or Argyll and _Gallgaithel_ or Galloway making their first appearance. In the year 1031, when Cnut, the Danish king of England, invaded Scotland, he is said to have received the submission of Malcolm, king of the Scots, and of two other kings, Maelbaethe and Iehmarc. These kings appear to have represented the districts beyond the rivers Spey and Drumalban, which at this time formed the boundary of Scotland proper on the north-west and west; for Maelbaethe can be no other than the celebrated Macbeth, who was then Mormaer of Moreb or Moray, and Iehmarc may be identified with Imergi, who appears in the old Irish Genealogies as ancestor of Somerled the petty king of Argyll.[57] The Irish Annals record in the same year in which king Malcolm died, the death also of Suibne, son of Kenneth, Ri or king of Gallgaidel. This name, which appears to have been applied in the Irish Annals as a general name of the Gaedhel or Gael of the Western Isles and of the districts lying along the coast, who became subject to and adopted the manners of the Norwegian pirates or Galls, was, as a territorial name, used in a more restricted sense, and appropriated to the district of Galloway, a name which in its Latin form of Galwethia is derived from the Welsh equivalent of Galwyddel. The Norwegians knew it by the name of Gaddgeddla, a district said in the Orkneyinga Saga to be ‘at the place where Scotland and England meet.’[58] [Sidenote: Jarl Thorfinn.] On the death of Malcolm the Second in the year 1034 the dynasty of Scottish kings, which had been established on the Pictish throne nearly three centuries previously, came to an end. There appears to have been no male descendant left who could claim the crown, and the succession opened to his grandson by his eldest daughter. So far as the districts south of the Firths of Forth and Clyde were concerned, his claim was not opposed to the law of succession which previously prevailed there, and though inconsistent with the law of tanistry which regulated the succession to the crown among the Scots, it had been so far modified that the right of the heir-female to succeed in default of heirs-male appears to have been recognised in such an emergency, but the change was too recent to have acquired a firm and permanent place in the law of the country; and here the right of Duncan, the son of the eldest daughter, was contested by Thorfinn, the most powerful of the Norwegian Jarls of Orkney, whose mother was likewise a daughter of Malcolm II.; and a war of succession followed, which was terminated by the death of King Duncan in 1040. According to a contemporary writer, he was slain by the commander of his own army, Macbethad, son of Findlaech, who succeeded him.[59] This was Macbeth, the Ri or Mormaer of Moray, who appears to have treacherously joined the Norwegian Jarl and slain his king, in hopes of obtaining, with the assistance of the former, the Scottish crown. We are told by the Orkneyinga Saga that Thorfinn then followed the routed army, and subjected the land to himself as far south as Fifi or Fife; that he drove those who resisted him to the deserts and the woods, and subdued the country wherever he went; and that till the day of his death he possessed nine jarldoms in Scotland and the whole of the Sudreys or Western Isles.[60] These jarldoms were no doubt the districts ruled by the native Mormaers, and, if his conquest embraced merely the low country as far south as Fife, the districts which he had not subjected consisted merely of the province composed of Gowry, Fife, and Fothreve, the province of Athol, and that consisting of Stratherne and Menteath. Over these, within which Scone, the capital of the kingdom, was situated, Macbeth appears to have ruled as king, while the districts of Lothian and Cumbria recognised the son of Duncan as their legitimate monarch, with the exception of the Gaelic territory of Galloway, which was under Norwegian rule. In 1054, Malcolm, the eldest son of Duncan, who is termed by the historians son of the king of the Cumbrians, with the assistance of Siward, earl of Northumbria, drove Macbeth from his kingdom and regained possession of its capital, Scone; and on the death of Thornfinn in 1057 Macbeth was driven north and slain within no great distance from the frontier of his native province of Moray, and Malcolm’s rule was extended over the whole kingdom as its legitimate monarch. We are told in the Orkneyinga Saga that Thorfinn ‘was much lamented in his own land, but in those lands which he had subjected to himself by conquest the natives were no longer content under his government; consequently many _rikis_ which the earl had subjected fell off, and their inhabitants sought the protection of those native chiefs who were territorially born to rule over them.’[61] These _rikis_ were no doubt the districts subdued by Thorfinn, which now passed again under the rule of their native Mormaers, and it is rather remarkable that, with the exception of the districts of Stratherne and Menteath, when we can trace the position of the remaining districts, consisting of Athol, Gowry, Fife, and Fothreve, we find them in the possession of the Crown, and ruled over by members of the royal family.[62] [Sidenote: Mormaers termed by Norwegians Jarls.] By the Norwegians these Mormaers seem to have been viewed as holding the same position as the Norwegian Jarls, and this name is invariably given to them in the Sagas. Like them, they were viewed as the hereditary rulers of the territory with which they were connected, and as protecting the rights of the Crown within its bounds. That the office, whatever it was, was held hereditarily by the same family we see in the notices of two of these families preserved in the Pictish Chronicle and in the Irish Annals. In the one we find Dubucan, son of Indrechtaig, Mormaer of Angus, succeeded by his son Maelbrigdi; and in the other we see the family of Ruadri filling the office of Mormaer of Moray, and the succession apparently following the Irish law of tanistry, and alternating between the descendants of his two sons Maelbrigdi and Findlaec; and when this family was finally driven from the throne in the person of Lulach, the grandson of the former, we find his son Maelsnectai appearing as _Ri Muireb_ or king of Moray, from whom it passed through his sister to Ængus, termed in the Annals ‘son of the daughter of Lulaig.’[63] [Sidenote: Mormaers of Buchan from the Book of Deer.] A more complete revelation, however, is made to us with regard to the Mormaers of another district, that of Buchan, in the Book of Deer, which contains the usual memoranda of the old grants made to that monastery while still retaining its character as an old Celtic foundation. Here the names of seven of the old Mormaers during the five centuries and a half which elapsed between the foundation of the Celtic monastery in the time of Columcille and the reign of David the First are given. We are told that Bede _Cruthnech_, or the Pict, Mormaer of Buchan, gave the _cathair_ or city _Abbordoboir_, now Aberdour, on the south shore of the Moray Firth, to Columcille and Drostan, and afterwards certain lands called also a _cathair_ or city, to which Columcille gave the name of Dear. He seems to have been followed by Comgall, son of Aeda, who made a grant to Columcille and Drostan. After him we have Matan son of Cearill, Domhnall son of Giric, and Domnall son of Ruadri, but there is nothing to show what the connection of these Mormaers with each other was or when they lived, but the dignity then passes to a family called Mac Dobharcon.[64] Two brothers, Domhnall son of Mac Dobharcon, and Cainneach son of Mac Dobharcon, follow each other as Mormaers, and the latter is succeeded by his son Gartnait, who, with his wife Ete, daughter of Gillemichel, makes a grant in the eighth year of King David, that is, in 1132. The succession among these latter Mormaers seems to follow the same rule of tanistic succession which we have seen among the Mormaers of Moray. [Sidenote: Toisechs of Buchan.] The same valuable record, however, makes a further revelation regarding the organisation of those districts ruled over by the Mormaers. It shows us that the next rank under the Mormaers of Buchan was held by persons termed Toisechs, who possessed a similar relation in a subordinate capacity to the land and the people. Thus we find that Bede the Pict grants Abbordoboir free from the claim of Mormaer and of Toisech, and in the grants of land by the subsequent Mormaers there is usually associated with them the Toisech as having an interest in the subject of the grant. Among these Toisechs a family descended from Morcunn or Morgan appears very prominent. Thus Comgall, son of Aeda, grants the land from Orti to Furerie, and Mondac, son of Morcunn, gave Pette mic Garnait and Achad Toche Temni, and it is added that ‘one was Mormaer and the other was Toisec.’[65] Then Cathal, son of Morcunt, gives Achadnagleree; and Domhnall mac Giric, the fourth Mormaer named, and Maelbrigdi, son of Cathal the Toisech, gives Pett in Mulenn; and finally Colban, Mormaer of Buchan, and Eva, daughter of Garnait (the previous Mormaer), his wife, and Donnachac, Toisech of the clan Morgainn, mortmained all the foregoing offerings to God, Drostan, Colcumcille, and Peter, free of all burdens except four davachs of such burdens as come upon chief residences of Alban and chief churches. Among the witnesses to this grant are Morgunn and Gillepetair, sons of Donnachach, and others who are called _Maithi_, that is, good men or nobles of Buchan. Another family of Toisechs which appears is that descended from Batni. Thus Matan, son of Cairill, who is the third-named Mormaer, gives the Mormaer’s share in Altere, now Altrie; and Culi, son of Batni, gives the Toisech’s share. Then Domhnall, son of Ruadri, the fifth-named Mormaer, and Malcolm, son of Culi, give Bidhen, now Biffie; and here the king comes in as also possessing rights in these lands, for Malcolm, son of Cinaetha, or Malcolm II., gives the king’s share in Bidhen, Pett mic Gobroig, and the two davachs of Upper Rosabard. Then Domhnall, son of Mac Dubhacinn, mortmains all these offerings to Drostan upon giving the whole of them to him, and Cathal mortmains in the same way his Toisech’s share. They also give Eddarun, and Cainnech, son of Mac Dobharcon, and the same Cathal give Alterin of Ailvethenamone; and then it is added Cainnech, Domhnall, and Cathal mortmained all these offerings free from Mormaer and Toisech. It is unnecessary to notice the other grants further than that Comgall, son of Cainnaig, Toisech of Clan Canan, gives certain lands free from Toisech. Thus in the organisation of these districts we find a gradation of persons possessing territorial rights within them, consisting of the Ardri or supreme king, the Mormaer, and the Toisech, and the latter of these appears as not only possessing rights in connection thawith the land, but also standing in a relation to the tribe or clan which occupied them as their leader.[66] The same record discloses a similar connection between the Mormaer and the land in the person of two of the Mormaers of Moray. Thus Malcolm, the son of Ruadri, who died in 1029, gives the Delerc, and Malsnectai, the son of Lulach, the successor of Macbeth as usurper of the throne, gives Pettmalduib to Drostan. These lands were probably within the province of Moray ruled by them, and we are told by the Saxon Chronicle that ‘in 1078 King Malcolm won the mother of Maelslaht or Maelsnectai and all his best men,’ an expression similar to that of the _Maithi_ or good men of Buchan, which, as we have seen, included the Toisech ‘and all his treasure and his cattle,’ and he himself escaped with difficulty. His death as _Ri Moreb_, or king of Moray, is recorded, as we have seen, in 1080. [Sidenote: Seven earls first appear in reign of Alexander the First.] On the death of Eadgar, the successor of Malcolm III., his brother Alexander the First ruled as king over Scotland proper, while Lothian and Cumbria or Strathclyde fell to his brother David. From the time when the Celtic king Malcolm had married the Saxon princess Margaret there had been an increasing Saxon influence in the government of the Celtic provinces; and when his sons by that princess had been firmly established on the throne by foreign aid, in opposition to the attempt of their father’s brother to maintain his right under the older law of succession, with the assistance of the Gaelic population, and found their chief support in the Anglic population of Lothian and the Merse, the reigns of Eadgar and Alexander the First must be viewed as essentially those of Saxon monarchs modelling their kingdom in accordance with Saxon institutions; while the object of David from the first, both while he governed the southern districts as earl and the whole of Scotland as king, was to introduce the feudal system of Norman England into Scotland, and adapt her institutions to feudal forms. The charters of Eadgar relate mainly to land south of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, and we find that the immediate dependants of the Court, who formed the witnesses to these charters, were certainly Saxons; and when Alexander the First founded the monastery of Scone after the attempt made upon his life by the Gaelic population of the northern provinces, we find that the foundation charter is framed upon the model of the Saxon charters. Like the latter, which were granted with the assent of the members of the Witenagemot, who subscribe the charter as consenting parties with the designation of Episcopus and Abbas if churchmen, and of Comes or Dux if earls, without the addition of the diocese, monastery, or earldom with which they were connected; so we find this charter granted with the consent of nine persons, two of whom have the simple designation of Episcopus, who are followed by seven others, six of whom have the word Comes or Earl after their names; and the only one who is not so designated is Gospatrick, whom we know to have been at the time Earl of Dunbar, and who probably represented that part of Lothian attached to Alexander’s kingdom. The other six must of course have represented the districts of transmarine Scotland, which properly formed Alexander’s dominions. We thus find in his reign a body constituted somewhat similarly to that portion of the Witenagemot of the Saxon monarchs, and exercising similar functions.[67] The six persons, however, who bear the title of Comes are Beth, Mallus, Madach, Rothri, Gartnach, and Dufagan, and of these we can identify four. Mallus is undoubtedly the Mallus Comes Stradarniæ or Earl of Stratherne, who took such a prominent part in the Battle of the Standard.[68] Madach is that Maddach, _Jarl of Atjoklum_, or Earl of Atholl, said in the Orkneyinga Saga to be the son of Melkolfr or Melmare, brother of Malcolm the Third.[69] Rothri appears in a charter in the Book of Deer, granted in the eighth year of King David, as Ruadri, Mormaer of Mar; and Gartnach is the Gartnait, son of Cainnech, Mormaer of Buchan, who grants the charter. The remaining two, Beth and Dufagan, cannot be identified with certainty, but the resemblance of the name of the latter to Dubican, who appears at an earlier date as Mormaer of Angus, leads to the supposition that he may have filled that position. At all events there is enough to show that the six persons who appear with the title of Comes as representing the districts north of the Firths, were the same persons whom we have hitherto found in connection with these districts bearing the title of Mormaer; and thus the great Celtic chiefs of the country, to whom the Norwegians applied the Norwegian title of Jarl, which was a personal dignity though given in connection with a territory, now appear bearing the Saxon title of Comes or Earl, and the Celtic title of Mormaer, probably official in its origin, was now merged in a personal dignity.[70] In one of the earliest charters in King David’s reign, we find a slight change in the position of these _comites_. It is the first of David’s charters to the monastery of Dunfermline, and in this charter five bishops appear who alone prefix to their names the word ‘Ego,’ and add the title of Episcopus simply with the word confirmed; and then follows a list of names of persons who are said to be ‘hujus privilegii testes et assertores,’ and these are headed by five earls—viz., Ed Comes, Constantinus Comes, Malise Comes, Rotheri Comes, and Madeth Comes.[71] The last three are obviously the same with three of the earls who subscribe the Scone charter, and who, we have seen, had been Mormaers of Stratherne, Mar, and Atholl. Constantin appears in a subsequent charter, where King David grants to Dunfermlin ‘the whole shyre of Kirkcaldy, which Earl Constantine held from them by force, in perpetual charity,’ and this charter is simply witnessed by three bishops and three earls—viz., Madeth Comes, Malis Comes, Head Comes.[72] Constantin, however, appears in two documents in the Chartulary of St. Andrews, in which he is described as Earl of Fife. In the first, which is the memorandum of the grant by Edelrad, son of Malcolm, king of Scotland, abbot of Dunkeld, and also Earl of Fife, of the lands of Admore, it is said to have been confirmed by his brothers David and Alexander ‘in presentia multorum virorum fide dignorum scilicet Constantini Comitis de Fyf viri discretissimi.’ The second is a perambulation of the boundaries of Kirkness and Lochore, when the king sends his messengers through the province of Fyf and Fothrithi, and summons many of their people in one place—viz., Constantinem Comitem de Fyf virum discretum et facundum cum satrapys et satellitibus et exercitu de Fyf et Macbeath Thaynetum de Falleland (Falkland), etc. The dispute is then referred to ‘tres viros legales et idoneos,’ the first of whom is ‘Constantinus Comes de Fyf magnus judex in Scotia.’[73] We thus see that one of the principal functions of these old Mormaers, who now appear as comites or earls, was judicial, and it is probable that the title of Magnus judex, or great judge, given to Constantin, is simply the Latin equivalent of the Celtic title of Mormaer, or great maer, and by the ‘satrapes,’ probably the same persons are meant who appear in the Book of Deer with the Celtic title of Toiseach. The ‘Ed comes’ who precedes Constantin in the first of King David’s charters may possibly be the same person as the ‘Head comes’ who witnesses the second, but neither can be identified.[74] During the entire reign of David the First these earls appear simply with the designation of Comes without any territorial addition, with two exceptions, which occur towards the end of his reign. In the earliest charter the earls who witness it, among whom is Constantin, are followed by other witnesses, partly officers of state, as the chancellors, partly Norman barons, and a few Celtic names which have no designation, and the first witness who follows the earls and precedes the chancellor is Gillemichel Makduf. In the foundation charter of Holyrood, granted not long after, he follows the chancellor and the chamberlain as Gillemichel Comes, and in a subsequent charter to Dunfermline he again precedes them as Gillemichel Comes de Fif. In a charter in the Book of Deer, which must have been granted in the last year of David’s reign, the earl who succeeded Gillemichel appears as Dunchad, Comes de Fif, and along with him, for the first time, appears Gillebride, Comes de Angus. Gillemichel has usually been supposed to be the son of Constantin, but this has arisen solely from the preconceived notion that all the ancient Earls of Fife bore the name of Macduff. There is, however, no evidence of any connection between them, and it is obviously quite inconsistent with the character of their appearance as witnesses in the same charter. [Sidenote: Policy of David I. to feudalise Celtic earldoms.] There is no doubt that David’s object, on his accession to the throne, was to feudalise the whole kingdom, by importing feudal forms and feudal holdings into it, and to place the leading dignitaries of the kingdom in the position of Crown vassals, as well as to introduce a Norman baronage. The relation of those old Celtic earls or Mormaers towards the Crown on the one hand, had hitherto been purely official, and that towards the districts with which their names were connected was not a purely territorial one. It was more a relation towards the tribes who peopled it than towards the land. David’s desire, certainly, would be to place them, whenever opportunity offered in the position of holding the land they were officially connected with as an earldom of the Crown in chief, in the same manner as the barons held their baronies, and in these cases he may have inaugurated the policy undoubtedly followed, as we shall see, by his successors. Gillemichel Macduff, from his position in the earliest charter, must have held a high position as a follower of the king, and may have rendered him great services, which legend drew back to the usurpation of the throne of his ancestor Duncan by Macbeth, and led to the creation of the fictitious Macduff, who makes his first appearance in Fordun’s Chronicle, and after Constantin’s death Gillemichel may first have had the personal title of Comes or Earl bestowed upon him, and then been feudally invested with the Earldom of Fife, which thus may have become a territorial title in his person. It certainly did so in that of his successor Duncan, who received from David a charter of the earldom, which was confirmed to his successors by the subsequent kings;[75] and a similar feudal investiture of the earldom of Angus in the person of Gillibride may have added that old Celtic earldom likewise to the number, as from this time, when we find the older earldoms still conferring no territorial designation on their earls, Gillibride invariably appears along with them as Earl of Angus. During the earlier part of the reign of Malcolm IV. no change appears to have been made in the position of the existing earldoms. His first charter after his accession appears to have been his confirmation of the grants to the monastery of Dunfermline, and this charter is witnessed first by six bishops, then by twelve barons, most of whom were Normans, and other foreigners, and then by six of the earls (De Comitibus), who are thus named: Gospatricius Comes, Ferteth Comes, Duncanus Comes, Morgund Comes, Melcolmus Comes, et Comes de Engus. The five preceding earls were those of Dunbar, Stratherne, Fife, Mar, and Athol, the earl of Buchan, who would make up the number of the seven earls, not appearing among them. To this number a temporary addition was made by Malcolm, when, on making peace with Malcolm macHeth, the pretended son of Earl Angus of Moray, in 1157, he gave him the district of Ros with the title of earl; but the inhabitants soon rose against him and drove him out. An event, however, took place soon after, which led to the policy inaugurated by David the First, of feudalising these earldoms, being resumed by Malcolm and still further carried out by his successor. This was the attack made upon the king by six of the old Celtic earls, when, under the leadership of Ferteth, earl of Stratherne, they besieged him in Perth in the year 1160. Fordun, quoting from the Chronicle of Melrose, says, ‘Six earls—Ferchard, Earl of Stratherne, to wit, and five other earls—being stirred up against the king, not to compass any selfish end, or through treason, but rather to guard the common weal, sought to take him, and laid siege to the keep of that town (Perth). God so ordering it, however, their undertaking was brought to nought for the nonce, and after not many days had rolled by, he was, by the advice of the clergy, brought back to a good understanding with his nobles.’[76] An expression in the Orkneyinga Saga would lead us to infer that the object of the six Celtic earls was to put up the young son of William Fitz Duncan, who was usually called the Boy of Egremont, and as grandson of King Duncan, the eldest son of Malcolm III. by Ingibiorg, widow of Earl Thorfinn of Orkney, had a direct claim to the throne, which would commend itself both to the Gaelic and to the Norwegian population in preference to the descendants of the Saxon princess Margaret.[77] Wyntoun gives us the following account of this occurrence:— A mayster-man called Feretawche, Wyth Gyllandrys Ergemawche, And other mayster-men thare fyve, Agayne the king than ras belyve; For caws that the past till Twlows, Agayne hym thai ware all irows: Forthi thai set thame hym to ta In till Perth, or than hym sla. But the kyng rycht manlyly Swne skalyd all that cumpany, And tuk and slwe.[78] Wyntoun here associates with the five earls who followed Ferteth, the Earl of Stratherne, Gillandrys Ergemawche. If two persons are meant, Ergemawche may be a corruption of Egremont, and Gillandres may have represented the old Celtic earls of Ross, as the clan bearing the name of Ross are called in Gaelic _Clan Ghilleanrias_, or descendants of Gillandres, and may have led the revolt which drove Malcolm macHeth out of the earldom. [Sidenote: Creation of additional earldoms.] Each of the seven provinces of Scotland consisted, as we have seen, of two districts, and we find a Mormaer ruling over each: but when they appear in the reign of Alexander the First, under the name of Comes or Earl, we find the number reduced to six; and with the exception of the province consisting of the two districts of Mar and Buchan, each of which is represented by an earl, the other provinces appear with one of its two districts possessing an earl, and the other remaining unrepresented. It was these six earls, no doubt, who formed the party who attacked the king in Perth, and one feature of the new policy appears to have been to increase their number by appointing new earls to the vacant districts, who were feudally invested with their earldoms, and thus introducing a large feudal element into the old Celtic earldoms, while those which retained their original character would be gradually feudalised as opportunity offered. Malcolm had thus restored one of these vacant districts when he made Malcolm macHeth Earl of Ross; and when that earl was driven out by the inhabitants, he endeavoured to connect it still more closely with the Crown, by giving the earldom to Florence, Count of Holland, in marriage with his sister Ada in 1162, but this grant, too, did not practically take effect.[79] Two years after he added another in the district of Menteath, which, along with Stratherne, formed one of the old provinces of Scotland. ‘Gillechrist, Comes de Menteth,’ makes his first appearance as witness in a charter granted by King Malcolm to the canons of Scone in 1164; and in the same charter we have Gillebride Comes de Angus and Malcolm Comes appearing for the first time with the territorial designation of ‘De Ethoel.’ The policy thus inaugurated by David the First as entering into his plan for transforming the old Celtic kingdom of the Scots into a feudal monarchy, and to some extent carried out by Malcolm the Fourth, was still more vigorously prosecuted by his successor William the Lion; and we find that during his reign he converted two of the old earldoms into feudal holdings, that a third had passed by gift and a fourth by succession into the hands of Norman barons, and that he added four new earldoms to the number. [Sidenote: Earldom of Mar.] We have seen that during the reign of Alexander the First and the early part of the reign of David, Ruadri or Rotheri, who had been Mormaer of Mar, appears witnessing the royal charters, with the personal title of Comes or Earl. He was followed, during the latter part of the reign of David and during that of his successor Malcolm IV., by Morgundus or Morgund, who also bears the personal title of Comes or Earl; but in the early part of the reign of William the Lion, when the territorial designations became more common, he is superseded by a certain Gilchrist, Earl of Mar, and Gilchrist, in his turn, makes way in 1171 for Morgund again. The explanation of this apparent contest for the position of earl is furnished us by the controversy which afterwards took place between the family of De Lundin, who were the kings hereditary _Hostiarii_ or doorkeepers, and from that office took the name of Doorward or Durward. It appears from this controversy that Morgund was alleged to be illegitimate, and King William had probably taken advantage of this flaw in his title to break the succession of the old Celtic earls by recognising Gilchrist, the next lawful heir, as earl. This Gilchrist had married Orabilis, the daughter of Ness, son of William, one of the foreign settlers in Fife, and his daughter was the mother of Thomas de Lundin, the king’s Hostiary or Doorward, and carried the claims of the lawful heirs into this family.[80] It is probable, however, that this illegitimacy, though possibly well founded according to the canon law, was not recognised as such by the Celtic customs, and an arrangement seems to have been come to by which Morgund agreed to receive from the king the investiture of the earldom as a feudal holding, while the claims of the rival party were satisfied by a large tract of land between the rivers Dee and Don, which was withdrawn from the earldom and became the property of the Durwards. There is preserved a deed by King William, in which he narrates that Morgund, son of Gillocher, formerly Earl of Mar, appeared before him in June 1171 and was invested with the earldom of Mar, in which his father had died vest and seized, and which was now granted to him and his heirs whatsoever.[81] It may perhaps be doubted whether this is an original deed; but there can be little doubt that it contains the record of a real transaction by which the earldom was converted into a purely feudal holding, which, like all such holdings created at this time, was descendible to heirs-female. [Sidenote: Earldoms of Garvyach and Levenach.] The policy followed by King William, with regard to these earldoms, was checked for a time by the unfortunate result of his attempt in 1174 to recover possession of the northern provinces of England, when he was taken prisoner, and only recovered his liberty by surrendering the independence of his kingdom; but soon after his liberation, when he returned to Scotland, he appears to have created two new earldoms, which he bestowed upon his brother David. The first was the earldom of Garvyach or Garrioch in Aberdeenshire, formed from the districts surrounding the ancient fortification of Dunideer, and extending between the river Don and its tributary the Ury. The second was the earldom of Levenach or Lennox, and consisted of the northern part of the old Cumbrian kingdom, which appears to have received a Gaelic population, and is nearly represented by the county of Dumbarton.[82] These districts were probably at the time in the hands of the Crown. The earldom of Garvyach passed on David’s death to his son John the Scot, after whose death it again reverted to the Crown, and was eventually granted as a lordship to the earls of Mar. The earldom of Levenach does not appear to have remained long in Earl David’s possession, as we find it emerging in the possession of a line of Celtic earls, the first of whom, Aluin, must have received it as early as the year 1193. Earl David was invested with the English earldom of Huntingdon on the death of its then possessor, Simon de Senlis, in 1184; and it is probable that on that occasion he resigned the earldom of Lennox in favour of the head of its Gaelic population.[83] [Sidenote: Earldoms of Ross and Carrick.] In 1179 William the Lion brought the people of Ross under more complete subjection to the Crown, and built two royal castles within its bounds, but he appears to have retained the earldom in his own hands, as the Count of Holland complains that he had been deprived of it, although he had never been forfeited. His grievance was probably not a very substantial one, as it is very unlikely that he either had obtained or could obtain practical possession of it. Seven years after the king formed a second earldom out of the territory of the old Cumbrian kingdom, at its southwestern extremity, where it bordered upon the Gaelic district of Galloway, and appears to have received a Gaelic population from thence. This was the district of Carrick, which he bestowed as an earldom upon Duncan, son of Gilbert, and grandson of Fergus, the Celtic Lord of Galloway. [Sidenote: Earldom of Caithness.] Ten years after this he took advantage of the slaughter of the bishop of Caithness by the Norwegian earl of Orkney and Caithness, to extend his power over that district likewise, and to reduce its earl to submission. Harald, the earl at this time, was not a very distant relation of the king by paternal descent, being the son of Madach, earl of Atholl, whose father was a brother of Malcolm the Third, but he inherited the earldom of Orkney to which Caithness at this time was attached, through his mother, Margaret, the daughter of a previous earl, of Norwegian descent, and he had married a daughter of Malcolm MacHeth, the so-called earl of Moray, and was thus associated with that family in their opposition to the Crown. The result of two separate invasions of Caithness by the royal army was, that Caithness, north of the great range called the Ord of Caithness, was eventually restored to Earl Harald, to be held by him on payment to the Crown of a large sum of money; while the district south of that range, which has the Norwegian name of Sudrland or Sutherland, was retained by the king, and bestowed upon Hugo, a scion of the house of De Moravia, as a lordship, and eventually made an earldom in the person of his son William. Before the death of William one of the old Celtic earldoms had passed by succession into the hands of a foreign baron, for William Cumyn, the head of the Norman house of that name, became possessed of the earldom of Buchan by his marriage with Marjory, daughter of Fergus, the last of the Celtic earls. [Sidenote: Seven Earls in the reign of Alexander the Second.] Alexander the Second, the successor of William, followed out the same policy, but during his reign, notwithstanding the increase in the number of the earldoms, and the feudalisation of some of the older ones, we find the seven earls of Scotland frequently making their appearance, apparently as a constitutional body whose privileges were recognised. They first appear as taking an important part in the coronation of Alexander as king of Scotland, and then consisted of the earls of Fife, Stratherne, Atholl, Angus, Menteath, Buchan, and Lothian.[84] With the exception of Menteath, which was a more recent earldom, these are the same earldoms whose earls gave their consent to the foundation charter of Scone; but Menteath comes now in place of Mar, perhaps owing to the controversy as to the rightful possessor of the latter earldom, and Buchan was, as we have seen, now held by a Norman baron. Another of these ancient earldoms, however, soon after terminated in the male line, and this raised a question which throws some light upon their character and relation to the law of feudal tenures. When Fergus, the last of the old Celtic earls of Buchan, died in the end of King William’s reign, there seems to have been no doubt that the earldom devolved upon his daughter Marjory, which she carried to her husband, William Cumyn; but when Henry, the last of the old Earls of Atholl, died, soon after the accession of Alexander the Second, his heirs were two sisters, Isabella and Forflissa, and the question at once arose whether the earldom was partible between them, as was the case with any feudal barony, or whether it devolved in its entirety upon the elder sister, Isabella, who had married Thomas of Galloway, brother of Alan, Lord of Galloway. This question, and the decision of the _Curia regis_ or royal court, consisting of the tenants in chief of the Crown, are incidentally mentioned when the same discussion took place before Edward the First between three of the competitors for the crown on the death of the Maid of Norway. These were John Baliol, who claimed as grandson of Margaret, the eldest daughter of David, earl of Huntingdon; Robert de Bruce, who claimed as son of his second daughter Isabella; and John de Hastings, as grandson of Ada, the youngest daughter. The competition for the crown came eventually to be between Baliol, who claimed as representing Earl David through his eldest daughter, and Bruce, who asserted that being his grandson he was one step nearer, and should be preferred to his great-grandson, notwithstanding that he was thus connected through the second daughter. John de Hastings, who, like Baliol, stood only in the relation of great-grandson, admitted the right of the latter to the throne, if the kingdom was maintained in its entirety, but asserted that being held under the English Crown, it was partible like any other feudal holding, and that he ought to be preferred to one-third of the territory of the kingdom; and Robert Bruce put in a further claim, that in the event of his right to the whole being rejected, he was likewise entitled to one-third. His argument was this—‘The land of Scotland, albeit it is called a kingdom, ought to be partible, by reason that the event which has now happened to Scotland, seeing that it is held in fee of our lord the king of England by homage, is no other than similar to what it would have been as to an earldom or a barony of the realm of England which had descended in such case. And if an earldom or barony had descended to three daughters, with the issue of them, each would have her purpart, seeing that the three daughters represent but one heir of all the heritage of their father; so that no advantage ought to accrue unto the eldest, or unto the issue of her, except solely the name of the dignity, and especially of the chief messuage.’[85] The king of England referred this question to the eighty Scotch arbiters, who had been elected by the parties, who were asked to decide—‘first, whether the kingdom of Scotland is partible; second, although it be that the kingdom is not partible, whether the lands acquired and the escheats are partible or not. The third, whether the earldoms and the baronies of the kingdom are partible of right; and the fourth, seeing that the kingdom is not partible, in case the right to the kingdom falls to daughters, whether any consideration ought to be paid to the younger ones, by reason of the equality of right which descended to all, as though in acknowledgment of their right,’ This discussion only bears upon our subject in so far as it affects the position in this respect of the old earldoms, and it is unnecessary to refer to the answers of the arbiters, except to the third and fourth questions. ‘To the third they say that an earldom in the kingdom of Scotland is not partible; and this was found by judgment in the Court of the king of Scotland as to the earldom of Astheles, or Atholl; but as to baronies, they say that they are partible. To the fourth they say that as to a kingdom they never saw the like; but if an earldom falls to daughters in Scotland, the eldest takes it wholly. But if either of the other sisters has not been provided for, in the life of the father, it is proper that the eldest, who takes the inheritance, makes her a payment and assignment. And this is of grace, not of right.’[86] They thus adopt the argument of Robert the Bruce as to baronies but not as to earldoms. It is, however, unlikely that the eighty arbiters, forty of whom were named by Baliol and forty by Bruce, should have been unanimous in rejecting the claim of the latter; and the qualification contained in the fourth answer has much the appearance of a compromise between two conflicting views, and like most compromises is inconsistent with the grounds upon which either must be based. In point of fact both views had a substance of truth in them. So far as the old Celtic earldoms of the kingdom were concerned, the arbiters pronounced a correct judgment, for such earldoms were rather official and personal than territorial dignities, and the territory of the earldom, which afterwards formed its demesne, was more of the nature of mensal land appropriated to the support of the dignity. The decision, founded on as having been given by the court of the king, that the earldom of Atholl was not partible, must have reference to that time when the last Celtic earl was represented by two co-heirs, and it appears to have been viewed as being governed by Celtic and not by feudal law. Hence the eldest sister, Isabella, was held to have right to the whole earldom.[87] Isabella married Thomas de Galloway, brother of Alan, Lord of Galloway, by whom she had a son, Patrick; and after her first husband’s death, in 1232, Alan de Lundin, the Hostiarius or Doorward, and one of the most powerful barons of the time, appears as earl of Atholl, from which we may infer that he had married the widow, and held the title during her life. Patrick, the young earl, was, on his accession, miserably burnt to death at Haddington in the year 1242, and then we are told the earldom passed to his aunt Forflissa, who had married David de Hastings, a Norman baron.[88] While the succession to the earldom of Atholl thus shows the light in which the ancient Celtic earldoms were regarded, and the position they occupied in the eye of the common law of the land, those which had been either feudalised or created by the districts being erected into earldoms by the Crown, were in no different position from an ordinary barony, and were regulated by the feudal law, which was correctly laid down by Bruce, the lands being partible between co-heirs, but the dignity and the chief messuage belonging to the eldest co-heir. Of the former we have an example in the earldom of Caithness, which had become feudalised after the war between William the Lion and Harald, who, though of Scottish descent, had inherited through a Norwegian mother. On the death of John, earl of Caithness, the last of this line, in 1231, the title of earl passed with only one half of the lands of the earldom to Magnus, a son of the earl of Angus, while we find the other half of the earldom in the possession of the family of De Moravia, and on the death of the last earl of the Angus line this half was again divided, and Malise, earl of Stratherne, became earl of Caithness, possessing, however, one-fourth only of the lands of the earldom.[89] In the same manner, when the earldom of Buchan, which had passed by marriage into the hands of the Norman family of Cumyn, was forfeited to the Crown, and the last earl was represented by two co-heirs, one-half of the lands of the earldom was given by King Robert Bruce to Sir John de Ross, son of the earl of Ross, who had married the younger daughter; and the other half, with the title of earl, was afterwards conferred upon Sir Alexander Stuart, second son of King Robert II. Of the additional earldoms which had been created by the Crown and added to the older earldom, the earliest, that of Menteath, affords an example. This earldom, like that of Buchan, had passed by marriage into the hands of a Cumyn, and Walter Cumyn is termed Earl of Menteath as early as the year 1255. On his death in 1257 his widow married John Russell, an unknown Englishman, and the nobles of Scotland, irritated at this, accused her of the murder of her former husband, and imprisoned both her and her second husband. Walter Stewart then claimed the earldom in right of his wife, and by the favour of the nobles obtained it. On the death of the first Countess her right passed to William Cumyn, who had married her daughter, and a controversy arose between him and Walter Stewart, which terminated in the title being confirmed to the latter, with one half of the earldom, while the other half was erected into a barony in favour of William Cumyn. The partition at a later period of the earldom of Lennox, another of these created earldoms, likewise affords an example. Such being the distinction between the old Celtic earldoms represented by the seven earls and those subsequently constituted, we learn also from the discussions which took place in the competition for the crown somewhat of the rights which they claimed as their privilege; for among the documents still preserved connected with the competition is an appeal on behalf of the seven earls of the kingdom of Scotland to Edward I., in which it is stated that, ‘according to the ancient laws and usage of the kingdom of Scotland, and from the time whereof the memory of man was not to the contrary, it appertained to the rights and liberties of the seven earls of Scotland and the “communitas” of the same realm, whenever the royal throne should become vacant _de facto et de jure_, to constitute the king, and to place him in such royal seat, and to confer upon him all the honours belonging to the government of the kingdom of Scotland.’[90] And this function we find them evidently performing at the coronation of Alexander the Second. [Sidenote: Province of Argyll.] The only one of the seven provinces which was required to be brought into more direct connection with the Crown was the great district of _Arregaithel_ or Argyll, and early in his reign Alexander annexed the northern part to the earldom of Ross, and placed that earldom in possession of a devoted adherent of his person. The district forming what was then called North Argyll consisted in a great measure of the territory of the old and powerful Celtic monastery of Apercrossan, and had passed into the hands of a family of hereditary lay abbots, who termed themselves _Sagarts_ or priests of Applecross; and Ferquard Macintaggart, or the son of the _Sagart_ or priest who had aided the young king in suppressing an insurrection of the Gaelic people of Moray and Ross in support of the pretensions of the MacWilliam and MacHeth families in the early part of his reign, was now created Earl of Ross, which thus became a feudal earldom held of the Crown, by a family who were among its most loyal supporters.[91] The insurrection which took place a few years after in favour of Gillespic mac Eochagan, also of the family of MacWilliam, led to the rest of this great district being subdued and brought into the same relation with the Crown. The king, we are told by Fordun, led an army into Argyll. The men of Argyll were frightened. Some gave hostages and a great deal of money, and were taken back in peace, while others, who had more offended against the king’s will, forsook their estates and possessions and fled. But our lord the king bestowed both the land and the goods of these men upon his own followers ‘at will’; or, as Wyntoun expresses it— ‘And athe tuk off thare fewté Wyth thare serwys and thare homage, That off hym wald hald thare herytage; Bot the eshchetys off the lave To the lordys off that land he gave.’ Those who fled appear to have taken refuge in Galloway, as we find Gilescop Macihacain witnessing a charter in Galloway with a cluster of Gaelic names along with him;[92] and as one of these names can be connected with the district of Lochaber, while the family of that Roderic who joined with him in his rebellion appear to have had their main possessions in the district of Garmoran, extending from Ardnamurchan to Glenelg, the main seat of the rebellion appears to have been that central portion of the great region of Argyll which was said to pertain to Moravia or Moray, of which these districts formed a part. The native lords of this district were apparently those whom the king dispossessed, and whose possessions he gave to his own followers, and accordingly we find Lochaber soon after in the possession of the Cumyns. In South Argyll, on the other hand, the native lords appear to have submitted to the king, as the family of Dubhgal, the eldest son of Somerled, the great Celtic Lord of Argyll, seem to have remained in possession of the extensive district of Lorn; and it is at this time that we may fairly place a grant which appears to have been made of the lands in the interior which afterwards formed the lordship of Lochow to Duncan Mac Duine, the ancestor of the Campbells, a clan the head of which appears in the following reign as a close adherent of the Crown.[93] The seven earls of Scotland appear again as a body taking part in important transactions on two different occasions in this reign. In the first, which was the agreement between the kings of England and Scotland, by which a settlement of the claims of the latter was concluded in 1237, the seven earls among others became bound by oath to maintain the agreement. These were the earls of Dunbar, of Stratherne, of Lennox, of Angus, of Mar, of Atholl, and of Ross; and here we find the earls of Lennox, of Mar, and of Ross, coming in place of those of Fife, Menteath, and Buchan; but when the agreement was renewed seven years afterwards, in 1244, the seven earls who became bound that King Alexander would observe good faith were, Patrick Earl of Dunbar, Malcolm Earl of Fife, Malise Earl of Stratherne, Walter Cumyn Earl of Menteath, William Earl of Mar, Alexander (younger) Earl of Buchan, and David de Hastings Earl of Atholl;[94] the Earls of Fife, Menteath, and Buchan again appearing among them, and those of Lennox, Angus, and Ross being omitted. We thus see that though the number of seven was always retained, the constituent members were not always the same, the latter being probably regulated by the respective positions of the earldom at the time, for in 1237 the earldom of Angus had passed by marriage into possession of one of the powerful family of Cumyn, but he had died in 1242, and the Countess of Angus had in 1243 replaced him with a Norman Baron, Gilbert de Umphraville, whom she took as her second husband. [Sidenote: Seven Earls in the reign of Alexander the Third.] In the elaborate and picturesque account which Fordun gives us of the coronation of Alexander the Third when a boy of eight years old, he does not give the seven earls, as a body, a part in the ceremonial, but simply says that the royal boy was accompanied by a number of earls, barons, and knights. The only earls he mentions by name are Walter Cumyn Earl of Menteath, Malcolm Earl of Fife, and Malise Earl of Stratherne; but it is probable that in a coronation in which the Celtic element loomed so largely, he did not intend to imply that this body did not play the same part which they did in the coronation of his father; and this we may reasonably infer, for he tells that in the second year of his reign a solemn ceremony took place at Dunfermline, when, in the presence of bishops and abbots, earls and barons, and other good men both clerics and laymen, the relics of Saint Margaret were enshrined at Dunfermline. The record of this transaction in the Chartulary of Dunfermline bears that it was done in presence of the seven bishops and seven earls of Scotland.[95] It is obvious, however, that this body of the seven earls were gradually losing their separate corporate existence, and were no longer able to maintain in this reign the functions they exercised in previous reigns; for when the succession to the throne was settled upon the daughter of Alexander in 1284, we find them merged in the general ‘communitas,’ or feudal community of the kingdom, in which the entire body of the earls, now amounting to thirteen, appear. They take a part, but apparently not an influential one, in the discussions that took place after the death of the Maid of Norway between the competitors for the crown; and probably the last attempt they made to repossess themselves of the important position they formerly occupied in the affairs of the kingdom was when in 1297 they, in conjunction with John Comyn of Badenoch, invaded England at the head of a powerful army which met in Annandale and besieged Carlisle. The seven earls engaged in this expedition were the earls of Buchan, Menteath, Stratherne, Lennox, Ross, Atholl, and Mar;[96] but the attempt resulted disastrously for them, for they were obliged to raise the siege and return to Scotland; and then again assembling at Roxburgh they made a second raid into the eastern part of England as far as the priory of Hexham, which they destroyed, and returned with a great booty to Scotland. They then besieged and took the castle of Dunbar, the earl of Dunbar having submitted to the king of England, but being besieged by the English in their turn the castle was taken, and three of the earls, viz., those of Menteath, Atholl, and Ross, were taken prisoners, with John Comyn and five other barons, with twenty-nine knights, two clerics, and eighty-three esquires, and confined in different castles in England.[97] After this we hear no more of the seven earls of Scotland. As a constitutional body possessing, or claiming to possess, separate privileges, they are merged in the general ‘Communitas regni,’ or Estates of the kingdom, the feudal ‘Curia regis’ consisting of all who held lands in chief of the Crown. As we have seen, when the succession to the Crown was settled towards the end of the reign of Alexander the Third, they take no part as a separate body, but are merged in the general assembly of the feudal baronage of the kingdom, consisting of thirteen earls and twenty-four barons, and six years afterwards there is a still fuller representation of the Estates of the kingdom, when a letter is addressed to Edward the First by the Communitas regni urging him to arrange a marriage of his son with the Maid of Norway. The body from whom this letter proceeds consists of the two bishops of St. Andrews and Glasgow, John Cumyn, and James, High Steward, the guardians of the kingdom; ten diocesan bishops; twelve of the thirteen earls, the earl of Fife being then a minor; twenty-three abbots of monasteries, eleven priors, and forty-eight barons holding of the Crown.[98] Neither do they appear as a separate body in the great national protest addressed by the Communitas regni to the Pope in 1320, and signed on their behalf by eight of the earls and twenty-eight of the barons.[99] [Sidenote: State of the land in the reign of Alexander the Third.] The state, then, of the land, as thus exhibited to us in the reign of Alexander the Third, appears to have been this.—A large portion of the territory of the kingdom was now held in chief of the Crown by barons, very few of whom were of Celtic descent, on the feudal tenure of military service. Another portion of the territory formed the domain of the Crown. A third portion formed the territory possessed by the old earls of Scotland, and presented, in miniature, the same characteristics as the Crown land, being partly held of the earls by the vassals of the earldom, and partly forming his domain; and a very large extent of territory, probably not less than a third of the whole land, belonged to the Church, and formed the possessions either of the bishoprics, or of the great monasteries which had been founded by the kings of this dynasty, while the lands which had formed the territory of the old Celtic monasteries and had become secularised, now appear either in the possession of the Crown or of the monasteries under the name of ‘abthaniæ’ or abthainries. In that part of Scotland which still retained, in the main, a Celtic population, we may expect to find the Celtic tenures still prevailing to a large extent, and still exhibiting many of their peculiar characteristics; but where the population had become in a large measure Teutonic, and where so much of the land was now held on feudal tenures by the great barons of the Crown, and by the Roman monastic orders, and where so many of the earldoms had passed by marriage into Norman families, it is more difficult to discover the traces of a Celtic occupation, and the peculiarities of the Celtic tenures under the feudal forms which shrouded them from observation. These we can only expect to find on that portion of land which formed the proper demesne of the Crown and of the old earls, and had been retained in their own possessions without the interposition of any feudal vassals between them and the actual occupiers of the soil. [Sidenote: The Crown demesne.] Of the mode in which the demesne land of the Crown was actually possessed, we have fortunately a very distinct account given to us by the old chronicler, John of Fordun. He refers it back to the period of Malcolm the Second, to whom nine spurious laws have been attributed, and supposes it to have originated with him; but this may be regarded as a mere theory, framed on the basis of the spurious history of Scotland, to account for a state of matters which existed in his own day, and we have only to separate the mythic part of his statement from what is obviously the result of his own observation. He tells us that ‘histories relate the aforesaid Malcolm to have been so open-handed, or rather prodigal, that while, according to ancient custom, he held as his own property all the lands, districts, and provinces of the whole kingdom, he kept nothing thereof in his possession but the Moothill of the royal seat of Scone, where the kings, sitting in their royal robes on the throne, are wont to give out judgments, laws, and statutes to their subjects. Of old, indeed, the kings were accustomed to grant to their soldiers in feu-farm more or less of their own lands, a portion of any province, or a thanage; for at that time almost the whole kingdom was divided into thanages. Of these he granted to each one as much as he pleased, either on lease by the year as tillers of the ground, or for ten or twenty years, or in liferent, with remainder to one or two heirs, as free and kindly tenants, and to some likewise, though few, in perpetuity, as knights, thanes, and chiefs, not however so freely, but that each of them paid a certain annual feu-duty to their lord the king,’[100] The first or mythic part of this statement corresponds with the spurious laws of Malcolm the Second, which thus commence—‘1. King Malcolme gave and distributed all his lands of the realm of Scotland amongst his men; 2. and reserved nathing in propertie to himselfe but the Royale dignitie and the Mute hill in the town of Scone,’[101] and may be disregarded as belonging to the spurious history of Scotland. Whether there ever was a time when it could be said that the king possessed nothing but the Moothill of Scone, and in what sense it could be said that the whole kingdom was divided into thanages, and that the whole lands of the kingdom once belonged to the Crown, is a question that must be determined in the course of this inquiry; but when the old chronicler tells us by what class of persons the Crown lands were actually possessed, and by what species of tenure they held them, he is dealing with matters which still existed in his own day, and the characteristics of which he had every means of ascertaining if they were not perfectly familiar to him, and he gives us a very distinct account of them. He discriminates between three classes of persons as possessing these lands. The lowest class were the _agricolæ_ or husbandmen, the actual cultivators of the soil, who were regarded as yearly tenants, and are, no doubt, the same class with those who are termed _bondi_ and _nativi_ in feudal charters. They were, in the eastern districts, the remains of the old Celtic population. The class next above them consisted of the _liberi_ and _generosi_, who held land either on lease for ten or twenty years, or in liferent renewable for one or two lives. The former were probably equivalent to the _liberi firmarii_ or free farmers, and the latter to the Rentallers or kindly tenants of the feudal holdings. The third class, who held directly of the Crown, were either _milites_ or knights, who held a knight’s fee for military service, or _thani_, who held a thanage, or _principes_ or magnates. And he defines a thanage to be a portion of the land of a province held _ad feodofirmam_,[102] or in feu-farm, the holder of which was subject in payment of an annual ‘census’ or feu-duty. By the _principes_, he probably refers either to the Mormaers or Earls of the old Celtic earldoms, or to the position of the great Celtic vassals in the western districts as chiefs of clans.[103] Fordun was himself connected with the northern counties of Kincardine and Aberdeen, where the older holdings of the thanage still maintained their position in the greatest degree even to his own day. He was a chaplain in the diocese of Aberdeen, and the Chartulary of that bishopric has preserved to us a rental of the Crown lands in the reign of Alexander the Third, which shows their extent and the nature of the holdings. In this rental we find the lands of Aberdeen, Belhelvy, Kintore, Fermartyn, Obyne, Glendowachy, Boyn, Munbre, and Natherdale, which are termed thanages; Convalt, which is termed a ‘dominium’ or lordship; Lydgat, Uchterless, and Rothymay, called baronies; and other lands which have no particular designation, with the towns of Aberdeen, Cullen, and Banff.[104] We also learn that the upper part of the vales of the rivers Dee and Don formed the domain of the earldom of Mar, which consisted of the districts of Braemar, Strathdee, Cromar, and Strathdon, while an extensive territory on the Dee, which had formerly belonged to the earldom, was held in the reign of Alexander the Third by one of his most powerful feudal vassals, Alan the Doorward, to whose father it had been given as a compensation for a claim he had to the earldom of Mar; but though we do not find any of the lands of this earldom bearing the name of thanages, this denomination was still retained in the demesne of two of the more westerly earldoms. In Atholl we have the thanages of Glentilt, Crannich, Achmore, Candknock, while the great abthanrie of Dull belonged to the Crown; and in Stratherne we find the thanages of Strum and Dunning held under the earls, and that of Forteviot with the abthanrie of Madderdyn or Madderty in the Crown. While in the eastern districts we find the older holdings which survived from the Celtic period though disguised under a Saxon nomenclature, which owes its origin probably to the reigns of Edgar and Alexander the First, explained in language more appropriate to feudal holdings, when we pass over to the western districts which still possessed a Celtic population where the Saxon terminology has not penetrated, we come in contact at once with the realities of the Celtic tribal system which the adoption of feudal forms little affected, and whose customs are therefore less disguised by feudal forms, while the relation of the different classes to each other, though nominally feudal, are practically tribal. Although, when the great district of Argyll was annexed to the Crown and other insurrections among the Gaelic tribes were repressed, grants of land were, to some extent, given to Norman barons, with a view to the more effectual suppression of the unruly inhabitants, they conveyed little beyond a bare feudal superiority and introduced no foreign resident element, and thus hardly influenced the Celtic tribes who remained the actual holders of the soil; and when, by the cession of the Isles in the reign of Alexander the Third, the Norwegian dominion over them was transferred to Scotland, we find that the great Celtic lords of the Southern Isles, who had held them as kings under the Norwegian Crown, retained the same position under the Scottish king. At the great meeting of the Community of Scotland, which settled the succession of the Crown in 1283, we see the heads of three great families descended from Somerled—viz. Alexander de Ergadia, Angus, son of Dovenald, and Alan, son of Rotheric—appearing among them, the first being the powerful Lord of Lorn, and the second the Lord of the Isles, while the third owned large territories both on the mainland and in the Isles. [Sidenote: District of Argyll divided into sheriffdoms.] One of the first acts of John Baliol, when his claim to the throne was preferred, was to assimilate the district of Argyll and the kingdom of the Isles to the system which prevailed in the rest of the kingdom, which was divided into sheriffdoms, in which the king was represented by the vicecomes or sheriff, and the Act of Parliament by which this was done will show how the land in these western regions was then held within eight years of the death of Alexander the Third.[105] By this Act, which was passed in 1292, the sheriffdom of Skye was to consist of the lands of the earls of Ross in North Argail, that is, the western part of the present county of Ross, the lands of Glenelg, the Crown lands of Skye and Lewis (here the principal lords were the Macleods of Harris and Lewis though they are not named), the lands of Garmoran, with the islands of Egg and Rume (this had been the chief seat of the Lords of the Isles descended from Roderic, son of Reginald), and the islands of Uist and Barra, where the MacNeills were the principal possessors. The sheriffship of Lorn was to consist of the lands of Ardnamurchan and Kinnelbathyn or Morvern; the lands of Alexander de Ergadia, Lord of Lorn; of John de Glenurchy, of Gilbert M‘Naughton, of Malcolm MacIvor, of Dugald of Craignish, of John, son of Gilchrist of Radulph of Dundee, who was a Scrymgeour, whose ancestor had received a grant of Glassrie from Alexander the Second; of Gillespie M‘Lachlan, of the earl of Menteath who had a right to Knapdale, of Anegus, son of Dovenald the Lord of the Isles, and of Colin Campbell, Lord of Lochow; and the sheriffdom of Kintyre was to consist, besides the possessors of the district of Kintyre, of the lands of the Lamonts, of Thomas Cambel, and of Dunkan Duff, in Cowall, and of the island of Bute. CHAPTER III. LEGENDARY ORIGINS. [Sidenote: The problem to be solved.] The occupation of the lands which formed the territory of the kingdom of Scotland in the reign of Alexander the Third, the mutual relation of the different races by which it was held, the connection of the Celtic portion of the population with the soil, the tenure by which they possessed it, and the different classes in their social organisation which it discloses, present to us the problem which we have to solve, and we have now to trace the history of the early institutions from which its phenomena were derived, and the extent to which they have been affected by internal change or by external influence. [Sidenote: Early traditions.] But before entering upon this inquiry it may be well to see what legend or tradition tells us with regard to the Celtic portion of the population, with which we have now mainly to do. Such legends or traditions are either intended as a means of conveying some early facts in the history of the race in a popular form, or of clothing some truths in a symbolic dress, or they are merely the picturesque imaginations of their early sennachies or native historians. Those which relate to the Celtic population of Scotland are derived from two different sources. They are either Welsh or Irish, that is, they are the legends of either the Cymric or the Gaelic race, and in estimating their relative value it is necessary to take their probable origin and character into account. Some of them are what may be termed ethnic legends. They are designed to perpetuate the popular conception of the origin and early settlements of the race, but they are the creation of a period when there had been some progress in the culture of the people, and when they possessed a rude literature derived in the main from the spread of Christianity and the establishment of Christian institutions among them. Their authors felt the necessity of connecting the early history of the country with the events of Biblical or Classical history, and it assumed the shape of a fictitious narrative which belongs to the mythic period of their annals. Others again may be called linguistic legends, and were rude attempts to account for peoples nominally distinct, and from pride of race regarding each other as independent races, possessing the same language and using a cognate form of speech. Others were what may be truly called historical legends, and handed down in a more or less modified shape events which we have reason to think actually took place; while others again were purely artificial, and were simply the rude and fantastic creations of the popular mind, which felt the necessity of filling up the dark period of the annals of their race with imaginary events calculated to gratify their national feeling and their natural love of the marvellous. [Sidenote: Ethnic legends.] The ethnic legends invariably connect the origin of the people with Biblical or Classical history, and assumes that some of the races which formed the oldest population of the country, and were really indigenous, had immigrated from some foreign land. We find it assuming two different shapes. In the one the different nations constituting the early population were separate colonies which proceeded from foreign countries and entered the land at different periods. Thus Bede tells us of the early population of Britain that it was first peopled by a colony of ‘Brittones’ who came from Armorica; that then the Picts came from Scythia, and the nation of the Scots came from Ireland; and he places these successive colonies prior to the Roman invasion of Britain. The legendary history of Ireland presents the early history of its population in the same aspect. The account of the successive colonies which occupied Ireland is supposed to have been narrated to Saint Patrick by her earliest historian Fintan, who lived before the Flood, and remained alive during the whole of the centuries which elapsed till the introduction of Christianity. The Book of Ballimote contains a poem supposed to have been written by him. If he was a real personage, he may have been Fintan Munnu, a celebrated Irish saint who died on 25th October 634, but the poem is no doubt a later composition, and a translation is here inserted as giving in short compass these successive peoplings of the island, and as a good specimen of their early legends. As the learned historian has related, namely Fintan:— 1. ‘Should any one inquire of me about Eire, I can tell most accurately Respecting every invasion which took place From the beginning of all pleasing life. 2. ‘Ceasair set out from the East, The woman who was daughter of Beatha, Accompanied by fifty daughters, As also by three men. 3. ‘The deluge came on. Bith resided at his mountain without secrecy, Ladra at Ard Ladran, And Ceasair at her corner. 4. ‘As to me, I remained a year under the flood At Tul Tinnde of strength. There had not been slept, nor will there be slept, A sleep better than that which I had. 5. ‘I was then in Ireland; Pleasant was my condition When Partholon arrived From the Grecian country in the East. 6. ‘I was also in Ireland While it was uninhabited, Until the son of Agnoman arrived, Neimead of pleasant manners. 7 ‘Fir Bolg and Fir Gaillian Arrived a long period afterwards. The Fir Domnan then arrived, And landed in Irrus westward. 8. ‘After them the Tuatha De arrived Concealed in their dark clouds I ate my food with them, Though at such a remote period. 9. ‘Then came the sons of Milead From Spain southward. I lived and ate with them, Though fierce were their battles. 10. ‘A continuity of life Still remained with me, For in my time Christianity was here established By the king of heaven of the clouds.’ The history of these successive colonies is elaborated with many details in the fictitious history of Ireland during the mythic period, but it is unnecessary for our purpose to enter into these details except in so far as they bear upon the legendary history of the people of Scotland.[106] Another form of the ethnic legend is one common to the early history of all countries during the mythic period. In it the race is personified in an _eponymus_ who is the supposed ancestor and founder of it, and their supposed settlement in the country in which they are first found is prefigured in a marriage with a female whose name has an obvious relation to it, and thus an ethnic family is produced, the sons of which usually represent the territorial divisions of the country. This family has therefore a territorial as well as an ethnic meaning, and the filiation does not always imply affinity of race, but may indicate no more than the joint occupation of the country by the different tribes personified in the members of the ethnic family. We have an instance of this form of the legend in the well-known fable contained in Geoffrey of Monmouth’s fabulous history, where Brutus, the _eponymus_ of the Britons, appears as the first colonist in the island, and has three sons, Locrinus, Camber, and Albanactus, representing the Lloegry of England, the Cymry of Wales, and the people of Alban or Scotland, as well as in the older form of the legend, where Brutus and Albanus are brothers. In the Irish form Gathelus or _Gaidelglas_, the _eponymus_ of the Gael, marries Scota the daughter of Pharaoh, by which the settlement of the Gael in Scotia or Ireland is prefigured, and his period is brought back so as to connect his history and that of his race with the Biblical narrative. His descendant Milesius, son of Bile, son of Breogan, is also said to have married Scota, daughter of Pharaoh, and actually settles the race in Ireland. We find, however, this feature of the legend, which represents the territorial divisions of the country by the sons of the supposed colonist, running through the whole of the first form of the legend. Thus Partholan, the first colonist after the flood, arrives with three sons, Rughruidhe, Slainge, and Laighlinne, and after their death he divides Ireland between four sons, Er, Orba, Fearann, and Feargna. The second colonist, Nemead, has a wife, Macha, from whom Ardmacha or Armagh takes its name, thus signifying the principal seat of the race; and he has three sons, Iarbheineoil, Fergus Leithdearg, and Starn, and Ireland is divided into three parts between Beothach son of Iarbheineoil, Briotan son of Fergus Leithdearg, and Simon son of Beoain son of Starn. The people of Nemead are then driven out of Ireland by the Fomoraigh or sea pirates, and depart in three bodies. One under Beothach goes to the north of Europe, another under Briotan to the north of Britain, and the third under Simon to Greece. The third colonists, the Firbolg, come from Greece under Dela, a descendant of Simon, and by him Ireland is divided into five districts between his five sons, Slainge, Gann, Seangan, Geannan, and Rughruidhe; and these were the five provinces of Ireland—Leinster, possessed by Slainge; Thomond and Desmond, the two divisions of Munster, by Gann and Seangan; Connaught by Geannan, and Ulster by Rughruidhe. Here we have a reproduction of two of the sons of Partholan in Slainge and Rughruidhe. We have again a threefold division of Ireland under the fourth colonists, the Tuatha De, supposed to be the descendants of Beothach, son of Iarbheineoil; and the three sons of Cearmadha Milbeoil their king—MacCuil, MacCeacht, and MacGreine—have three queens, Eire, Fodla, and Banba, which are simply the three oldest names in Ireland. Milesius too has three sons, Eber, Heremon, and Ir, of whom the former possessed the two Munsters, Heremon Leinster and Connaught, and Ir Ulster; and here again we find the same reproduction of previous names, for Eber has the same four sons, Er, Orba, Fearann, and Feargna,[107] who are attributed to Partholan, and the descendants of Ir who occupied Ulster were termed the race of Rughruidhe from a descendant of that name. We also find that this filiation from the same parents does not imply identity of race, for the descendants of Ir, to whom the name of Rughruidhe especially belongs, and who peopled the north of Ireland, appear throughout the Irish Annals under the name of Cruithnigh, and were no other than the Picts who were settled in Ireland. [Sidenote: Linguistic legends.] The form which the linguistic legend usually assumes is that of a colony of soldiers obtaining wives from another people whose language they adopt, and perhaps the most curious specimen is that told of the Britons of Armorica by Nennius. He tells us that when Maximus, who was declared emperor in Britain, went over to Gaul to maintain his pretensions, he withdrew from Britain its military force, and, unwilling to send his soldiers back to their wives, children, and possessions in Britain, settled them in Armorica, where they became the Armorican Britons, and some MSS. have the following addition:—These Armorican Britons, having laid waste and depopulated the country, took the wives and daughters of the previous inhabitants in marriage, but cut out their tongues that their children might not learn their mother tongue. Hence they were called _Letewiccion_ or half speech.[108] The meaning of this tale is, that identity of language is implied by the marriage of the leaders of one people with the wives and daughters of another, and a dialectic difference could only be accounted for by depriving the females of the power of speech. The story told by Bede that the Picts had no wives, and first asked them of the Britons and were refused, and then obtained them from the Scots, is likewise a legend, intended to account for that people, or at least the greater portion of them, speaking a Gaelic dialect; and in the same manner the oldest poem which narrates the settlement of the Milesian Scots in Ireland tells us that ‘Cruithne, the son of Cinge, took their women from them;’ and then after— There were no charming noble wives For their young men. Their women having been stolen, they made affinity With the Tuatha Dea.[109] Here we have the same story of the Picts, as personified in their _eponymus_ Cruithne taking their wives from the Milesians, and the latter replacing them by wives taken from the previous inhabitants of the Tuath De. The meaning is obviously linguistic, and such legends are intended simply to express a community of language between the supposed military colonies and the people from whom they obtained their wives. [Sidenote: Historical legends.] Some of these legends have, however, a historical basis, such as those which relate to supposed settlements of the race of the Scots in Britain. These contain an element of truth, in so far as temporary settlements of the Scots took place in Britain in the fourth century, when they first appear in history, and joined the Picts, Saxons, and Attacotti in assailing the Roman province in Britain; and still more when a permanent settlement of the Scots on the west coast north of the Firth of Clyde undoubtedly took place in the beginning of the sixth century, and the small Scottish kingdom of Dalriada was formed. [Sidenote: Artificial character of early Irish history.] Others of these legends, however, are undoubtedly purely artificial, and the entire legendary history of Ireland prior to the establishment of Christianity in the fifth century partakes largely of this character. It presents us with a minute detail of the colonies supposed to have preceded the settlement of the Scots, with the names and families of their leaders, the exact period, even to the day of the week, of their settlement, the duration of their occupation of the country, the succession of their kings, and the history of the extinction of the colony either by pestilence or expatriation. Then we have the reigns of 116 pagan kings of the Scots, who reigned during twenty-one centuries, given with an extraordinary minuteness and elaboration of detail, and the accompaniment of marvellous incidents, which betrays its legendary character. Ethnic and linguistic legends are of course interwoven in it, and it may contain fragments of history, such as the revolt of the _Attachtuatha_ or servile classes against their lords, and the territorial changes in the divisions of the land and the location of the tribes which took place from time to time; but the marvellous character of the events continues to the establishment of Christianity, as we see in the narrative of the reigns of three last pagan kings, the first of whom, Niall, who reigned from 379 to 405, subjected all Britain and a great part of the Continent to his sway, and received hostages from nine kingdoms, whence he was called Niall of the nine Hostages; Dathy, who was killed by a flash of lightning at the foot of the Alps in the year 428; and Laogaire, who was slain by the elements between two mountains called Erin and Alban for refusing obedience to the mission of St. Patrick. The chronology of this legendary history, too, is entirely artificial, and though some parts of the narrative may have a historic basis, the dates assigned to them are as little to be trusted as the rest of the history itself. One of the tales contained in the Book of Ballimote, by which the knowledge of this wonderful history was supposed to have been preserved to historic times, will furnish a good example of what the imagination of its framers was capable of producing, and it has an interest for us from the connection it had with the great apostle of Scotland, as that of Fintan had with the apostle of Ireland. We are there told that the entire colony of Partholon’s people were destroyed by the plague, excepting one man, Tuan the son of Starn, the son of Seara, Partholon’s brother’s son, and God metamorphosed him into various forms, so that he lived from the time of Partholon to that of Columcille, to whom he related all the information, history, and conquests of Ireland that took place from Ceasair’s time to that period, and then we have the following poem:— 1. Tuan, son of Cairill, as we are told, Was freed from sin by Jesus; One hundred years complete he lived, He lived in blooming manhood. 2. Three hundred years in the shape of a wild ox He lived on the open extensive plains; Two hundred and five years he lived In the shape of a wild boar. 3. Three hundred years he was still in the flesh In the shape of an old bird; One hundred delightful years he lived In the shape of a salmon in the flood. 4. A fisherman caught him in his net, He brought it to the king’s palace; When the bright salmon was there seen, The queen immediately longed for it. 5. It was forthwith dressed for her, Which she alone ate entire; The beauteous queen became pregnant, The issue of which was Tuan. [Sidenote: Cymric legends.] These legends, however, though it has been thought to indicate their real character and to inquire how far they may be supposed to embody ethnologic and linguistic facts or to contain an element of historic truth, in reality concern us only in so far as they tend to throw light upon the constituent elements of the Celtic population of Scotland and the corresponding territorial divisions of the land. So far as regards the early Celtic peoples south of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, we must turn in the first instance to the Cymric legends.[110] They tell us that this population may be referred to three races, the Brython, the Romani, and the Gwyddyl. Thus in a poem contained in the Book of Taliessin we find them thus alluded to:— Three races cruel from true disposition, Gwyddyl and Brython and Romani, Create discord and confusion; And about the boundary of Prydain, beautiful its towns, There is a battle against chiefs above the mead vessels[111] Although the word _Gwyddyl_ is in modern Welsh usually translated _Irish_, yet there can be no doubt that it was originally used in a much wider sense as the equivalent of the Irish word _Gaidheal_, and was applied to the whole Gaelic race wherever located. Of this there is ample evidence in the old Welsh poems. The Brython are, of course, the Brettones of Bede, or rather here that part of them which occupied the districts extending from the Derwent to the Clyde, and formed the ancient Cumbria. In the same poem they appear under their national name of Cymry, when it is said, From Penryn Wleth to Loch Reon (that is, from Glasgow to Loch Ryan), The Cymry are of one mind, bold heroes. By the Romani, those leaders of the Britons are meant who were supposed to have derived their descent from the Roman military or civil commanders, as when Gildas tells us that the Britons ‘took arms under Ambrosius Aurelianus as their leader, who was of the Roman nation, and whose parents had been adorned with the purple;’[112] and Nennius, who calls him _Embres Guletic_, says that his father was a consul of the Roman nation.[113] We find also many of the great leaders of the Britons termed _Guledig_, the equivalent of the Latin Imperator, and usually expressed by the epithet Aurelius or Aurelianus; and to them no doubt the great national hero Arthur also belonged, who, according to Nennius, led the kings of the Britons against the Saxons as their Dux Bellorum,[114] and whose actions, so far as they are historical, belong to this part of Britain. Of the last two races, the Brython and the Romani, we have an account in an old document, ‘The Descent of the Men of the North.’[115] Here the Cymry, who occupied the northern districts, are said to be the descendants of Coel Hen, or the aged, whose name is preserved in the central district of Ayrshire, now termed Kyle, and of his son, Ceneu. Their descendants appear to have consisted principally of three tribes. They are thus noticed: ‘Three hundred swords of the tribe of Kynvarch, and three hundred shields of Kynwydyon, and three hundred spears of the tribe of Coel. Whatever object they entered into deeply, that never failed.’ The leader of the tribe of Cynvarch, whose grandfather, Gorust Ledlwm, was either son of Coel or of his son Ceneu, was the celebrated Urien Reged, whom Nennius mentions under the name of Urbgen as fighting against Roderic, son of Ida, the founder of the Anglic kingdom of Bernicia, and known in the Welsh poems by the name of Flamddwyn or the Flamebearer. This tribe appears to have occupied the districts lying between the Northern Wall and the Forth, to which the names of Reged and of Mureif were applied. The second tribe was that of Kynwydyon, whose grandfather Garthwys was grandson of Ceneu. The four sons of Kynwyt Kynwdyon are given as the leaders, two of whom are termed Clydrud Eiddyn and Cadrod Calchvynyd, from which we may infer that this tribe was located partly in the district extending from the Esk to the Avon, in which Duneyddyn or Edinburgh, and Caereiddyn or Caredin, are situated, and partly in the district of which Calchvynyd or Kelso was the chief seat. The latter were probably the people afterwards termed the Tevidalenses. The rest of the descendants of Coel were grouped under the name of Coeling, and extended from the Clyde to Loch Ryan, their principal territories being the districts of Carrawg, Coel, and Canawon, which, under the modern form of Garrick, Kyle, and Cuningham, form the county of Ayr. After thus noticing the three tribes under which the supposed descendants of Coel were ranged, the descent of the Men of the North proceeds to give the pedigrees of those said to be of Roman descent. They are all deduced from Dyfnwal Hen, or the aged, who, in this document, is made the grandson of Macsen Guledig, or Maximus the Roman Emperor, but in the genealogies annexed to Nennius is said to be the grandson of Ceredig Guledig, whose ancestor Confer or Cynvor was the mythic father of Constantius, the father of the Emperor Constantine. These were obviously the Romani of the poem, and can be mainly traced in connection with the central districts of Annandale, Clydesdale, and Tweeddale. The principal race included among them was that of the provincial kings of Strathclyde, descended from Rydderch Hael, who is mentioned in Adamnan’s _Life of Saint Columba_ as reigning in Alclyde or Dumbarton, and whose history is so intimately connected with that of Kentigern, the great apostle of Strathclyde.[116] To the race of the Gwyddyl or Gaidheal the old Welsh traditions undoubtedly attach the Ffichti or Picts, to whom they invariably give the name of Gwyddyl Ffichti.[117] They occupied the small district extending from the Pentland or Pictland Hills to the river Carron, which was known to the Welsh as Manau Guotodin or Gododin, and to the Irish as the Plain of Manann, from whence they are said by Nennius to have driven out the sons of Cunedda, from whom the kings of North Wales were descended. They also possessed the larger district of Galloway, from the mouth of the Nith to the Irish Sea. This district takes its name from the term applied by the Welsh to its inhabitants, of Galwydel, from which the Latin form of Galwethia was formed;[118] and we find the name of Scoti Picti, which is obviously a Latin rendering of the Welsh term Gwyddyl Ffichti, applied by the author of the _Descriptio Albaniæ_, who was certainly a Welshman, to the Picts, who, Bede tells us, formed the population of the western districts north of the Clyde, afterwards known by the name of Arregaithel, before the Scots formed their settlement of Dalriada there. [Sidenote: Legendary origin of transmarine tribes.] For the legendary origins of the tribes of transmarine Scotland, or the districts north of the Forth and Clyde, we must, however, mainly look to Irish sources, and we find them pervading nearly the whole of the mythic history of Ireland, and cropping up here and there in the course of its artificial chronology. [Sidenote: The Nemedians in Scotland.] Alban, or Scotland, is first brought into connection with these legendary narratives of the primitive colonisation of Erin, or Ireland, in the history of the second colony—that of the Nemedians, or sons of Neimead. After a great battle with the sea-robbers termed the Fomoraigh, they were defeated, and none escaped save the crew of one ship, consisting of thirty men under three chiefs, Simon Breac, son of Starn, son of Neimead; Iobaath, son of Beothuigh, son of Iarbhanieoil, son of Neimead; and Briotan Maol, son of Fergus Leithdearg, son of Neimead. They then resolve to leave Ireland, and taking seven years to prepare for this emigration, they fit out three fleets, under their three leaders. One fleet, under Simon Breac, goes to Thrace. A second, under Iobaath, to the north of Europe; and the third, under Briotan Maol, to Dobhar and Iardobhar in the north of Alban, where they dwelt with their posterity. Now from this third colony the oldest legendary accounts bring two of the West Highland clans. These are the Clan O’Duibhn, or Campbells, and the Clan Leod, or MacLeods.[119] The former clan first appear in the occupation of the central district of Dalriada encircling the lake of Lochaw, around which lay territories of the Dalriadic tribes of Lorn and Gabhran, and their oldest genealogies bring them from this Briotan, son of Fergus Leithdearg. The Clan Leod emerge, after the termination of the Norwegian kingdom of the Isles, in possession of Lewis, Harris, and the northern districts of Skye, and they are deduced from Laigh Laider, his brother, also a son of Fergus Leithdearg. [Sidenote: The Firbolg and Tuath De Danan in Scotland.] After remaining in Greece two hundred and sixteen years, the followers of Simon Breac, the first of the three leaders of the sons of Neimead, return to Ireland in three tribes—the Firbolg, Fir Domnan, and Fir Gaileoin, under five brothers, who divide Ireland into five provinces. They are in their turn conquered by the Tuatha De Danan, the descendants of the second tribe of the Nemedians, who, after remaining a long time in the north of Europe, where they possessed four cities—Falias, Gorias, Finias, and Murias—pass over into the north of Alban, where they remain seven years in the same districts of Dobhar and Iardobhar, which had been colonised by Briotan Maol, bringing with them from Falias the Lia Fal, or celebrated Coronation Stone; from Gorias, the sword used by their leader; from Finias, his spear; and from Murias, the mystic caldron of the Dagda. After remaining seven years in Alban, they go to Ireland and conquer the Firbolg in the great battle of Magh Tuireadh; and the few Firbolg who escaped this battle fly to the Western Isles, and occupy Arran, Isla, Rachrain, and other islands, where they remained till they were driven out by the Cruithnigh or Picts, and returned to Ireland, when they were received by Cairbre Niadhfher, king of Leinster under the Milesian Scots. Then follows the legendary settlement of the Scots under the three sons of Milesius, Heber, Heremon, and Ir, and their cousin Lughadh, son of Ith, before whom the mythic race of the Tuatha De Danan gave way. The transactions between them form one of the most picturesque of these Irish legends, the details of which need not be given here;[120] but the Tuatha De Danan yield the plains of Erin to the Scots, retaining only the green mounds, known by the name of Sidh, and then being made invisible by their enchantments, became the Fir Sidhe, or Fairies, of Ireland. [Sidenote: Pictish legends.] With the mythic settlement of the Milesian Scots in Ireland commence the legends of the settlements of the Cruithnigh or Picts in Scotland; and as Ireland was divided into five provinces between five brothers, sons of the leader of Firbolg, and afterwards by the sons of Milesius, so we find in the legend an early division of Alban into seven provinces between the seven sons of Cruithne, the ‘eponymus’ of the Pictish race. Five of these provinces can be identified. Fibh, the eldest of the seven brothers, represents Fife; Fodla, the third, _Athfhotla_ or Atholl; Fortrenn, corresponds with the district between the Tay and the Forth, consisting of Stratherne and Menteath, and which, as at one time the seat of the monarchy, gave its name to the kingdom of the Picts; Caith, with Caithness; and Circinn, with that district which included _Maghghirghinn_, or the plains of Circinn, a name corrupted into Moerne or the Mearns. The remaining two, Fidach and Ce, though the names cannot now be identified, obviously represent the intermediate districts of Ross, Moray, Buchan, and Mar. Another form of the legend represents the Cruithnigh or Picts coming from Ireland in the time of the sons of Milesius, under Cruithnechan, son of Cinge, son of Lochit, to assist the Britons of Fortrenn to fight against the Saxons, and the Britons yielded their clans and their swordland to them, that is, _Cruithentuath_, and they took possession of the land. The same legend assumes the form, in connection with the Picts of Dalaradia in Ulster, from whence they came, of twice eighteen soldiers of the tribes of Thracia who accompanied the sons of Milesius to Ireland, and cleared a swordland among the Britons, consisting first of _Maghfortrenn_ or the plains of Fortrenn, and then of _Maghghirghinn_ or the plains of Cirginn, or as another edition has it of _Cruithentuath_.[121] [Sidenote: The Milesians in Scotland.] In the long line of mythic pagan monarchs sprung from the sons of Milesius, two come prominently forward as waging war in Scotland, and hence termed kings of Erinn and Alban, and under the second of these a settlement is said to have been made. The first of these imaginary monarchs is Aengus, of the line of Heremon, termed Ollmucadh, from _oll_ great, and _mucadh_ swine, because he is said to have possessed the largest swine in his time in Ireland. According to the Annals of the Four Masters he reigned in the year of the world 3773, or 1421 years before the birth of Christ. He is said to have fought fifty battles against the _Cruithentuath_, or Picts of Scotland, and the Firbolg; twelve battles against the Longbardai, and four battles against the Colaisti, whoever they may be.[122] The second was Reachtaidh Righdearg, or red-wristed, of the line of Heber, who is said in the same Annals to have reigned in the year of the world 4547, or 647 years before the birth of Christ. He led his forces to Alban under Forc and Iboth. ‘They gained great battles, so that great districts were laid waste in Alban, until the men of Alban submitted to Reachtaidh Righdearg, so that he was king of Erinn and Alban, and it was from them sprang the two tribes Tuath Forc and Tuath Iboth in Alban.’[123] These supposed settlements, however, become more frequent and distinct as we pass the birth of Christ and approach the historic period of this early Irish history. Between the Christian era and the fifth century, when Christianity was introduced into Ireland, and something like a true chronological history may be said to commence, two events come prominently forward in this mythic history. The first is the rising of the _Attachtuatha_ or servile class of the population of Ireland, and their massacre of the nobles of Ireland. These _Attachtuatha_ are said to have been the remains of the Firbolg and other colonists who preceded the arrival of the Milesian Scots and formed a population of subject tribes under them, and they have been improperly identified by the Irish historians with the Attacotti of the Roman historians, who were a British nation and belonged to a later period. The story as given in the Leabhar Gabhala, or Book of Conquests, is this.—On the death of Crimthan Nianair, king of Ireland, of the race of Heremon, about ten years after the birth of Christ, the nobility of Ireland were massacred at a great feast at Magh Cro, where they were entertained by the Attachtuatha. They were all cut off except three queens who were pregnant, and went over the sea. One was Baine, daughter to the king of Alban, who gave birth to Feredach Finn Fechtnach, the son of Crimthan. The second was Cruife, daughter to the king of Britain, and mother of Corb Olum of Munster; and the third was Aine, daughter of the king of Saxony, who was mother of Tipraide Tireach, king of the Cruithnigh of Ulster. The Attachtuatha then set up Cairpre Caitcheann, or cat-headed, one of their own race, as king, who reigned five years over Ireland. He was succeeded by his son Morann, who was a just and learned man, and he resolved to recall the three legitimate heirs. Feradach Finn Fechtnach was elected king, and the Attachtuatha swore by heaven and earth, the sun, the moon, and all the elements, that they would be obedient to them and their descendants as long as the sea surrounded Ireland. Feradach was succeeded by Fiatach Finn, also of the line of Heremon, and he by Fiacha Finnfolaidh, son of Feradach, who, after a reign of seventeen years, was killed by the provincial kings, at the instigation of the Attachtuatha, at the slaughter of Maghbolg. And again we have a repetition of the same story. The only person who escaped was his wife Ethne, daughter of the king of Alban, who was pregnant of his son Tuathal. Elim, son of Conra, king of the Cruithnigh of Ulster, who had on this occasion joined the Attachtuatha, then became king, and after a reign of twenty years was slain in the battle of Aichill by Tuathal, called Teachtmar or the acceptable, who came from Alban with a large force. Tuathal is said to have fought 133 battles against the Attachtuatha, whom he reduced to obedience in the various provinces. He altered the arrangement of the five provinces by uniting the two Munsters into one province, and formed a fifth province of Meath as mensal lands for the monarchy, by taking four portions from each of the other four provinces. Upon the portion taken from Munster he built Tlachtga, now called the Hill of Ward, and there the festival of the Fire of Tlachtga was held, and the Druids were wont to assemble On the portion taken from Connaught he established the chief seat at Uisneach, now Usnagh Hill, and there the great fair called the Convention of Uisneach was annually held in May. On the portion taken from Ulster he constructed Taillte, now Telltown, as the chief residence. It was here that alliances were made and contracts ratified, and the fair of Taillte was held. On the portion taken from Leinster the royal capital of Teamhar or Tara was established where the Feis Temrach was held every third year, the laws were ordained and published, and the Ardri or sovereign of Ireland was inaugurated. Tuathal is then said to have celebrated the Feis Temrach, at which the princes and chieftains of the kingdom assembled, who all swore by the sun and moon, and all the elements, visible and invisible, that they would never contest the sovereignty of Ireland with him or his race. Undoubtedly this formation of the province of Meath, with its four royal residences, survived to historic times, and has an unquestionable historic basis. Another of its great landmarks is the contest which is supposed to have taken place in the second century between Conn Ced Cathach, or of the hundred battles, of the line of Heremon, and Eoghan Mor, called Modha Nuadhat, of the line of Heber, and which led to a division of Ireland into two parts separated from each other by a ridge termed Eisgir Riada, leading from Dublin across the island to Galway, composed of a line of gravel hills which existed long after. The northern half was termed Leth Cuinn or Conn’s half, and the southern Leth Mogha or Mogha’s half. This division is mentioned by the old chronicler Tighernac as having been made in the year 165,[124] and is undoubtedly recognised by Bede when he distinguishes the northern province of the Scots from the nations of the Scots who dwell in the southern parts of Ireland.[125] Cormac, son of Art, and grandson of Conn, is said to have sent a fleet across Magh Rein, or the plain of the sea, in the year 240, so that it was on this occasion that he obtained the sovereignty of Alban.[126] He is said by Tighernac to have obtained the name Ulfata, or ‘the people of Ulster at a distance,’ because he banished the Pictish tribes of Ulster to Manann and Innsigall in the year 254.[127] [Sidenote: The race of Ith in Scotland.] These supposed settlements in Scotland during this mythic period were, however, not entirely confined to the kings of the lines of Heber and Heremon, sons of Milesius, but are also attributed to another line of kings descended from Lughaidh, son of Ith, who was father’s brother of Milesius. We read in an ancient tract that ‘these are the tribes of the Gael that are not of the sons of Miledh, nor of the Tuatha De Danann, nor of the Firbolg, nor yet of the Clann Neimhead, and that widely did this tribe spread throughout Erin and Alban. For it is boasted that Maccon obtained sway over the world, and it is certain that he conquered the west of Europe, without doubt that is Alban and France and Saxon land and the island of Britain. And it is boasted concerning Daire Sirchreachtach that he obtained sway over all the west of Europe; and some of the learned say that he won the whole world. And it is stated that Fathadh Canann obtained the government of the whole world from the rising to the setting sun, and (if it be true) that he took hostages of the streams, the birds, and the languages.’[128] The first of these conquerors of the line of Ith, in point of time, was said to be this Daire Sirchreachtach. He had six sons, all called Lughaidh. The eldest was Lughaidh Laidhe. Another was Lughaidh Mal, ‘who won the world from Breatain Leatha or Armorica to Lochlann or Scandinavia, and from Innsi Orc or the Orkneys to Spain.’ The old tract called the Dinnseanchas, says of Carnn Mail in Ulster, ‘Whence was it named? It is not difficult to tell. It was otherwise called Carnn Luighdheach, from Lughaidh Mal, who was driven from Erinn with a fleet of seven ships; and from Alban he set out for Erinn with the great fleet of Alban, and they give battle to the Ulster men and defeated them. Every man that came into battle with Lughaidh carried a stone, and thus the carn was formed, and it was on it Lughaidh was standing while the battle was fought;’ and an old poem quoted in this tract says, Lughaidh Mal, who destroyed much, Was banished out of Erinn. With a fleet of seven ships the king’s son sailed From Erinn to the land of Alban. He fought for the eastern country In battles, in conflicts, From Eadain to the wide-spreading Lochlann, From the islands of Orc to Spain. When he obtained the powerful kingdom, He brought with a numerous army, So that the harbours of Uladh were filled, With the barks of a fierce champion.[129] Lughaidh Laidhe, the eldest son of Daire Sirchreachtach, was also called _Macniadh_, or son of the champion, and had a son Lughaidh, called _Maccon_, or the son of the dog. He is said by the Four Masters to have reigned in Ireland from the year 196 to 225. His sons were said to be the three Fothadhs—Fothadh Airctheach, Fothadh Cairptheach, and Fothadh Canann. The first is said to have been king of Ireland for one year in 289, and to have slain his brother; and of the third, Fothadh Canann, we are told that he obtained the government of the whole world from the rising to the setting sun, and took hostages of the streams, the birds, and the languages, and that from him descended the tribe of Mac Cailin, or the Campbells, in Scotland.[130] These three brothers are by other books stated to be of the race of the Ui Eachadh of Uladh or Ulster, that is, of Pictish descent. [Sidenote: The race of Colla in Scotland.] In the fourth century before Christ the three Collas play a great part in the mythic history of Ireland, and are likewise connected with a supposed settlement in Scotland. Cormac, the son of Aet, and grandson of Conn of the hundred battles, whom we have already adverted to, has a son, Cairbre Liffechair, so called from the river Liffey near which he was nursed, who likewise becomes _Ardri_ of Erinn. He has two sons, Fiacha Sraibtaine and Eochaidh Doimlein. The former marries Aeifi, daughter of the king of the Gallgael, and was the father of Muredach Tirech, from whom the subsequent kings of Ireland of the race of Niall derived their descent. The latter marries Oilich, daughter of the king of Alban, called by some Vadoig, by others Uigari, and has three sons, Caerill, Muredach, and Aedh. These take the name of Colla, and are called respectively Colla Meann, Colla da Crioch, and Colla Uais. These Collas slay their uncle Fiacha, and Colla Uais becomes king of Ireland, but is driven from thence with his brothers in 326 by Muredach Tirech, and takes refuge with his paternal grandfather the king of Alban, from whom he receives _Buannacht_ or military maintenance. Three hundred warriors were his host. After remaining three years in Alban the three brothers return to Erinn, each with a following of nine warriors, and having been reconciled with Muredach Tirech, who tells them they ought to conquer some territory as an inheritance, they are joined by seven ‘catha’ or battalions of the Firbolg of Connaught, and with their assistance attack the king of Ulster, march to the Carn of Achadhleithderg, from whence they fought seven battles, one on each day of the week, and on the last slay the king of Ulster, plunder and burn his capital, of Emania, and acquire a large territory as their swordland, which was termed Oirgialla, and was possessed by their descendants. This is the story of the three Collas, and in this manner the great Pictish kingdom, of which Emania was the capital, was supposed to come to an end in the year 331, and the Cruithnigh of Ulster confined to the district of Dalaradia on the east coast of Ulster. From Colla Uais the Sennachies both of Erinn and Alban deduced the descent of Somerled, who became the Regulus of Arregaidhel and of half of the Western Isles, and from whom sprang the potent clan of the MacDougalls, Lords of Lorne, and the MacDonalds, Lords of the Isles.[131] [Sidenote: The last three pagan kings of Ireland in Scotland.] The long line of mythic pagan kings of Ireland terminates with a group of three monarchs who succeeded each other, and are each said to have made extensive conquests beyond the bounds of their island kingdom. The first of these is Crimthan Mor mac Fidhaig, of the line of Heber, who reigned from 366 to 378, and is said to have extended his sway over Alban, Britain, and Gaul. Of him one of the oldest of the Irish documents, Cormac’s Glossary, says, under the word Mugeime, ‘that is the name of the first lapdog that was in Ireland. Cairbre Musc, son of Conaire, brought it from the east from Britain, for when great was the power of the Gael on Britain, they divided Alban between them into districts, and each knew the residence of his friend, and not less did the Gael dwell on the east side of the sea, as in Scotia or Ireland, and their habitations and royal forts were built there. Hence is called _Duin Tradui_, or the triple-fossed fort of Crimthan Mor, son of Fidach, king of Erinn and Alban to the Ictian Sea.’[132] His successor was Niall Mor, or the great, who reigned from 378 to 405. He also extended his conquests over Alban, Britain, and Gaul, and was slain at the mouth of the Loire on the shore of the Ictian Sea. He was termed Niall naoighialla, or ‘of the nine hostages,’ as he received hostages from nine nations which he had subjected to his rule. The last of these great conquerors was Dathi, who reigned from 405 to 428. He, too, extended his conquests over Alban, Britain, and Gaul, and was killed by a flash of lightning at _Sliabh Ealpa_, or the foot of the Alps.[133] He is said, in another document, to have been king of Erinn, Alban, Britain, and as far as the mountains of the Alps, where he went to revenge the death of his predecessor Niall, and was said by some to have been slain by the same arrow which killed the latter. His body was brought back to Erinn by his son, who gained nine battles by sea and ten by land by means of it, for when they exhibited the body they crushed their foes. Dathi is said to have fought many battles in Alban, viz., the battle of Magh Circain and the battle of Srath.[134] A tale called ‘The Expedition of Dathi to the Sliabh n-Ealpa’ gives the following account of his invasion of Scotland:—‘He invites all the provincial kings and chiefs of Erinn to a great feast at Tara, and there decides upon making an expedition into Alban, Britain, and Gaul, following the foot-steps of his predecessors Crimthan Mor and Niall. His fleet assembles at _Oirear Caoin_, probably Donaghadee, where he embarks with his troops and sets sail for Alban. Immediately upon his landing Dathi sends his Druid to Feredach Finn, king of Alban, who was then at his palace of ‘Tuirrin brighe na Righ,’ calling on him for submission and tribute, or an immediate reason to the contrary on the field of battle. The king of Alban refused either submission or tribute, and accepted the challenge of battle, but required a few days to prepare for so unexpected an event. The time for battle at last arrived; both armies marched on Magh an Chairthé (the plain of the pillar stone) in Glenfeadha, Dathi at the head of his Gael, and Feredach leading a large force composed of Scots, Picts, Britons, Gauls, Northmen, and Gallgaidheal. A fierce and destructive fight ensued between the two parties, in which the forces of Alban were at length overthrown and routed with great slaughter. When the king of Alban saw the death of his son and the discomfiture of his army, he threw himself headlong on the ranks of his enemies, dealing death and destruction around him, but in the height of his fury he was laid hold of by Conall Gulban, a son of Niall naoighialla, who, taking him up in his arms, hurled him against the pillar stone and dashed out his brains.’ The scene of this battle has ever since been called _Gort an Chairthé_ (the field of the pillar stone), and the Glen _Glenn an Chatha_ or the battle glen. ‘Dathi set up a surviving son of the late king on the throne of Alban, and receiving hostages and submission from him, passed onwards into Britain and Gaul, in both of which countries he still received hostages and submissions wherever he proceeded on his march.’[135] Another of the legendary settlements in Alban is connected with the same Feredach Finn, king of the Cruithnigh of Alban, and may be placed about the same time. The story is this:—‘Daol, the daughter of Fiachra, king of Musgry, was the wife of Lughaidh, son of Oillill Flannbeg, king of Munster. She became enamoured of her stepson Corc, son of Lughaidh by a former wife, and on his refusal follows the example of Potiphar’s wife with Joseph, when Corc is banished by his father. He goes to Feredach, king of Alban, from whom he received great honours and his daughter in marriage, by whom he had two sons, Cairbre Cruithnecan and Maine Leamhna. The mother’s name was Leamhan Mongfionn, and these sons were settled in their mother’s patrimony. Cairbre Cruithnecan fixed on _Maghghirghinn_, or the plain of Circinn, and from him descended Ængus Eamhan, king of Alban. Maine fixed on _Maghleamhna_, or the plain of Leamhan, and from him are the Luimnigh Albain or people of the Levenach or Lennox.’ The river Leamhan or Leven took its name from Leamhan, daughter of Feredach Finn, who was drowned in it, and an old poem has been preserved by Muredach Albanach, several of whose compositions have been preserved in the Book of the Dean of Lismore, and who appears to have lived between 1180 and 1220.[136] It was written in the time of Aluin og, Mormaer of Leamhain, or Lord of Lennox, who, there can be little doubt, was the same person with Alwyn, first Earl of Lennox, who was his contemporary. It is addressed to the river Leamhan or Leven, and refers to the same legend. The poem is so curious that it may be given at length. Muredach Albanach sang thus:— Noble thy spouse, O Leamhan! Alun oge, the son of Muireadhach, His waving hair without blackness, Descendant of Lughaidh of Liathmhuine. Good thy luck in white-skinned spouses, Since the time thou didst love thy first spouse, For the son of the king of Bealach it was ordained That Leamhain should be his spouse. Gearr-Abhann was thy name of old, In the reign of the kings, Until Corc of Munster came over the sea With waving hair above his eyes. When came Fearadhach Fionn, Son of the king of Alban of the Carpets of Gold, When he made with Corc alliance. Upon coming into his lordship Fearadhach gave—to me it seems well— His daughter to fair-haired Corc. Full of his renown is Tara of Meath, Leamhain was the name of the daughter. A queenly birth brought forth Leamhan, Maine, son of Corc of the long hair. She cherished in her bosom the bird For Corc of Cashel of the hounds. One day that Leamhain was (The mother of Maine of the slender fingers) With fifty maidens of white soles, Swimming in the river’s mouth, She is drowned in the bosom of the port. Leamhain, the daughter of Fearadhach, Thou art named Leamhain after that, A remembrance not bad to be related. Seldom was the tramp of a Gall battalion Upon thy green borders, O river! Oftener with thee, O Leamhain! The son of a hind above thy Innbhears. There has grown up to thee Alun oge, Son of Mureadhach of the smooth roads, Splendid the colour of his pure fresh hands, A scion of the wood of the first Aluin. Not alone drinking ale Is Alun oge, descendant of Oilleall. The branch of the race of Alun sits With an hundred to drink from the same gallon. Though there should be but one tun of wine To the race of Corc of the comely kings, Not happy the fair-headed son of Corc Should he save the wine from death. The Mormaer of Leamhan of the smooth cheek, The worthy son of Ailin’s daughter, His white hand, his side, his foot; Noble is thy spouse, O Leamhan![137] Such, then, being the record of these supposed conquests of Alban and settlements in the country presented to us in the early history of Ireland, their general effect upon the Gaelic population of Scotland is thus given in another ancient document preserved to us by the Sennachie McFirbis:— ‘The Clan Domnall, Clann Ragnall, Clann Alasdair, Clann Tsithig (Sheehy), Clann Eachan, Clann Eadhain, Clann Dubhghal, and Clann Ragnall mic Domnall Ghlais, are of the race of Eremon. ‘MacGille-Eoin or MacGille a Ea-in (MacLean), the two MacLeods (Harris and Lewis), MacConnigh (Mackenzie), Mac a Toisigh (Macintosh), Murmor Hundon (Mormaer of Moray?), are of the race of Conaire. ‘Murmor Abhaill (Mormaer of Atholl), Murmor Mair (Mormaer of Mar), Murmor Gall (Mormaer of Galloway), MacCenedig (Kennedys), Muirgeach og, Lord of Granta (Grants), MacCregan (MacGregor?), are also of the race of Eremon.’[138] The first group here given evidently belongs to the supposed settlement by Colla Uais of the race of Heremon, and consists of the great clans of the MacDonalds and MacDougalls, and their branches, descended from Somerled, the great Lord of Argyll, whose traditionary pedigree is deduced from Colla. The second as certainly comprises those supposed to be descended from the six sons of Erc, whose pedigree is deduced from Conaire, a king of Ireland;[139] but among them are included the MacLeods, whose legendary origin, as we have seen, belongs to an older race. The third, said to be also descended from the race of Eremon, seems to be composed of those who could not be included in either of the two former groups, and likewise presents inconsistencies. The Mormaers of Athol were of the royal family, and afterwards Stewarts, and under the title of the Mormaer of Mair, and of Muirgeach og, by whom the earls of Lennox descended from Aluin og, son of Muredach, seem meant the race deduced from Corc, king of Munster, who was of the line of Heber, are here included among the descendants of the line of Heremon. [Sidenote: How far have these legends a historic basis?] The turning-point in the chronology of the early history of Ireland may with some reason be fixed at the battle of Ocha, which was fought in the year 478, and placed the first Christian monarch on the throne of Ireland. It obviously separates the artificially-constructed history of the pagan period which makes so large a demand upon the assent of the historian from that succession of events which corresponds with all the historic dates we possess, and commends itself readily enough to our belief. With the change produced by that event all that is fantastic, improbable, and artificial ceases, and the incidents recorded are more natural and in better accordance with what we should expect to find. In the oldest records of Irish history it appears as a great era from which the dates of its events were reckoned, and is connected as such with another settlement of Scots in Alban. We are told by the synchronist Flann Mainistrech that twenty years elapsed from the battle of Ocha till the children of Erc, son of Echach Muinremhair, passed over into Alban, viz., the six sons of Erc, the two Anguses, the two Loarns, and the two Ferguses[140]. The question then at once arises, To what extent have these legends a historic basis, and how far may we accept them as true elements in the history of the population of Scotland? This question we may at once answer in so far as regards the last settlement in the series which we have extracted from that history. The passing over of the sons of Erc into Alban twenty years after the battle of Ocha is undoubtedly a true event. It was the foundation of the small Scottish kingdom of Dalriada on the west coast north of the Firth of Clyde by a colony of Scots, which took place in the year 498, and the death of its first king, Fergus mor mac Erce, is recorded by Tighernac in the year 501. The annals of this little kingdom may now be considered as well ascertained. But can we attribute the same certainty to the conquests supposed to have been made prior to the battle of Ocha? These present several features calculated to lead us to a different conclusion. On looking over the entire succession of those supposed conquests and settlements in Alban, we can hardly fail to recognise the same legends repeated at different times and cropping up in different forms. Thus the supposed conquests of the race of Lughadh, son of Ith, who were a different race from the Milesian Scots, and the settlement of Fothadh Canann, from which sprang the Clann Mhic Cailin or Campbells, seems merely a repetition of the much older settlement of the sons of Neimhead in the districts of Dobhar and Iardobhar in Alban, who were likewise a different race from the Milesian Scots, and from whom also sprang the Clann Mhic Cailin or Campbells; and when the Fothadhs appear not as of the race of Ith but as of the race of the Ui Eachach of Ulster, that is, Irial Glunmhar, son of Conall Cearnach, who had two sons, Forc and Iboth, they become Cruithnigh, and their settlement the same as that of the two tribes Tuath Forc and Tuath Iboth; and this again connects them with the supposed conquest by the mythic king Rechtgidh Righdearg, who in another document appears as Fothadh Righdearg. In the name Forc we can recognise the old name of the river Forth, which again connects them with the district between the Tay and the Forth, which appears to have been intended by the Dobhar and Iardobhar; but this is the same district which was called by the Picts Fortrenn, and to which, according to the Pictish legend, Cruithnechan, the son of Lochit, son of Cinge, came with his Picts to help the Britons of Fortrenn, and superseded them there; and this again corresponds with the statement that the descendants of Braodn, son of Fergus Leithdearg, who had occupied Dobhar and Iardobhar with his Nemedians, were driven out by the Cruithnigh. And when we are told that Cruithnechan settled his Picts in Magh Fortrenn and Maghghirghinn, we surely have the same legend repeated in the supposed settlement of the sons of Corc, king of Munster, when Cairpre Cruithnechan and Maine Leamhna settle in Maghghirghinn and Maghleamhna. We can see that under these legends there simply lies an attempt to express in these stories the popular conception of the ethnic relations of local tribes. While in these tales the true localities which form the scene of them are veiled under fictitious names which it is difficult to identify, there are others where the apparent distinctness and accuracy with which the localities are given cast an air of verisimilitude over the narrative, and lead to the supposition that there must have been some historic foundation for them; but in these cases it will generally be found that they are real historic events, which belong to the historic period, but have been transported to the imaginary realm of mythic narrative by some process arising from some fancied resemblance in the names of the actors. The most striking instance of this is in the tale of the conquests in Alban by the Dathi, the second last of the pagan monarchs of Ireland. The scene is laid in Maghghirghinn, but this name we know is the original form of the name corrupted into Mearns, and belongs to a district now represented by Kincardineshire, but which formerly appears to have included part of Forfarshire south of it and Mar on the north. Here he fought the battles of Srath and Maghghirghinn, and the other names mentioned in the story can also be identified. Tuirrin, the palace of the Pictish king Feredach Finn, is no doubt the hill of Turin in the parish of Rescobie in Forfarshire, about 600 feet high, on the top of which, according to the writer in the old Statistical Account, ‘there has evidently been anciently a stronghold or place of defence, consisting of various extensive contiguous buildings, with a circular citadel of about forty yards in diameter. The situation has been well chosen, being secured by an impregnable rock in front, much like the face of Salisbury Crags, and of difficult access all around. It is now called Kemp or Camp Castle.’[141] Glenfeadha finds its modern representative in Fithie in the adjoining parish of Farnell, where too we find Gort an Chairthé corrupted into Carcary. This battle seems, however, to have been an historic event, and to have really taken place in the eighth century, for the old chronicler Tighernac records, in the year 752, the battle of Strath, in the land of Circinn or Maghghirghinn, between the Pictones, in which Bruidhi, son of Maelchon, was slain.[142] There, by an anachronism which it is difficult to explain, the well-known Bruidhe mac Maelchon, who died 200 years before, takes the place of Feredach Finn. This battle really took place in the reign of the great Pictish king Angus, son of Fergus; but we find in 763, eleven years after this battle was fought, the Pictish throne occupied by Cinadon, son of Feredach, and, at the same time, the prince who ruled over Dalriada, after its conquest by the Pictish monarch, is Muredach ua Dathi, or grandson of Dathi. The same battle appears a century later in Hector Boece’s fictitious narrative, where the Scots under their king Alpin defeat and slay on the same spot Feredach, king of the Picts. When we see these Irish monarchs, however, not only conquering Alban and making settlements there, but extending their conquests over Britain and Gaul, and carrying their arms even to the foot of the Alps, it is difficult to avoid the suspicion that we have here localised as Irish kings some of the Roman emperors connected with the Roman province in Britain, and some of their acts transferred to Ireland, and that this is the true source of many of these fabulous events, so far as there is any foundation for them at all. Thus we find a parallel to the revolt of the Attachtuatha, or servile tribes of Ireland, against the Milesian kings, which was finally suppressed by Tuathal Teachtmhar, in the insurrection of the serf population of Gaul, called the Bagaudæ in the reign of the emperor Diocletian, which was suppressed by his colleague Herculius Maximian. Cairbre Cinncait, who was enabled to seize the throne of Ireland as their leader, and reigned five years, has his counterpart in Carausius, who, by the help of these Bagaudæ, revolted against Maximian, and ruled for seven years in Britain as an independent emperor. Conn of the hundred battles, under whom Ireland became divided into two provinces, may be a shadow of Constantine the Great, in whose time the provinces of Britain were divided; and in Niall of the Nine Hostages, and Dathi the fighter of so many battles, who carried their arms to the foot of the Alps, we may possibly recognise Theodosius and Maximus, the emperors who preceded the termination of the Roman power in Britain, and fought battles in North Britain. The Conquests in Alban under Crimthan Mor mac Fidhaigh, and his designation as king of Erinn and Alban, have perhaps a historic foundation of a different kind. The first really historical appearance of the Scots in Britain is in the year 360, when, in conjunction with the Picts, they attacked the Roman province in Britain. The attack was repeated by the Scots and Picts, who were now joined by the Attacotti and Saxons in 364, and they ravaged the whole province till the year 369, when they were driven back by Theodosius, and the province restored. Now the Annals of the Four Masters place the commencement of Crimthan’s reign in 366, and he reigned twelve years. The period of his supposed conquests in North Britain synchronises with the appearance of the Scots in Britain, as recorded by the Roman historian. So also the subsequent conquests under Niall Mor and Dathi, and the supposed settlement of the Munster Scots under Corc, king of Munster, with the three devastations of the province by the Picts and Scots recorded by Gildas, the first two of which were repelled by the Roman general Stilicho, and the last by the provincial Britons themselves. The period of these attacks extended from the year 360 to 409, but it is quite clear, from the concurrent testimony of all the authorities which record them, that the Scots were driven back to Ireland, and that they effected no permanent settlement in Britain till the end of the sixth century, when the Dalriadic colony was established in the southern part of the great western district of Arregaithel or Argyll. [Sidenote: Early connection between Scotland and Ireland.] We have then, prior to that date, merely temporary conquests in the province of Britain, commencing in 360, which afford the sole historic basis to these supposed settlements, and there is no reason to suppose that prior to 360 a single Scot ever set foot in North Britain. The connection between the two countries of Scotland and Ireland was, notwithstanding, a very intimate one. It is quite clear that prior to the settlement of the Scots in Dalriada, the great nation of the Cruithnigh or Picts formed the sole inhabitants of Britain north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde; but while we find them during the historic period likewise in possession of that part of the province of Ulster known as Dalnaraidhe or Dalaradia, and Uladh, extending from the Boyne along its eastern shore to the border of Irish Dalriada, and likewise of that part of Meath termed Maghbreg or Bregia, yet these early legends present them to us as forming the original inhabitants of the north of Ireland, and as constituting one great nation peopling the northern districts of Britain and Galloway on the east side of the Channel, and the whole province of Ulster and part of Meath on the western, while the Scots occupied the rest of Leinster and the whole of Connaught and Munster. The Cruithnigh of both countries were thus substantially one people, and remained so till the beginning of the seventh century, and during this time there must have been a constant intercommunication between the tribes on both sides of the Channel, as well as a community of early legends among them. Thus the Pictish Chronicle tells us that thirty kings of the name of Bruide ruled over Hibernia and Albania during a period of 150 years, and the Irish Nennius derives the statement from the books of the Cruithnigh, while an early legend of the Picts of Dalnaraidhe states that ‘thirty kings of the Cruithnigh ruled over Erin and Alban, viz., of the Cruithnigh of Alban and of Erin, viz., of the Dalnaraidhe from Ollamhan, from whence comes Mur Ollamhan at Teamhair or Tara to Fiacha mac Baedan, who fettered the hostages of Erin and Alban.’ This latter event was in the historic time, and must have occurred between 589 and 626, when Fiacha mac Baedan was king of Ulster. From this period may therefore be dated the political separation of the Picts of Alban from those of Erin, who had hitherto been governed as one nation. The same legend likewise informs us that ‘seven kings of the Cruithnigh of Alban governed Erinn in Teamhair or Tara. Ollamh was the name of the first king that governed Erinn at Teamhair and in Cruachan thirty years. It is from him Mur Ollamhan at Teamhair is; by him was the feast of Teamhair first instituted.’ Then, after naming his six successors, the legend adds, ‘These then are the seven kings that ruled over Erin of the Cruithnigh of Alban.’[143] These seven kings, however, appear in the list of the mythic pagan kings of Ireland, and are placed as such by the Annals of the Four Masters as far back as from the year of the world 3883 to 4019, that is, from the year 1317 to 1181 before Christ, each of the seven kings reigning exactly thirty years. The first was Ollamh Fodla, who is, of course, said to be of the race of Ir, and to him is attributed the tribal organisation of his people; for according to the Annals of the Four Masters, ‘it was he also that appointed a Toisech over every Triocha Ceud or barony, and a Bruighigh over every Baile or township, who were all to serve the king of Erin.’ Under the name of Fodla he appears in the Pictish Chronicle as one of the seven sons of Cruithne, and two of his successors, viz., Gede Ollgudach and Finnachta, appear in the list of the Pictish kings of Scotland among his immediate successors, and precede the thirty kings of the name of Brude. The numbers peculiar to the Pictish legends are seven, and thirty, and have, of course, no chronological significance. But the most brilliant period of the mythic history of these Cruithnigh of Ulster was that when the champions of the Order of the Red Branch at Eamhain or Emania were supposed to have performed their great achievements. They are placed in the fabulous history about the commencement of the Christian era, and here we find abundant indications of the close connection between the Cruithnigh of Erin and of Alban. Among these ancient Irish tales are three which are termed the Three Sorrowful Stories of Erin, namely the story of the tragical fate of the children of Lir, the story of the children of Uisneach, and the story of the sons of Tuirinn.[144] From the second of these tales we learn that about this time Cathbad, a Druid of the Picts of Ulster, has three daughters. The eldest, Dectcum, was the mother of the celebrated champion Cuchullin; the second, Albe, was the mother of Naisi, Ainle, and Ardan, the three sons of Uisneach; and the third, Finncaemh, was the mother of Conall Cearnach. These champions were all trained in a military school at Sgathaig in the island of Skye, kept by Aife and her father Scathaidh, and by Aife Cuchullin had a son, Connlaoch, whose history forms one of the Fenian tales. The place called Sgathaig can be still identified. On the west side of the parish of Slate in Skye, on an isolated rock overhanging the arm of the sea termed Loch Eishart, are the remains of an old castle now termed Dunscaich; and below it, at a little distance from the shore, is a small island on which is still to be seen one of those ancient vitrified forts which are so closely connected with these Fenian tales. It is likewise called Dunsgathaig or Dunscaich, and was no doubt the site of Aife’s supposed school. Looking across this arm of the sea, the magnificent and most picturesque range of the Coolins form the principal feature in the landscape, and hence the three sons of Uisneach, supposed to have been trained to the use of arms here, are termed in the tale ‘The Three Falcons of Sleibhe Cuillinn,’ that is, of the Coolin hills, now improperly termed Cuchullin hills.[145] On their return to Ulster, Naisi, the eldest, falls in love with a fair girl Deirdri, who had been reared in a tower by Conchubhar, king of Ulster, with the view of making her his wife. Naisi carries her off, and, accompanied by his two brothers and one hundred and fifty warriors, goes to Alban, where they settled in a wild therein, and obtained maintenance of quarterage, that is, an appanage or land of maintenance to be held for service from the king of that country. The sons of Uisneach are said in the tale to have defended by the might of their hands a district and a half of Alban, and are called ‘the Three Dragons of Dunmonadh,’ which seems to have been the residence of the kings, as it afterwards was of the Scottish kings of Dalriada, and may be identified as the isolated hill in the Crinan Moss on the banks of the river Add, the top of which bears the remains of a strong fortification, and which was also called Dunadd. In another poem Naisi is said to have visited the daughter of the Lord of Duntreoin on his return from the north of Invernois or Inverness, and this is Duntroon, an old castle on the north side of Loch Crinan. The place where the sons of Uisneach settled, and where they obtained their land of maintenance, was on the north shore of the arm of the sea called Loch Etive, where their seat was no other than that remarkable vitrified fort crowning the summit of a considerable hill on the shore of the bay of Ardmuchnish, now called Dun mac Sniochan, a corruption of the name _Dun mhic Uisneachan_, and to which Hector Boece gave the fanciful name of Beregonium. Here they are said to have had three booths of chase—one in which they prepared their food, one in which they ate it, and one in which they slept. Conchubhar now resolves to tempt them to return to Ulster, with the treacherous purpose of killing them and taking Deirdre, but is told that they will not come unless either Cuchullin, or Conall Cearnach, or Fergus, son of Roigh, another of the champions of the Red Branch, will go for them and ensure their safety. Cuchullin and Conall Cearnach both refuse, but Fergus agrees to go, finds them at _Loch-n-Eite_ or Loch Etive, and at the _Dainghion mhic n-Uisnech_ or fastness of the sons of Uisneach, and persuades them to return, much against the wish of Deirdre, who expresses her regret at leaving that eastern land with its delightful harbours and bays, its dear beauteous plains of soft verdure, and its sprightly green-sided hills, and then utters a beautiful lament on leaving that ‘beloved land, that eastern land, Alban with its wonders.’[146] Deirdre tells Fergus that the sway of the sons of Uisneach in Alban is greater than that of Conchubhar in Erin, and her lament bears this out, for the scenery of it embraces the whole of the eastern part of Argyllshire from the Linnhé Loch to Loch Long, and among the places mentioned we can identify Glen Etive at the head of Loch Etive, Inistrynich in Loch Awe, Dun Suibhne or Castle Swen in Knapdale, Glenlaidhe, or Glenlochy, and Glenurchy at the east end of Loch Awe, Glenmasan and Glendaruel in Cowall.[147] Alban now drops out of the tale, and it is unnecessary for our purpose to follow further the tragical fate of the sons of Uisneach after their return to Ulster. We find, however, that Conall Cearnach, another of these heroes of the Cruithnigh of Ulster, has left his traces in the same part of the country, for Dean Munro, in his description of the Western Isles in 1549, tells us of Dunchonill, one of the group of the Garveloch Isles which lie off the coast of Lorne—‘Dunchonill, are iyle so namit from Conal Kernache, are strength, which is alsmeikle as to say in Englische, are round castle.’ One of the legends of the Cruithnigh of Ulster tells us that Conall Cearnach married Loncetna, the daughter of Echdhe Eachbeoil of Alban, who was a Cruithnigh, by whom he had Irial Glinmar, and adds, ‘This was the cause which brought Cuchulain and Curoi son of Daire from Alban to Erin.’[148] The mother of Curoi, we learn from other legends, was Moran Mannanach, the sister of Loncetna. A curious notice of the Pictish king Echdhe Eachbeoil and the intimate connection between the Cruithnigh on both sides of the Irish Channel has been preserved to us in the very ancient document called Cormac’s Glossary, where, under the word ‘Fir, _i.e_. find’ or white, we are told—‘This, then, was the appearance of the cows of Echaid Echbel from Alban which Curoi captured, that is, white cows with red ears;’ and another MS. adds—‘These cows, then, of Echaid Echbel used to come to graze from Ard-Echdai Echbeil, from Alban into the district of Dalriatta, and they used to be in Seimne Ulad. Curoi, however, carried them off by force from the Ulad or Ulster men.’[149] We thus see how completely the idea of a close connection, amounting to identity both of race and nation, between the Pictish inhabitants of North Britain and the Cruithnigh of Ireland, runs through these popular tales, and expresses a true state of matters which goes far to explain the supposed conquests and settlements under the Irish kings of the mythic and heroic period in Scotland. Although attributed to kings of the different races into which the descendants of Milesius were supposed to be divided, we can see that there is always a tendency to connect them with the Cruithnigh of Ulster. Thus the Fothadhs are by one account of the race of Ith, and by another Cruithnigh of Ulster. When we read of the sons of Nemhead settling in Dobhar and Iardobhar in North Britain, under Braodn the son of Fergus Leithderg, we are reminded at once of the historic king of the Picts, Brude, son of Urgust or Fergus. When we are told that the Tuatha De Danaan proceeded from the same district and bestowed upon Ireland the three designations of Eire, Fodla, and Banba, from the names of the three queens of their three last kings, we cannot avoid noticing that these three names are likewise preserved in Scotland in the river Earn;[150] in Fodla, one of the seven districts named after the seven sons of Cruithnigh, and which is preserved in Athfotla, the old name of Atholl; and in Banff. We see too that whenever a Scot is said during this mythic period to have settled in Alban he is usually said to be the son of the daughter of a Pictish king, and to have inherited through his mother. Thus Colla Uais, of the race of Eremon, has a Pictish mother, and so have the two sons of Corc, king of Munster; and there is reason to suppose that among the Pictish tribes marriage was exogamous and that the son of a Pictish mother even by a stranger was held to belong to the tribe of his mother. Other points of a connection between these Irish legends and those of Scotland also suggest themselves. In the story of the insurrection of the Attachtuatha, or servile tribes of Ireland, against the Milesian Scots, we are told that the nobility of the latter were cut off at a great banquet given by the Attachtuatha, and that none escaped except three nobles who were in their mothers’ womb. This same legend is reproduced in the legendary history of Scotland, when the supposed destruction of the Picts by the Scots in the ninth century is said to have been effected in the same manner, the nobles of the Picts having been cut off by the Scots at a great banquet.[151] [Sidenote: The twofold division of the Picts and the establishment of Scone as the capital of the kingdom.] The twofold division of the Scots, supposed to have taken place in the reign of Conn of the hundred battles, has also its parallelism in Scotland; and if Bede recognised the division of Ireland into the two provinces of the Northern and the Southern Scots, he equally viewed the territory occupied by the great Pictish nation as consisting of the two provinces of the Northern and the Southern Picts, who were separated from each other ‘by steep and rugged mountain chains, within which the latter had seats,’ a description which can only apply to the great chain of the Mounth, extending from the Eastern Sea to the Western Sea, and separating the counties of Aberdeen and Inverness from those of Kincardine, Forfar, and Perth; and to those minor chains proceeding from it on the south, which, as they terminate in the more level country, form the great barrier of the so-called Grampians. Towards the end of the great Pictish kingdom we find Scone appearing as the principal seat and central point of the monarchy, and Fordun gives as one tradition ‘that it had been anciently fixed as the principal seat of the kingdom by both the Pictish and Scottish kings;’ and as another ‘that the ancient kings, even from the time of Cruithne, the first king of the Picts, had made it the seat of the kingdom of Alban.’[152] Scone is situated on the left bank of the river Tay, and within the ancient district of Gouerin or Gowry, and the circumstances connected with this district, and with Scone as the ancient capital of Scotland, present features very analogous to those recorded in the legend by which the province of Meath was formed, and Teamhair or Tara constituted the chief seat of the monarchy. As Meath was situated where the four ancient provinces of Ulster, Connaught, Munster, and Leinster meet, so also Gowry is placed in a central position where the four ancient provinces of Alban—namely those of Stratherne and Menteath, of Atholl (to which it appears at one time to have been attached), of Angus and Mearns, and of Fife and Fothreve—touch each other. As the originally small district of Meath was enlarged into a province by adding four districts, each of which was taken from one of the other districts, so we find that there were four royal manors of Gowry, viz. those of Scone, Cubert, Forgrund, and Straderdel.[153] These too surround a small central district, and each lies contiguous to one of the four provinces. Scone, forming the western district of Gowry, is separated by the river Tay from the old province of Fortrenn; Cubert or Coupar-Angus, on the north-east, adjoins Angus or Forfarshire; Forgrund, now Longforgan, on the south-east, is separated by the Tay from a parish in Fife bearing the same name; and Stratherdel or Strathardle, on the north, lies within the barrier of the Grampians, and stretches along the eastern boundary of Atholl. As Meath was the old mensal land set apart for the support of the Crown, so we find Gowry too appears to have been a Crown demesne; and as Teamhair or Tara was not only the place where the Ardri or sovereign of Ireland was inaugurated, and the laws of the kingdom framed and published, but was so completely regarded as the central point of the monarchy that the kingdom was often termed the Kingdom of Tara, so we find the ancient kings of Alban inaugurated and the laws of the kingdom promulgated at Scone; and when Kenneth, the first of the Scottish line, overthrew the Pictish dynasty, he is said in the oldest chronicler who records the event to have acquired ‘the kingdom of Scone.’[154] CHAPTER IV. THE TUATH OR TRIBE IN IRELAND. [Sidenote: Mixed population of Scotland.] The population of Scotland in the reign of Alexander the Third was, as we have seen, of a very mixed character. The southern frontier of the kingdom had by this time been advanced to the Solway and the Cheviots, while the annexation of the Isles in his reign had extended its western boundary to its utmost limits. Over the whole of this extended territory the name of Scotland, originally limited to the country north of the Forth and Clyde, had now spread, and we find the area of this extended kingdom occupied by a population consisting of three different races. These were, in the mountainous region of the north and west, the Gael or Highlanders, the descendants of the Northern Picts of pure Gaelic race, and of the Gaelic Scots who had settled among them. The more fertile and level plains forming the eastern seaboard, extending from the Moray Firth to the Cheviots, had originally been possessed by the Southern Picts, a mixed race partly of Gael and partly of Britons, but the Angles of Northumberland had by degrees colonised the whole of it. On the west the Britons of Strathclyde had extended from the Clyde to the Solway, but had likewise given way to the Anglic colonisation; while Galloway west of the Nith was still occupied by a Gaelic people, who had encroached upon the British territory by occupying the district of Carrick in the south, the Northern Gael having likewise encroached on its northern frontier by spreading over the district of Lennox. [Sidenote: Sources of information as to their early social state.] The actual population of Scotland had thus consisted of three races—the two Celtic peoples of the Gael and the Brython or Britons, and the Teutonic people of the Angles. To these races had been added by King David the First and his successors the Norman barons, who were overlords of a great part of the territory of the kingdom, while a Norwegian population may to some extent have still lingered in the Western Isles. In endeavouring to ascertain the early social organisation of these three races, besides the few hints which historical documents afford, we have the advantage of an ancient code of laws of each race. For the Angles we have the Anglo-Saxon laws, and for the Britons the early laws and institutions of Wales, both published by the Record Commission.[155] For the Gael we have the ancient laws of Ireland, commonly called the Brehon Laws, now in course of publication;[156] and besides these there has been preserved a small code in Scotland termed the Laws of the Picts and Scots, and some fragments of ancient law retained in the hands of the different kings of the race of David I.[157] [Sidenote: Tribal organisation of the Gaelic race.] It is with the Celtic races alone that we have to do in this work, and principally with those of Gaelic race, who alone preserved a separate and independent existence in Scotland; and an examination of all those documents which tend to throw light upon the early social organisation of the Gaelic as well as of the Cymric race leads us to the conclusion that it was not territorial or purely patriarchal, but was based on the community or tribe. Among the people of Gaelic race the original social unit appears to have been the _Tuath_, a name originally applied to the tribe, but which came to signify also the territory occupied by the tribe community;[158] but when we endeavour to ascertain the original constitution of the Tuath or tribe of the Gaelic race, we are met by a difficulty analogous to that which we have to encounter in investigating the history of their language. ‘The formation of the mother tongue belongs to the prehistoric period, and it is a process which, carried on in the infancy and growth of the social state, is concealed from observation. When its possessors first emerge into view and take their place among the history of nations, counter-influences have already been at work, their language has already entered upon its downward course, and we can only watch it in its process of decomposition and alteration, and reach its primitive condition through the medium of its dialects.’[159] So it is with the tribe. We nowhere see it in its primitive form. When it first emerges in the historic period it has already entered upon a course of modification and change. Various influences have been at work, both internal, arising from the natural progress of society, and external, produced from the contact of foreign organisations, to alter existing forms and introduce new elements, and thus it undergoes a process of change which leads it further and further from its primitive constitution. [Sidenote: Influences affecting the tribe.] Two leading features of this process can, however, without difficulty be detected, and may be assumed as tolerably certain. These are, first, that private property in land did not exist at first, but emerged from a right of common property vested in the community. Personal property or individual property in moveables must at all times have existed, but real property or individual property in the soil is of much later origin, and is an excrescence upon the common use or property of the land occupied by the tribe, and is inconsistent with its original constitution. The second feature is, that the social unit was not the individual or the family but the community or tribe. The original bond of union between the members of the tribe was no doubt the belief in a common origin, a common descent from the _eponymus_, whether mythic or historic, from whom it took its name; but in the early period to which we must refer the pure primitive tribe, when the sanctions of marriage were unknown, and a loose relation between the sexes existed, which is faintly shadowed forth in a few scattered notices by the Roman authors of this relation among the Celtic inhabitants of Britain and Ireland, descent through the females rather than the males must have been viewed as the more certain link; and it is probable that here as elsewhere female succession preceded a representation through males, and that the sons belonged to the tribe of their mothers.[160] [Sidenote: Effect of the introduction of Christianity.] The early state of the tribe, however, soon became modified not only by internal changes but also by external influences. Of these external influences not the least powerful, and probably the first in order, was the introduction of Christianity and the adaptation of the Christian Church to the tribal system. The tribe was thus brought into contact with a higher civilisation and a purer code of morals. The lax relations between the sexes, which still survived, must have been checked and controlled, the sanction of marriage enforced, by which the father is placed in his legitimate position as head of the family, and the rights of the children were clearly defined, and the older connection of the members of the tribe through females reduced in some cases to an occasional right of succession through the mother, while in others it entirely disappeared. [Sidenote: Land originally held in common.] The oldest tenure by which land was held was that by the tribe in common. When the tribes passed from the hunting and nomad state to the pastoral, and became possessed of large herds of cattle, it was a natural consequence that each tribe should appropriate a special territory for their better management. The whole of the regulation of these ancient laws is evidently based upon the fact that cattle formed the principal property of the original tribes; and long after individual property in land had become an essential element in the constitution of the tribe, cattle still formed the standard of value by which everything was estimated. That a right of individual property in the cattle existed at a very early period seems very evident, but the land on which they were pastured was the common property of the tribe, and, after the cultivation of land began, the arable land was annually divided into lots, to one of which each member of the tribe had a right. The special district occupied by the tribe would thus consist of pasture land held by the tribe in common, on which each member had a right to pasture the cattle which belonged to him; arable land divided into lots which were annually or at certain periods assigned to him; and unoccupied and waste land remaining as the common property of the tribe. [Sidenote: Distinction of ranks in the tribe.] These rights belonged, however, to the proper members of the tribe only, who were as such on an equality with each other; but there soon came, from other external influences, to be a distinction between those dwelling within the bounds of the _Tuath_ of _Saor_ or free, and _Daor_ or unfree. The freemen of the tribe were alone recognised as possessing rights derived from the original constitution of the tribe. The origin of the class of the unfree is thus stated in connection with the legendary history of Ireland:—‘The first race of them were the remnant of the Firbolg themselves, together with the remnant of the Tuath De Danaan,’ the legendary people who preceded the Milesian Scots. ‘The second race, the people who passed from their own countries, they being descended from _Saor chlann_ (or free tribes), who went under _Daor-chios_ (servile rent) to another tribe. The third people were the race of the _Saor chlann_, whose land was converted into _Fearann-chlaidhimh_ (sword-land or conquered country) in their own territory, and who remained in it in bondage under the power of their enemies. The fourth race were people of _Saor chlann_ who passed into bondage for their evil deeds, and who lost their blood and their land through their evil deeds, according to the law. The fifth people were those who came from stranger soldiers, _i.e_. from external mercenaries who left property in Erin. The sixth race were the people who were descended from the bondmen who came with the Milesians into Erin,’ that is, who and their forefathers had always been bondsmen.[161] [Sidenote: The _Ri_ or king.] Besides this great distinction between the free and the unfree, the free members of the tribe contained within themselves one distinction which must have always existed among them, and the germs of others which became gradually more prominent as the operation of the causes which led to them more and more influenced the constitution of the tribe. That combination which produced the tribe must from the beginning have had leaders and other necessary office-bearers; some one among them must have had supreme authority as judge in time of peace, and the tribe must have had a competent leader in time of war. Such functionaries were necessary as bonds of union; without them the tribe could not have been kept together in anything like social union; and as the tie which bound the free members of the tribe together was the belief in a common origin—a common descent from a mythic _eponymus_ from whom the tribe took its name—so the _Ri_ or king, who was at the head of the tribe, held that position not merely by election but as the representative in the senior line of the common ancestor, and had a hereditary claim to their obedience. As the supreme authority and judge of the tribe he was the _Ri_ or king. This was his primary function. Thus we are told that ‘it is lawful for a king to have a judge _though he himself is a judge_.’[162] As the leader in war he was the _Toisech_ or Captain, and bore the one or the other title as either function became most prominent, while in some cases these functions might be separated and held by different functionaries. Although the _Ri_ or king derived his authority from his claim to be the senior representative of the common ancestor, the office was still, from the necessity of being filled by a properly qualified person, to a certain extent elective. It was hereditary in a certain family, but elective among the members of that family; and an additional safeguard against the tribe being left without a proper head was provided by another member of the family being elected _Tanaist_ or successor to the _Ri_ or king in the event of his death. That the hereditary character of this office existed from primitive times is apparent from this, that a somewhat similar law of succession prevailed in the early Irish Church, the abbot or head of the monastery being chosen from a particular family; and while the influence of the Church may have confirmed, if it did not establish, a strict descent in the male line in the tribe,[163] a hereditary succession in the Church must have been derived from the close connection which had been formed between the Church and the tribe, and from the influence of the tribe upon the Church and not of the Church upon the tribe. While the whole of the land was still the common property of the tribe, the _Ri_ or king had no separate possession of land, but in this respect was on an equality with the free members of the tribe, and entitled only to the same right of pasturage for his cattle on the pasture land and to the share of the arable land annually allotted to him; but in addition to this he was maintained in the dignity of his office at the expense of the tribe, and this right of maintenance, according as the tribe and its wealth increased, assumed various forms, one of which may have arisen from the influence of the Church, and given the first impulse to something like separate possession of land. When the Church was established in connection with a tribe, a grant of part of the tribe land and its separation from the rest became a necessity for the maintenance of the Church, and thus those Termon lands which form so marked a feature in the territorial position of the Irish Church, came into existence. Analogous to this, one form which this right of maintenance on the part of the _Ri_ or king assumed was, that a portion of land was likewise separated from the common land of the tribe as mensal land for the support of the dignity of the _Ri_ or king for the time being. [Sidenote: Distinction of ranks arising from possession of cattle.] Another cause must also of necessity have produced distinction of position between the free members of the tribe. Such an equality as may be held to have existed originally among the members of the tribe can hardly have been preserved unless there was also an equality in their personal characteristics and their wealth in cattle. The natural operation of differences of character and wealth was to create distinctive classes among them. Those of superior abilities soon take the lead of others, and those whose prudence and sagacity enabled them to increase their possession of cattle must soon have occupied a more important position in the tribe, as their share of the annual allotment of land was regulated by the size of their herd. Thus there came to be recognised in the tribe a gradation of ranks founded upon the possession of personal wealth and importance. The lowest grade in the tribe was the _Fer Midba_ or inferior man, of whom there were two classes. As soon as a member of the tribe reached the age of fourteen he was emancipated from the control of his parents and acquired certain rights, but was not vested with his full privileges till the encircling of the beard, that is, till he became twenty years old, when he was entitled to a separate residence (_Sain trebhta_) and a share of the tribe land (_Sealbh_). Above the _Fer Midba_ was the _Boaire_ or Cowlord, whose superior wealth in cattle, with the exclusive possession of a homestead, gave him a kind of nobility over the tribe’s man. Of the _Boaire_ class there were six grades. The lowest rank, to which the title of _Aire_ was given, was the _Ogaire_ or young lord who had ‘newly taken householdship upon him.’ His property was reckoned by the number seven. He had seven cows with their bull, seven pigs with a boar, seven sheep, and a horse for work and riding. He possessed a house but no land in property. The land required for the support of seven cows was termed a Cow-land, and he left one cow at the end of the year in payment for it. He had the fourth part of a plough, and therefore his possession with the arable land attached to it formed probably the fourth part of a ploughgate, or thirty acres, equivalent to the husbandland in Scotland. The next higher grade was the tenant resident (_Aithech ar athreba_). He represented a small community of four or five, occupying jointly as much land and possessing in common as much stock as would entitle a single person to be a _Boaire_. He had ten cows, ten pigs, ten sheep, but, like the _Ogaire_, the fourth part of ploughing apparatus, which is here defined to be an ox or ploughshare, a goad, and a bridle. He was so named as occupying a part only of as much land as would entitle him to be called a _Boaire_ along with others, the joint possession being sufficient for the purpose. Above him was the _Boaire febhsa_, so called ‘because it is from cows his rank as an _Aire_ and his honor price are derived.’ He had land of the value of twice seven _Cumhals_, or forty-two cows. He had a house with a back house or kitchen, a share in a mill, a kiln, a barn, a sheephouse, a calf-house, and a pigstye. These are the seven houses from which each _Boaire_ was rated, and formed the complete _Rath_ or homestead. It was surrounded by a precinct or _Maigne_, which was a space as far as the _Boaire_ could cast a spear with an iron head, or hammer, sitting at the door of his house, and was inviolable. The whole was usually enclosed by a ditch and earthen rampart. And he possessed twelve cows and half a plough. Land of the value of three times seven _Cumhals_ or sixty-three cows, and the possession of twenty cows, two bulls, six bullocks, twenty hogs, twenty sheep, four house-fed hogs, two sows, and a riding-horse, made him a _Bruighfer_, and entailed upon him the burden of ‘receiving the king, bishop, poet, or judge from off the road,’ as well as all travellers. And here too the court of judgment was held for the tribe and the assembly of the tribe’s men. When the _Boaire_ possessed so large an amount of stock as to be obliged to give off some to others he becomes a _Ferfothla_, and ‘the excess of his cattle which his own land cannot sustain, which he cannot sell for land, and which he does not himself require, he gives as the proportionate stock of tenants’ (_Ceile_). The highest grade of the _Boaire_ was the _Aire-coisring_, who represented the people before the king and the synod. [Sidenote: Origin and growth of private property, and creation of Fan order of territorial chiefs.] The superior position in which the _Boaire_ was placed towards the other members of the tribe, his more extensive stock, and the exclusive possession of his homestead, must have naturally led to a desire to retain the same land in his family, instead of being subjected to annual change; and the larger his possession the more easily he would obtain this, which was an inevitable step to the introduction of rights of private property in the land of the tribe. When the same family had retained possession of land for three generations it came at length to constitute a right of property, and thus a class of territorial lords was created whose position as _Aires_ was based upon property in land. This right of property and all the privileges connected with it was termed _Deis_, and they formed a superior class of territorial magnates, who were termed _Flaith_ or chieftains, and constituted an order termed the _Grad Flaith_, in contradistinction to the _Grad Feine_ or inferior order. In the division of these respective orders, if not in the actual introduction of an individual right of property in land, we can again trace the influence of the Christian Church. In one of the tracts forming the collection of laws termed the Brehon, but not one of the most ancient, the following account of these divisions is given:—‘How many divisions are there of these?—Seven. What is the division of the grades of a Tuath derived from?—From the similitude of ecclesiastical orders, for it is proper that for every order which is in the Church there should be a corresponding one in the Tuath.’ But this number of seven is purely arbitrary, for we are told that the grades of the Tuath consist of the ‘Fer Midba, the Boaire, the Aire desa, the Aire ard, the Aire tuise, the Aire forgaill, and the Ri or king. If it be according to the right of the Feinechus law, it is in such manner these seven grades are divided.’ But then follows—‘What is the division if it be not the Boaire with his eight divisions?’ that is, if the ‘Grad Feine,’ or inferior order consisting of eight divisions, is excluded; and the answer is—‘The Aire desa, the Aire echta, the Aire ard, the Aire tuise, the Aire forgaill, the Tanaist of the Ri or king, and the Ri or king.’ Here the number of seven is made up by adding to the Grad Flaith an Aire echta and the Tanaist.[164] [Sidenote: The _Ceile_ or tenants of a chief.] As these ranks of the _Grad Flaith_ possessed an increasing amount of stock beyond what their own land could maintain, one great characteristic of the order was their possessing tenants or _Ceile_, that is, persons of the inferior order to whom they gave their surplus stock in return for a food-rent, services, and homage; the gift being termed _Taurcreic_ and the food-rent _Besa_. And as the territorial lords appropriated more and more land of the tribe as individual property, it is obvious that the land remaining for division among the freemen of the tribe must have been proportionately diminished, while the natural increase of the population must have increased the evil. An ancient tract tells us that ‘numerous were the human beings in Ireland at that time (A.D. 658-694), and such was their number that they used not to get but thrice nine ridges for each man in Ireland, viz., nine of bog, and nine of smooth or arable, and nine of wood;’ and we read in the _Lebor na huidre_ that ‘there was not ditch nor fence nor stone wall round land till came the period of the sons of Aed Slane (the same period), but smooth fields. Because of the abundance of the households in their period, therefore it is that they introduced boundaries in Ireland.’[165] Thus, as the land and the wealth in cattle of these _Flaith_ or territorial lords increased, the freemen of the tribe who were still independent became poorer, and their lots diminished, and by degrees they began voluntarily to place themselves under these lords by accepting stock from them, in return for which they became their dependants. Where the _Flath_ contributed merely an addition to the stock of the freeman who already possessed some, he became his _Saer Ceile_ or free tenant, and had to return the value of a third of the stock annually for seven years; and besides this the tenant might be called upon to give certain services termed _Manchaine_, such as assisting in building a fort, reaping the harvest, or going on hostings, and had to pay a food-rent for his house, termed _Bestigi_, likewise did homage on paying his rent, termed _Ureirge_. Where the Flath furnished the entire stock for the tenant he had to give security for its return, and became his _Daer Ceile_ or Bond-tenant, and had to pay a food tribute termed _Biathad_ twice a year.[166] The _Aire desa_ had ten such tenants, five bond and five free. He is described as ‘the son of an Aire and the grandson of an Aire, with the property of his house.’ The _Aire echta_ seems to have ranked with the _Aire desa_. The _Aire ard_ had twenty tenants or _Ceile_, ten bond and ten free. The _Aire tuise_, so called ‘because his race has precedence, and he takes precedence of the _Aire ard_,’ had twenty-seven tenants or _Ceile_, fifteen bond and twelve free; and the _Aire forgaill_ or highest rank has forty tenants or _Ceile_, twenty bond and twenty free. Besides these _Ceile_ or tenants, so constituted by voluntary contracts between the freemen and the _Flath_ or chief, he had likewise _Bothach_ or Cottiers and _Fuiddhir_, strangers, or broken men from other tribes, whom he settled upon his waste land in return for homage and service, and these, if they had remained nine times nine years on the land, became what were called _Sencleithe_ or old standers.[167] This account of how the constitution of the tribe became modified and altered by the effect of internal change and external influence pretends to be nothing more than a speculative view of it, but we have now reached that stage in its progress when it fairly enough represents the tribe in the form in which we find it in the ancient Irish laws; but as these laws with their commentaries belong to different periods, some branches of them being obviously more modern than others, this must be borne in mind in endeavouring to extract a view of the organisation of the tribe from them. [Sidenote: State of the _Tuath_ or territory of a tribe.] The territory belonging to a tribe is now termed _Tuath_, the tribe itself _Ciniol_, as implying a race of men sprung from a common ancestor. The land of the tribe is now found in three different positions. There was first that part of the original territory of the tribe which still remained the _Feacht Finne_ or common property of the tribe, and consisted of the common pasture lands, on which each freeman of the tribe had a right to pasture his cattle, and of the common tillage lands annually divided among those freemen who possessed cattle, a possession which entitled them to the usufruct of a share of the arable land and to a habitation in each township. The cattle each person had were termed his _Cro_, a name also applied to the enclosure in which they were housed, and the entire cattle of the tribe were termed their _Creaght_. Then, secondly, there was the official or mensal land set apart for the maintenance of the _Ri_ or _Toisech_, the _Tanist_, and the other functionaries of the tribe, as the Bard, the Brehon or judge, the Sennachy or historian, etc.; and along with this land may be classed the Church land or Termon land given to the Church free of all imposition, which land was held to form a sanctuary. Lastly, there was the land held by individual ownership. This land was the _Orba_ or inheritance land, which belonged to the _Flaith_ or chiefs, and which was transmissible to their successors. The principal part of this land was retained by the chief in demesne, and on it he had settled the strangers called _Fuidhir_ who consisted of two classes, Free and Bond, and formed a body of retainers entirely under his control; and here too were the _Bothach_ or Cottiers, and those who by length of residence had become _Sencleithe_. The land not retained by himself was given off to freemen of the tribe to whom he had given stock either by _Saer_ or by _Daer_ stock tenure, and who thus became his _Ceile_ or tenants. [Sidenote: The _Dun_ or fort.] The stronghold of the tribe was the _Dun_ or fort, which the _Ri_ alone had a right to occupy, and of which each king was bound to have at least three. The description given of it is as follows:—‘Seven score feet are the dimensions of the Dun every way; seven feet the thickness of the mound at top; twelve feet at bottom. Then only is he king, when he is encircled by the moat of servitude. Twelve feet is the breadth of its mouth and of its bottom, and its length is the same as the Dun. Thirty feet is its length on the outside.’[168] The average number of fighting men which a tribe turned out on ordinary occasions appears to have been 700.[169] The possessions of the Church within the territory of the tribe varied in extent from half a _Ballyboe_ or ploughgate, till in some cases the Dun itself and the possessions of the king or chief were granted to found a monastery, and in those cases where the monastery was said to have consisted of 3000 monks, the tribe itself appears to have merged in the Church. There came to be a lay and a clerical _progenies_, and the head of the tribe appears to have been chosen alternately from the tribe of the land and the tribe of the patron saint.[170] The free and bond _Ceile_ then became free and bond _Manachs_, their position being substantially the same. [Sidenote: The _Mortuath_.] Such being the aspect in which the tribe is presented to us in the ancient laws of Ireland, it must not be assumed that these tribes, thus possessing a complete organisation in themselves, were at this period independent of each other. From even a much earlier period they seem to have been united in a constitutional framework, by which they formed a kind of federal nation. Several of these _Tuaths_ were grouped together to form a still larger tribe, termed a _Mortuath_ or great tribe, over whom one of the kings presided as _Ri Mortuath_. The normal number forming a _Mortuath_ is in one place stated as three, and in another seven. [Sidenote: The _Cuicidh_ or province.] Then several of these _Mortuath_ formed a province, called in Irish _Cuicidh_, or a fifth. The name is interpreted as implying that the _Mortuath_ thus united were five in number, but the usual explanation is more probable, that as there were five provinces in Ireland—Meath, Leinster, Munster, Connaught, and Ulster—it means that each was the fifth part of Ireland. Over each province was the _Ri Cuicidh_, or provincial king, and then over the whole was the _Ardri_, or sovereign of all Ireland. [Sidenote: The law of Tanistry.] The succession to these several grades of _Ri_ or king was the same as that of the _Ri Tuath_, and was regulated by the law of Tanistry, that is, hereditary in the family but elective in the individual, the senior of the family being usually preferred; but as, when the king was chosen, the Tanist would naturally be selected from the next most powerful branch of the family, it fell at length into an alternate succession between the two most powerful branches. This becomes at once apparent when we examine the actual succession of these kings as recorded in the Annals. The sovereignty over the whole of Ireland fell for several centuries into one branch of the great family called the Northern Hy Neill, and the throne was filled alternately from two branches of it. The succession of the kings of Munster shows the same peculiarity of an alternate succession between the descendants of two sons of the mythic founder of that kingdom, and furnished the illustration upon which a Dissertation on the Law of Tanistry, attributed to General Vallancey, but really written by Doctor John O’Brien, Bishop of Cloyne, was founded. The province of Ulster, where an ancient Pictish population was encroached upon and gradually superseded by Scottish tribes, exhibits the remarkable peculiarity of an alternate succession of the kings of Ulster between a family descended from its old Pictish kings and one of the earliest colonies of Scots, that of the _Dalfiatach_, who settled among them.[171] [Sidenote: Connection between superiors and dependants.] The tie which bound these groups together, and united the chain which connected the _Ardri_ with the _Ri Tuath_, was the same which linked the latter with his dependent chiefs, and those with their _Ceile_. The dependence of one upon another possessed the invariable feature of a gift or subsidy from the superior to the inferior, and corresponding duties from the inferior to the superior. In one of the law tracts the gift from the superior appears as _Taurcreic_, or proportionate stock, and the return as _Bestighi_, or food-rent of the house, and ranges from a _Taurcreic_ of five Seds, and a _Bestighi_ of a wether, with its accompaniments, consisting of cakes, milk, and butter, as the lowest for the _Fermidba_ to a _Taurcreic_ of fifteen _Cumhals_, or forty-five cows, and a _Bestighi_ of eight cows for the _Ri Tuath_.[172] We derive the fullest information on this subject from the ancient tract termed the Book of Rights. We there see the gift or _Tuarastach_, as it is there called, made by the _Ardri_ to the different provincial kings, by them to the kings of the respective _Mortuath_, and by the latter to the _Ri Tuath_; while the corresponding returns made by the inferior to the superior king consisted first of a small fixed rent, which in one case consisted of a _Sgreaball_, or threepence, from each _Baile_ or township,[173] and a tribute termed _Cobhach_, which included, in the case of Munster, a submission paid in cattle, termed _Smacht_, and a _Biathad_ or refection; and each king was entitled to a maintenance when going beyond his own territory, called _Coinnim_, corrupted into Coigny; and besides these, service in war was due from each inferior tribe to the superior, distinguished into _Feacht_ or expedition, and _Sluaged_ or hosting. The number of fighting men each _Tuath_ had to provide was 700, and each _Mortuath_ three companies, or 2100 men. [Sidenote: The system of fines.] Another feature of the ancient tribal system in Ireland, presented to us in the Brehon Laws, must not be overlooked, and that is the system of fines, in which respect it closely resembled not only similar regulations in the Welsh Laws but likewise in those of the Anglo-Saxons. In that early state of society the idea that the slaughter or injury of any of its members was a crime against the State, which required the punishment of the criminal in vindication of the law of the land, was entirely unknown. The slaughter or injury of the member of the tribe was considered as a loss to the tribe itself, which must be compensated for, and when compensation was made and accepted the criminal was free. Originally the compensation was probably simple retaliation, but afterwards this right of retaliation might be bought off by payment of a fine. That a tradition of this kind existed appears from a passage in the Introduction to the Senchus Mor, in which we are told that ‘retaliation prevailed in Erin before Patrick, and Patrick brought forgiveness with him. At this day we keep between forgiveness and retaliation; for as at present no one has the power of bestowing heaven as Patrick had at that day, so no one is put to death for his intentional crimes, so long as Eric fine is obtained; and whenever Eric fine is not obtained, he is put to death for his intentional crimes, and placed on the sea for his unintentional crimes.’ Sir Henry Maine, in commenting on this passage, justly remarks, that ‘it is impossible, of course, to accept the statement that this wide-spread ancient institution, the pecuniary fine levied on tribes or families for the wrongs done by their members, had its origin in Christian influences; but that it succeeded simple retaliation is in the highest degree probable.’[174] [Sidenote: The Honor price.] The system of fines was based in the main upon a fixed value put upon each person, estimated according to his position and rank, and expressed by a standard of value in cattle. This was his _Enechlann_ or Honor price, and it enters as an element into all the pecuniary relations of the different members of the tribes with each other. This standard of value was expressed in two forms. First by what was termed a _Set_ or _Sed_, by which single animals of different value were meant. The next was the _Ri Set_ or milch cow, which was equal to two _Samaiscs_ or three-year-old heifers or mules, and each _Samaisc_ was equal to two _Dairts_ or _Colpachs_, that is, two-year-old heifers or bulls, and the rule was that of every three _Sets_ one must be of each kind.[175] The other standard of value was the _Cumhal_, which originally meant a female bondslave, and was equal in value to three milch cows. The Honor price of the _Ogaire_ was three _Seds_, but they must be _Seds_ of the cow kind. Five _Seds_ that of a _Boaire_; ten _Seds_ that of the _Aire desa_; fifteen that of the _Aire ard_; twenty that of the _Aire tuisi_; twenty-four that of the _Aire forgaill_; thirty _Seds_ that of the Tanist or successor to the king of the tribe; and seven _Cumhals_, or twenty-one cows, that of the king himself. The king of a _Mortuath_ has an additional _Cumhal_, or three cows more, to make up his Honor price. The Honor price of a son of each rank was equal to that of the rank immediately below it. The intentional slaughter, then, of one of these persons might be compensated by payment of the Eric fine, which was equal to the Honor price of the person slain. Other fines were the Dire fine for injury to a man’s property, and the _Smacht_ or body fine. A share of these fines fell to the _Flath_ or chief under whom the person injured was, and also to the king of the tribe, which formed no insignificant portion of his revenue. [Sidenote: System of land measures.] In combination with the tribal organisation, there was also in Ireland an ancient system of fixed land measures adapted to it. The largest of these divisions was the _Trichaced_, which was considered as the normal extent of the _Tuath_ or territory of a tribe. It contained thirty _Bailebiataghs_, and each _Bailebiatagh_ twelve _Seisrighs_ or ploughlands, also termed _Ballyboes_, and these were the townships, and the distribution of the land among the freemen of the tribe appears to have been separately allotted in each township to its occupants. An ancient poem,[176] printed by Mr. O’Donovan in his edition of the Battle of Magh Lena, gives probably the oldest view of these land divisions over all Ireland, as it is attributed to the same Finntan who is said to have preserved the record of the ancient mythic colonisation of Ireland. The poem is thus translated by Mr. O’Donovan, the denomination of land being, however, retained untranslated:— 1. How many Trichas in noble Erinn, How many half Trichas to accord, How many Bailes in linked array, How many doth each Baile sustain. 2. How many Bailes and Tricha-ceds, In Erinn the abundant in wealth. I say unto thee—an assertion with sense— I defy all the learned to confute it. 3. Do not say that you defy me, Said Finntan, the man of sense; I am the most learned that has been In Alban, in Erinn. 4. Ten Bailes in each Tricha-ced, And twenty Bailes (thirty in all), it is no falsehood; Though small their number to us appears, Their extent form a noble country (Crich). 5. A Baile sustains three hundred cows, With twelve Seisrighs, it is no lie; Four full herds may therein roam, With no cow of either touching the other. 6. I enumerate eighteen Trichas In the country of Meath of ample wealth. And thirty Trichas more In the country of Connaght yellow-haired. 7. I enumerate fifteen Trichas, And twenty Trichas; without falsehood This I say to you—a saying bold— In the great province of Ulster. 8. Eleven Trichas in Leinster, And twenty of teaming wealth, From Inbher Duibhlinne hither Unto the road of the Boroimhe. 9. Ten Trichas in Munster, And threescore in full accordance, In the two proud provinces (N. and S. Munster), In the great extensive Munster. 10. I enumerate four Tricha-ceds, And ninescore (184 in all), it is no falsehood, Without the deficiency to any Tricha of them, Of one Baile or half a Baile. 11. Twenty Bailes, too, and five hundred And five thousand (5520 in all), it is no falsehood Since I have taken to divide them, Is the number of Bailes in Erinn. 12. Two score acres three times, Is the land of the Seisrigh; The land of three Seisrighs, therefore, Is the quarter of a Bailebiataigh. 13. To twelve Seisrighs in full, The Bailebiataigh alone is equal; As I am Finntan, a man of sense, The tenth generation from Adam. 14. The history of Erinn in memory, As it is in all the books, Finntan, the truly intelligent, hath. Of him is asked how many. The _Seisrigh_ or ploughgate, which represents the sown land, is here stated to contain 120 acres and twelve ploughgates, with as much pasture land as sustained 300 cows, or four herds of seventy-five each formed the _Bailebiatagh_. Thirty _Bailebiataghs_ constituted a _Tricha-ced_, which would thus contain 43,200 acres; and as, according to the poem, there were 184 _Tricha-ceds_ in Ireland, this represents about one-half of the acreage of the whole country, assuming that the ancient and modern acre was the same in extent. The other half would thus represent the waste lands, which were turned to no profitable account. These measures of land make their appearance at an early period in the mythic history of Ireland, for it is recorded of Ollamh Fodla, one of the most remarkable figures who appears in this extraordinary catalogue of shadowy monarchs, and who is said to have flourished twelve centuries before Christ, that ‘it was he also that appointed a _Toisech_ over every _Tricha-ced_, and a _Brughaidh_ over every _Baile_, who were all to serve the king of Erinn.’[177] They emerge also in the historic period in the tenth century, when a great fleet of Danes landed at Limerick and plundered and ravaged Munster, both churches and tribes (_Cella_ ocus _Tuatha_), and their king is said to have ‘ordained kings (_Rigu_), chiefs (_Taishechu_), _Maers_ and _Reactdairidu_ or stewards in each land (_Tir_) and in each _Tuath_, as well as levied the _Cis rigda_, or dues of the kingdom,’ that is, confirmed the old tribal organisation, substituting Danes for Gael, so that there was ‘a king (_Ri_) for each _Tir_, a _Toisech_ for each _Tuath_, an abbot for each _Cill_ or church, a _Maer_ for each _Baile_, and a _Suairtleach_ in each _Tigi_ or homestead.[178] In the succeeding century it is told of Brian Boroimhe, the Munster king who reigned over Ireland from 1002 to 1014, and defeated the Danes in the great battle of Clontarf, that ‘during his time surnames were first given, and territories (_Duchadha_) allotted to the surnames, and the boundaries of every _Tuath_ and every _Tricha-ced_ were fixed.’[179] But although these ancient measures of land are represented as possessing a definite and fixed extent, yet there seems to be little doubt that they varied very much in different parts of Ireland. Thus the unit of the _Seisrigh_ or ploughgate seems to have been of two kinds—a larger measure of 120 acres in some parts of Ireland, and a smaller measure of 60 acres in other parts. We also find the _Ballybiatagh_ consisting of sixteen _Taths_ in place of twelve ploughgates, the _Tath_ containing sixty acres. [Sidenote: Later state of the tribes.] But not only do these measures of land vary in size and denomination, but the _Tuath_ or tribe territory appears also to have varied in different parts of Ireland as well as the constitution of the tribe possessing it. The publications of the Irish Archæological and Celtic Societies afford specimens of this in four of the provinces in Ireland. Thus the preface to the poems of John O Dugan, who died in 1372, opens with reference to Meath with the general statement—‘His country (_Duthaidh_) to every _Ardrigh_ and to every _Urrigh_ and to every _Taoisech_ of a _Tuath_ in Erin.’[180] In the district of Corca Laidhe in Munster, which represented a _Mortuath_, instead of containing merely three or seven _Tuaths_, we find eight _Tuaths_ mentioned, and of seven of these the head of the tribe is termed its _Toisech_, and bears the same name, while the _Flaith_ or chiefs are called _Oclaich Duthaich_, or the champions of the territory. The first is the _Duthaich_ or country of _O Gillamichil_, with seventeen _Oclaich_. Then we have the _Tuath Ui Chonneid_, with O Conneid as its _Toisech_, and five _Oclaich_. Then _Tuath Ruis_, with O Laeghaire as its _Toisech_, and eleven _Oclaich_ or chiefs. Then Tuath O’n-Aenghusa, with O h-Aenghusa as its _Toisech_, and fourteen _Oclaich_. Then Tuath O’Fithcheallaigh, with O’Fithcheallaigh as its _Toisech_, and eight _Oclaich_. Then Tuath O’n Dunghalaigh, with O Dunghaill as its _Toisech_, and nine _Oclaich_. Then Tuath Ui-Dubhdaleithe, with O Dubhdaleithe as its _Toisech_ and seven _Oclaich_. The boundaries of these several _Tuaths_ are likewise given.[181] In the province of Connaught we have also an account of four of the great territories, which furnishes us also with some information regarding the constitution of the tribes there. In a tract printed in the appendix to ‘The Tribes and Customs of Hy Fiachraich’ we find the following statement:—‘Connaught (and, I suppose, other provinces) was anciently distinguished into countries called Doohie (_Duthaidh_) or Tyre (_Tir_), named from such and such families or nations inhabiting them, as in the barony of Athlone, Doohie Keogh, the country or nation of the Keoghs. In the barony of Ballintobber, Doohie Hanly, the country of the Hanleys, and betwixt Elphin and Jamestown, that sweet country Teer O Ruin (_Tir Briuin_) and Teer O Byrne, the country of the Beirns. These countries were subdivided into townlands (in some other parts of Ireland known by the name of ploughlands), which were called Ballys, as in Doohie Hanley _Bally nengulluh_, or Gyllstown, _Ballygilleclinne_, (the town of the Chlinnes), _Ballyfeeny_, etc.; and each townland was divided again into quarters, which are generally known and distinguished by certain meares and bounds, and for that reason the name of quarter is used as though it signified a certain measure; and now the lands here are generally set and let, not by the measure of acres but by the name of quarters, cartrons, and gnieves, a quarter being the fourth part of a townland, and a gnieve the sixth part of a quarter, and a cartron also the fourth part of a quarter (although in other parts of Ireland a quarter is the same part that a cartron is here, and a gnieve the fourth part of a cartron). I have been sometimes perplexed to know how many acres a quarter contains, but I have learned it is an uncertain measure, and anciently proportioned only by guess, or according to the bigness of the townland whereof it was a parcel.’[182] From the tract termed the ‘Hereditary Proprietors (_Duthchusaigh_) of the Clann Fiachrach’ we obtain some further information. The territory possessed by the tribe appears under different names. These are _Triocha Cheud_, _Taoisidheacht_, or territory ruled over by a _Taoisech_, _Tuath_, and _Duthaidh_.[183] The first is the _Triocha Ceud_ of Ceara, and over it were three kings, O’Muireadhaigh, O’Gormog, and O’Tighernaigh. It seems to have been exceptionally large. Then we have five districts termed _Taoisidheacht_. The first is that of O’h-Uada and O’Cinnchnamha. Then that of O’Cearnaigh, containing the twenty-four Ballys of the termon of Balla, and therefore nearly as extensive as a _Triocha Ceud_, but the expression Termon indicates it as being church land. Then that of Ui Ruadin and of him is the _Dudhchus_ of O’Culachan. Then that of O’Birn and that of O’Gorrmghiolla, the latter containing seven Ballys and a half, or the fourth part of a _Triocha Ceud_. Then there are three _Tuaths_ mentioned. First the _Tuath_ of Partraighe, co-extensive with the parish of Ballyovey. Of this _Tuath_ we have two accounts. The first shows us the _Ri tuath_ and the _Taoisech_ distinct, for O’Gaimiallaigh was its _Ri_ and O’Dorchaidhe its _Taoisech_. By the second account it was the _Taoisigheacht_ of O’Dorchaidhe alone. O’Banan of Bally Ui Banan and Magilin of Muine were two _Mac Oglaichs_ or inferior chiefs. The _Tuath_ of Magh na bethighe contained the seven Ballys of Lughortan, the _Duthaidh_ of Mac an Bhainbh. The _Tuath_ of Magh Fhiondalbha, containing fifteen Ballys or half a _Triocha Ceud_, was the _Duthaidh_ of O’Cearnaigh. Then twelve _Duthaidhs_ or Estates are given, all connected with surnames. Of these seven consist of one Bally only. The _Duthaidh_ of O’h-Edhneachan consisted of three divisions, each containing three Ballys. The _Duthaidh_ of O’Faghartaigh contained three Ballys, and that of O’Caomhan containing the seven Ballys of Roslaogh. All of these tribes possessed a common origin with one exception, for it is added ‘that there was found no _Tuath_ without its hereditary proprietor of the race of Earc Culbhuidhe except this well-known _Tuath Aitheachda_,’ that is, tribe of the older subjected inhabitants, called _Tuath Ruisen_, the old name of Roslaog.[184] The Tribes and Customs of Hy Many, another great district of Connaught, throw further light on the subject. This district was considered to be a third part of the province of Connaught, and the patrimony of the _Clann Ceallaigh_ or O’Kellys. In a tract giving an account of its boundaries we are told that it consisted of ‘seven _Tricha_, seven _Tuaths_, seven _Ballys_, and seven half _Ballys_;’[185] and in the tract called the ‘Customs of Hy Many’ we read: ‘These are the tributaries of the _Clann Ceallaigh_: the O’Duibhginns, the O’Geibhennaighs, the MacCathails, the MacFloinns, Muintir Murchadhan, and the Clann Aedhagain, until they become Ollamhs to the _Ardri_ or head of the whole race. These seven tributaries correspond with the seven _Tricha_;’ and it is added, that ‘the third part of the _Cuigid_ or province of Connaught, that is, Hy Many, is to be their _Duthaidh_ for ever.’ They have also the ‘marshalship of the forces’ (_Marasgalacht a Sluag_), as _Saer clann_ or free tribes, and they are freed from the _Sluaged_, or hostings of spring and autumn. The seven _Tuaths_ were apparently smaller divisions, and corresponding with them we have ‘the seven _Oirrighi_ or sub-kings of Hy Many, viz., O’Conaill, and he has the same patrimony as Mac Chnaimhin and O’Dubhurrla; the _Oirrighs_ of the _Sil Anmchadha_ are the O’Madudhains; the _Righs_ or rather _Oirrighs_ of Maenmaigh are the Muintir Neachtain and the O’Maelallaidhs; the six _Soghans_ with their _Tricha_; to whomsoever of them they cede the lordship he is called _Oirrigh_ during his lordship,’ and this makes up the seven. Corresponding with the seven _Ballys_ we find that ‘the seven _Flaiths_ of Hy Many are these, viz., Mac Eidhigan, _Flath_ of Clann Diarmada; MacGelli-Enan, _Flath_ of Clann Flaithemael and of the Muintir Chinait; the _Flaith_ of Clann Bresail is the Muintir Domhnallan, and the _Flaith_ of Clann Duibgind is O’Duibgind, and O’Gabhrain is over Dal n-Druithne, and O’Docomhlan over Rinnna h-Eignide, and O’Donnchadha over Aibh Cormac Maenmuighe, and O’Mailbrigdi is _Flath_ of Bredach.’ The seven half _Ballys_ correspond with the seven principal _Comharbas_ of Hy Many, and were the lands attached to seven churches. We have then the following curious account of the termination of the tribal system in Hy Many. An agreement is entered into in the reign of Queen Elizabeth, on the 6th of August 1589, between ‘the Irish chieftains and inhabitants of Imany called the O’Kellie’s country,’ consisting of, first, the O’Kelly or head of the race; two O’Kellys, competitors for the name of Tanistshippe of O’Kelly; two other O’Kellys, and different chiefs bearing the names of O’Mannine, O’Concannon, O’Naghten, Mac Keoghe, O’Murry, O’Fallone, and Mac Gerraghte. It is there stated that ‘the territory of Imany, called O’Kelly’s Country, is divided into five principal barronyes, all which contain 665-1/2 quarters of land, each at 120 acres;’ and they agree ‘that the Captainshippe and Tanistshippe of the said country, heretofore used by the said O’Kellys, and all elections and Irish customary division of lands, shall be utterly abolished and extinct for ever.’ The O’Kelly is to have four quarters of land then in his possession, with a chief-rent out of other lands during his life, and the other two O’Kellys four quarters each.[186] The third great district or _Mortuath_ of Connaught was that called ‘West, or H-Iar Connaught, the country of the O’Flahertys,’ and in connection with it we have a tract on the ‘territories of the hereditary proprietors of Muintir Murchadha of Clanfergail and Meadruidhe and Hy Briuin Seola and Hy Briuin Ratha and Muintir Fathy; their _Toiseachs_ and high _Mac Oglachs_ and _Ollaves_, that is, O’Halloran is _Toiseach_ of the twenty-four Ballys of Clanfergail (or nearly a _Triocha Ceud_), and of these are O’Antuile and O’Fergus of Roscam. Mac Cingamain and Mac Catharnaigh are the two _Toiseachs_ of Meadruidhe, having each their own people of the tribe subject to them. O’Dathlaoich is the _Toiseach_ of the fourteen Ballys of the Hy Briuin Ratha (or half a _Triocha Ceud_), and of these are the O’Kennedies and the O’Duinns and the O’Innogs of Cnoctuadh and O’Laighin of Lackagh and O’Callanan, Comharba of Kilcahil,’ the latter being an ecclesiastical sept occupying church land. ‘O’Canavan was medical Ollamh of O’Flaherty in the _Tuath_ of Toibrineadh, but others say it was O’Laighidh. The _Flaith_ or chiefs of Hy Briuin Seola, with their correlatives, are O’Fechin, O’Balbhain, O’Duff, and O’Madudhain.’ This last tribe does not appear united under one head but broken up into septs. ‘O’Flaharty is _Toiseach_ of the fourteen Ballys of Muintir Fathy, with their correlatives under them.’ We have then a list of the hereditary office-bearers of O’Flaherty, which it may be useful to insert as showing that this designation of _Toiseach_ was not only applied to the hereditary leaders of tribes, but when coupled with a qualifying word designated a hereditary officer; thus Mac Gillagannain of Moyleaslainn is _Toiseach scuir_, or Master of the Horse to O’Flaherty. The O’Colgam of Bally Colgan are standard-bearers (_go m-brataigh_) of O’Flaherty. MacGinnain is the _Comharba_ of Kilcoona. O’Maelampaill of Donaghpatraic is the _Brehon_ or judge of O’Flaherty. O’Cleircin of Rathbuidbh, O’Laibacain, and O’Maoilin, are the _Erenachs_ of Cillbile. The O’Dubains are the attendants (_Lucht Comhideachta_) of O’Flaherty at his common house. The MacKilkellys are the Ollamhs of O’Flaherty in history and poetry, and for this they have three half Ballys. O’Domnall of Ardratha is the _Toiseach Comoil_, or Master of the Feast of O’Flaherty, with his own correlatives under him—viz., O’Daigean of Ardfintain, who was O’Domhnall’s steward (_Reachtaire_), and O’Chichearan of Lis-chicheran, and O’Conlachtna of Ballyconlachtna, are the _Beachadoir_, or beekeepers, of O’Flaherty. O’Murgaile of Muinne-inradain is the high steward (_Ardreachtaire_) of O’Flaherty.’[187] The king of Connaught, the head of the O’Connors, had similar officers; for we are told by O’Ferrall, in his Book of Pedigrees, under the O’Conor family, ‘that the king of Connaught kept twelve prince officers of the chief families of his country in his court, attending his person as his council, and to rule and govern as well his household as to manage the affairs of his kingdom in war and peace, and were called in Irish _Taoisigh na Cruachan_, or Toiseachs of Cruachan, the royal residence, which officers were hereditary from father to son. These chief lords had from the king certain subsidies for their services.’[188] These are given in detail in an ancient tract among the Stowe MSS. Four of them—viz., O’Flanagan, MacGerachty, O’Finnachty, and O’Maolbrennan—were termed royal _Taoiseachs_, and had each a subsidy of fifty milch cows and fifty sheep at Beltane, and fifty heifers and fifty pigs at Samheinn, as well as a domain of forty-eight Ballys; and of these officers, O’Flannagain had the high stewardship (_Ardmaoraidacht_), O’Feorinachtaigh was the Hostiarius or doorkeeper, and O’Maolbrennan was joint steward, and commanded the bodyguards. The other eight _Toiseachs_ of inferior rank had a domain of twenty-four _Ballys_ each, and of these O’Hanly had the guardianship of hostages and prisoners, O’Floinn the stewardship of the horse (_Maoras Each_), O’Flaithbertaigh and O’Maille the command of the fleet, MacDiarmad was high marschal, O’Teige was _Taoiseach Teaghlach_ or marshal of the household, and O’Kelly was _Taoiseach Seud_ or steward of the jewels.[189] The province of Ulster likewise presents us with the _Tuath_ or tribe, several of which form a larger territory equivalent to the Mortuath. Thus a vast territory, consisting of the two districts of the Route and Glynnes, was granted by James I. in 1603 to the Earl of Tyrone, and was at that time subdivided into sixteen smaller districts termed _Tuoghs_ or _Tuaths_, which are recited in the patent. The Route, which was co-extensive with the ancient territory of Dalriada—from which name indeed the modern word Route is a corruption—contained nine _Tuoghs_. These were the _Tuogh_ between the Bandy or Bann and the Boys or Bush, containing six parishes; the _Tuogh_ of Dunseverick and Ballenatoy; the _Tuogh_ of Ballelagh; the _Tuogh_ of Loughgill; the _Tuogh_ of Ballemoney and Dromart, containing two parishes; the _Tuogh_ of Killeoconway (_Coil na g-Connmuigh_), or the wood of O’Conway; the _Tuogh_ of Killioquin, or the wood of O’Conn; the _Tuogh_ of Killiomorrie, or the wood of O’Murry; and the _Tuogh_ of Magheredunagh (_Machaire Dun Eachdach_), or plain of the fort of Eachdach, consisting of the parish now called Dunaghy. The district of the Glynnes consisted of seven baronies, six of which are termed _Tuoghs_. These were the _Tuogh_ of Munerie, the _Tuogh_ of Carey, the _Tuogh_ of Glenmiconogh, the _Tuogh_ of the Largie, the _Tuogh_ of the Parke, and the _Tuogh_ of the Larne. The entire acreage of the two districts of the Route and the Glynnes was 333,907 acres, giving an average of 20,869 acres to each. The names of the tribes which were connected with these _Tuoghs_ or _Tuaths_ have not been preserved, but they are still retained in the district of North Clandeboy, which with South Clandeboy represented the ancient Dalnaraighe or territory of the Picts of Ulster. We find from an inquisition in 1605 that North Clandeboy consisted of twenty subdivisions, thirteen larger and seven smaller; the former are termed _Tuoghs_ or _Tuaths_, and are named after the tribes occupying them. These are the _Tuogh_ of Clanaghartie, containing the entire parish of Kilconriola and part of Ahoghill, and the _Tuogh_ of Muntir Callie (_Muintir Ceallaigh_), or the tribe of Kelly, containing the rest of Ahoghill parish. These two together formed the barony of Lower Toome, and contained 36,000 acres. The _Tuogh_ of Muntir Rividy, and the _Tuogh na Fuigh_. These two formed the barony of Upper Toome, and contained 64,000 acres. The _Tuogh_ of Muntir Murigan (_Muintir Mhuireagan_), or the tribe of Murrigan. The _Tuogh na Keart_. The _Tuogh_ of Moylinny, which is co-extensive with the barony of Upper Antrim, and contained 36,000 acres. The _Tuogh_ of Killelagh. The _Tuogh_ of Maghery-morne, the _Tuogh_ of Braden Iland, and the _Tuogh_ of Ballinlyny. These three formed the barony of Lower Belfast, and contain 56,000 acres. The _Tuogh Cinament_, containing part of the parish of Shankill, and the _Tuogh_ of the Fall, containing the rest of Shankill and the parish of Drumbeg.[190] We have then a very instructive account of the counties of Monaghan and Fermanagh in a letter addressed by Sir John Davis, Attorney-General of Ireland, to the Earl of Salisbury in the year 1606. He states that Monaghan, otherwise called M‘Mahon’s country, ‘was divided into five baronies, viz., Dartry, Monaghan, Cremorne, Trough, and Donamayne; that these five baronies contain an hundred Ballybetaghs, viz., Dartrey 21, Monaghan 21, Cremorne 22, Trough 15, and Donamayne 21.’ These obviously represent _Tuaths_, four being about two-thirds, and the fifth the half of a _Triocha Ceud_. He then proceeds to tell us ‘that every _Ballibetagh_ (which signifieth in the Irish tongue a town able to maintain hospitality) containeth 16 _taths_, each _tath_ containeth 60 English acres or thereabout; so as every _Ballibetagh_ containeth 960 acres, the extent of the whole containing 100 _Ballibetaghs_ is 96,000 acres, besides the church lands.’ This territory having been forfeited to the Crown, four of the baronies were thus regranted to the M‘Mahons. ‘In the Dartrey five _Ballibetaghs_ were granted in demesne to Bryan McHugh Oge McMahon, then reputed chief of his name, and the heirs-male of his body, rendering £30 rent, viz., £6 for each _Ballibetagh_; the other 16 _Ballibetaghs_ were divided among the ancient inhabitants of that barony, some having a greater portion allotted and some a less; howbeit every one did render a yearly rent of 20s. out of every _tath_, whereof 12s. 6d. was granted to Bryan McHugh Oge McMahon as a chief rent in lieu of all other duties, and 7s. 6d. was reserved to the Crown; which plot was observed in every of the other baronies, so as out of every _Ballibetagh_ containing 16 _taths_ the lord had £10 and the king £6. In Monaghan, Ross Bane McMahon had likewise five _Ballibetaghs_ granted unto him, with the like estate, rendering to the queen £30 rent, and the like chief rent out of nine _Ballybetaghs_ more, and in the same barony Patrick McArt Moyle had three _Ballybetaghs_ allotted unto him with the like estate, rendering £18 rent to the queen, and the like chief rent out of the other four. ‘In Cremorne, Ever McColla McMahon had five _Ballybetaghs_ in demesne granted unto him, and the heirs-male of his body, rendering £30 rent to the Crown, and the like chief rent out of twelve other _Ballybetaghs_; and in the same barony one Patrick Duffe McColla McMahon had two _Ballybetaghs_ and a half assigned to him in demesne, rendering £15 rent, and the like chief rent out of two other _Ballybetaghs_ and a half. ‘In the _Tuough_, containing only fifteen _Ballybetaghs_, Patrick McKenna had three _Ballybetaghs_ and twelve _taths_ in demesne, given unto him, with the like estate, rendering £22 rent as aforesaid, and the like chief rent out of seven other _Ballybetaghs_; and in the same barony one Bryan Oge McMahowne, brother to Hugh Roe, had the like estate granted unto him in three _Ballybetaghs_, rendering £18 rent in like manner, and the like chief rent out of two other _Ballybetaghs_.’ These grants no doubt reflect the ancient occupation of the district, the various returns in kind and in service being commuted for a money payment, and the holdings being made direct from the Crown, part of each barony being held in demesne by the chiefs, and the rest by what Sir John calls the inferior inhabitants, who had, he says, likewise ‘their demesne and rents allotted to them, and their several portions of land granted unto them and to their heirs.’ Besides these temporal lands there were, he says, ‘the spiritual lands, which the Irish call _Termons_, which were granted to sundry servitors rendering 10s. to the Crown for every _tath_; which out of all the church lands amounted to £70 per annum or thereabouts,’ that is, to 140 _taths_, equal to about nine _Ballybetaghs_. From the return with regard to the county of Fermanagh we obtain similar information, with some additional particulars deserving of notice. ‘For the lands of inheritance in Fermanagh,’ otherwise called Maguire’s Country, he says, ‘they stood not in the same terms as the lands in Monaghan. For the signorie or chiefry and the demesne lands, that were the inheritance of MacGuire himself, were reduced and vested in the Crown.’... But forasmuch as the greatest part of the inhabitants of that country did claim to be freeholders of their several possessions, who, surviving the late rebellion, had never been attainted, so as we could not clearly entitle the Crown to their land;’ and he adds, that ‘they held the same not according to the course of common law but by the custom of tanistry, whereby the eldest of every sept claimed a chiefry over the rest, and the inferior sort divided their possessions after the manner of gavelkind.’ Sir John tells us that, ‘First we thought it meet to distinguish the possessions, next to inquire of the particular possessors thereof. Touching the possessions,’ he says, ‘we found Fermanagh to be divided into seven baronies, viz., Magheryboy, Clanawley, Clankelly, Maghery, Stephanagh, Tirkennedy, Knockrinie, and Lough Lurgh. Every of these baronies contains seven _Ballybetaghs_ and a half of land, chargeable with McGuire’s rent, and other contributions of the country. Every _Ballybetagh_ is divided into four quarters of land, and every quarter into four _taths_, so as a _Ballybetagh_ containeth sixteen _taths_, as it doth in Monaghan, but the measure of this country is far larger; besides the freeland, whereof there is good quantity in every barony, is no parcel of the seven _Ballybetaghs_ and a half, whereof the barony is said to consist. For these reasons Fermanagh, containing but fifty-one _Ballybetaghs_ and a half of chargeable lands, is well-nigh as large an extent as Monaghan, which hath in it an hundred _Ballybetaghs_.’ ‘Touching the freeland we found them,’ he says, ‘to be of three kinds— ‘1. Church land or _termon_ lands, as the Irish call it. ‘2. The mensal land of McGuire. ‘3. Land given to certain septs privileged among the Irish, viz., the lands of the chroniclers, rimers, and gallo-glasses. ‘The Church land was either monastery land, _Corbe_ land, or _Erenach’s_ land. The monastery land lay in the barony of Clanawley, and did not exceed two _Ballybetaghs_, but the lands belonging to the _Corbes_ and _Erenachs_ are of far greater quantity, and are found in every barony. They told me,’ he adds, ‘that the word _Termon_ doth signify in the Irish tongue a liberty or freedom, and that all church lands whatsoever are called _termon_ lands by the Irish, because they were ever free from all impositions and cuttings of the temporal lords, and had the privilege of sanctuary.’ McGuire’s mensal lands, he tells us, were ‘free from all common charges and contributions of the country, because they yielded a large proportion of butter and meal and other provisions for McGuire’s table, ‘and that though lying in several baronies did not in quantity exceed four _Ballybetaghs_, the greatest thereof being in the possession of one M‘Manus and his sept.’ The certainties of the duties or provisions yielded unto McGuire out of these mensal lands were set forth in an old parchment roll in the hands of one O’Brislan, a chronicler and principal _Brehon_ of that country. It was not very large, but was written on both sides in a fair Irish character, and contained not only ‘the certainty of McGuire’s mensal duties, but also the particular rents and other services which were answered to McGuire out of every part of the country.’ ‘Besides these mensals,’ he adds, ‘McGuire had two hundred and forty beeves or thereabouts yearly paid unto him out of the seven baronies, and about his castle at Iniskillen he had almost a _Ballybetagh_ of land, which he manured with his own churles. And this was McGuire’s whole estate in certainty, for in right he had no more, and in time of peace did exact no more. In time of war he made himself owner of all, cutting what he listed, and imposing as many _bonachts_ or hired soldiers upon them as he had occasion to use. Concerning the free land of the third kind—viz., such land as is possessed by the Irish officers of this country, viz., chroniclers, galloglasses, and rimers—the entire quantities if it were laid down together, as it is scattered in sundry baronies, doth well-nigh make two _Ballybetaghs_ and no more.’[191] This presents us with a graphic enough account of the state of the Irish tribe as it existed at the time Sir John Davis wrote; and we may supplement what he says as to the position of the _Termon_ or Church lands, and their freedom from the burdens to which the other lands were subject, by two charters preserved in the Book of Kells. The first is a grant by Conchobhar O’Maelsechlann, king of Meath, in the eleventh century, by which he gave Kildelga with its territory and lands to God and to Columkille for ever, free of all claim for _Cis_ or rent, _Cobach_ or tribute, _Fecht_ and _Sluaged_ or expedition and hosting, and _Coinnim_ from king or _Toiseach_, and the precise signification of _Coinnim_ appears from the second charter granted in the succeeding century, by which the freedom of Ardbreacain was granted by Muirchertach O’Lochlainn, king of Ireland, Diarmaid O’Maelsechlann, king of Meath, and Aedh Mac Cu-Uladh, king of Laeghaire. The people of Laeghaire had a certain tribute on the Church, viz., one night’s _Coinnmeda_ every quarter of a year. O’Lochlain, king of Ireland, and O’Maelsechlann, king of Meath, induced the king of Laeghaire to sell this night’s _Coinnmeda_ for three ounces of gold. The Church, therefore, with its territory and lands, is free for two reasons, viz., on account of the general freedom of all churches, and on account of this purchase.’[192] We thus see that the leading features of the Irish tribes, as we have gathered them in the ancient laws, can to a great extent be recognised in the state of the native population of the country, as we find it presented to us at a later period in four of her great provinces. CHAPTER V. THE FINÉ OR SEPT IN IRELAND, AND THE TRIBE IN WALES. [Sidenote: Origin of the _Finé_ or Sept.] Among the changes produced in the social organisation of the tribe by external influence and internal progress, not the least striking was the gradual development within it of the _Finé_ or septs. Though the word _Finé_ is undoubtedly used for the whole confraternity of the members of the tribe, viewed as a community united together by a supposed common origin, yet, in its strict technical sense, it was applied to those divisions of the tribe which may be called septs or clans. As soon as the superior advance of some members of the tribe over the others in wealth and importance produced a relation of superior and dependant by the latter becoming _Ceile_ or tenants of the former, while their possessions became hereditary in their families, the germ of the _Finé_ or sept was formed. When the _Boaire_, or cow-lord, was led by wealth in cattle to give over the excess of his stock to other members of the tribe, who became his _Ceile_ or dependants, a _Finé_ in its most restricted sense was formed, and the _Aire Coisring_, as he was called, became also the _Aire Finé_, or head of an inferior sept.[193] [Sidenote: The _Ciné_ or kinsfolk.] The acquisition of part of the tribe land as the absolute property of individuals, and their advance as wealthy land as well as cattle owners, led to its further development. The _Aire_ who owned an estate in land which raised him to the position of a _Flath_ or chief, and was enabled to transmit it to his descendants, led to the settlement of his family and kinsfolk on the land. He was not considered as fully entitled to the privileges of a territorial lord unless his father and grandfather had likewise been an _Aire_; and when three generations had thus been settled on the land, the offshoots of these generations formed a group consisting of the nearest agnates of the chief, which would increase in number as the generations went on. These were the _Ciné_, or kinsfolk of the head of the tribe, and to them were added those freemen of the tribe who claimed a common origin with them, and who placed themselves under the chief as his _Ceile_ or dependants. [Sidenote: The _Ceile_ or tenants.] The same causes which operated in the feudal system to lead the odal proprietors to commend themselves to an overlord as his vassals, and gradually extinguished the more ancient class of independent landholders, tended likewise in the Irish tribal system to absorb the original freemen of the tribe in the class of the _Ceile_ or dependants of the chief, and thus to add to his following and to form a constituent part of the _Finé_ or sept. With the _Saor Ceile_, or free dependants, the basis was a mutual contract for a fixed period usually of seven years, by which the _Flath_ or chief gave a portion of stock proportionate to the food-rent he was to receive in return, and was entitled along with this to the homage of the tenant during the subsistence of the contract, and to a certain amount of service in the erection of a _Dun_ or fort, the reaping of his harvest, and the _Sluaged_ or hosting; but the contract could be terminated and the parties to it return to their original relation to each other, either by the _Ceile_ or tenant returning the stock he had received, or by the _Flath_ reclaiming it. A more permanent connection was formed between him and the _Daor Ceile_ or bond tenant. Here the _Ceile_ placed himself formally under the protection of the _Flath_ as his permanent follower, and this relation was formed by his receiving a certain number of _Seds_ or cows, by way of subsidy or gift from the superior, and paying him a certain tribute termed _Sed Taurclothe_, or returnable _Seds_, as the price of his protection. This servitude was termed _Aicillne_, and the amount of the _Seds_ was regulated by the Honor price. As soon as this relation was constituted, he received an additional amount of stock in proportion to the food-rent he had to return, in the same manner as in the case of the free _Ceile_.[194] The real distinction probably was, that in the one case the _Ceile_ was in a more independent position, and possessed stock of his own as well as a share of the tribe land, besides what he received from the _Flath_. In the other he was dependent upon what he received from the _Flath_ for the whole of his stock. When the _Flath_ reclaimed his stock from the free _Ceile_, the latter had the option of becoming a bond _Ceile_, if he preferred doing so to returning his stock, and the _Flath_ was then bound to add the returnable _Seds_ to the stock he had originally given, which constituted the relation between him and the _Ceile_ as a permanent dependant. This process, therefore, not only led to the freemen of the tribe being gradually absorbed into the class of the dependants or following of the chief, but placed a powerful weapon in the hands of the latter, by which he could transform his temporary free _Ceile_ into permanent and more servile dependants. [Sidenote: The _Fuidhir_ or stranger septs.] As the _Flath_, however, increased in wealth and power and his territory extended, he was not satisfied with drawing his dependants from the tribe of which he was himself a member, but added to his followers by settling stranger septs upon his waste lands, and thus still further augmented his power. These stranger septs formed that class termed _Fuidhir_, a name which from its resemblance to the word _feud_, and from the apparent analogy between the position of the _Fuidhir_ with the vassals of the feudal system, has given rise to much speculation. These analogies are, however, more apparent than real, and there is probably no connection whatever beyond casual resemblance between the terminology of the two systems. In the oldest Glossary, that of Cormac, the term is applied to the superior instead of the dependant, and the name _Fuithir_ is said to be from _fo thir_, he who gives land (_tir_) to a stranger; but in the Brehon Laws it is applied to those stranger septs settled upon the land, and, like all the dependants, consisted of the two classes of _Saer_ and _Daer_, free and bond, according to the temporary or permanent character of the connection. With the exception that they were broken men from stranger tribes instead of members of the same tribe, their connection with the chief presented the same features with that of the native _Ceile_. Of these _Fuidhir_ there were said to be seven classes, ranging from those who had land or wealth and became detached from their tribe, to those who fled to the chief of another tribe for protection, and had nothing to give but their labour. The better class, termed _Fuidhir Grian_, obtained possession of a _Rath_ consisting of the usual five houses, received stock from the _Flath_ similar to that given to the _Ceile_, and had a _Lagenech_ or Honor price. These formed subordinate septs or _Finé_ under the chief,[195] and we are told that they ‘do not bear the liability of relationship unless there be five houses (_Treabba_) to relieve each other. If there be five houses with complete stock, they share the property of the _Finé_’ (_Finnteada_), and this is explained in the commentary to mean that ‘the _Fuidhir gabla_—that is, the _Fodaor_ or natural bondsman (_Daor_)—does not bear the crimes of his relatives unless he has five houses to relieve him, that is, five who have stock consisting of a hundred head of cattle, and unless they belong to one chief. If there be five men of them, each man having a hundred of cattle, every one of them obtains his share of the _dibadh_ land of each other, and pays for the crimes of others, like every free native, that is, when they have the five stocks of a hundred cattle and are under one chief.[196] The lower class of _Fuidhir_ were of four kinds, termed _grui_, _gola_, _gabla_, and _gill de bas_, and consisted of strangers who had lost their land by wars, or fled from having been guilty of bloodshed, and of hostages saved from death. Lower than these again were the _Bothach_ or cottiers, likewise divided into the two classes of _Saer_ and _Daer_ according as they were either small occupiers of land or were prædial slaves, and probably were remains of the oldest population of the land. [Sidenote: Territorial basis of _Finé_.] The formation of the _Finé_ or sept had thus a territorial basis, and the possession of the _Deis_ or inheritance land, which gave its owner the rank of _Aire_, was also essential to his acquiring the privileges of the chief of a _Finé_. Thus we are told in one of the law tracts that ‘there are four _deis_ rights prescribed for _flaith_ or chiefs. The ancient protection of the _Tuath_ is his office in the _Tuath_; the office of _Tuisig_ or leader, or _Tanaist Tuisig_, whichever it be, of his _Ceile gialnai_ or bond Ceile, his _Saer Ceile_, and his _Sencleithe_ or ancient adherents; the punishment of every imperfect service; and the following of _Bothach_ or cottiers and _Fuidhir_, whom he brings upon his land, because his wealth is greater and better. If there is service from them to the _Flaith_ during nine times nine years, they are _Bothach_ and _Fuidhir_, but after that they are ranked as _Sencleithe_ or old adherents.’[197] The _Finé_, as thus constituted, was formed of two distinct classes;—one being members of the same tribe as the _Flath_, and consisted of his own immediate family and relations, and of his _Saor_ and _Daor Ceile_; the other of stranger septs and broken men from other tribes, who were settled on the land, and formed a class of subordinate followers. The basis was a territorial one; but while the authority and privileges of the chief were derived from his _deis_, there was likewise a bond of union between him and the former class, derived from community of blood, and he added to his territorial rights the natural claim to their allegiance arising from his position as a hereditary chief of their _Tuath_, as well as the right to punish imperfect service. The most important of these services on the part of the _Ceile_ was the duty of following their chief to war. The Book of Aicill, one of these law tracts, tells us, ‘A chief may enforce a _Sloiged_ or hosting;’ and the commentator explains, ‘That is, there is a _smacht_ fine, upon a _Daor Ceile_ of the _Gradfeine_, that is, of the ranks below the _Aires_, for not going to it, and for coming away from it; double work upon the _Saor Ceile_ of the _Grad Feine_ for not going to it, and Honor price for coming away from it.’ Another and perhaps more ancient tract in the Brehon Laws gives us likewise a view of the _Finé_. There we are told, ‘These are the divisions of the _Finé_ of each _Flath_ or chief. His _Fuidhir_, his _Ciniud_ or kinsfolk, his _Gabail fodagniat_ (under which name his Ceile are comprised), all of whom go by the name of _Flaith Finé_, or the chiefs _Finé_ or sept.’[198] [Sidenote: The four families of the _Ciné_ or kinsfolk.] That division of the _Finé_ which was formed of those of the same tribe as the _Flath_ or chief consisted of two distinct elements, the first being the _Ciniud_ or near kinsmen of the _Flath_, and the second of those of the tribe who became his dependants and followers. The first, as descended from the original founder of the sept, had hereditary claims upon his land, as well as duties and privileges derived from kin to the chief, while the rights and duties of the latter were founded on contract; and here we come in contact with one of the most difficult and obscure features of the _Finé_ constitution, viz., that institution by which the duties and the privileges arising from kindred with the chief are limited to an artificial group of seventeen persons, which again was divided into four lesser groups, termed respectively _Geilfiné_, _Deirbhfiné_, _Iarfiné_, and _Indfiné_. These formed the _Duthaig Finé_, or the sept in its narrowest sense. The _Geilfiné_ consisted of five persons, and each of the others of four, making seventeen in all. Upon these four groups of kinsmen appears, in the first place, to have been imposed a joint responsibility for each member of it. Thus, we find in the Senchus Mor, that ‘the four nearest _Finé_ bear the crimes of each kinsman of their stock, _Geilfiné_ and _Deirbhfiné_, _Iarfiné_ and _Indfiné_;[199] and in a commentary on the Senchus Mor, they are termed ‘the four nearest _Finé_ or families,’ that is, ‘because it is four _Finés_ that sustain the liabilities of every person that is related to them intimately.’[200] They likewise possessed mutual rights of succession in the _dibad_ of the chief, or the land which passed to his kinsfolk. These rights are very elaborately stated in the Book of Aicill, but it is necessary to give them in detail in order to understand the nature of this grouping of the kinsfolk. In answer to the question, ‘What is the reciprocal right among _Finé_?’ we are told that ‘if the _Geilfiné_ division become extinct, three-fourths of the _dibad_ of the _Geilfiné_ shall go to the _Deirbhfiné_, and one-fourth to the _Iarfiné_ and the _Indfiné_—viz., three-fourths of the fourth to the _Iarfiné_, and one-fourth of it to the _Indfiné_. ‘If the _Deirbhfiné_ division has become extinct, three-fourths of its _dibad_ goes to the _Geilfiné_, and one-fourth to the _Iarfiné_ and _Indfiné_’—that is, three-fourths of the fourth to the _Iarfiné_, and a fourth of it to the _Indfiné_. ‘If the _Iarfiné_ division has become extinct, three-fourths of its _dibad_ shall go to the _Deirbhfiné_, and one-fourth of it to the _Geilfiné_ and _Indfiné_—that is, three-fourths of the fourth to the _Geilfiné_, and one-fourth of it to the _Indfiné_. ‘If the _Indfiné_ has become extinct, three-fourths of its _dibad_ shall go to the _Iarfiné_, and one-fourth of it to the _Geilfiné_ and _Deirbhfiné_—that is, three-fourths of the fourth to the _Deirbhfiné_, and one-fourth of it to the _Geilfiné_. ‘If the _Geilfiné_ and _Deirbhfiné_ both become extinct, three-fourths of their _dibad_ shall go to the _Iarfiné_, and one-fourth to the _Indfiné_. ‘If the _Indfiné_ and _Iarfiné_ both become extinct, three-fourths of their _dibad_ shall go to the _Deirbhfiné_, and one-fourth to the _Geilfiné_. ‘If the _Deirbhfiné_ and _Iarfiné_ have both become extinct, three-fourths of their _dibad_ shall go to the _Geilfiné_, and one-fourth to the _Indfiné_. ‘If the _Geilfiné_ and _Indfiné_ have both become extinct, three-fourths of the _dibad_ of the _Geilfiné_ shall go to the _Deirbhfiné_, and one-fourth of it to the _Iarfiné_; three-fourths of the _dibad_ of the _Indfiné_ shall go to the _Iarfiné_, and one-fourth to the _Deirbhfiné_.’ This seems to exhaust all possible combinations, and some provisions follow which are not very easily understood; but when it is added, ‘And the whole number of the seventeen men are then forthcoming, and if they be not, there shall be no partition, but the nearest of kin shall take it,’ the meaning seems to be that the group of seventeen persons must be made up in each case, but if that cannot be done, there is no partition of the _dibad_ to the person nearest in degree to the extinct family. We are also told that ‘the _Geilfiné_ is the youngest and the _Indfiné_ the oldest,’ and that ‘if one person has come up into the _Geilfiné_ so as to make it excessive, that is, more than five persons, a man must go out of it up into the _Deirbhfiné_, and a man is to pass from one _Finé_ into the other up as far as the _Indfiné_, and a man is to pass from that into the _Duthaig n-Daine_ or community.’[201] It is exceedingly difficult to form anything like a clear conception of the true nature of what appears to be so highly artificial an arrangement, and it is probable that if it ever really existed in its entirety, it must soon have broken down under the various modifications which the natural progress of society brought to bear upon the community. So far as we can gather, there seems undoubtedly to have been the tie of kindred among themselves, and between them and the chief; and a portion of the territory of the _Flath_ appears to have been assigned to them under the name of _dibad_, the portion occupied by each group being possessed in common by its members, so that it was only when the subordinate groups became extinct that a redistribution of it took place. [Sidenote: Members of the four families.] Of what members of the _Finé_, then, did each of these groups really consist? There seems to be no doubt as to the number which formed the members of each. The _Geilfiné_ consisted of five persons only, who were nearest of kin to the chief, but these might be found either in the descending or ascending line, or were, in the strictest sense of the term, collateral. The descending line was termed _Belfiné_, and the _Geilfiné_ consisted of the father, the son, the grandson, the great-grandson, and the great-great-grandson, to the fifth generation. The ascending line was termed _Culfiné_, or back family, and we are told that, viewed in this connection, the _Geilfiné_ consisted of the father’s brother, and his son, to the fifth generation.[202] The collateral relationship was termed _Taobhfiné_, or side family; and, according to Mr. O’Donovan and the authorities he refers to, the _Geilfiné_ is defined as ‘the first or direct family; the father and his two sons, and two grandsons; collateral tribe.’ The _Deirbhfiné_ as ‘the second tribe; the next in point of dignity to the _Geilfiné_; the two grandsons and their two sons.’ The _Iarfiné_ as ‘the after family; two sons of grandsons and their sons, making four persons;’ and _Indfiné_ as ‘the fourth and lowest division of a tribe.’[203] He does not define the members of which it consists, but it may be inferred that he held it to consist of the two sons of great-grandsons and their sons, corresponding to the five generations of the Brehon Laws. [Sidenote: The _Geilfiné_ chief.] The father, who in each case was the head of the _Geilfiné_, is evidently the person frequently referred to in these Laws as the _Geilfiné_ chief, and the other four members of this group were evidently his nearest agnates, according to the position of the family, but the members of the other three groups, as presented to us in these Laws, cannot be viewed as his descendants. The _Deirbhfiné_, _Iarfiné_, and _Indfiné_, were obviously collateral and contemporary with the _Geilfiné_, otherwise it is impossible that they could, on the one hand, have been jointly responsible for a kinsman, or, on the other, have shared in the succession of each as they became extinct; and we can gather from several expressions in the Laws that such was the case. Thus we find in the Senchus Mor the seventeen persons are termed relatives, and are defined in the commentary as ‘kinsmen’ (_Bleogain_),[204] and these are distinguished as _Tobach_, _Saigi_, and _Bleogain_, or kinsmen in general.[205] In another commentary these terms are thus defined: ‘_Tobach_, that is, the nearest kinsman, that is, the liability of his son and grandson. _Saigi_, that is, the middle kinsman, that is, the liability of a kinsman as far as seventeen. _Bleogain_, that is, kinsman, that is, the farthest kinsman or _Cin_.’[206] The first obviously refers to the constituent members of the _Geilfiné_; the second to the three other groups; and the third to the remainder of the kin of the chief who did not belong to these artificial groups. Again, we are told that ‘the tribe property (_Finntiu_) is claimed backwards; it is divided between three _Finé_; an extern branch stops it, if the five persons perish. Except as regards the liability of relationship, if the family become extinct; except a fourth part to the _Findfiné_. From seventeen men out it is decided that they are not a _Duthaig Finé_, or tribe community,’ and this is explained in the commentary to mean that ‘the hereditary right of the _Geilfiné_ group goes backwards to the _Deirbhfiné_, who have their share of it when it is divided among the three _Finé_, that is, the _dibad_ land is divided between the three _Finé_ groups, viz., the _Deirbhfiné_, the _Iarfiné_, and the _Indfiné_. An extern branch stops it, that is, the branch by which the land is detained is a branch that is hitherto extern to the _Geilfiné_, that is, the _Deirbhfiné_.’ The liability of relationship is explained that, ‘as they share the _dibad_ land, so they shall pay for the crimes of their relatives.’ It is added that, ‘from the seventeen men out, it is then they are distinguished, so that they are not a _Duthaig Finé_ or tribe community, but a _Duthaig n-Daine_, or a community of people.’[207] From these notices it is apparent that there underlies the formation of these groups the idea of five generations. These were expressed by the terms _Athair_, father, _Mac_, son, _Ua_, grandson, _Earmua_, great-grandson, _Innua_, great-great-grandson, and that each of the four groups was one generation less than the other, the _Geilfiné_, or white family, being the chiefs immediate family, including himself;[208] but it must not be supposed that these degrees of relationship implied descent from the same individual, otherwise it would require that the five generations were alive at the same time. The idea rather is that it required five generations from the founder of the _Finé_ to complete the group of seventeen persons. Thus his own immediate family, to the number of four, constituted his _Geilfiné_. Then as each new person was born into the _Geilfiné_, the older member passed into a new group termed _Deirbhfiné_, and this went on till the group extended to nine persons; then, as new members were born to these two, older members passed into another group called _Iarfiné_,; and so on, as new generations were added, till the group of _Indfiné_ was formed, and the whole number of seventeen was completed, the members of each being fathers and sons, and representing the fourth and fifth generations from the common ancestor; and as generations went on, the kin or kinsfolk of the chief passed through the alembic of these four groups and disappeared into the commonalty of the _Finé_, leaving always a residuum of seventeen persons behind them. These relationships, then, meant not descent from the same individual but from the founder of the _Finé_, and expressed the distance of each group from the stem-line of hereditary chiefs, and the degrees of relationship between them and the chief for the time being. This view of the degrees of relationship, as connected with the five generations, seems to be implied in one of the regulations regarding ‘_Saer_ stock tenure.’ We are there told that ‘if one chief has received stock from another, there shall be no returning of the _Saer_ stock without _Seds_, in that case until one heir transmits to another.’ ‘If it is from the chief next to him he has taken it, it is grandson upon grandson, or great-grandson upon great-grandson, or the son of a great-grandson upon the son of a great-grandson, and the number of degrees which are between the person who gave the stock and the person to whom it is given, is the number of relatives who shall claim the stock without _Seds_ of _Saer_ stock.’[209] The _Geilfiné_ were thus what was termed youngest cadets; and the _Indfiné_, the oldest cadets, recognised as forming part of the kin, and as longest separated from the chief, were the most powerful family next to his own. The following table, in which the succession to the _dibad_ land is included, will show this conception of the nature of these groups:— _Common Ancestor, Geilfiné Chief_. | +—————————————————————————- —-+ | | _Son, _Son._ Geilfiné Chief_. | | | +—————————————————————-+ | | | | _Grandson, _Son._ _Grandson._ Geilfiné Chief_. | | | | | +———————————-+ | | | | | | | | 1. _Geilfiné_ | _Son._ | _Grandson_. |_Great-grandson_. chief, | | | | | | when complete. | | | | | | | | | | | | | 2, 3. | 6, 7. | 10, 11. | 14, 15. Two sons. | Two | Two great- | Two | | grandsons. | grandsons. | great-great- | | | | | | grandsons. | | | | | | | 4, 5. | 8, 9. | 12, 13. | 16, 17. Two grandsons. | Their two sons. | Their two sons. | Their two sons. | | | GEILFINÉ. | DEIRBHFINÉ. | IARFINÉ. | INDFINÉ. —————————-+——————————-+——————————+———————— If extinct. | Obtains 3-4ths. | 3-4ths of 1-4th. | 1-4th of 1-4th. —————————-+——————————-+——————————+———————— Obtains 3-4ths. | If extinct. | 3-4ths of 1-4th. | 1-4th of 1-4th. —————————-+——————————-+——————————+———————— 3-4ths of 1-4th. | 3-4ths. | If extinct. | 1-4th of 1-4th. —————————-+——————————-+——————————+———————— 1-4th of 1-4th. | 3-4ths of 1-4th. | 3-4ths. | If extinct. —————————-+——————————-+——————————+———————— If extinct. | If extinct. | 3-4ths of both. | 1-4th of both. —————————-+——————————-+——————————+———————— 1-4th of both. | 3-4ths of both. | If extinct. | If extinct. —————————-+——————————-+——————————+———————— 3-4ths of both. | If extinct. | If extinct. | 1-4th of both. —————————-+——————————=+——————————+———————— If extinct. |3-4ths of _Geilfiné_.|1-4th of _Geilfiné_.| If extinct. | 1-4th of _Indfiné_. |3-4ths of _Infiné_. | ——————————+——————————-+——————————+———————— 17 men must in this case be made up. ———————————————————————————————————————— It is hardly possible that so complicated a system should have long remained intact through all the changes produced in the social system of these tribes by the mere course of time; and it probably, at least to some extent, broke down under the growing importance of the family of the oldest cadet, which became more and more independent the longer it was separated from that of the chief, and so would narrow the group which formed his kin; and thus we see that as it became the most powerful family next to his, there came to be alternate election of the king or chief from these two families, the head of the one being always nominated Tanist to the other. [Sidenote: Relation of _Geilfiné_ chief to the _Ri Tuath_.] Such being probably the nature of these groups, it becomes necessary to examine their relation to the _Tuath_ and that of the _Flath Geilfiné_ or _Geilfiné_ chief to the _Ri Tuath_. We find in the Senchus Mor the following statement:—‘The head of each _Finé_, or the _Ceannfiné_, should be the man of the _Finé_ who is the most experienced, the most noble, the most wealthy, the wisest, the most learned, the most powerful to oppose, the most steadfast to sue for profits and for losses.’ The two qualities of ‘most noble’ in race and ‘most wealthy’ in cattle can only be found united in the _Flath_ or chief, and he is expected to possess the rest. We therefore find in the commentary ‘the head of each _Finé_’ defined to be ‘every one who is head chief of the _Geilfiné_.’ We are then told that ‘every person in a _Tuath_ accepts equal stock or subsidy from the _Flath Geilfiné_ or _Geilfiné_ chief, and the _Flath Geilfiné_ accepts stock or subsidy from the _Ri Tuath_, or else every person in the _Tuath_ accepts it from the _Ri Tuath_, though it is from him that the _Flath Geilfiné_ takes his _Flaithius_ or chiefship.’[210] We have here an alternative statement. In the one the members of the tribe take stock from the _Geilfiné_ chief, that is, are his dependants. In the other they take stock directly from the _Ri Tuath_. These statements represent different states of the tribe; the older state, when the members of the tribe were equal and independent of each other, and the later when they had become dependent upon the _Flath_ or chief; but both might exist at the same time, some taking stock from the chief and some from the king. There was this distinction between the chief and the king as regards _Saer_ stock tenure, that the connection between the _Flath_ and the _Ceile_ was based upon contract, and the connection which was freely entered into might be dissolved by either party; but we are told in the _Cain tsaorrthadh_ or law of _Saer_ stock tenure, ‘a man need never accept of _Daer_ stock from any other unless he likes it himself, and he need not accept even of _Saer_ stock from any but his own king, and he cannot refuse taking _Saer_ stock from his own king.’ And further, ‘he cannot separate from his own king at any time, either while he holds by _Saer_ stock tenure or by _Daer_ stock tenure.’[211] And in the _Cain Aigillne_ or law of _Daer_ stock tenure we read, ‘The law does not require of a man to accept of _Daer_ stock from his own chief or from an extern chief, or from his own king or from an extern king, but the law requires of him to take _Saer_ stock from his own king. If he takes _Daer_ stock, it should be from his own king.’[212] This power which the _Ri Tuath_ possessed of forcing the members of the tribe to become his dependants in _Saer_ stock tenure, and of retaining them permanently, enabled him to increase his dependants to any extent; and besides the _Ceile_ whom he thus gathered around him he likewise settled _Fuidhir_ or stranger septs upon his waste land in proportion to the extent of his territory and the amount of his wealth. He thus not only occupied the position of _Ri Tuath_ or king of the tribe, with all its rights and privileges, but was likewise the _Flath_ or chief of the most powerful sept within it. The _Flath Geilfiné_ or _Geilfiné_ chief was likewise the chief of an entire _Finé_ or sept. This is implied in a passage in the tract ‘Of the judgment of every crime,’ where we are told that ‘the reason why the crime goes upon the _Deirbhfiné_ and the _Iarfiné_ before it goes upon the _Flath_ or chief, is because it is one chief that is over them, the _Flath Geilfiné_, and he is chief of four _Finés_ or groups.’ Another passage in the Book of Aicill also shows that he was next in rank and power to the king, for it apportions the fines for injuring the roads of a _Tuath_ between the _Ri_ or king and the _Flath Geilfiné_, and adds, ‘What is the reason that there is more due to the _Ri Tuath_ for injuring his principal road than his by-road, and that there is more due to the _Geilfiné_ chief for injuring his by-road than his principal road? The reason is, the principal road is more the peculiar property of the _Ri Tuath_ than the by-road, and the by-road is more the peculiar property of the _Flath Geilfiné_ than the principal road.’[213] Where then are we to recognise the _Flath Geilfiné_ among the _Aires_ of a _Tuath_ of the _Grad Flath_? The _Geilfiné_ chief, as we see, received his stock or subsidy direct from the _Ri Tuath_, but there were only two of the _Aires_ who were in this position, and in this respect the _Aires_ of a _Tuath_ fall into two divisions. The _Aire Desa_ and the _Aire Ard_ received their stock from a _Flath_, but the _Aire Tuise_ and the _Aire Forgaill_ from the _Ri Tuath_ direct, and it is in this latter division we have to look for the _Flath Geilfiné_. The _Aire Forgaill_ was the highest grade of the _Aires_, and is said to be so named ‘because it is he that testifies (_Fortgella_) to the grades in every case in which denial of a charge is sought, and because his quality is superior to that of his fellows;’ while the _Aire Tuise_ is said to be so called ‘because his race has precedence,’ or, as it may be more literally rendered, ‘because he is _Tuisech_ or leader from race’ (_Toisech a Ciniul_).[214] The former, as the superior of the two, may probably be viewed as the _Flath Geilfiné_ or _Geilfiné_ chief, and exercised the judicial functions of a chief; while the latter, as the oldest cadet, led the forces of the clan when called out either by the chief or by the king on a _Sluaged_ or hosting. [Sidenote: Law of Succession.] Although the position of _Flath_ or chief of a sept, as well as that of _Ri Tuath_ or head of the whole tribe, was hereditary in the family but elective in the person, there can be little doubt that the senior of the family, as representing the founder of it, was usually elected as entitled to the position, unless disqualified by some defect mental or physical, and this principle is recognised in the tract on Succession, where it is thus laid down:—‘The senior with the _Finé_ or sept, dignity with the _Flath_ or chief, wisdom with the _Eclais_ or church;’ and this rule is thus illustrated in the commentary: ‘Ignorance was set aside for wisdom in the orders of the church. An _Aitech_ or tenant of the _Grad Feiné_ was set aside for a _Flath_ or chief, a junior was set aside for the senior, that is, the person who is junior shall rise or walk out of the kingship or the abbacy or the _Geilfiné_ chiefship before the person who is senior.’ And again—‘Age is rewarded by the _Feiné_, for where there are two _Aires_ or lords of the same family who are of equal dignity and property, the senior shall take precedence.’ And again—‘The senior is entitled to noble election,’ but ‘if the kings be equally old and good, lots are to be cast between them respecting the kingship, but if one of them is older than the other he shall go into it.’ Finally, it is laid down that ‘the junior shares and the senior is elected,’ and that ‘it is according to desert they come into power, and it is according to the goodness of the branch itself and the goodness of the grade also, and the most worthy person of the branch shall go into it, that is, the best person of that branch. And the head of all according to the _dera_ of the _Finé_, that is, that every one who is a head should be afterwards according to the _Finé_.’ The following commentary on the qualities required in a chief further illustrates the principles on which the selection is made:—‘The noblest, that is, in age or in race (_Cenel_). The highest, that is, in grade. The wealthiest, that is, in ploughing and reaping. The shrewdest, that is, in wisdom or in mind. The wisest, that is, in learning. Popular as to compurgation, that is, who has good friends with compurgators, that is, good friends outside the territory adhering to him. The most powerful to sue, that is, to prosecute for each of them. The most firm to sue for profits, that is, of the _dibad_ property. And losses, that is, liabilities.’ Finally, ‘the body of each is his _Finé_, that is, the body of each person who is head is his _Finé_. There is no body without a head, that is, of themselves, over them, according to law.’[215] It was the operation of this rule that led to brothers being preferred to sons, and when there was alternate succession the collateral in the same degree was preferred to the son of his predecessor, as being one degree nearer to the common ancestor. [Sidenote: _Sluaged_ or hosting.] The regulations for compelling attendance upon the _Sluaged_ or hosting still further illustrate the relations between the king and the chief of a sept. They are contained in the Book of Aicill, and are as follows:—‘If a man of the _Grad Flath_, with his _Daer Ceile_, came away from it (that is, the hosting), or if the _Ceile_ came away from it, if ordered by the chief, Honor price shall be paid for it, half of which goes to the king of the province and the other half is divided into three parts; one third goes to the king who is nearest the king of the province in upward gradation (that is, the king of a _Mortuath_), one-third to the _Ri Tuath_ who is over those below, and one-third to the chiefs and intermediate chiefs (_Flathaibh_) who are between them in the middle,’ by which latter distinction the two divisions of the _Aires_ of the _Grad Flath_ are intended. ‘If it was a man of the _Grad Flath_ and one _Ceile_ that came away from it, Honor price is to be paid for it also; and the share which the _Ceile_ should pay, if all the _Ceile_ had been concerned in it, is what he is to pay now, and the remainder is to be paid by him (that is, the chief), and the same division is made of the half for the king of the province, and the other half is divided into three parts.’ ‘If it was the _Ceile_ themselves that came away from it without the chief’s leave, the _Smacht_ fine or Honor price, which is due for it, is to be paid by them; one-third of it goes to the king of the province, and one-third to the chief whose _Ceile_ came away, and the other third is to be divided into three parts, one-third of which goes to the king of the _Tuath_ who is over them, and one third to the chiefs and intermediate chiefs who are in the middle between them;’ to which is added, ‘Whenever it is _Smacht_ fine that is paid, it shall be paid according to the rank of the person who pays it; and whenever Honor price is paid, it shall be paid according to the rank of the person to whom it is paid.’ ‘What is the reason that there is a greater fine upon the _Grad Flath_ for not going to the hosting than upon the _Grad Feiné_? The reason is, The hosting or the Dun-building suffers a greater loss from the absence of the _Grad Flath_ than from that of the _Grad Feiné_, and they are more needed, and it is right there should be a greater fine upon them.’ ‘What is the reason that there is a greater fine imposed upon them for coming away from it than for not going to it? The reason of it is, It is more dangerous for the king to be deserted outside in an enemy’s territory, than that they should not go out with him at first.’[216] [Sidenote: Fosterage.] The tie between the chiefs and their dependants was still further strengthened by the custom of fosterage, by which the children of the upper classes were intrusted to a family belonging to the inferior ranks to be brought up and trained along with their own children. This custom prevailed from an early period among the Irish tribes, but it is obvious that such an institution could only have arisen after the distinction of ranks had been fully organised in the tribe. The influence of early association with the earlier stage in the constitution of the tribe, when its free members were in a state of independence and equality with each other, may have led to their regarding the children under age, and before they had acquired any independent rights and privileges, as occupying no better position, and so created a sentiment that they ought to be trained along with the children of a lower rank, long after the reality which gave rise to the feeling had ceased to exist. Be this as it may, we find the institution in full operation in these Ancient Laws, and the regulations connected with it forming part of the Senchus Mor. According to it there were two kinds of fosterage with the _Finé_ which had not been annulled—fosterage for affection, and fosterage for payment. The clothing and the food of the children given to the inferior families to foster is minutely regulated. Those of the children of the _Grad Feiné_ were to be black or yellow or grey, and old clothes were to be worn by the sons of an _Ogaire_, and new by the sons of a _Boaire_. The sons of an _Aire desa_ were to wear clothes of a different colour every day, and of two different colours on Sunday, and to have both old and new clothes. The sons of the superior chiefs were to wear clothes of two colours every day, both old and new, and new clothes of two colours on Sunday; while the sons of the _Aire Forgill_, the highest of all, and of the king, were to have new coloured clothes at all times, and all embroidered with gold and silver. How far such regulations were ever practically observed may well be doubted, but those regarding food are probably enough. Porridge[217] was to be given to them all, but the materials of which it is made and the flavouring vary according to the rank of the parents of the children. The sons of the inferior grades are fed to bare sufficiency on porridge made of oatmeal and butter-milk or water taken with salt butter. The sons of chiefs are fed to satiety on porridge made of barley-meal, upon new milk with fresh butter. The sons of kings are fed on porridge made of flour, upon new milk taken with honey. The food of all, however, was alike, till the end of a year or of three years. The price of the fosterage of the son of an _Ogaire_ is three _Seds_ or three _Samhaiscs_, that is, three-year-old heifers; and for his daughter four _Seds_, a _Sed_ in addition being given for the daughter, because the household arrangements for her accommodation are more extensive than for the sons. This was the lowest price given, and the _Fer Midbuid_, or man of the humblest rank, could not perform the fosterage for less. The boys were to be taught the herding of lambs, calves, kids, and young pigs, and kiln-drying, combing, and wood-cutting; and the daughters the use of the quern, the kneading-trough, and the sieve. The price of the fosterage of the son of a _Boaire_ was five _Seds_, or three cows. The price of the fosterage of the son of an _Aire_ was ten _Seds_, and instruction in the usual sciences is given him; that is, the sons were taught horsemanship, _brann_-playing, shooting, chess-playing, and swimming; and the daughters sewing and cutting-out, and embroidery. The price of the fosterage of the son of a king was thirty _Seds_, and the foster-sons were to have horses in time of races, and the foster-father was bound to teach them horsemanship. The relationship thus formed was considered most friendly, and was connected with the _Geilfiné_ relationship, but the passage which states it is so obscure that it is difficult to attach a definite meaning to it. The children remained with the foster-father till the boys were seventeen and the girls fourteen. The age of the boys was divided into three periods. The first extended till he was seven years old; the second from seven to twelve years, and the third till he was seventeen. During the first period the foster-father might punish him for faults with castigation, and during the second with castigation without food, but for his first fault there were to be three threatenings without castigation, and after the age of twelve he had to make compensation in the usual way, with regard to which there are many minute regulations. On the termination of the fosterage the foster-father returned the children with a parting gift, which was regulated according to the Honor price; and in return, the foster-son was bound to maintain his foster-father in sickness or old age, in the same manner as he would maintain his own father and mother. Such were the leading features of the system of fosterage as presented to us in the Senchus Mor.[218] [Sidenote: Later state of the _Finés_.] The ancient topographical descriptions of some of the territories in the three provinces of Munster, Connaught, and Ulster, which have been printed by the Irish Archæological and Celtic Society, and which have been already referred to as affording illustrations of the tribe system, so far as preserved, likewise indicate the existence of the _Finé_ or sept. Thus in the district of _Corca Laidhe_ in Munster, which consisted of eight _Tuaths_ or tribe territories, in describing the district of _Cuil-Cearnadha_, it is added, ‘These are its hereditary tribes (_Fineadha duchusa_), O’Rothlain its _Toiseach_, and Ua Cuinn, Ua Iarnain, and Ua Finain,’ three septs. Again, of the country or _Duthaich_ of Gillamichil, which formed a _Tuath_, we are told, ‘These were its hereditary leaders (_Oclaich Duthaich_), O’Duibharda, O’Dunlaing, Oh-Ogain, O’Dubhagan,’ etc. It is unnecessary to go through the whole of them, or the _Oclaich Duthaich_ of the other _Tuaths_, as Mr. O’Donovan adds a note which sufficiently explains their relation to the tribe. He says that these _Oglaich_ ‘were the petty chiefs, _Kenfinies_ or heads of families,’ properly septs, ‘who held their lands by the same right of descent from the common ancestor as the chief, or rather _Toiseach_, himself; and they were called ’_Oglaich_, young heroes, because they were bound to assist him in his wars against his enemies at the heads of their respective clans.’[219] We have some information, too, regarding the _Finé_ or sept in Connaught. Thus in the ‘Tribes and Customs of Hy Fiachraich’ we read that Fiachra, son of Eochaidh Muighmheadhoin, _Ardri_ of Erin, colonised this district, and had a son, Amhalgaidh, from whose son, Fedhlim, sprang the _Cineal Fedhlimidh_, which consisted of ‘O Ceallachain, O Caithniadh, Mac Coinin, O Muimhneachain, Mac Fhionain, O Gearadhain, O’Conboirne. These are the _Cineal Fedhlimidh_ of Jorrus.’ The _Cineal Feidhlimidh_ here is the tribe occupying a _Tuath_, and the others are the _Finé_ or septs of which it was composed. Then from ‘Aongus, son of Amhalgaidh, came the Cineal Aongusa in Hy-Amhalgaidh, viz., O Muireadhaigh, _Taoisig_ of the Lagan.’ Here we have the _Taoisech_ at the head of the _Cineal_ or tribe, and then we are told that ‘of the descendants of Aongus are the people of _Dun Finne_, or fort of the _Finé_, viz. O Cuinn, MagOdhrain, O Comhdhan, O’Duibhlearga, O Bearga, O Blighe, O Duanma or Duanmaigh;’ and these were the _Finé_ or septs. Amhalgaidh had other sons by Earca, daughter of Eochaidh, king of Leinster, the eldest of whom was Fergus, and his son Muireadhach was _Rig Ua n-Amhalgaidh_, or king of Hy-Amhalgaidh. The descendants of this Muireadhach possessed ‘the _Triocha Ceud_ of Bac and of Gleann Nemthinne, and the half _Triocha Ceud_ of Breudach. These are the hereditary tribes (_Fineadhoigh Dudhchusa_) of Bac, viz., O Lachtna, _Taoisioc_ of the two Bacs and of the Gleann, and of them O Dubhagain and the Clann Firbisigh, O Maoilruaidh of Ardachaidh, and O’Cuimin of Lios Cuimin on the Muaidh. These are the families or septs (_Fineada_) of Breudach, viz., O Toghda, Taoiseach of Breudach, O Glaimin, O Luachaidh, and O Gilin.’[220] Here we have two groups of _Finé_ or septs, with a _Toisech_ at the head of each. Lastly, from Aongus Fionn, another son of Amhalgaidh, are O’Gaibhtheachan, O’Flainn, and O’Maoilhiona, chiefs (_Flaithe_) of Calraighe Muighe h-Eleag. In one of MacFirbis’s tracts he deduces the tribes and septs descended from Brian, the son and successor of Eochaidh Muighmeadoin, king of Connaught. He is said to have had ‘twenty-four sons, and from Echean, one of them, descended the _Cinel n-Echean_ or tribe of Echean, consisting of the septs of O’Biasta, O’Bli, O’Caisleorach, O’Ruanuidhen, and O’Fionnucain. From Fergus came the _Cinel Fergusa_ of Echtge, consisting of the septs of O’Brain, O’Bruachain, O’Conrethe, and O’Cairriodha, _Taoiseachs_ of Cinel Fergusa. From Erc Dearg, or the Red, came the _Cinel Deirg_ in Connaught; from Esse or Essile came the Tuath Esille; from Aongus are the _Cinel n-Aongusa_ of Galway, that is, the O’Hallorans with their branches; from Tenedh the _Corco-Tenedh_, and Muichead, from whom _Corco-Muichead_; from Cana, the O’Cananans in Uaithne; Neachtain, from Tir Neachtain, with their septs (_Fineadhaibh_); two Carbrys, viz., Carbry Conrith, from whom is descended St. Barry of Corc, and Carbry Aircheann, from whom the Hy Briuin Ratha in West Connaught; three Conalls, viz., Conall Oirisin, from whom the men of Umalia, Conall Glun, from whom the O’Monahans, _Taoiseachs_ of the three _Tuaths_, and Conall Cortaine, from whom the O’Maolduibh; Eochaidh, from whom the Cinel n-Eachach; and Enna Eamalach, from whom Cinel n-Eanna; Duach Galach, the youngest, from whom the kings of Rath Cruachan are descended.’[221] In the province of Ulster we find, besides the _Tuaths_ which formed the subdivisions of the larger districts and were equivalent to the tribe territories, that in some a smaller division is mentioned termed a _Cinement_. Thus in the district of the Glynnes, consisting of seven subdivisions, six are termed _Tuoghs_ or _Tuaths_, and one is the ‘_Cynamond_ of Armoy and Raghlin,’ containing the parish of Armoy and the island of Rathlin. Again, among the _Tuoghs_ in North Clandeboy we find the ‘_Cinament_ of Knockboynabrade;’ the ‘_Cinament_ of Duogh Connor,’ containing the sixteen towns of Connor; the _Cinament_ of Kilmahevet; the _Cinament_ of Ballinowre, represented by the modern parish of Ballinowre, and containing 8000 acres; the _Cinament_ of Carntall, Monksland, and Carnemony; the _Cinament_ of Dirrevolgie, _alias_ Fealaogh; and the _Cinament_ of Clandermot, containing four Ballys or townlands.[222] This word Cinament is derived from _Cine_, a sept, and _Minand_, a habitation or residence, and these smaller districts were obviously the possessions of septs or _Finés_ which had become detached from their tribe, and thus we find the name of the Clan Dermot connected with one of them. Again, we find the Barony of Lower Castlereagh in South Clandeboy consisted of five smaller territories termed Slut Henrickies, Slut Kellies, Slut Hugh Bricks, Slut Bryan Boye, Slut Durnings, and Slut Owen mac Quin, the last two forming one district; but this word _Slut_ is the Irish _Sliocht_ or sept, and the names are corrupted from _Sliocht Enri Caoich_, or the sept of Henry the Blind; _Sliocht Ceallaigh_, or sept of the Kellies; _Sliocht Aodh breac_, or sept of Hugh the Freckled; _Sliocht Briuin buidhe_, or sept of Brian the Yellow; _Sliocht Owen mhic Cuinn_, or sept of Owen son of Conn.[223] Sir John Davis, in his Letter to the Earl of Salisbury, written about the same time, gives us a very clear account of the position of these septs in the counties of Fermanagh and Cavan. In Fermanagh he derived his information from certain of the clerks or scholars of that country, who knew all the septs and families and their branches, and the dignity of one sept above another, and what families or persons were chief of every sept, and who were next, and who were of third rank, and so forth, till they descended to the most inferior man in all the barony. Moreover, they took upon them to tell ‘what quantity of land every man ought to have by the custom of their country, which is of the nature of gavelkind, whereby, as their septs or families did multiply, their possessions have been from time to time divided and subdivided, and broken into so many small parcels as almost every acre of land had a several owner, who termeth himself a lord and his portion of land his country.’ ‘Notwithstanding, as McGuire himself had a chiefry over all the country, and some demesne that did ever pass to him only who carried that title, so was there a chief of every sept who had certain services, duties, and demesnes that ever passed to the Tanist of that sept, and never was subject to division.’ And in his return of the state of the county of Cavan he gives the following general account:—‘In the Irish countries, where the custom of Tanistry is not extinguished, the tenures are everywhere alike. There is first a general chieftain of every country or territory, which hath some demesne and some household provisions yielded unto him by all the inhabitants under him; every sept or surname hath a particular chieftain or Tanist, which hath likewise his peculiar demesne and duties, and these possessions go by succession or election, entirely without any division; but all the other lands holden by the inferior inhabitants are partable in course of gavelkind, wherein there is no difference made between legitimate sons and bastards.’[224] [Sidenote: The Tribe in Wales.] Such, then, being the leading features of the _Tuath_ or tribe, and the _Finé_ or sept, so far as we can gather them from the Ancient Laws of Ireland, and as we find them exemplified in the later condition of the country, which it is essential for our purpose to indicate, we must now pass over to the mainland of Great Britain, and examine how far we can likewise trace them in the Ancient Laws of its Welsh population; and here we see clearly enough that a tribal system possessing in the main the same characteristics lies at the foundation of their social organisation. It was likewise modified in the main by the same influences, but that of the Church was earlier encountered, and it could hardly escape being affected by another influence to which the Irish tribe was not exposed, viz., that of the Roman institutions during the period when the Welsh population formed a part of the Roman province—an influence, however, which would be more intense in the southern and eastern districts, and more superficial in the mountainous region of the west, and in the frontier districts between the Roman walls, whose Welsh population afterwards formed the kingdom of Strathclyde. The Welsh codes which have been preserved are those of Gwynedd or North Wales, and Dyved and Gwent, the west and east divisions of South Wales. Besides these we have some fragments of Commentaries printed under the title of Anomalous Laws, and we have also the advantage of possessing a Latin version of the Laws of Dyved, which gives us the equivalent of the Welsh terms in the Latin of the feudal charters. The oldest of these codes are certainly the Laws of Gwynedd or North Wales, and they recognise the influence of the Church as establishing the sanction of marriage, requiring legitimacy in the sons, and introducing a law of primogeniture in the succession to land which did not exist in the Irish system, when it declares, ‘An innate _Bon-eddig_ is a person who shall be complete as to origin in Wales both by the mother and by the father. The ecclesiastical law says again that no son is to have the patrimony but the eldest born to the father by the married wife.’ The rule was not, however, universally accepted, for it is added, ‘The law of Howel, however, adjudges it to the youngest son as well as to the oldest.’[225] These laws present to us the Cymric people, or Welsh population, who still maintained their independence, as in a more advanced stage of organisation than the Irish tribes are exhibited in the Brehon Laws. We find the land divided into _Talaeth_, or provinces, each under its _Brenhin_, or king, similarly to that of Ireland, and all under a _Brenhin penrhaith_, or supreme king; but while we can trace the original function of the king as judge of his people, the position of king had assumed a more modern aspect both as relates to his power and authority, and to his rights in connection with the land. The whole people are termed the _Cenedl y Gymry_, or race of the Cymry, and we can see that the organisation of each province was based upon an earlier tribal system, and that it must have been formed by a confederation of tribes similar to that of the Irish province. Indications of this earlier tribal system appear to be contained in ‘The Heads of the Social State’ attributed to Dyvnwal Moelmud, a mythic king. These tribes appear as _Llwylh a Cenedl_. We find also the same distinction of the people into bond and free, _Caithion_ and _Rydyon_, the Latin equivalents of which were _Nativi_ and _Liberi_, the latter alone representing the ancient free members of the tribe. These are termed in the Laws _Boneddic Cancwynawl_. They were pure Cymri both by father and mother, and the Latin equivalent was _nobilis ingenuus_. The head of the tribe was the _Pencenedl_, or _prefectus generis_, who is still recognised as a functionary in these Laws. According to the Triads of the Social State, the _Pencenedl_ must be the oldest in the _Cenedl_ so far as the ninth degree of kindred, who is in full strength of body and mind. The same process which in the case of the Irish tribe had created a class of territorial lords or _Flaith_, no doubt gave rise to the similar class whom we find fully developed in the Welsh law. These were the _Uchelwyr_ or _Breyr_, sometimes termed _Mab Uchelwyr_, just as the Irish Flaith appear as _Mac Oclaich_, and their Latin equivalent was _Optimates_. When a family succeeded in retaining possession of the same portion of land for a certain period, they were recognised as proprietors of it, and entered the class of territorial lords. Thus in the Laws of Gwynedd, ‘Whosoever shall claim land and soil by kin and descent, let him show his kin and descent from the stock from whence he is derived; and if he be a fourth man, he is a proprietor because a fourth man becomes a proprietor;’ and in the Laws of Gwent, ‘a _dadenhudd_ is the tilling by a person of land tilled by his father before him. In the fourth degree a person becomes a proprietor,—his father, his grandfather, his great-grandfather, and himself the fourth.’[226] The servile class consisted of two kinds. First, those of native race termed _Taeog_ or _Villanus_, and the _Caeth_ or prædial serf. The former class was analogous to the _Daer Ceile_ or bond tenants, and the latter to the _Sencleithe_ of the Irish. Besides the occupiers of the soil, who were native members of the tribe, there was a class of foreign settlers analogous to the _Fuidhir_ of the Irish, who were termed _Alltudion_ or strangers, and were settled on the waste lands. The land which formed originally the common property of the tribe now appears as consisting of the _Tir Gwelyawg_ or inheritance land, similar to the Irish _Orba_. Part was held in demesne and cultivated by the _Alltudion_ or stranger villains, and the _Caethion_, or prædial serfs; and part occupied by the _Taeog_, or native members of the tribe, who had become his tenants. There was also the _Tir Bwrdd_ or mensal land, and the _Tir Cylladus_ or geldable land, also termed _Tir Cyfrif_ or register land, which was divided among the _Aillt_ or native members of the tribe.[227] The mode in which the land was occupied will, however, be better understood in connection with the system of land measurement which appears in these laws. It is thus given in the Laws of Gwynedd. The smallest denomination of land was the _Erw_ or acre. It was a ridge of land. The measure was what was termed the long yoke of sixteen feet, the breadth consisted of two yokes, and the length was thirty times its breadth. It thus contained 3413 square yards, that is, somewhat less than three-fourths of an imperial acre. The basis of this system is the number four. Four of these _Erws_ formed a _Tyddyn_ or man’s house, that is, the homestead of a single family, and four _Tyddyns_ made a _Randir_ or division of land. Four _Randirs_ formed a _Gavael_, and four _Gavaels_ the _Tref_ or townland. Four _Trefs_ made a _Maenawl_. Twelve _Maenawls_ and two _Trefs_ formed a _Cymwd_, and two _Cymwds_ a _Cantrev_, so called because it thus contained one hundred _Trefs_. The _Cymwd_, however, appears to be the true unit in this system, for we are told that the two _Trefs_ which it contained, besides the twelve _Maenawls_, were for the use of the _Brenin_ or king. One was his _Maertrev_ land, and the other for his waste and summer pasture. There were thus, we are told, four legal _Erws_ of tillage in every _Tyddyn_; sixteen in every _Randir_; sixty-four in every _Gavael_; two hundred and fifty-six in the _Tref_; one thousand and twenty-four in every _Maenawl_; twelve thousand two hundred and eighty-eight in the twelve _Maenawls_. In the two _Trefs_ which pertain to the court are to be five hundred and twelve _Erws_; the whole of that, when summed up, is twelve thousand and eight hundred _Erws_ in the _Cymwd_,[228] or about 9600 imperial acres. The _Tref_ thus, in the main, corresponds to the _Ballyboe_ or ploughgate of the Irish system, and the fifty _Trefs_ of the _Cymwd_ were thus distributed among the people. Sixteen _Trefs_ formed the _Tir Cyfrif_ or register land, occupied by the _Bonedic_ or free members of the tribe. Eight _Trefs_, or two _Maenawls_, were assigned to the _Cynghellawr_ and the _Maer_ who represented the king in the Cymwd, and divided the register land among the people. Twenty-four _Trefs_, or six _Maenawls_, were the _Tir Gwelyawg_ or inheritance land, possessed by the free _Uchelwyr_; and the two _Trefs_ which remained over were the king’s _Tir Bwrdd_ or mensal land. Under the _Uchelwyr_ there was a similar distribution of land, and it is obvious that what was originally the common land of the tribe, had now come to be viewed as the property of the king; and the _Bonedic_, or original free occupiers of the land, now appear as the king’s _Aillts_. Though, like the Irish _Ceile_, they came to occupy a dependent position in relation to the superior, their original mode of occupation of the soil remained unchanged, and the _Maer_ and _Cynghellawr_ are directed to share this land equally between all in the _Tref_ or township, and on that account it is called _Tir Cyfrif_ or register land. On the other hand, the sons succeeded equally to the _Tir Gwelyawg_ or inheritance land, and if they failed, it went to their first and second cousins, after whom there was no further division, a succession very similar to the Irish Gavelcine. This system of land-measures was not, however, uniform, for we are told that Bleddyn, a prince of Gwynedd and Powis, altered the size of the _Tyddyn_ or smallest holding from four _Erws_ to twelve _Erws_ when held by an _Uchelwr_, eight _Erws_ when held by an _Aillt_, and four when held by a _Godaeog_ or superior _Taeog_,[229] and in the Laws of Dyved we find a still greater variety. In these laws the _Tref_ or township in the free manors is to consist of four _Randirs_, instead of sixteen as in the Laws of Gwynedd, and the Randir is to contain three hundred and twelve _Erws_, ‘so that the owner may have in the three hundred _Erws_ arable pasture and fuel wood and space for buildings on the twelve _Erws_.’ The _Erw_, however, is smaller than that in the Laws of Gwynedd, for while it is of the same breadth, viz., the long yoke of sixteen feet, it is only sixteen times as long in place of thirty. Again, in place of the _Maenawl_ containing a uniform quantity of four _Trefs_, the lowland _Maenawl_, where the land is more fertile, is to consist of seven _Trefs_, and the upland _Maenawl_ thirteen.[230] The land-measures as given in the Code of Gwent are very similar, but with some variations. There is the same direction that there are to be four _Randirs_ in the _Tref_ and three hundred and twelve _Erws_ in the _Randir_, but the _Erw_ contains eighteen rods of eighteen feet in place of sixteen yokes in the length, and there are to be thirteen _Trefs_ in every _Maenawl_, except those of the _Taeog Trefs_, which contain only seven. Of the four _Randirs_ in the free _Tref_ three are for occupancy and the fourth pasturage for the three; but in the _Taeog Tref_ there are only three _Randirs_, the third being pasturage for the other two.[231] The original rights of the free members of the tribe, on which their possession of the register land is based, are thus defined in the Triads of the Social State:—‘There are three original rights of every native Welshman (_Cymro Cynwhynawl_),—first, the possession, without restriction, of five _Erws_ of land; second, a right of determining the constitutional law of the country under protection and in right of the _Pencenedl_; and third, a right to the freedom of the country in general, that is to say, that he be free to go whither he will without loss of privilege or verdict, unless when in actual service of the country, or of a court of law.’[232] The burdens upon the land and its possessors were as follows:—The sixteen _Trefs_ in the _Cymwd_ possessed by the _Aillt_ paid a rent in kind, termed _Dawnbwyd_, which was similar to the _Biatad_ or food-rent of the Irish system, and were subject to the _Cylch_ and _Dovraith_ of the superior, or refection and quartering, equivalent to the _Conmedha_ or _Coigny_ of the Irish. From the _Trefs_ possessed by the _Uchelwyr_, and the two manors belonging to the _Maer_ and _Cynghellawr_, the king received a _Gwestva_ or food-rent, which corresponds to the _Bestighi_ or food-rent of the house paid by every rank in the Irish tribe to the _Ri Tuath_; but in the Welsh system the payment in kind was, in part, commuted for a money payment, and we find no trace of the subsidy or gift of stock by the superior, in proportion to the return in the shape of food-rent, which characterises the whole relations of the different grades in the Irish tribe to each other.[233] Besides these regular burdens, there were two that may be termed casual. These were the _Ebidiw_ or relief, payable to the superior by the heir of a defunct vassal; and secondly, the _Amobr_, _Gobr Merch_, or maiden fee, that is, a fee paid to the superior by the person subject to that payment on the marriage of a daughter. By the Welsh laws the _Amobyrs_ of the daughters are said to be of equal amount with the _Ebidiws_ of their fathers, and there were three _Ebidiws_—an _Ebidiw_ of a pound, an _Ebidiw_ of six score pence, and an _Ebidiw_ of three score pence. The first was paid by the principal officers of the palace—by the _Pencenedl_ and by the officers of the country, the _Maer_ and the _Cynghellawr_. The second by the superior officers, the _Uchelwr_ or _Breyr_, and the _Gwahalaeth_ or son of a lord; and the third by the king’s _Taeog_, an _Arddelwman_ and an _Alltud_ whom the king has enfranchised.[234] [Sidenote: Fines for Slaughter.] Another important feature of the Irish tribe system is exactly reflected in the Welsh laws. The compensation for every injury, from the slaughter of a member of the tribe to the smallest loss, was by fines based upon a value or price put upon each person according to his position as regards rank and wealth. The fines are the _Galanas_ for slaughter, equivalent to the _Eric_ of the Irish; the _Saraad_, or fine for any personal injury or insult, which seems to be the _Smacht_ of the Irish; the _Dirwy_ and _Camlwrw_, equivalent to the _Dire_ fines of the Irish. The _Gwerth_ or price of the different ranks, equivalent to the Irish Honor price, and which regulated the _Galanas_, was as follows:—That of a king is defined in the Laws of Gwynedd as three times his _Saraad_. The _Gwerth_ or value and _Galanas_ of a _Pencenedl_ is to be paid by thrice nine kine and thrice nine score kine, and his _Saraad_ is thrice nine kine and thrice nine score of silver. The _Gwerth_ or price and the _Galanas_ of an _Uchelwr_ was six score and six kine, and his _Saraad_ six kine and six score of silver. That of a native _Bonedic_, or free member of a tribe, was three score and three kine, and his _Saraad_ was three kine and three score of silver. That of a king’s _Alltudd_, or foreign settler, was the same. The _Gwerth_ of the _Alltudd_ of an _Uchelwr_, as well as his _Saraad_, was one half that of the king’s _Alltudd_. The _Gwerth_ of a _Caeth_ or bondman, if of the island, was one pound; if from beyond sea, one pound and six score pence, and his _Saraad_ was twelve pence. The third of every _Galanas_ belongs to the king, ‘for to him pertains the enforcing of it when the _Cenedl_ may be unable to enforce it.’ The _Dirwy_ was twelve kine or three pounds; and the _Camlwrw_, or fine for wrong, three kine or nine score pence. [Sidenote: The sept in Wales.] So far the resemblance between the Irish and the Welsh tribe seems sufficiently marked, and we can also trace in the Welsh Laws the existence of the sept, though it does not come so prominently forward as in the Irish Laws. The _Uchelwr_ or territorial lord, from which class alone the _Pencenedl_ was elected, had under him a class of native _Cymri_ who had become his _Aillt_ or tenants, and had likewise settled upon his land, the _Alltudion_ or stranger tenants, both bond and free, and his prædial serfs or _Caethim_. These formed his _Teulu_ or sept, which was sufficiently numerous to turn out a military force of one hundred and twenty fighting men;[235] and we find, though to a more limited extent, the same system by which the nearer relations of the chief formed an artificial group, which inherited his lands and were responsible for the crimes of its members. The law of succession in the _Tir Gwelyawg_ or inheritance land was this—‘Three times shall the same patrimony be shared between three grades of a kindred. First, between brothers; the second time between cousins; the third time between second cousins; after that there is no propriate share of land;’[236] and in the Commentaries this is illustrated by the following figure, Great Grandfather +——————————————-|——————————————+ | | | Brother Grandfather Brother | +——————————-+—————————-+ | | | | | | Cousin Brother Father Brother Cousin | | +———————+—————-+ | | | | | | | | | Second Cousin Brother Son Brother Cousin Second Cousin | | | | | Cousin Second Cousin Grandson Cousin Second Cousin | | | Cousin Second Great Grandson Second Cousin Cousin which shows the similarity of the system with the Irish. The commentator adds, ‘The above figure guides a person to understand the arrangement and connection existing between him and his ancestors and his co-inheritors and his children. For the ancestors of a person are his father, his grandfather, and his great-grandfather; the co-inheritors are brothers and cousins and second cousins; the heirs of a person are those who proceed from his body, as a son, and a grandson and a great-grandson; and if a person be skilful in the use of the figure described above, when a person descended from any one of the three kins of the body of the original stock shall die without heir of his body, he will know who is to obtain the land of such a one according to law. For unto the third degree there is to be an appropriate sharing of land in the court of a _Cymwd_ or _Cantrey_.’[237] These three _kins_ of the Welsh Laws evidently represent the first two _Finés_ of the Irish Laws, viz., the _Geilfiné_ and _Deirbhfiné_, but the Welsh Law proceeds no further with the distribution than the first nine persons of the Irish group of seventeen. The same group was liable under the Welsh Laws for the crimes of its members, and the fines incurred by them, but the nine degrees are differently stated, in a manner which appears to extend it as far as the Irish system. We find in the Laws that ‘whoever shall confess _Galanas_, he and his kindred shall pay the whole of the _Saraad_ and _Galanas_ of the person killed;’ and then the kindred is thus defined: ‘Thus the grades of kindred are denominated which are to pay _Galanas_, or to receive payment. The first grade of the nine is the father and mother of the murderer or of the murdered. The second is a grandfather. The third is a great-grandfather. The fourth is brothers and sisters. The fifth is a cousin. The sixth is a second cousin. The seventh is a third cousin. The eighth is a relation in the fourth remove. The ninth is a relation in the fifth remove. The collateral relations in these grades are the nephews and uncles of the murderer or of the murdered. A nephew is a son of a brother or sister or of a cousin or of a second cousin, male or female. An uncle is a brother of a father or mother, or of a grandfather or grandmother, or of a great-grandfather or great-grandmother. This is the amount of the share of each of these; whoever may be nearer by one degree to the murderer, or to the murdered, than another, is to pay or to receive twice as much as the other; and so in respect to all the grades and their collateral members.’[238] The head of the sept was termed the _Penteulu_, but we have little information as to his relation towards the king or the _Pencenedl_, except that it was from the class of _Uchelwyr_ that these were elected, and thus, as in the Irish system, they too had each their _Teulu_ or sept. [Sidenote: Fosterage in Wales.] There is but one allusion in the Welsh Laws to the system of fosterage, but it is sufficient to show that this custom also prevailed among the Welsh tribes. We find in the code of Gwynedd that ‘if an _Uchelwr_ place his son to be reared with the _Aillt_ of a lord, by the permission or by the sufferance of the lord, for a year and a day, that son is to have a son’s share of the _Aillt’s_ land, and ultimately of his property.’[239] The age of the boy, however, is distinguished into only two periods. First, from his baptism till he is seven years of age, during which time his father is to swear and pay for him, except the payment of _Dirwy_ or _Camlwrw_ for him to the king; because the king is not to have any _Dirwy_ or _Camlwrw_ for an error nor for the act of an idiot, and he is not endowed with reason; he must, however, indemnify the sufferer for his property. At the end of seven years he himself is to swear for his acts, and his father is to pay. From the time when a boy is born till he shall be fourteen years of age, he is to be at his father’s platter, and his father lord over him; and he is to receive no punishment but that of his father, and he is not to receive one penny of his property during that time, only in common with his father. At the end of fourteen years the father is to bring his son to the lord and commend him to his charge; and then the youth is to become his man, and to be on the privilege of his lord; and he is himself to answer every claim that may be made on him; and is to possess his own property; thenceforward his father is not to correct him, more than a stranger; and if he should correct him, upon complaint made by the son against him he is subject to _Dirwy_, and is to do him right for the _Saraad_. ‘From that age onward he is of the same privilege with an innate _Boneddig_.’[240] The preceding short analysis of the tribal organisation in its leading features, as presented to us in the ancient Irish and Welsh laws, is an indispensable preliminary to any inquiry into the ancient land tenure of the people of Scotland in Celtic times. Without it we should have been at a loss to discover the source and origin of many of the peculiar features it presents in later times. CHAPTER VI. THE TRIBE IN SCOTLAND. [Sidenote: Early notices of tribal organisation.] In investigating the early social state of the Celtic inhabitants of Great Britain, we possess an advantage which does not attach to that of Ireland. For the Pagan period in the latter country we have no information except what is derived from native tradition; but in Britain we possess in addition a few incidental notices by contemporary writers of other countries, both as regards the native population of the Roman province and the Barbarian nations beyond its limits. These notices, few and general as they are, yet indicate the presence of a social organisation very similar to that of Ireland. When we are told by one Greek writer ‘that its aboriginal tribes inhabit Britain, in their usages still preserving the primitive modes of life, and that they have many kings and princes;’[241] by another, ‘that there are several states amongst them. Forests are their cities; for having enclosed an ample space with felled trees, here they make themselves huts and lodge their cattle;’[242] when Cæsar tells us of the inhabitants of the interior, whom he calls indigenous, that ‘they did not resort to the cultivation of the soil for food, but were dependent upon their cattle and the flesh of animals slain in hunting for their food;’[243] when Solinus reports of the inhabitants of the five Western Isles forming the southern group, that ‘they knew nothing of the cultivation of the ground, but lived upon fish and milk,’ which latter implies the possession of herds of cattle, ‘and that they had one king, who was not allowed to possess property;’[244] when Tacitus speaks ‘of the numerous states beyond the Firth of Forth,’ and describes the great Caledonian army which Agricola encountered at the Mons Granpius as a federation of all the states of the northern population; and when we are told of the two great divisions of them in the third century—the Caledonians and the Mæatæ—‘that they inhabit mountains wild and waterless, and plains desert and marshy; that they live by pasturage and the chase, and that their state is chiefly democratical;’[245]—we can see that they consisted of an aggregation of tribes occupying the land in common, and whose chief possessions consisted of cattle. When these writers add that they had their wives in common, they indicate at least that looser relation between the sexes which usually prevailed before the introduction of Christianity had invested a stricter rule of marriage with its sanction, and which led to a connection through females as being regarded with more favour than that through males. [Sidenote: The tribe among the Picts.] When we come down, however, to Christian times, we find the existence of the _Tuath_ both as the tribe and as the tribe territory fully recognised as characterising the social organisation of the population of Gaelic race. The ancient tract, termed the _Amra Choluim Chilli_, of Dallan Forgaill, preserved in the _Liabhar na h-Uidre_, contains repeated references to the _Tuaths_ both in the sense of tribes and of their territories, and as regards the Pictish nation as well as the Dalriadic colony. Thus we are told that Saint Columba ‘illuminated countries and territories’ (_Tir agus Tuatha_), and that from him ‘the _Tuaths_ used to be disciplined.’ Again, when it is said, ‘Through an idolatrous _Tuath_ he meditated criminality,’ which is explained to mean, ‘when going through the _Tuath_ or territories of the idols he would know their criminality towards God,’ it can only refer to the pagan nation of the Picts; and when we are told that ‘he sought seven _Tuaths_, viz., the five _Tuaths_ of Erin, and two _Tuaths_ in Alban,’ the latter must be identified with the territory given him by the Picts, who, according to Bede, inhabited the districts adjacent to Iona. In another passage, when St. Columba is referred to as ‘the son of Fedelimid for whom used to fight or whom used to serve the twenty _Tuaths_,’ the word is probably used in the sense of tribes, and it is still more plainly used in this sense, as existing among the southern Picts, when he is described as ‘the teacher who used to teach the tribes who were around Tai, that is, the name of a river in Alban,’ which can obviously be identified with the river Tay. In another passage they are referred to as the people of the Tay (_Lucht Toi_); and the _Tuaths_ or tribes are indicated as existing both among the Dalriads and the Picts, when he is called ‘the champion who bound new things for the alliance of Conall, that is, the champion of the new things is not here for alliance, that is, for confirming the alliance of Conall, that is, between the _Tuaths_ of Conall within, or at making their alliance with other _Tuaths_ externally.’[246] Conall was the king of Dalriada at the time when St. Columba came over from Ireland to Scotland, and the other _Tuaths_ or tribes which were external to his kingdom can only refer to the neighbouring tribes of the Picts. The undoubted antiquity of this tract gives great value to these incidental references to the existence of the _Tuath_ or tribe, not only among the Scots of Dalriada, where we might expect to meet them, but also among the two great races of the northern and southern Picts, and this is confirmed by other authorities of a later date. Thus, in the tract called ‘The Genealogy of Corca Laidhe,’ referred to in a previous chapter, we read that ‘Irial Glumnar, son of Conall Cearnach, had two sons, viz., Forc and Iboth. Rechtgidh Righdearg led them into Alban. They gained great battles, so that great districts were laid waste in Alban, until the men of Alban submitted to Rechtgidh Righdearg, so that he was king of Erin and Alban; and it was from them sprang the two _Tuaths_ or tribes, _Tuath Forc_ and _Tuath Iboth_ in Alban.’[247] Rechtgidh Righdearg was one of the mythic pagan kings of Ireland, and Irial Glumnar a traditionary hero of the _Cruithnigh_, or Picts of Ulster; but it is a fair inference from it that two _Tuaths_ or tribes bearing the names of Forc and Iboth were known in Scotland, and the name Forc, which is the old form of that of the river Forth, indicates their situation on the northern shore of that river or estuary, that is, among the southern Picts. That a social organisation similar to the Irish tribal system prevailed among the southern Picts, to whom St. Columba’s mission was mainly directed, is confirmed by the Gaelic entries in the Book of Deer, which open with the statement that ‘Columba and Drostan, son of Cosgrach, his pupil, came from Hi, as God had shown them, unto _Abbordoboir_ or Aberdour, and Bede the _Cruthnech_ or Pict, who was _Mormaer_ of Buchan, gave them that town in freedom for ever from _Mormaer_ and _Toisech_;’ thus exactly corresponding to the grant of land to the church of Kells, quoted in a former chapter as free from rent, tribute, hosting, coigny, or any other claim of king or _Toisech_. Where there are _Toisechs_ there are _Tuaths_, and the district of Buchan probably formed a _Mortuath_ like the other districts ruled over by a _Mormaer_, the equivalent in Scotland of the _Ri Mortuath_ of the Irish system. [Sidenote: The tribe in Dalriada.] The Scottish kingdom of Dalriada was at this time confined within very narrow limits, and could hardly claim a higher position than that of a _Mortuath_, as we find that it consisted of three tribes, termed, in the tract ‘Of the History of the Men of Alban,’ the three powerfuls in Dalriada. These were the _Cinel Gabran_, the _Cinel Angus_, and the _Cinel Loarn_, who traced their descent from the three sons of Eochaidh—Fergus, Angus, and Loarn—who led the colony from Irish Dalriada. We obtain from this tract some valuable information as to the constitution of these tribes. The _Cinel Gabran_ occupied Kintyre in its old extent, including Knapdale, the district of Cowall, and the islands, that is, of Arran and Bute, and consisted of five hundred and sixty houses. The _Cinel Angusa_ possessed Isla and Jura, and consisted of four hundred and thirty houses. The _Cinel Loarn_ possessed the extensive district of Lorn, extending from Lochleven to the Point of Ashnish, and part of the opposite coast of Morvern, and consisted of four hundred and twenty houses. The districts thus occupied by these tribes surrounded an inner region, extending from the range of mountains called Drumalban to the arms of the sea termed Lochs Craignish and Crinan, consisting of the two districts of Lochaw and Ardskeodnish. This inner region seems to have been left to the older inhabitants of the country, and to have borne the name of _Airgialla_, possibly for the same reason that that name was applied to the extensive region in the heart of Ulster, wrested by the Scots under the three Collas from the Irish Picts.[248] The houses of which these three tribes consisted seemed to have formed groups of twenty houses each, as we are told that their sea muster assigned twice seven benches or seats for rowers to each twenty houses, but the armed muster for the _Sluaged_ or hosting was, for the _Cinel Gabran_ three hundred men, for the _Cinel Angusa_ five hundred men, and for the _Cinel Loarn_ seven hundred men, but one hundred of these were furnished by the people of _Airgialla_.[249] [Sidenote: The tribe in Galloway.] The only other districts of modern Scotland in which a Gaelic population remained are those of the Lennox and of Galloway, and in the latter we can trace the remains of the same tribal system. Thus in the year 1276 we find King Alexander the Third confirming a charter by which Neil, Earl of Carrick, granted and confirmed to Roland of Carrick and his heirs the right of being head of their kin in all pleas relating to _kenkenoll_ and the office of bailie, and the leadership of the men of the country under the earl. This shows that the _Cinel_ or tribe, with its head or _Ceannchinel_, had formerly existed among the Gaelic population of Galloway; and the same thing is indicated by some notices of lost charters preserved in the ancient Index published in 1798. Thus there is a charter by David II. to Donald Edzear of the captainship of _Clanmacgowin_, and a charter ‘anent the Clan of _Muintircasduff_,[250] John M‘Kennedy captain thereof;’ this term of Captain being the equivalent of the _Toisech_ of the Irish and Scottish Gael,[251] and the word _Muintir_, or people, being one of the appellations of a tribe. [Sidenote: Modification of original tribes under foreign influences.] These indications of the existence of a tribal organisation analogous to that in Ireland among the Celtic population during the period when, with the exception of Saxon Lothian, both king and people were Celtic, comprise in the main the information we are able to gain from the most trustworthy sources available to us; but after the purely Celtic dynasty of kings of Scottish race came to an end in the eleventh century in the person of Malcolm the Second, this tribal system became exposed to powerful external influences, which greatly modified its character, and finally resulted in its disappearance in the eastern districts under feudal forms, and its passing over in the mountainous regions of the north and west into the clanship which was afterwards found there. [Sidenote: Passing of the Mortuath into the Earldom, and the Tribe into the Thanage.] Soon after the death of Malcolm the Second the northern districts of Scotland fell under the dominion of the Norwegian Earl of Orkney, while the Celtic _Mormaer_ of Moray reigned in a kingdom the centre of which was at Scone; but when the usurper was expelled by the heir through a female of the ancient line, and Malcolm Ceannmor was established on the throne by the powerful aid of the Angles of Northumberland under their Earl Siward, and the northern districts reverted to his sway on the death of the Norwegian Earl, Saxon influences became predominant; and the new dynasty, still more closely connected with the Saxons through the marriage of its founder with the Saxon Princess Margaret, found its support mainly in the Anglic population of Lothian, which now became the most important province of the extended monarchy. His son Eadgar reigned in reality as a Saxon monarch, and when on his death the kingdom was divided between his brothers Alexander and David, the former consolidated his kingdom north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde upon the basis of Saxon institutions, while the latter ruled over the districts of British Strathclyde and Anglic Lothian as a feudal lord, with Norman sympathies and supported by a powerful following of Norman nobles. During the reigns of Eadgar and Alexander there was a silent advance of Saxon colonisation, and a progressive assimilation of the people to Saxon customs, which led to a Saxon nomenclature being imposed upon their Celtic institutions which found analogous forms in the Saxon laws; and thus in the kingdom of Alexander the First we find the Celtic _Mormaer_ appearing as _Comes_ or Earl, while the name of _Thanus_ or thane was applied to the _Toisech_,[252] and the tribe territory is now termed _Thanagium_ or Thanage. In the British district of Strathclyde the Celtic forms disappeared before the advancing feudalism of David; and when upon the death of his brother he became the first feudal king of all Scotland and its first lawgiver, the constitution of his kingdom was based upon the feudal system; and as its leading principle was that the king was feudal superior of all the territory, and all rights to land emanated from him, all land not given out as feudal holdings was held to be Crown land, and the tribe territories not placed under feudal lords, and now termed Thanages, were regarded as royal demesnes.[253] When Fordun, therefore, in the forty-third chapter of his fourth book, tells us that ‘of old almost the whole kingdom was divided into Thanages,’ he was not referring to that fabulous state of matters described in a previous chapter, when _Thanes_ were supposed to be governors of provinces, with an _Abthane_ over them as high steward—a state of matters which never existed in Scotland; but, as is evident from the context, to those smaller territories termed _Thanages_ in his own day, and, viewing these _Thanages_ as representing the more ancient _Tuaths_ or tribe territories, he is reporting a genuine tradition of the tribal organisation which preceded the Saxon and feudal forms. [Sidenote: Distinction of people into free and servile classes.] The principal fragments of the ancient tribal law which we find still preserved in the subsequent legislation were those relating to the fines paid in compensation for different offences, analogous to those contained in the Irish and Welsh Laws; and these afford us the best indications of the different ranks or grades of society in the old tribal system. We find in Scotland, as in Ireland and Wales, the broad distinction between the free and servile classes. Thus in the laws of King William the Lion there is preserved this fragment of the older system ‘of the law that is callyt weregylt. Of euery thief through all Scotland the weregehede is xxxiiii. ky and one half, whether he be a freeman or a serf (_liber sive servus_).’[254] [Sidenote: Classes of freemen.] Of the classes of freemen these laws regarding fines afford us complete information. Among the laws attributed to King David I. is a fragmentary code termed ‘Leges inter Brettos et Scottos.’ It is preserved in Latin, in Norman French, and in the vernacular Scotch. By the Bretti are meant the Britons of Strathclyde, and the term Scotti now comprehended the whole inhabitants of the country north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde. David had ruled over the former as earl during the reign of Alexander the First, and on his accession to the throne seems in this short code to have recognised as law the system of fines which existed among his Celtic subjects both of Gaelic and of British race, and to have included them in a short code applicable to both. It contains the fines paid in compensation for slaughter, termed here _Cro_, a word signifying death; but it is said to be equivalent to the _Galnes_ or _Galanas_ of the Welsh laws, and also to the _Enauch_ or Honor price of the Irish. Another fine for slaughter is called _Kelchyn_, and the fines for ‘Blude drawn’ seem to be the _Saraad_ of the Welsh. They were termed _Bludwyts_ in Saxon and _Fuilrath_ in Gaelic.[255] The _Cro_ of the King of Scotland is said to be one thousand ‘ky’ or three thousand ‘ore’ or ounces of gold, three ounces being the value of a cow, and his _Kelchyn_ is one hundred ‘ky.’ The _Cro_ of the king’s son,—that is, the Tanist of the Irish Laws, or of an Earl of Scotland, who is thus placed in the same rank,—is seven score ‘ky’ and ten ‘ky.’ His _Kelchyn_ is three score ky and six ky and two parts of a cow; and for Blude drawn, nine ky. The _Cro_ of the son of an Earl, or of a Thane, who is placed in the same rank, is one hundred ky. His _Kelchyn_, forty-four ky and twenty-one pence and two-thirds of a penny; and for Blude drawn, six ky. The _Cro_ of the son of a Thane is three score ky and six ky and two parts of a cow. His _Kelchyn_ is less by a third than his father’s, and is twenty-nine ky and elevenpence and the third part of a halfpenny; and for Blude drawn, three ky. The _Cro_ of the nevow or grandson of a Thane, or of ane _Ogethearn_, is forty-four ky and twenty-one pence and two parts of a penny. His _Kelchyn_ is not given, but for Blude drawn it is two ky and two parts of a cow. We are then told that all these who are lower in the _kyn_ (parentela) are callit _Carlis_ (_rustici_, vilayn), and that the _Cro_ of a _Carl_ is sixteen ky, that he has no _Kelchyn_, and that the ‘Blud’ of a _Carl_ is one cow. We have also in this code a section ‘Of thaim that are slayn in the peace of the King and other lordis.’ ‘Giff ony man be slayn in the peis of our lord the Kyng, til him perteins nine score ky.’ If in the peace of the sone of the King or of an Earl, four score and ten ky. If in the peace of the son of an Earl or of a Thayn, three score ky. If in the peace of the son of a Thane, forty ky; and if in the peace of a nevo or grandson of a Thane, twenty ky and two parts of a cow.’[256] The names of the different ranks here are analogous to the Irish system, where the son of each grade occupied the rank of the next inferior grade.[257] The Earl was the Scottish _Mormaer_, the _Ri Mortuath_ of the Irish. The Thanus or thane was the _Toisech_. The _Ogethearn_ is the Irish word _Ogthighearna_, one of the names applied to the second class of the _Gradflatha_,[258] or those _Aires_ who received stock from a superior _Aire_. They were also called _Oglaochs_. The fines occupy an intermediate place between those of the Irish and of the Welsh Laws, but most resemble the latter; and the distinction between the free and bond classes and the rights of the _kyn_ are clearly indicated from the following addition it made to the account of the _Kelchyn_ fine:—‘If the wife of a freeman (liberi hominis) be slain, her husband shall have the _Kelchyn_, and her kyn shall have the _Cro_ and the _Galnes_. If the wife of a _Carl_ (_rustici_, vileyn) be slain, the lord in whose lands he dwells shall have the _Kelchyn_, and her _kyn_ shall have the _Cro_ and the _Galnes_.’ A fragment has also been preserved giving the _merchet_ or maiden-fee paid to the superior on the marriage of the daughter of a dependant. It is the _Amobr_ or _Gobr merch_ of the Welsh Laws:—‘According to the assize of the land of Scotland, the _merchet_ of every woman, whether she be a serf or mercantile, was one calf or three shillings. If she was the daughter of a freeman who was not lord of a township, her _merchet_ was one cow or six shillings. If the daughter of the son of a thane or of a _ochethiern_, two cows or twelve shillings. If the daughter of an earl, twelve cows.’[259] The fines which were paid for abstaining from attending the king’s hosting are preserved in the Statutes of Alexander the Second, where the following ‘record was made at St. Johnstoun or Perth before the king be all the “dempsteris” (judices) of Scotland in the seventh year of the king’s reign, or A.D. 1221,‘ after the king had been in hosting at Inverness against Donald Neilson.’ They thus declare that ‘of those that remained away from the host, the king shall have the forfeiture of the erlis if their thanes’ (that is, the earls’ thanes) ‘remained from the host; but how much that forfalture should be was not determined. Of all others which remained at home—that is to say, of the lands of bischopis, abbotis, baronis, knychtis, and thaynis which hold of the king, the king alone ought to have the forfalture; that is to say, of a thane, vi cows and a calf; of an _ochtyern_, xv sheep or vi shillings; but the king tharof shall have but the one half, and the thane or the knycht the other half. Of a _Carl_, a cow and a sheep; and they also are to be divided between the king and the thane or the knycht.’ ‘But when by the leave of the thane or the knicht they remained behind the king, he shall have all the forfalt. For no earl nor sergand of the erlis in the land of any man holding of the king ought to come to raise that default but the Erl of Fyffe, and he shall not come as earl but as the _Mair_ of the king of his rights to be raised within the earldom of Fyffe. Of the _Cairlis_, however, where the king and the earl divide betwixt them, the king and the earl shall have the one half and the thane the other half; but where the thane falls in forfalt it shall be divided between the king and the earl, as in the laws of King William is declared.’[260] The analogy between this arrangement and the system of fines for withdrawing from hosting contained in the Irish Laws will be apparent at once, and the different grades here given are the same as those in the code of David I., though adapted to a period when the thane appears as the vassal of the king or of the earl, and the _ochtyern_ as the vassal of the thane. [Sidenote: Ranks of bondmen.] The different ranks of the bondmen or unfree class have also been preserved in the code of laws termed _Quoniam attachiamenta_. They are there termed native-men (_nativi_), and we are told that there are several kinds of nativity or Bondage (_nativitatis sive bondagii_). For some are native-men of their grandfather and great-grandfather, which is commonly called _de evo et trevo_, whom their lord may claim to be naturally his native-men by narrating their progenitors, if their names are known, as his great-grandfather, his grandfather, and his father, who are challenged, declaring them to have been his native-men in such a township and in such a spot in that township, and to have made and rendered to him and his predecessors servile service in a servile land for many years; and this nativity or bondage may be proved by the kin of him who is challenged or by a good assize. Another kind of bondage is similar to this, when any stranger receives servile land from any lord doing servile service for that land; and if he dies in that land and his son likewise dies in that land, and afterwards his son lives in the same land and dies there, then his whole posterity to the fourth degree shall be of servile condition to his lord, and his whole posterity may be proved in a similar manner. The third kind of _nativity_ or bondage is when a freeman, in order to have a lord or the maintenance (_manutenencia_) of any great man, gives himself up to that lord to be his native or bondman (_nativum seu bondum_) in his court by the hair of his forehead; and if he thereafter withdraws himself from his lord, or denies his _nativitie_ to him, his lord may prove him to be his native-man before the justiciary by an assize, challenging him that he in such a day in such a year came to him in his court and gave himself up to be his man; and if any one is adjudged to be the native or bondman to any lord, that lord can seize him by the nose and reduce him to his former servitude, taking from him all his goods to the value of four pence.[261] These definitions of the different kinds of _nativi_ or bondmen may no doubt apply to a later period than we are now referring to, and be more or less connected with feudal forms, but we may, notwithstanding, infer that they preserve the characteristics of the servile class in Celtic times; for, although the upper classes may in the Lowland districts have been superseded by Saxon or Norman proprietors holding their lands in feudal tenure, the servile occupiers of the soil of Celtic race who were attached to the land would remain and become the villains of the feudal lord; and so we find that wherever they appear in the Chartularies they possess Celtic names. We see from the above description that their connection with their lord was of two kinds—first, by occupying under him servile land; and second, by placing themselves under him as personal bondmen; and of the former class, they were either natives by descent or strangers who had taken land from him, and the latter became native serfs after four generations. Here we recognise at once the _Sencleithe_ or old adherents of the Irish law, and the _Bond Fuidhir_, who became _Sencleithe_ after four generations. The latter class of personal serfs are the _Mogha_ of the Irish and the _Caeth_ of the Welsh Laws. The Celtic names by which these two classes were known in feudal times have also been preserved to us. Thus, in the Chartulary of Scone, King William the Lion grants a mandate directing that if the abbot of Scone or his sergands shall find in the lands or in the power of others any of the _Cumlawes_ and _Cumherbes_ pertaining to his lands, he may reclaim them;[262] and in the Chartulary of Dunfermline, the foundation charter by King David the First grants that all his serfs and all his _Cumerlache_ from the time of King Edgar shall be restored to the Church wherever they may be found, and the scribe interprets the word _Cumer lache_ by _fugitivi_ on the margin; and in a mandate by the same king to the same effect the title is ‘Of the _fugitivi_ which are called _Cumerlache_.’[263] In the last syllable of the name _Cumherbes_ or _Cumarherbe_ we can recognise the Irish word _Orba_, applied to that part of the tribe territory which had become the private property of the chiefs; and this name was no doubt applied to that class of serfs whose bondage was derived from their possessing servile land. They were the _ascripti glebae_ of feudal times. The term _Cumlawe_ or _Cumarlawe_ is simply a translation of the Latin term _manutenencia_, which characterised the third kind of bondage above described, and whose tie to their master being a personal one, led to their frequently escaping from hard usage and being reclaimed as fugitives.[264] Thus among the laws of King William the Lion we find one declaring that any one who detains a native fugitive man (_nativi fugitivi_) after he has been demanded by his true lord or his bailie, shall restore the said native-man with all his chattels, and shall render to his lord the double of the loss he has sustained.[265] [Sidenote: Measures of land.] As in Ireland and Wales, so also in Scotland, the ancient measures of land were closely connected with the tribal system, but here too we find them more greatly affected by external influences than in the two former countries. When we examine the most ancient land-measures of that part of Scotland lying north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, we do not find the same local varieties which can be traced in the different provinces of Ireland and Wales, but instead, a great and leading difference between those of the eastern and the western districts. In the eastern districts there is a uniform system of land denominations consisting of Davachs, Ploughgates, and Oxgangs, the davach consisting of four ploughgates, and each ploughgate of eight oxgangs; but as soon as we cross the great chain of mountains separating the eastern from the western waters, we find a different system equally uniform. The ploughgates and oxgangs disappear, and in their place we find davachs and penny lands. The portion of land termed a _davach_ is here also called a _Tirung_ or ounce land (_unciata terra_), and each davach or _Tirung_ contains twenty penny lands. The davach[266] being the only denomination common to both parts of the country, we may infer that it belongs to the old Celtic system of land-measures, and that the others are foreign importations. Now we find in the ancient province of Lothian, which originally formed part of the Anglic kingdom of Northumbria and possessed an Anglic population, the land-measures consisted of Carucates or ploughgates, and Bovates or oxgangs. The oxgang contained thirteen acres, two oxgangs made a husband-land, and eight oxgangs a ploughgate, which thus consisted of 104 acres of arable land. On the other hand, in the islands of Orkney and in the district of Caithness, which were formerly a Norwegian earldom under the king of Norway, we find the land was valued according to a standard of value derived from the weight of silver, the unit being the ounce or _Eyrir_, eight ounces forming the _Mörk_ or pound, and twenty pennings one ounce,[267] and thus the land-measures consisted of _Oers_ or ounce lands, the ounce lands containing either eighteen or twenty penny lands. They seem to have been so called, because under the Norwegian rule each homestead paid one penny as _scat_. It is therefore a fair inference that, with the Saxon colonisation, the Saxon denominations superseded the older Celtic lesser denominations, as forming the subdivisions of the Davach in the eastern districts, while in the western seaboard and in the islands, which were for a time under Norwegian rule, the Norwegian denominations replaced the Celtic, but in both cases they were adapted to the existing divisions of land, which could not be altered without interfering with the whole framework of society. The Carucate or ploughgate was a term known to the Irish system, and may likewise have existed in Scotland in Celtic times, as it appears in Highland charters under the name of _Arachor_, the Gaelic equivalent of the Latin _Aratrum_,[268] but seems sometimes to have contained 160 acres in place of 104, and consisted of a definite measure of arable land with common pasture;[269] and we find from a charter of a Carucate or ploughgate of land on the Nith, that the common pasture carried 24 cattle and 100 sheep,[270] and the minor terms can probably still be traced in the topography of the districts. We have the words _Ballin_, _Bal_, from _Baile_, a town, entering into many local names in both parts of the country, as well as the word _Teaghlach_ or family, corrupted into Tully and Tilly, as in Tullynessle, Tillymorgan, etc. Then in the east there are the Pits, the old form of which, as appears from the Book of Deer, was _Pette_ or _Pett_. It is there uniformly connected with a personal name, as if it was applied to a single homestead, as in _Pette mac Garnait_, _Pett mac Gobrig_, and _Pett Malduib_, and the affix Pitt seems to have a similar meaning in the old entry in the Chartulary of St. Andrews, where we read of the ‘villula’ or homestead, which is called Pitmokane.[271] In the western districts we find the penny land also entering into the topography, in the form of _Pen_ or Penny, in such names as Pennyghael, Pennycross, Penmollach, while the halfpenny becomes _Leffen_, as in Leffenstrath; and if the group of twenty houses, which we found characterising the early tribe organisation in Dalriada, was the Davach, then we obtain the important identification of these houses or homesteads with the later penny lands. We find notices in the charters connected with this part of the country of the _Shammark_, equal to two penny lands, of Cow lands, probably the Irish _Ballyboe_, and of Horsegangs.[272] When these western districts fell under the rule of the Scottish monarchs, the valuation of land called the Old Extent seems to have been to some extent introduced. In the eastern districts it corresponded so far with the land measures, that the ploughgate was the same as the forty shilling or a three-merk land;[273] but the merk land in the west appears to have had no uniform relation to the penny land, though in Lochaber we find that five penny lands were equal to a forty-shilling land, which seemed to indicate that here also the ploughgate was the fourth part of a Davach, and consisted of five homesteads; on the other hand, we are told that each township in Isla consisted of two and a half merk lands.[274] The state of these districts probably gave the Davachs and penny lands a fluctuating value, which depended more upon the pasture and the stock it carried than on the arable land. There is an old tradition that the Davach was land capable of pasturing 320 cows, and that a merk land was as much land as would graze twelve milch cows, ten yeld cows, including three-year-olds, twelve two-year-olds, twelve year-olds, four horses, four fillies, mares and followers, one hundred sheep, and eighty goats.[275] The two systems of land measure appear to meet in Galloway, as in Carrick we find the measure by Penny lands, which gradually become less frequent as we advance eastward, where we encounter the extent by merks and pounds, with an occasional appearance of a penny land, and of the Bovate or oxgang in Church lands. [Sidenote: Burdens on the land.] The burdens upon the land held by the community in Scotland seem to have been principally four. We find them still attaching to the Crown and the Church lands during the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, and they are analogous to those connected with the Irish tribe system. They were _Cain_, _Conveth_, _Feacht_, and _Sluaged_. The two former were fixed payments in kind. The two latter were services to which the possessor of the land was subject. They are rendered in Latin by the words _expeditio_ and _exercitus_. We find these burdens in both of the leading divisions of the country north of the firths. Thus, by a deed dated at Lismore in the year 1251, Sir Ewen, son of Duncan de Erregathil (Argyll), granted to William, bishop of Argyll, fourteen penny lands in Lismore, free of all secular exactions and dues—viz., _Cain_, _Coneveth_, _Feacht_, _Sluaged_, and _Ich_—and of all secular services;[276] and similarly Roger, bishop-elect of St. Andrews, granted between 1188 and 1198, when he was consecrated, the lands of Duf Cuper to the church and canons of St. Andrews, free of ‘_Can_ et _Cuneveth_ et exercitu et auxilio et ab omni servicio et exactione seculari.’[277] [Sidenote: The _Cain_ or _Can_.] We find during this period that these dues and services were derived by the king from the Crown lands, and by the superiors from lands not held feudally. Thus King David grants to the monks of Dunfermline the tithe of his whole _Can_ from Fif and Fothrif, likewise the tithe of his _Can_ of Clacmannan, and the half of his tithe of Ergaithel (Argyll) and Kentir in that year, to wit, in which he receives _Can_ from it, and these grants are repeated by his successor Malcolm IV.[278] King David likewise grants to the church of Urchard (Urquhart) the tithe of the _Can de Ergaithel de Muref_, that is, that part of the great province of Ergadia or Ergaithel which belonged to Moray, extending from the Leven to the border of North Argyll.[279] King William confirms to the bishop of Moray the _Cana et Coneveta_ which his predecessors had received from those who held land of the bishops during the time of King David and King Malcolm;[280] and in an agreement in 1225 between the bishop and Walter Cumyn of Badenoch, the bishop frees him from any claim he had for the tithe of the _Can_ of his lord the king from the lands of Badenoch.[281] In Aberdeenshire we find the Earl of Mar granting to the bishop of St. Andrews the tithe of the ‘redditus’ or _Can_ of his whole lands;[282] and Thomas the Hostiary gives to the canons of Monimusk ten bolls of meal and ten stones of cheese from his lands of Outherheicht, which is afterwards called the _Can_ of Houctireycht.[283] In Mearns or Kincardine Earl David of Huntingdon grants to the church and canons of St. Andrews the whole _Kan_ and _Kuneveth_, which they were due him, from the lands of Ecclesgirg, and the services which his men of Eccleskirch were bound to render him.[284] Then in the beginning of the thirteenth century the record of a dispute between the bishop of St. Andrews and the abbot of Arbroath is preserved to us in the chartulary of that church, regarding the lands of Fyvy, Tarves, Innerbondy, Munclere, Gamery, Inverugy, and Monedin, and the _Can_ or redditus and _Conevet_ of these lands, which the bishop resigns to the abbot free of every exaction, reserving to himself the ancient ‘redditus’ of Monedin, viz., three shillings and sixpence, and the portion of the _Conevet_ which was wont to be paid at Bencorin or Banchory; and in the same Chartulary there is a grant by King William to the abbey of Arbroath of the ferry and ferrylands of Munros, to be held free ‘ab exercitu et expeditione et operatione et auxilio et ab omnibus consuetudinibus et omni servicio et exactione;’ and the earl of Angus grants them the lands of Portincraig in similar terms, as free ‘ab exercitu et expeditione et exactione multure et ab omnibus auxiliis et geldis et omnibus serviciis et exactionibus;’ the ‘exercitus’ and ‘expeditio’ being the _Sluaged_ and _Feacht_ of the Gaelic charters.[285] Then in Fife we find in a rental of the earldom a certain _firma_ or rent which is termed _Canus_, with ten shillings of the _Can_ of Abernethy; and in Stratherne we find the bishops of Dunkeld confirming to the canons of Inchaffray the lands of Maderty, which is called _Abthan_, and the freedom from the _Cane_ and _Coneveth_ which the clerics of Dunkeld were wont anciently to receive from these lands. These notices will be sufficient to show that these Celtic burdens on land prevailed over the whole of the country north of the Firths, on the crown lands and those of the church, and on all lands which had not become the subject of feudal grants. Passing then to the country south of the Firths, we find them equally prevalent, except in the great Anglic province of Lothian. Thus King David grants to the church of Glasgow the whole tithe of his _Chan_ in the beasts and pigs of Strathegrive and Cuninghame, Kyle and Carrick, in each year, unless the king himself shall go to dwell there and consume his own _Chan_.[286] These districts formed the greater part of the ancient British kingdom of Strathclyde, and this was an appropriate grant to the church of Glasgow, which had been its metropolitan church. Then we find the lords of Galloway granting lands in that district to the canons of Holyrood, free from all ‘_Can_ and _Cuneveht_ and from every exaction, custom, and secular service;’[287] and finally, at a court held by the judges of Galloway at Lanerch in the reign of King William the Lion, in presence of the Lord of Galloway, it was adjudged that ‘when the king ought to receive his _Can_ from Galloway he should issue his breve to the _Mairs_ of Galloway, and the _Mairs_ should go with the royal breve to the debtor of the _Can_ and exact the _Can_ from him. If he fail to pay, the _Mair_ was to take the rod or staff, called the king’s staff, and take a distress for the king’s _Can_, and if the debtor removed the subject of the distress he was to pay for each ten cows fifteen cows, besides a hundred cows _de misericordia_; but if he delivered part of the _Can_, till after the Nativity he was to pay for each cow four shillings of cow-tax, and for each pig sixteen pence, and before the Nativity the debtor was to deliver cows worth forty pence, and if he stated on oath that he had no pigs, he was to pay for each pig seventeen pence.’[288] This last notice will explain in some degree what the burden termed _Cain_ or _Can_ really was, and how it was exacted. It consisted of a portion of the produce of the land, in grain when it was arable land, and in cattle and pigs when pasture land. It was in fact the outcome of the _Bestighi_ or food-rent of the Irish laws, and the _Gwestva_ of the Welsh laws, paid by every occupier of land to his superior. Over the whole of Scotland, except in Lothian, it was a recognised burden upon the crown lands and upon all land not held by feudal tenure, but it ceased as soon as the possessor of the land was feudally invested. Thus we find in the Moray Chartulary an agreement between the bishop of Moray and Thomas de Thirlestan, who had received a feudal grant of the lands of Abertarff, regarding a half-davach of land, which the bishop asserted belonged to the church, and regarding the tithes of the royal _Can_ payable from the lands of Abertarff before his feudal investiture (_ante infeodationem_). There is a similar agreement between the bishop and James, son of Morgund, regarding certain lands in his fief of Abernethy, and regarding the tithes of the _Can_ which was wont to be paid to the king from these lands before his feudal investiture, and another between the bishop and Gilbert the Hostiary regarding the tithes of the _Can_ which he was wont to pay annually to the king from the lands of Strathbroc and Buleshe before his feudal investiture (_ante infeodationem_).[289] The _Can_ or _Chan_ was so termed from the Gaelic word _Cain_, the primary meaning of which was ‘law.’ It was the equivalent of the Latin word _canon_, and like it was applied to any fixed payment exigible by law.[290] [Sidenote: Conveth.] Conveth was the Irish _Coinmhedha_ or Coigny, derived, according to O’Donovan, from _Coinmhe_, which signifies feast or refection. It was the _Dovraeth_ of the Welsh laws, and was founded upon the original right which the leaders in the tribe had to be supported by their followers. It came to signify a night’s meal or refection given by the occupiers of the land to their superior when passing through his territory, which was exigible four times in the year, and when the tribe territory came to be recognised as crown land, it became a fixed food contribution charged upon each ploughgate of land. Thus in the charter by King Malcolm the Fourth, confirming the foundation of the abbey of Scone, he grants to the canons from each ploughgate of the whole land of the church of Scone in each year, at the Feast of All Saints, for their _Coneveth_, one cow and two pigs, and four _Camni_ of meal, and ten threaves of oats, and ten hens and two hundred eggs, and ten bundles of candles, and four pounds of soap, and twenty half meales of cheese.[291] In the reign of Alexander the Third this word seems to have assumed the form of _Waytinga_, and appears in the Chamberlain Rolls of his reign as a burden upon the Thanages. Thus the Chamberlain renders an account of the _Waytingas_ of Forfar and Glammis, of the _Waytinga_ of one night of Fettercairn, of the _Waytingas_ of four nights in the year of Kinross, and ‘of the rent of cows of two years,’ that is to say, of the _Waytingas_ of two nights in the year of Forfar, forty-eight cows, and of the _Waytinga_ of (one) and a half nights of the Thanage of Glammis, twenty-seven cows.[292] Another name for this exaction was _Cuidoidhche_, or a night’s portion, corrupted into _Cuddiche_ or _Cuddicke_. It appears under this name mainly in the Highlands and Islands, and was continued as a burden on the lands to a late period. In the rentals of South and North Kintyre for 1505 we find, besides _firma_ or rent, each township charged with a certain amount of meal, cheese, oats, and a mert or cow, _pro le Cuddecht_. A description of the Western Isles written between 1577 and 1595, has preserved a record of these payments. Lewis, a forty pound land, pays yearly 18 score chalders of victuall, 58 score of ky, 32 score of wedderis, and a great quantity of fishe, poultry, and white plaiding by their _Cuidichies_—that is, feasting their master when he pleases to come in the country, each one their night or two nights about, according to their land or labour. In Uist each merk land paid 20 bolls victual, besides other customs which are paid at the landlord’s coming to the Isle to his _Cudicht_; and in Mull each merk land paid yearly 5 bolls bear, 8 bolls meal, 20 stones of cheese, 4 stones of butter, 4 marts, 8 wedders, 2 merks of silver, and 2 dozen of poultrie by _Cuddiche_, whenever their master comes to them. Under the name of _Conyow_ or Coigny it appears in Iona, when, in a contract between the bishop of the Isles and Lauchlan M‘Lean of Dowart, in 1580, the latter becomes bound that he ‘sall suffer na maner of persoun or personis to oppress the saidis landis of Ycolmekill (Iona) and Rosse, or tenantis thaireof or trouble or molest thame in ony sort with ather stenting, _Conyow_, gerig service or ony maner of exactioun.’[293] In Atholl we find the vassals of Strathtay and their tenants ordered as late as in 1719 to pay their _Cudeichs_ according to ancient use and wont. These included two pecks of corn, one threave of straw, and six shillings Scots for maintenance of the superior’s horses and servants who wait on them, out of each twenty shilling land; and in 1720 it is ordered that the accustomed corn and straw and other casualties paid yearly as _Cuddeichs_ out of each merk land be taken up, excepting always the land laboured by the vassals for their own use. A similar burden under different names emerges in Galloway, when in a charter by David II. to Sir John Heris, knight of the barony of Terreglis, in Dumfriesshire, in which it is declared ‘free of _Sorryn_ and _Fachalos_ unless officers come through it with a robber or with the head of a robber; and if they, the king’s officers, can pass beyond the barony before sunsetting, they shall have nothing for their expenses, and if they cannot pass beyond the barony before sunsetting they shall have hospitality for that night (_hospicium ad hospitandum_),’ etc. _Sorren_ was a tax imposed in Ireland upon the possession of land for the clothing, feeding, and supporting the galloglasses and kernes. It was originally a night’s meal upon land passed through, and _Fachalos_ was probably the Irish _Fechtfele_, which is explained as ‘the first night’s entertainment we receive at each other’s house.’[294] [Sidenote: Expedition and hosting.] The _Feacht_ and _Sluaged_ (_expeditio et exercitus_) consisted of a general obligation, originally upon the members of the tribe, and afterwards upon the possessors and occupiers of what had been tribe territory, to follow their superiors and chiefs as well as the _Ardri_ or sovereign in his expeditions and wars. They are usually termed expedition and hosting, and in Scotland the burden was apportioned upon the davach of land. It is probably this burden that is referred to in the Book of Deer, where we are told that the ‘_Mormaer_ and _Toisech_ immolated all the offerings to God and to devotion, and to Saint Columcille and to Peter the Apostle, free from all the burdens, for a portion of four davachs of what would come on the chief tribe residences generally and on the chief churches.’ These obligations seem to have constituted what is called in charters Scottish service (_servitium Scoticanum_), and were of two kinds, internal and external, the one representing the _Feacht_ or expedition, and the other the _Sluaged_ or hosting. We find them distinguished in a charter by Waldevus de Stratheihan to the church of St. Andrews of the lands of Blaregeroge, which are granted ‘free from all exaction and service, internal and external’ (_sine omne exactione et servitio intrinseco et forinseco_);[295] and their connection with the Davach appears very clearly from three Charters, one by Alexander II. to the abbey of Scone of the lands of Magna et Parva Blar, which contains in the reddendo the clause, ‘rendering the external service only which pertains to five davachs of land, that pertaining to the sixth davach being remitted.’[296] In another by the Earl of Stratherne to Willelmus de Moravia, the lands are granted free of ‘every service except the external Scottish service of our lord the king;’[297] and in a third charter by Alexander the Second to the abbey of Arbroath of the lands of Tarvays, consisting of four davachs and a half davach and quarter davach, they are granted ‘rendering the external service in the army which pertains to the said lands.’[298] We have seen that the _Feachtmara_ or sea expedition of each tribe in ancient Dalriada was attached to each twenty houses, corresponding to the twenty penny lands which formed the davach in the west, showing very clearly that even at this early period the Davach was the measure of land by which this burden was regulated. Such, then, were the burdens connected with the ancient tribal organisation as depicted in the Irish and Welsh Laws which we find still attached to the thanages, as well as to all the crown and church lands not held on a feudal tenure. They consisted of, first, a share of the produce of the land and the stock, of the personal services of certain of the tenants, and of various fines, which were all included in the general term of _Cain_; secondly, of rights of entertainment and support for a certain number of nights in the year, under the name of _Coinmhedha_ or _Coneveth_, _Cuidoidhche_ or _Cuddechie_, _Waytinga_, _Sorren_, and _Fachalos_, and assessed on homesteads or penny lands in the west, twenty of which made a davach; and on Carucates or ploughlands in the east, four of which constituted the davach; thirdly, of the _Feacht_ or expedition,—the burden of joining in expeditions within the kingdom or territory; and fourthly, of the _Sluaged_ or Scottish service of hosting,—that is, the burden of attending the king’s army or host when assembled for the defence of the kingdom or for hostile invasion; and of all these burdens the various grades connected with the land had their _Cuid_ or share in definite proportions. [Sidenote: Assimilation to feudal forms.] These old Celtic tenures, however, became gradually more and more assimilated to feudal forms as the kingdom with its mixed population assumed more the aspect of a feudal monarchy, and its kings adapted the customs of their subjects of different race to the model of those of the feudal law. In this progress of adaptation we can trace two distinct stages,—one when the crown lands came to be considered as held upon a distinct tenure termed in England fee-farm, in Scotland feu-farm, and in Latin charters _feodifirma_; and again, when the War of Independence which followed on the death of the last of the kings of the race of Malcolm Ceannmor and the contest between the houses of Bruce and Baliol led to numerous confiscations of the land held by their partisans on both sides, and to the general conversion of the crown grants into feudal tenures for military service. [Sidenote: Tenure in feu-farm.] The tenure of crown lands in _feodifirma_, or feu-farm, appears in England as early as the reign of King John, and must have then been already well established, as one of the stipulations in the articles of the Barons which led to the great charter of liberties or Magna Charta, and repeated in the latter, is, that if any one holds of the king _per feodifirmam_, or on _sokage_ or burgage tenure, and of another for military service, the king is not to have the custody of the heir or of his land who holds of another in fee by reason of his fee-farm, sokage, or burgage holding of the king, nor shall he have the custody of the latter unless the fee-farm owes military service;[299] and in Scotland it was evidently recognised as a tenure holding of the Crown in the reigns of William the Lion and of Alexander the Second. The tenure in feu-farm or _feodifirma_ was in fact an intermediate tenure between those who had merely the usufruct of land the right of property in which still remained with the granter, and those who held land as his vassal by a formal feudal grant for military service. Of the two words of which the name is composed, _Firma_—derived from the Saxon _feorm_—was the share of the produce of the land paid by a tenant to his landlord by way of rent; and to hold land _ad firmam_ or _in firma_ was equivalent to the modern leasehold tenure: it was constituted by a lease and completed by possession, and the tenant was called _firmarius_; but _feodum_ is the feudal fief granted by charter and completed by seisin or infeftment. The tenure _in feodifirma_, therefore, was a feudal grant of land, not for military service, but for a _firma_ or permanent rent, and was equally constituted by charter and seisin. Such lands were held _ad feodifirmam_, the annual payment was the _feodifirma_, and the holder was called _feodifirmarius_. These grants were supposed to resemble the Roman _Emphyteusis_, and the form still exists in Scotland in our modern feu-charter, in which the same expressions are used. In these the land is conveyed ‘in feu-farm, to be held in feu-farm fee and heritage for ever,’ for payment of an annual ‘feu-duty,’ and the granter is called the ‘feuar.’ It is, however, essentially a feudal holding, and differs from a mere tenancy by lease in this—that in the former the _dominium utile_ of the land is conveyed by charter to the vassal, while in the latter the usufruct of the land is solely given, and the property of the soil remains with the granter.[300] [Sidenote: Ranks of society on Crown lands.] When the thanage came to be considered as crown land it assumed an appearance, with its thane holding it under the Crown and paying a share of the produce as _Cain_, which was so analogous to that of the feu-farm holding, that when feudal forms became more generally adopted it almost unavoidably passed over into the latter; and it is at this stage of the history of the thanage, when it was universally recognised as a feu-farm holding, that the very important description of the tenure of crown lands given us by Fordun in his Chronicle, to which we have already adverted, more directly applies. We must now examine this description more in detail. Fordun divides the possessors and occupiers of the crown lands into three classes, beginning his description with the lowest class, and proceeding through the different ranks till he reaches the Thane; but it will be more convenient for our purpose to invert the order in which he describes them. He introduces his description by stating that the kings were accustomed of old to give to their soldiers more or less of their lands in feu-farm a thanage or portion of some province, of which, however, he gave to each as it pleased him. Then follow the three classes. The highest he terms _principes_, _thani_, and _milites_. To these, who were few in number, he gave the land in perpetuity, but under the burden of a certain annual payment to the king. The word _principes_ here, probably, means the earls of those ancient earldoms who represented the old _Mormaers_, and whose demesne was held to have been originally part of the crown land.[301] The _thani_ represented the older _Toschachs_, and here we find the _Toschachs_ or thanes holding the demesne of the thanage of the king in feu-farm, and paying an annual feu-duty, first in kind, and retaining its original name of _Cain_, but afterwards commuted to a money payment. Accordingly, in the laws of William the Lion and of Alexander the Second we find them in the position of crown vassals holding of the king _in capite_. Thus in an assize held at Perth by King William the Lion there were present the bishops, abbots, earls, barons, thanes, and whole community or estates of the kingdom. Again, a law passed in A.D. 1220, regarding persons absenting themselves from the king’s army, mentions those belonging to the lands of bishops, abbots, barons, knights, and thanes who hold of the king.[302] By _milites_, Fordun here means those who held a portion of the thanage termed a tenement or tenandry, either direct from the king, or, as was more usual, under the thane or lord as a sub-vassal, as distinguished from the demesne.[303] These formed the class termed freeholders or _libere tenentes_, and were bound to yield certain services as suit and service in the court of the overlord and Scottish service to the king. This class is frequently alluded to in the laws both of William the Lion and of Alexander the Second. Thus in a statute of King William the Lion in 1180, regarding the holding of barony courts, it is provided that neither bishops nor abbots, nor earls nor barons, nor any freeholders (_libere tenentes_) shall hold courts unless the king’s sheriff is summoned, etc. Again, in a statute regarding justice and sheriff moots, we have barons, knights (_milites_), and freeholders (_libere tenentes_) classed together; and a statute regarding the mode of citation refers to persons cited to attend the moots of the justiciary shiref, baron, vavasour (that is, of one holding of a baron), or of any freeholder (_libere tenentis_) that has a court. Then a declaration regarding the freedom of the Church is made by King William at Scone, with the common consent and deliberation of the prelates, earls, barons, and freeholders (_libere tenentium_); and finally there is a statute by the same king that the earls, barons, and freeholders (_libere tenentes_) of the realm shall keep peace and justice among their serfs, and that they shall live as lords from their lands, rents, and dues, and not as husbandmen or sheep-farmers, wasting their property and the country with a multitude of sheep and beasts, thereby troubling God’s people with penury, poverty, and destruction; this curious statute showing not only the position of the _libere tenentes_ as proprietors, but that there was a tendency even at this early period to withdraw land from culture and convert it into pasture land.[304] Then in the Statutes of Alexander the Second there is one _de modo duelli secundum conditionem personarum_, in which reference is made to the _miles_ or knight, or son of a knight, or any _libere tenens_ or freeholder in _feodo militari_ or knight’s fee. Again, in another law, the king statutes that if any _miles_ or knight shall be indicted by inquest, he shall pass through an assize of good and leil knights, or of freeholders of heritage (_libere tenentium hereditarie_);[305] and their position is clearly indicated by a provision in the Quoniam attachiamenta, that any freeholder (_libere tenens_) whose tenement is by his infeftment free from all service, shall fall to a lady by reason of her terce, and unwittingly did service to her, shall not be liable in similar service to his superior.[306] This view of the position of the _libere tenentes_ as freeholders holding land under the thane or baron as sub-vassals of the Crown, is corroborated by a few charters which may be noticed. Thus Robertus de Keth, lord of the same and of the barony of Troup and Marischall of Scotland, grants certain lands within the barony of Troup to his son John de Keth, with the bondmen, bondages, native-men, and their followers, but reserving to himself the superiority and service of the freeholders (_libere tenentium_) of the lands of Achorthi, Curvi, and Hayninghill, lying within the barony of Troup. Again, Morgund, son of Albe, grants to his son Michael one davach of his land of Carncors in Buchan, to be held of himself in fee and heritage for ever, as freely as any freeman (_liber homo_) can grant land; and Alexander Cumyn, Earl of Buchan, grants to Fergus, son of John de Fothes, the tenement of Fothes, with its bondmen, bondages, native-men, and their followers, to be held of himself and his heirs in fee and heritage for ever, as freely as any freeman (_liber homo_) can hold (_tenet_) any tenement of any earl or baron within the kingdom, rendering such form in service to the king as pertains to their lands, and a half-pound of wax to us and our heirs in lieu of all secular service or demand which we can exact in future.[307]. This class appears to be meant by the _Ogethearn_ of the old laws, who ranked next after the thane.[308] The second of Fordun’s groups consists of those whom he terms _liberi et generosi_, who held portions of land either for ten or for twenty years or during life, with remainder to one or two heirs. These were the tenants in the modern sense of the term. The former were the _liberi firmarii_ of the statutes, or free farmers, and the latter the kindlie tenants or tacksmen, who were usually near relations of the lord of the land, and when they had a liferent possession of land, occupied an intermediate position between the _libere tenentes_ or freeholders and the _firmarii_ or farmers, and may in fact be classed with either.[309] We find in this group a resemblance to the _Ceile_ or tenants of the Irish Laws in two respects. First, in the steelbow tenancy, by which many of these tenants held their land, and were sometimes called steelbow-men. By this tenure the landlord provided the stock and implements called steelbow goods, which were transferred to the tenant on valuation; and he was bound on the termination of his lease to return stock and implements to the same value, while the rent paid for the land was higher in proportion to the value of the steelbow goods. Secondly, the smallest possession held by a free farmer appears to have been two bovates or oxgangs of land, or the fourth of a ploughgate, called in some parts of the country a husband-land; and we find that in the north of Scotland the name of _Rath_ was given to this portion of land, a name which in the Irish Laws signified the homestead, which formed the lowest single tenancy. Thus William, son of Bernard, grants to the monks of Arbroath ‘two bovates of land, which are called _Rath_ (_que vocantur Rathe_), of the territory of Katerlyn (in Kincardineshire), with the right to pasture twenty beasts and four horses on the common pasture of Katerlyn; and the same person grants to the monks two other bovates of land in the territory of Katerlyn, consisting of seven acres of land adjoining their land which is called _Rathe_, on the north, and nineteen acres of land adjoining these seven acres on the seaside towards the east, under that culture which is termed _Treiglas_, thus making up the twenty-six acres of which a husbandland consisted.’[310] The word _Rath_ enters largely into the topography of Scotland, under the forms of _Rait_, as in Logierait; _Ra_, as in Ramorny; _Rothy_, as in Rothiemay and Rothiemurchus, anciently _Rathmorchus_. The last of Fordun’s groups consists of those termed _Agricolœ_ or husbandmen, holding land from year to year for rent (_ad firmam_). They are distinguished from the _liberi_ or freemen, and belonged to the class of holders of servile tenements termed in the laws _Rustici_. This class of servile tenants seems to form the object of the first laws made by Alexander the Second on his accession in A.D. 1214. They are issued at Scone, with the common council of his earls, for the profit of the country, and provide that the ‘_Rustici_ in those places and townships in which they were the previous year shall exercise their agriculture and not neglect their own profit, but shall begin to plough and sow their lands with all diligence fifteen days before the Feast of the Purification (second of February); and that those _Agrestes_ who have more than four cows shall take land from their lord and plough and sow it, to provide sustenance for them and theirs; and those who have less than five cows may not use them in ploughing, but shall labour the land with hands and feet, trenching and sowing as much as is necessary for the sustenance of them and theirs. Those that have oxen shall sell them to those that have land to plough and sow. Earls not allowing those who have such lands on their earldoms to do so shall forfeit eight cows to the king; and if any one holding of the king shall neglect to do so, he shall forfeit eight cows to the king. If he hold of an earl, he shall give the earl eight cows. If he be a serf, his lord shall take from him one cow and one sheep, and thenceforth shall force him who will not do it of free will; and the king adds the following warning to them to take heed that that does not happen to them which is taught in parables. He who will not plough in winter owing to severe cold shall beg in summer, and it shall not be given him, but rather according to the judgment of the apostle—Let them labour with their hands, working what is good, that they may have to give to those who are in necessity.’[311] The thanage then consisted, like all baronies, of two parts, demesne and that part given off as freeholds (_libera tenementa_) or tenandries. The demesne was held by the Thane of the king in feu-farm, and cultivated by the servile class, the bondmen and native-men, and the tenandries were either held of him in fee and heritage by the sub-vassals called freeholders or _libere tenentes_, or occupied by the kindlie tenants and free farmers. Such was their position prior to the death of Alexander the Third, the last king of the old dynasty, and a similar description would apply to those thanages which did not form part of the crown lands, but were held under earls of the ancient earldoms north of the Forth as part of their demesne,[312] or of the Church. ----- Footnote 1: De toto regno, de insula Manniæ et de omnibus aliis insulis ad dictum regnum Scotiæ pertinentibus necnon et de Tyndallia et de Penereth cum aliis omnibus juribus et libertatibus ad dictum dominum Regem Scotiæ spectantibus.—Rym. _Fœd._ ii. p. 266. Footnote 2: For this sketch of the attempts of the Scottish kings to obtain possession of these northern provinces, Hailes’s _Annals_ and Vol. I. of this work may be consulted. Footnote 3: Rymer’s _Fœdera_; Palgrave, _Records_, vol. i. pp. ii. 1. Footnote 4: Dominus autem rex, circa festum S. Michaelis (A.D. 1211) rediens inde cum manu valida, Malcolmum comitem de Fyfe Moraviæ custodem dereliquit.... Erat enim tunc temporis ipse (Willelmus Cumyn Comes de Buchan) Custos Moraviæ.—_Scotichron._ B. viii. c. lxxvi. Footnote 5: It is thus described by Dio in the reign of the Emperor Severus. Footnote 6: Adamnan, _Vit. Columbæ_. Footnote 7: Provinciis septentrionalium Pictorum, hoc est, eis quæ arduis atque horrentibus montium jugis ab australibus eorum sunt regionibus sequestratæ. Namque ipsi australes Picti, qui intra eosdem montes habent sedes.—_Hist. Ec._ lib. iii. cap. iv. Footnote 8: De situ Albaniæ quæ in se figuram hominis habet.—_Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 135. Footnote 9: Brevis Descriptio regni Scotiæ.—_Ib_. 214. Footnote 10: Fordun’s _Chronicle of Scotland_, B. ii. cc. vii. and viii. vol. ii. pp. 36-7. Footnote 11: Coadunatus autem erat iste nefandus exercitus de Normannis, Germanis, Anglis, de Northymbranis et Cumbris, de Teswetadala, de Lodonea, de Pictis, qui vulgo Galleweienses dicuntur, et Scottis.—Ric. Hagustald. _ad an_. 1138. Footnote 12: Fordun’s _Chron._ vol. i. App. I. Footnote 13: Qui duce Reuda de Hibernia progressi vel amicitia vel ferro sibimet inter eos sedes quas hactenus habent, vindicarent.—_Bede_, i. c. 1. Footnote 14: Dicto namque Kentegerno pluribusque successoribus suis pie religionis perseverantia ad Deum transmigratis, diverse seditiones circumquaque insurgentes, non solum Ecclesiam et ejus possessiones destruxerunt, verum etiam totam regionem vastantes, ejus habitatores exilio tradiderunt. Sic ergo omnibus bonis exterminatis, magnis temporum intervallis transactis, diverse tribus diversarum nationem ex diversis partibus affluentes, desertam regionem prefatam habitaverunt; sed dispari genere et dissimili lingua et vario more viventes, haud facile [inter] sese consentientes, gentilitatem potius quam fidei cultum tenuere. Quos infelices dampnate habitationis habitatores, more pecudum irrationabiliter degentes, dignatus est Dominus, Qui neminem vult perire, propitiatione Sua visitare; tempore enim Henrici Regis Anglie, Alexandro Scotorum rege in Scotia regnante, misit eis Deus David, predicti Regis Scotie germanum, in principem et ducem; qui eorum impudica et scelerosa contagia corrigeret, et animi nobilitate et inflexibili severitate contumeliosam eorum contumatiam refrenaret.—Haddan and Stubbs, _Councils_, vol. ii. part i. p. 17. Footnote 15: This chronicle was printed from the Book of Aberpergwm in the _Myvyrian Archæology_, vol. ii., and reprinted, with a translation, in the _Archæologia Cambrensis_, vol. ix., Third Series, but its authority is very doubtful. Footnote 16: When Kentigern was preaching to the pagan people at Hoddam, in Dumfriesshire, the chief point of his sermon was to show them that their god Woden had been a mere man.—See Paper on Early Frisian Settlements, _Proceedings Ant. Scot._, vol. iv. p. 169. Footnote 17: Fourth Report of Hist. MSS. Com., App. p. 493. Footnote 18: _Chart. Scon_, p. 24. Footnote 19: Fordun, _Chron._ (Annals, IV.) ed. 1872, vol. ii. p. 251. Footnote 20: The names Dubhgall and Finngall must not be confounded, as is usually done, with the Christian names Dubhgal and Fingal, which belong to a large class of names ending with the syllable _gal_, signifying _valour_. Footnote 21: There is no foundation for the usual statement that the Sudreys meant merely the islands south of the Point of Ardnamurchan, which is contradicted by the language of the Sagas. Footnote 22: This is Munch’s opinion. See his _Chronicle of Man_, preface, p. xviii. Footnote 23: _Annals of the Four Masters_, vol. i. p. 634. Footnote 24: Dasent, _Saga of Burnt Njal_, vol. ii. pp. 12, 39, 40. Footnote 25: Goffraig Meranach ri Gall mortuus est.—_An. Ult._ _ad an_. 1095. Atbath don mhortladh chetna (of the same pestilence died) Gofraidh Meranach tighearna Gall Athacliath agus na ninnsidh.—_Annals of the Four Masters_, vol. ii. p. 950. Footnote 26: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 170. Footnote 27: See translation of _Book of Clanranald_ in the Appendix, No. I. Footnote 28: _Ib_. Footnote 29: _Chron. of Man_, _ad an_. 1140. Footnote 30: _Ib_. Footnote 31: _Ib_. Footnote 32: The author is indebted to W. M. Hennessey, Esq., of the Public Record Office, Dublin, for a copy of this poem, collated with one in his own possession. It is printed in the Appendix, No. II., along with a translation by Mr. Hennessey. Footnote 33: _Ise in Manannan sin robai i n-arainn ocus as friaside adberar Emain Ablach_. It was this Manannan that resided in Arann, and this is the place which is called Eamania of the apple-trees.—_Yellow Book of Lecain, Atlantis_, vol. iv. p. 228. Footnote 34: Principes Insularum.—_Chron. Manniæ._ Footnote 35: _Chron. Manniæ_, _ad an_. Footnote 36: See _Act. Parl._, vol. i. p. 424. Footnote 37: Puis est treitez et acordez de mettre quatre poire des Justices en la terre Descoce et pur ce que les choses soient mesnees de meillur array et plus a honur et au profite de nostre seignur le Roy et al aisement du poeple est assentu que en LOENEYS soient deux Justices, cest asavoir monsieur Johan del Isle et monsieur Adam de Gurdon. En GA[LO]WAY monsieur Roger de Kirkpatrick et monsieur Wautier de Burghdone. Et pur LES TERRES DELA LA MER DESCOCE, cest asavoir ENTRE LA RIVERE DE FORTH ET LES MONTZ monsieur Robert de KETH et monsieur William Inge. Et pur LES TERRES DELA LES MONTZ Monsieur Reynaud le Chien et Monsieur Johan de Vaux du Counte de Northumber.—_Act. Parl. Scot._, vol. i. p. 120. Footnote 38: Fordun’s _Chron._, vol. ii. p. 38. Footnote 39: Bede tells us (B. i. c. 12) that the Picts and Scots were termed transmarine nations, not because they came from beyond Britain, but because they belonged to that remote part of Britain beyond the two firths. The word Transmarine Scotland is adopted as a convenient term for Scotland beyond the Firths of Forth and Clyde. Footnote 40: Defunctus est Palladius in Campo Girgin, in loco qui dicitur Forddun.—Colgan, _Tr. Th._ p. 13. Footnote 41: _Book of Rights_, pp. 17 and 49. Footnote 42: When the Pictish Chronicle tells us that the Norwegians were cut off in _Sraith-herne_ or Stratherne, the Irish Annals narrate the same event as a slaughter by the men of Fortren.—_Chron. Picts and Scots_, pp. 9. and 362. Footnote 43: Across the Stockfurde into Ros.—_Wyntoun._ Footnote 44: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 136. Footnote 45: 693 _Bruidhe mac Bile Rex Fortrend moritur_. 739 _Tolarcan mac Drostan rex Athfhotla a bathadh la h’Angus_ (drowned by Angus).—_Tigh. Ib._ pp. 75, 76. Footnote 46: 1020 Findlaec mac Ruaidri Mormaer Moreb.—_Tigh._ Findlaec mac Ruadri Ri Alban.—_An. Ult._ Footnote 47: Et si ille qui calumpniatus est de catallo furato vel rapto vocat warentum suum aliquem hominem manentem inter Spey et Forth vel inter Drumalban et Forth habeat ab illo die quo calumpniatus fuerit xv. dies ad producendum warentum suum qui infra dictas divisas maneat ad locum sicut Rex David constituit in comitatu ubi calumpnia tus fuerit. Et si quis ultra illas divisas velut in Moravia vel in Ros vel in Katenes vel in Ergadia vel in Kentyre vocaverit warentos habeat omnes warentos illos quos habere debuit ab ultimo die quindecem dierum predictorum in unam mensem ad locum ubi ipse qui calumpniatus est de catallo furato vel rapto cum catallo adductus erit. Et si calumpniatus venerit pro warento suo qui maneat vel in Moravia vel in Ros vel in Katenes vel in _Ergadia que pertinet ad Moraviam_ nec illum habere poterit tunc veniat ad vicecomitem de Invirnisse, etc.... Item si calumpniatus vocaverit warentum aliquem in _Ergadia que pertinet ad Scotiam_ tunc veniat ad Comitem Atholie vel ad Abbatem de Clendrochard, etc.—_Act. Parl._ vol. i. p. 372. Dominus Rex pro pace et stabilitate regni sui observanda statuit et ordinavit quod de terris subscriptis fient videlicet De _terra Comitis de Ros in Nort Argail_.—_Ib_. _ad an_. 1292, vol. i. p. 447. Footnote 48: The term Scotti Picti is here evidently a rendering of the name of _Gwyddyl Ffichti_, by which the Picts were known to the Welsh, and the allusion to their return from Ireland refers to the tradition of their settlement as given by Bede. Footnote 49: Reeves’s _Adamnan_, p. 397. Footnote 50: _Orkneyinga Saga_, p. 181. Footnote 51: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 363. Footnote 52: _Ib._ p. 9. Footnote 53: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 77. Footnote 54: See vol. i. p. 387, note 5. _War of the Gaedhil with the Gaill_, p. 153. Footnote 55: Olaf Tryggvesson’s Saga. _Collect. de reb. Alb._, p. 333. Footnote 56: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, 77, 78, and 367. Footnote 57: _Saxon Chron._ _ad an_. 1031. See also vol. i. p. 397, note 22. Footnote 58: Anderson’s _Orkneyinga Saga_, p. 28, note. The author has no doubt that Munch’s conjecture is correct. The expression ‘where Scotland and England meet’ must not be too strictly construed, but it evidently places the locality on the southern frontier of Scotland. That Gallgaedhel is geographically Galloway appears from this, that the deaths of Roland and Allan, Lords of Galloway, which took place in 1199 and 1234, are recorded in the Irish Annals under the title of _Ri Gallgaedhel_. Footnote 59: 1040 Donnchad rex Scotiæ in autumno occiditur a duce suo Macbethad mac Finnlaech, cui succesit in regnum.—(Marianus Scotus.) _Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 65. Footnote 60: _Collect. de reb. Alb._, pp. 345, 346. Footnote 61: _Col. de Reb. Alb._, p. 346. Footnote 62: Bower says of Alexander I.—‘Quod patruus suus comes de Gowry dedit sibi ad donum, ut moris est in baptismo, terras de Lyff et Invergowry’ (_Scotichron._ B. v. chap. xxxvi.), which shows that during the life of Malcolm III. one of his brothers possessed Gowry. Then we find that Madach, who ruled over Atholl as earl in the reign of Alexander I. and David I., was the son of Melmare, brother of Malcolm III., and his son Edelradus is designated in a charter of Admore in Kinross-shire ‘Abbas de Dunkelden et insuper comes de Fife’ (_Chart. St. Andrews_, p. 115), thus uniting the possession of the abbacy of Dunkeld, the patrimony of this royal family, with the earldom of Fife. Footnote 63: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, pp. 370, 372. Footnote 64: _Dobharcu_, of which Dobharcon is the genitive form, signifies literally water-dog, and is the name usually given to an otter. Footnote 65: The words _agus ise Mormaer agus ise Toisech_. This has been translated as if it meant that Mondac was both Mormaer and Toisech, while Comgall is left without a designation, but the above is the obvious meaning. Footnote 66: In the above notice from the Book of Deer the reader is referred to the edition of it printed for the Spalding Club under the able care of the late Dr. John Stuart. The facts they disclose are given here merely, and the explanation must be reserved to a subsequent chapter. Footnote 67: _Chart. Scon_, p. 2. Footnote 68: Ailred De bello apud Standardum, printed in appendix to Fordun, _Chron._, vol. i. p. 443. Footnote 69: _Orkneyinga Saga_, p. 86. Footnote 70: Compare the subscriptions to the Scone charter, ‘Ego Alexander Dei Gratia Rex Scotorum propria manu mea hec confirmo ... ego Sibilla Dei Gratia Regina Scottorum propria manu hec confirmo, ego Gregorius episcopus, etc., confirmo, ego Cormacus episcopus, etc., confirmo, ego Beth comes similiter, ego Gospatricius Dolfini assensum prebeo, ego Mallus comes assensum prebeo, ego Madach comes assensum prebeo, ego Rothri comes assensum prebeo, ego Gartnach comes assensum prebeo, ego Dufagan comes assensum prebeo (_Chart. Scon_, p. 2), with the following Saxon charters:—‘Ego Æthelbalth (Mercensium Rex) hanc donationem meam subscripsi. Ego Uuor Episcopus consensi et subscripsi. Piot abbas. Uuilfirth comes. Sigibed comes. Oba comes. Beorcol comes. Heardberht frater Regis Eadberht comes, etc. Or another in 823—‘Ego Eagbertus Rex Anglorum hanc donationem meam, etc., confirmavi et subscripsi. Ego Ætheluulf Rex consensi et subscripsi. Ego Uulfred Archiepiscopus consensi et subscripsi. Ego Wigthegn Episcopus consensi et subscripsi. Ego Ealhstan Episcopus consensi et subscripsi. Ego Bearnmod Episcopus consensi et subscripsi. Ego Wulfhard Dux consensi et subscripsi. Ego Monuede Dux consensi et subscripsi. Ego Osmod Dux consensi et subscripsi. Ego Dudda Dux consensi et subscripsi, etc.—Palgrave, _Rise and Progress of the English Commonwealth_, vol. ii. pp. ccxix. ccxx. Footnote 71: _Chart. of Dunfermlin_, p. 4. Footnote 72: _Ib_. p. 16. Footnote 73: _Chart. of St. Andrews_, pp. 116, 117. Footnote 74: Mr. Robertson, in his valuable work of _Scotland under her Early Kings_, considers that Beth in the Scone charter is written by a clerical error for Heth, that he is the same person with the Ed and Head of David’s charters, and was Earl of Moray, and father of that Angus, Earl of Moray, defeated and slain in 1130 (vol. i. pp. 104, 190). This opinion is mainly grounded on the fact that Wimund, when he claimed to be the son of Angus, called himself Malcolm MacHeth, but Beth appears in the same form in a subsequent charter in the Scone chartulary (p. 4), and an identification, which requires us to suppose that the name has been miswritten in two charters, is not admissible. Moreover, it is not likely that an Earl of Moray should witness the foundation-charter of a monastery erected as a thank-offering for the defeat of the men of Moray in that year. As the great province of Fif consisted of the two old districts of Fyfe and Fothrithi, it is not impossible that there may at first have been an Earl connected with each, and that Beth, occupying here the leading place in which the subsequent Earls of Fife are invariably found, may have been earl along with Edelrad, and that the latter is the Ed who, along with Constantin, witnesses the earliest charter of King David, as there is a circumflex through the d of Ed, which implies that some letters after it have been omitted. This would account for Constantin appearing in the charter of Edelrad as if he were his contemporary. It may be observed that the Admore which Edelrad grants was in Fothrif, while Constantin appears in connection with Kirkcaldy in Fife, and that the name of the Thane of Falkland being Macbeath, shows that the name Beath was also connected with Fife. Head may certainly have been the Earl of Moray who preceded Angus, and gave his name to the family of MacHeth. Footnote 75: See charter by Alexander the Second to Earl Malcolm of Fife, son of Duncan, Earl of Fife, of the comitatus de Fyfe. ‘Sicut Comes Duncanus frater suus comitatem illum tenuit ... Sicut carta regis David de predicto comitatu facta comiti Duncano patri ejus.’—_National MSS._ vol. i. p. 28. Footnote 76: Fordun, _Chron._ (Annals, III.) vol. ii. p. 251; and see note, p. 430. Footnote 77: ‘Ingibiorg, the mother of the earls,’ married Melkolf, king of Scotland, who was called Langhals. Their son was Dungad, king of Scotland, the father of William, who was a good man. His son was William the Noble, whom all the Scots wished to take for their king.—_Collect. de Reb. Alb._ 40, p. 346. Footnote 78: Wyntoun, _Chron._ B. vii. c. vii. Footnote 79: Memorandum quod Comes de Holand processit de sorore domini Regis Willelmi ut cognitum est per anticos regni Scotie quod totus comitatus de Ros, collatus fuit in maritagio cum predicta sorore domini Regis Willelmi et predictus comitatus elongatus fuit a predicto comite de Holand sine aliqua ratione et sine merito suo vel antecessorum suorum ut injuste sicut recognitum est.—Palgrave, _Documents and Records_, p. 20. Footnote 80: The principal act of Gilchrist’s life was the foundation of the Priory of Monimusk, and Thomas, the Doorward, confirms the grant by his grandfather and his mother. His son Alan declares, in 1257, that Morgund and his son Duncan were illegitimate, and in 1291 the Earl of Mar complains that when William the Lion restored the Earldom to Morgund, ‘deficiebant tres centum librate terre.’—_Ant. Ab. and Banff_, vol. iv. p. 151. Footnote 81: This deed has hitherto been known only by its being printed by Selden in his _Titles of Honour_; but the document from which he printed was found among his papers, and is now in the library at Lincoln’s Inn. See Appendix No. IV. for an account of this charter. Footnote 82: Fordun, _Chron._ (Annals, XXX.) vol. ii. p. 276. Footnote 83: _Chart. of Paisley_, p. 167. The expressions used here imply that David held the earldom only for a time. The first mention of another earl of Lennox is in 1193, when Eth, son of the earl of Lennox, witnesses a charter in the _Liber de Melrose_, vol. i. p. 22, and that his name was Aluin appears from the _Chartulary of Glasgow_, vol. i. p. 86, where we find, between 1208 and 1214, a charter by Alewinus comes de Levenax filius et heres Alewini comitis de Levenax. Footnote 84: Fordun, _Chron._ (Annals, XXIX.), p. 276. Footnote 85: Willelmi Rishanger _Chronica et Annales_, Master of the Rolls Series, p. 344. The words ‘de chef mes’ are erroneously translated by the editor ‘of chief of the house,’ instead of ‘chief messuage.’ Footnote 86: Rishanger, _Chronica_, pp. 355, 356, 357. Footnote 87: The decision is thus given in the arguments adduced by Baliol in support of the position that the kingdom was not partible. Printed by Palgrave (_Doc._, p. 40), unfortunately the document is very imperfect, but it appears to place the old Celtic earldom in the same category with the offices of seneschals, marischals, constables, and foresters:— ‘Ausi la Countee de Asheles demora a Isabele la einzne ... puisne n y aveit vivaunt Isabel l einzne soir e le isseue de li. E fet ... lavandit Isabel en pleyn Parlament devaunt le Rey Alexaundre fiz ... son counseil q ele ne deveit ceo par ... er por ceo qe Countee nest pas partable ... qe plus ... es ce ... vynt.... Escoce Seneschaucie Mareschaucie Conestablerie Foresterie. e ... einzne ... al isseue ... einznesce autres offices e baillies semblable qe sount de la coroune.’ Footnote 88: Pro dolor! Patricius de Athedle filius Thomæ de Galwedia et comitis de Adthedle, juvenis egregius et quantum ad humanam oppinionem omni curiali sapientia et facescia imbutus, apud Hadingtone in hospitio suo de nocte postquam se sopori dedisset, per consilium quorundam malignancium nequiter perimitur, cum duobus sociis suis.... Post cujus tamen obitum, David de Hastinges accepit ejus comitatum provenientem sibi ex parte uxoris sue, que erat matertera juvenis occisi.—_Chron. Mel._ Footnote 89: The history of these ancient earldoms is very inaccurately given by the Peerage-writers, and none more so than that of the earldom of Caithness. These errors will be found corrected in Appendix No. V. Footnote 90: Palgrave, _Documents_, pp. 14, 15. Footnote 91: Vol. i. p. 483. Footnote 92: Vol. i. p. 486. Footnote 93: See charter by David II., confirming in 1368 to Archibald Campbell, son of Colin, the lands of Craignish, Melfort, and others, with all the liberties thereof, as freely as Duncan Mac Duine, progenitor of the said Archibald Campbell, enjoyed the same in the barony of Lochaw, or other lands belonging to him.—_His. Com._, 4 Report, p. 40. The first Campbell on record is Gillespie Campbell in 1266, and this Duncan was his grandfather. Footnote 94: Rymer’s _Fœdera_, vol. i. p. 257. Footnote 95: Fordun, _Chron._, ed. 1874, vol. ii. p. 289, and note p. 436. Footnote 96: Quo tempore septem Comites Scotiae, viz. de Bowan, de Meneteth, de Stradeherne, de Lewenes, de Ros, de Athel, de Mar, ac Johannes filius Johannis Comyn de Badenau, collecto exercitu valido in valle Annandie, feria secunda Paschæ Angliam ingressi, vastabant omnia cæde et incendio, et non parcentes ætati vel sexui venientes Carleolum urbem, ipsam obsidione cinxerunt.—Willelmi Rishanger _Chronica_, p. 156. Footnote 97: Willelmi Rishanger _Chronica_, pp. 159, 160. Footnote 98: Rymer’s _Fœdera_, ii. p. 471. Footnote 99: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 291. Footnote 100: Fordun, _Chronicle_, vol. ii. p. 177. Footnote 101: _Regiam Majestatem_, p. i. Footnote 102: This word _feodofirma_, called feu-farm in Scotland and fee-farm in England, is usually understood as meaning what is inconsistently called a hereditary lease, but it was not so at least in Scotland. It was a grant of the _feodum_ or fee of the estate, and not merely of the usufruct, burdened with an annual payment of a _firma_ or _census_, instead of military service.—See Fordun, vol. ii. p. 414 note. Footnote 103: This subject will be more fully discussed in a subsequent chapter. Footnote 104: _Chart. Aberdeen_, vol. i. p. 55. Footnote 105: Dominus Rex pro pace et stabilitate regni sui observandus statuit et ordinavit quod de terris subscriptis fient [vicecomitatus] videlicet. De terra comitis de Ros in Nort Argail, Terra de Glenc[elg] Terra Regis de Skey et Lodoux, octo davaux de terra [Garmoran] Egge et Rumme Guiste et Barrich cum minutis insulis et vocetur vicecomitatus de Skey. De terris Kinnebathyn Ardemuirich Bothelve, Terra Alexandri de Argadia, Terra Johannis de Glenurwy, Terra Gilberti Mc[Nauchton] Terra Malcolmi M‘Ivyr Terra Dugalli de Cragins Terra Johannis McGilcrist Terra Magistri Radulphi de Dunde, Terra Gileskel M‘Lachl[an] Terra Comitis de Meneteth de Knapedal, Terra Anegus filii Dovenaldi Insularum et Terra Colini Cambel et vocetur vicecomitatus de [Lorn]. De terris de Kentyr cum omnibus tenentibus terras in eadem. Terra Lochmani McKilcolim McErewer Terra Enegus McErewer, Terra de ... Insula de Boot, Terra Domini Thomæ Cambel, et Terra Dunkani Duf et vocetur vicecomitatus de Kentyr.—_Acta Parl._ vol. i. p. 447. Footnote 106: The account of these supposed colonies in all their subsequent elaboration will be found in the _Annals of the Four Masters_, and in Keating’s _History of Ireland_, which contains a very accurate representation of the Irish legends in regard to them. Footnote 107: These names have a meaning connected with land, and probably personify the different kinds of tenure by which the land was held. _Er_ means noble; _Orba_, inheritance; _Fearann_, land in general; and _Feargna_, chieftainship. Footnote 108: The word meant is _Lediaith_. In Welsh, identity of language was implied by _Cyfiaith_, dialectic difference by _Lediaith_, and difference of language by _Anghyviaith_. Footnote 109: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, pp. 47, 48. Footnote 110: In referring to the Cymric legends it is necessary to be careful as to the source from which they are derived. The literature of Wales has been unfortunately tainted to a large extent by spurious documents professing to be old, but in the main the creation of the eighteenth century, when a school of Welsh antiquaries existed, desirous of reproducing what they considered a sort of mystic Druidism supposed to have been handed down from pagan times by a successor of Baedi, and who were little scrupulous as to the means by which they promoted their object. Among the documents emerging from this school were the so-called Historical Triads, which the author rejects as spurious. A valuable and interesting work, the _Mabinogion_, by Lady Charlotte Guest, containing the ancient Welsh prose tales preserved in the Red Book of Hergest, unfortunately includes one of these spurious pieces, the Hanes Taliessin, among the genuine tales. The author announced in his _Four Ancient Books of Wales_ that this tale, though included in those said to be taken from the Red Book of Hergest, is not to be found in that MS., and is certainly a manufacture of the last century; while more spurious poems, attributed to Taliessin but not to be found in the Book of Taliessin, have been introduced into it, though not forming a part of it. He regrets to see that this spurious document is still included in the new edition of the _Mabinogion_ among the tales said to be taken from the Red Book of Hergest, as if the imposture had never been detected. It shows how difficult it is to purge the early historical literature of any country of such spurious matter when once it has been accepted as genuine. Footnote 111: _Four Ancient Books of Wales_, vol. i. p. 276. Footnote 112: Gildas, _Hist._ c. 25. Footnote 113: Nennius, _Hist._ c. 42. Footnote 114: Nennius, c. 56. Footnote 115: This document is printed with a translation in the _The Four Ancient Books of Wales_, vol. ii. p. 455. Footnote 116: See _Four Ancient Books of Wales_, vol. i. c. x., Cumbria, or the Men of the North, for a fuller account of these traditionary origins. Footnote 117: The modern Welsh antiquaries in general regard the Picts as belonging to the Cymric race and speaking a Welsh dialect, but in this they run counter to their own early traditions, for both in their old poems and in prose documents there is a consensus as to their being a foreign race to the Cymry, and belonging to the people termed by them Gwyddyl. In the poems they are usually termed Brithwyr and Peithwyr, but also Gwyddyl Ffichti; thus the early Pictish inhabitants of Bernicia are thus alluded to— Five chiefs then will he Of the Gwyddyl Ffichti, Of a sinner’s disposition, Of the race of the knife. _Four Ancient Books of Wales_, vol. i. p. 432. And in one poem the epithet of _Anghyfiaeth_, that is, speaking a language different from the Cymric, is clearly applied to them (_ib_. p. 433 and note). Thus in the Triads of Arthur, which are genuine, they are included in the three foreign races called ‘Three oppressions came into this island, and did not go out of it.’ The second is ‘the oppression of the Gwyddyl Ffichti, and they did not again go out of it.’ The third was the oppression of the Saxons (_ib_., vol. ii. p. 465). In order to avoid the force of this, the term Gwyddyl Ffichti is usually translated Irish Picts, and supposed to refer to those in Ireland only; but the epithet Gwyddyl was certainly used in the larger sense of the race wherever found, and it is clear from all the passages that the same people are referred to who are known as the Picts of Britain. If they had been termed Cymry Ffichti, would this school of Welsh antiquarians have tolerated an assertion that they were not of the Cymric race? Footnote 118: Angles and Galwydel, Let them make their war.— _Four Ancient Books of Wales_, vol. i. p. 284. Footnote 119: Nemedius, inter posteros ejus McCailin Moir agus MacLeoid.—MS. 1467. See also _Ulster Archæological Journal_, vol. ix. p. 319. Footnote 120: They will be found in Lady Ferguson’s excellent little work, _The Story of the Irish before the Conquest_, and in Mr. Standish O’Grady’s interesting work just published, _The History of Ireland_, vol. i. _Heroic Period_. The interest of this latter work is, in the author’s opinion, greatly detracted from by his having unfortunately adopted a practice, which cannot be too strongly deprecated, of spelling Irish proper names phonetically. There is nothing gained by it, as the form of the name has quite as barbarous an appearance as when the proper orthography is retained, the identity of the persons meant is lost, it is misleading as there is no uniform pronunciation of these names by those who speak the vernacular Gaelic, and the travesty of the Irish names is equally offensive to good taste and to sound judgment. In other respects this little work has great merits. Footnote 121: _Chronicle of the Picts and Scots_, pp. 24, 45, 318, 322. Footnote 122: _Annals of the Four Masters_, vol. i. p. 49. Footnote 123: Genealach Corca Laidhe.—_Miscellany of the Celtic Society_, p. 10. Footnote 124: _Ranta on Athcliath cochele ittir Cond. c. Cathach agus Mogh Nuadhad_ cui nomen erat Eogan.—_Ad an._ 165. Footnote 125: Bede, _Ec. Hist._, lib. iii. cap. iii. Footnote 126: _Annals of the Four Masters_, vol. i. p. 113. Footnote 127: _Indarba Ullad a h-Erend a Manand la Cormac hui Cond. As de ba Cormac Ulfada dia ro cuir Ul. a fadh_.—_Ad an._ 254. Footnote 128: Genealach Corca Laidhe.—_Misc. Celtic Soc._, pp. 4, 5. Footnote 129: _Ib_. p. 67. Footnote 130: _Ibid_. p. 5. Footnote 131: See _Annals of the Four Masters_, under dates, and Keating’s _History of Ireland_. Tighernac under 322, 326, 332. Footnote 132: Cormac’s Glossary, edited for the Irish Arch. Society by Mr. Whitley Stokes, p. 111. Footnote 133: _Annals of the Four Masters._ Footnote 134: _Tribes and Customs of Hy Fiachrach_, p. 19. Footnote 135: From the Book of Leinster. The substance is given in O’Curry’s _Lectures on the MS. Materials_, p. 287. Footnote 136: Dean of Lismore’s Book, p. 157. Footnote 137: This poem is preserved in McFirbis’ _Book of Genealogies_, p. 410, where the prose tales will also be found. The original of the poem is printed in the Appendix No. VI. Footnote 138: McFirbis, in his Genealogical MS., says—‘This account I found among the Books of Fardorough McFirbis, who was a sennachaidhe well acquainted in Alban and much frequented it.’ He lived about 1560. Footnote 139: Fergus filius Eric ipse fuit primus qui de semine Chonare suscepit regnum Alban.—_Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 130. Footnote 140: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 18. Footnote 141: _Stat. Acc._ (1791-99), vol. xiv. p. 602. Footnote 142: Cath a sreith in terra Circin inter Pictones invicem in quo cecidit Bruidhi mac Mailchon.—_Tigh. Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 76. Footnote 143: _Chron. of the Picts and Scots_, pp. 320 and 526. Footnote 144: O’Curry, _MS. Materials of Ancient Irish History_, p. 319. The story of the children of Uisneach, from which the quotations are here made, will be found in the _Transactions_ of the Gaelic Society of Dublin. Footnote 145: The old Gaelic names of the leading physical features of the Highlands have been so perverted by the numerous guide-books to which the attraction of the country to tourists has given rise, that the older forms well known some thirty years ago are almost gone. The writers of these books seem to have invented an orthography of their own, which they suppose to represent Gaelic words, but are neither one thing nor another. One of their most successful inventions is that of the _Cuchullin_ hills in Skye. Footnote 146: A translation from the oldest copy of it will be found in the introduction to the Dean of Lismore’s Book, p. lxxxvii. Footnote 147: _Ib_., p. lxxxviii. note. Footnote 148: _Chronicles of the Picts and Scots_, p. 319. Footnote 149: Cormac’s Glossary, edited by Mr. Whitley Stokes, p. 72. Footnote 150: The form of this name as we find it in St. Berchan’s prophecy is identical with that of Erin or Ireland.—See _Chron. Picts and Scots_, pp. 84, 88, and 98. Footnote 151: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, p. 165. Footnote 152: Fordun’s _Chronicle_, ed. 1874, vol. i. pp. 227, 430. Footnote 153: There is a charter by Malcolm the Fourth to the canons of Scone, ‘in principale sede regni nostri fundata,’ in which he conveys to them the titles ‘de quatuor maneriis meis de Gouerin scilicet de Scon, et de Cubert et de Fergrund et de Stratherdel.’—_Chr. of Scone_, p. 6. Footnote 154: _Chron. Picts and Scots_, pp. 9 and 21. Footnote 155: _Ancient Laws and Institutes of England_, edited by Benjamin Thorpe, 1840. _Ancient Laws and Institutes of Wales_, edited by Aneurin Owen, 1841. Footnote 156: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. i., vol. ii., vol. iii. Footnote 157: See _Acts of the Parliaments of Scotland_, edited by Cosmo Innes, vol. i. Footnote 158: Sir Henry Maine, in his _Early History of Institutions_, considers that the unit was the Finé or sept, several of which united to form a tribe; but it will be shown that the Tuath or tribe preceded the Finé or clan. Footnote 159: See the author’s Introduction to the Dean of Lismore’s Book, pp. xvii. and xviii. Footnote 160: The legendary history of Ireland contains traces of the higher position of the female. Footnote 161: _The Book of Rights_, printed by the Celtic Society, p. 174. Footnote 162: _Brehon Laws_, vol. iv. p. 341. Footnote 163: The influence of the Church in this respect is recognised in the Welsh laws. Footnote 164: This account of the ranks in the tribe is taken from the _Crithgabhlach Brehon Laws_, vol. iv. p. 299. Footnote 165: Quoted in Sir H. S. Maine’s _Early History of Institutions_, p. 114. Footnote 166: _Ibid._ vol. ii. p. 345. Footnote 167: _Ibid_. iv. p. 321. Footnote 168: Maine, vol. iv. p. 337. Footnote 169: _Ibid_. iv. p. 331. Footnote 170: _Ibid_. iv. p. 373. Footnote 171: See _Collectanea de Rebus Hibernicis_, vol. i., No. III., and Appendix to the _Battle of Maghrath_. Footnote 172: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. iv., _Crithgablach_. Footnote 173: _Tribes and Customs of Hy Many_, p. 13. Footnote 174: _Early History of Institutions_, p. 23. Footnote 175: Cormac’s _Glossary_, voce _Clethac_, p. 29. Mr. O’Curry gives the following illustration:—A fine of three Cumals, or twenty-one cows, might be paid thus:— 10 Ri Seoit = 10 cows. 16 Samaisc = 8 cows. 12 Seoitgabla = 3 cows. Footnote 176: Published by Celtic Society, p. 107. Footnote 177: _Annals of the Four Masters_, i. p. 53. Footnote 178: _War of the Gaedhil with Gaill_, p. 49. Footnote 179: _Irish Topographical Poems_, p. 9. Footnote 180: _Irish Topographical Poems_, p. 1. Footnote 181: _Miscellany of the Celtic Society_, p. 49. Footnote 182: _Tribes and Customs of Hy Fiachraich_, p. 453. Footnote 183: Mr. O’Donovan explains _Duthaidh_ as a tract of country hereditary in some family; _Duthchas_ as a hereditary estate or patrimonial inheritance; _Duthchasach_ an inheritor or hereditary proprietor.—_Ib_. p. 149. Footnote 184: _Tribes and Customs of Hy Fiachriach_, pp. 149-159. Footnote 185: _Customs of Hy Many_, preface, p. 4. Footnote 186: _Customs of the Hy Many_, Preface, p. 19. Footnote 187: _Chorographical Description of West Connaught_, p. 368. The beekeepers were important functionaries, as honey supplied at that time the place of sugar. Footnote 188: _Ib_. p. 139. Footnote 189: _Cat. Stowe MSS._ vol. i. p. 168. Footnote 190: Reeves, _Arch. of Down and Connor_, pp. 330, 345. Footnote 191: Letter of Sir John Davis, _Coll. de Rebus Hibernicis_, vol. i. pp. 140, 152. Footnote 192: Book of Kells, _Irish Arch. Misc._, vol. i. pp. 139, 143. Footnote 193: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. iv. p. 349. Footnote 194: There is an elaborate account of the position of the _Ceile_ in the _Ancient Laws_, vol. ii.; but the position of the _Daor Ceile_ is shortly and clearly given in Cormac’s _Glossary_, voce _Aicillne_, p. 13. Footnote 195: _Ancient Laws_, vol. iv. pp. 39, 287. Footnote 196: _Ancient Laws_, vol. iii. p. 11; vol. iv. pp. 39, 43. Footnote 197: _Ib_. vol. iv. p. 321. Footnote 198: _Ancient Laws_, vol. iv. p. 283. The word _Gabail_ has retained its technical meaning here in Scotch Gaelic, where it signifies a farm or lease, and _Gabbailtaiche_ is a tacksman or superior farmer. Footnote 199: _Ancient Laws_, vol. i. p. 261. Footnote 200: _Ibid_. vol. i. p. 275. Footnote 201: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. iii. pp. 330-35. Footnote 202: _Ibid_. vol. ii. p. 163. Footnote 203: O’Donovan’s Supplement to O’Reilly’s _Irish Dictionary_. Footnote 204: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. i. p. 183. Footnote 205: _Ib_. p. 259. Footnote 206: _Ib_. p. 273. Footnote 207: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. iv. p. 43. Footnote 208: _Ibid_. p. 286. Footnote 209: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. ii. p. 269. Footnote 210: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. ii. pp. 279, 281. Footnote 211: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. ii. pp. 209, 211. Footnote 212: _Ib_. pp. 223-5. Footnote 213: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. iii. p. 309. Footnote 214: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. iv. pp. 325, 326. Footnote 215: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. iv. pp. 373, 375. Footnote 216: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. iii. pp. 495, 497. Footnote 217: The word _Lite_ is translated in the Brehon Laws ‘stirabout,’ but this is a term unknown out of Ireland, and the Scotch correlative ‘porridge’ has been substituted. Footnote 218: _Ancient Laws of Ireland_, vol. ii. pp. 147-193. Footnote 219: Genealach Corca Laidhe, _Miscellany of the Celtic Society_, pp. 31, 49. Footnote 220: _Genealogies, Tribes, and Customs of Hy Fiachraich_, pp. 6-11. Footnote 221: _Description of West Connaught_, p. 127. Footnote 222: Reeves’s _Eccles. Antiquities of Down and Connor_, pp. 332, 345. Footnote 223: Reeves’s _Down and Connor_, p. 348. Footnote 224: _Collect. de Reb. Hib._, vol. i. pp. 164, 169. Footnote 225: _Ancient Laws of Wales_, p. 86. Footnote 226: _Ancient Laws of Wales_, pp. 84, 268. Footnote 227: _Ancient Laws of Wales_, 82, 5, 6; 697, 5. Footnote 228: _Ancient Laws of Wales_, pp. 96, 97. It is not quite clear whether the length of an _Erw_ is thirty times its breadth, or thirty times the long yoke. In the latter case the _Erw_ would contain only 1706 square yards, or rather more than the third of an acre. Footnote 229: _Ancient Laws of Wales_, p. 81. Footnote 230: _Ib_., p. 263. Footnote 231: _Ancient Laws of Wales_, p. 375. Footnote 232: _Myvyrian Arch._, vol. iii. p. 298, No. 80. Footnote 233: _Ib_., pp. 88, 96, 573. Footnote 234: _Welsh Laws_, 394, 699. Footnote 235: _Four Ancient Books of Wales_, vol. ii. p. 461. Footnote 236: _Ancient Laws_, p. 266. Footnote 237: _Ancient Laws_, p. 605. The form of the figure has been slightly altered, in order to bring it to the same form as that shown in the Irish system. Footnote 238: _Ancient Laws_, pp. 198, 199. Footnote 239: _Ancient Laws_, p. 95. Footnote 240: _Ib_., p. 98. Footnote 241: Diodorus Siculus, lib. v. c. 21. Footnote 242: Strabo, lib. iv. Footnote 243: Cæsar, _De Bello Gallico_, v. 12. Footnote 244: Solinus, c. 22. Footnote 245: Xifiline, lib. lxxvi. s. 12-16. Footnote 246: These passages are taken from the edition of the _Amra Choluim Chilli_, with a translation by Mr. O’Beirne Crowe. Footnote 247: _Miscellany of the Celtic Society_, p. 61. Footnote 248: The word _Gialla_ means a hostage, and the Irish district is said to have been so named because the hostages of the conquered people were fettered with golden fetters. Footnote 249: _Chronicles of Picts and Scots_, pp. 308-314. The numbers are given as stated in the tract, but seem not quite correct. Thus there is an enumeration of the houses of the Cinel Angusa in connection with the lands occupied by them, which amount to 330 in place of 430, and the armed muster is not in proportion to the size of the tribe as shown by the number of houses. It is probable those of the Cinel Gabran and Cinel Angusa have been transposed, and that the 500 belongs to the former, the 300 to the latter. Footnote 250: _Hist. MSS. Rep._ v., p. 613; Robertson’s _Index_, pp. 39, 57. Footnote 251: ‘Taisius (_Toisech_) apud nos idem est sensu literali ac Capitaneus seu precipuus dux.’—O’Flaherty, _Ogygia_. Footnote 252: ‘Thanus apud priscos Scotos sive Hybernos dicitur Tosche.’—_Regiam Majestatem_, B. iv. c. 31; note by Sir John Skene. Footnote 253: Domania regis et Thanagia regis idem significant. Ass. reg. Da. c. Statuit Dominus, 38.—Skene, _De Verborum Significatione_. Si vero in dominicis vel Thanagiis domini regis, etc. Stat. Alex. II.—_Acts of Parliament_, i. 399. Footnote 254: _Acts of Parliament_, i. p. 375. Footnote 255: ‘Abstractione sanguinis que dicitur Bludwytys.’—_Chart. of Lennox_, p. 44. ‘Bludwytys que Scotice dicitur _fuilrath_.’—_Ib_. p. 45. Footnote 256: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. i. p. 663. Footnote 257: Thus the son of an _Aire forgall_ was an _Aire ard_.—_Brehon Laws_, vol. i. p. 77. Footnote 258: _Brehon Laws_, vol. i. p. 49; Petrie’s _Antiquities of Tarahill_, p. 199; _Chron. of Picts and Scots_, p. 319. Footnote 259: _Acts of Parl._, vol. i. p. 640. Footnote 260: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. i. p. 398. Footnote 261: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. i. p. 655. Footnote 262: _Liber de Scon_, p. 24. Footnote 263: _Chart. Dunf._, pp. 6, 17. The two classes are mentioned in a charter by Thomas, Earl of Mar, in 1359, of the lands of Rotheneyk, ‘cum nativis et fugitivis dictarum terrarum.’—_Ant. Aberd. and Banff_, vol. iv. p. 716. Footnote 264: These names seem to be derived from the verb _Cum_, tene, retine; and in the one case _forba_ or _orba_, terra, and in the other _lamh_, manus, with or without the preposition _ar_, upon. The word _Cum_ is no doubt the root of the Irish _Cumal_, the primary meaning of which was a female slave. Footnote 265: _Acts of Parl._, vol. i. p. 381. Footnote 266: The word Davach has been supposed to be derived from _Damh_ an ox, and _Achadh_ or _Ach_ a field, and thus to mean oxgang; but the Book of Deer shows this to be false etymology. The word there in its oldest form is _Dabach_, and the last syllable is inflected (forming in gen. pl. _acc_, dual _Dabeg_), which it could not be if it meant _Ach_ a field. The word is also applied in Ireland to the largest liquid measure, and appears in this sense in the old Irish Glosses, ‘Caba, _i.e_. Cavea, _Dabhach_, genitive _Dabhca_’ (p. 63). Footnote 267: Dasent’s _Saga of Burnt Njal_. Footnote 268: _Chart. of Lennox_, pp. 34, 36, 38. Mr. W. Fraser, in his first report on the Montrose papers, notes a charter by Alexander of Dunhon to Sir Patrick of Graham of three quarters of a carucate of land of Akeacloy nether, _which in Scotch is called Arachor_ (_Hist. MSS. Rep. I._ 166); but in his second report quotes two charters by the Earl of Lennox confirming to Sir David of Graham the half-carucate of land of Strathblahane, where the church called Arathor in the one charter and Letharathor in the other was built, but these charters have obviously been misread. It was not the church but the land conveyed that was called _Arathor_ or _Letharathor_, that is, carucate or half-carucate (_ib_. iv. 386). Footnote 269: _Antiq. Aberdeen and Banff_, vol. iv. p. 690, where a dimidia carucata, or half-ploughgate, is said to contain ‘quater xx acras cum crofto habiente vii acras et communi pastura.’ In the Chartulary of Arbroath we have ‘una carrucata terræ mensurata et arabilis cum commune pastura,’ p. 7. Footnote 270: _Charters of Holyrood_, p. 44. Footnote 271: _Chart. of St. Andrews_, p. 114. Footnote 272: ‘The tenants, particularly of arable farms, have but small possessions, only the fourth part of a farm, or what is called here a Horsegang’ (_Stat. Acc. of Kilmartin_, viii. 97). In the Craignish papers it is termed a quarter or Horsegang, and an eight shilling and eight-penny land. Footnote 273: _Scotch Legal Antiquities_, by Cosmo Innes, p. 270. Mr. Innes was the first to discover this important analogy. Footnote 274: _Origines Parochiales_, vol. ii. part i. pp. 177, 191. Appendix III. Footnote 275: Information derived from the late Colonel Macdonell of Glengarry, who had an accurate knowledge of Highland traditions. In the _Stat. Acc._ of Saddel it is stated that the average stock of a merk land is 4 horses, 12 milch cows with their followers, and 40 sheep with theirs (vol. xii. p. 477). Footnote 276: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, lib. xiv. No. 389. Footnote 277: _Chart. of St. Andrews_, p. 45. Footnote 278: _Chartulary of Dunfermline._ Footnote 279: _Antiquities of Aberdeen and Banff_, vol. ii. p. 273. Footnote 280: _Chartulary of Moray_, p. 8. Footnote 281: _Ib._ p. 83. Footnote 282: _Antiq. of Aberdeen and Banff_, vol. ii. pp. 17, 22. Footnote 283: _Antiquities of Aberdeen and Banff_, vol. i. p. 174. Footnote 284: _Chartulary of St. Andrews_, p. 238. Footnote 285: _Chartulary of Arbroath_, pp. 12, 35. Footnote 286: _Chartulary of Glasgow_, p. 12. Footnote 287: _Chartulary of Holyrood_, p. 61. Footnote 288: _Acts of Parl._, vol. i. p. 378. Footnote 289: _Chart. of Moray_, pp. 23, 76, 80. Footnote 290: Craig arrives at the true meaning when he says, ‘Meo quidem judicio melius a _canone_ deducetur, cum idem prope significet. _Canon_ enim in jure præstationem annuam sive pensitationem innuit, unde canon frumentarius et canon metallicus.... Est itaque _Cana_ idem quod _Canica_, sive _Canon_, sive certa præstatio annua, quæ nunquam naturam feudi per se, neque speciem tenendriæ immutat, ut nulla alia præstatio annua, nisi exprimatur tenenda in feudifirma.’—_Jus feudale_, pp. 79, 28. Footnote 291: _Liber Ecclesie de Scon_, p. 7. Footnote 292: _Chamberlain Rolls_, pp. 6, 50. There is a blank in the record. Footnote 293: Appendix III., Athole Papers. _Collect. de Rebus Albanicis_, p. 16. Footnote 294: Innes’s _Legal Antiquities_, p. 70; Ware’s _Antiquitates Hibernicæ_, p. 209; O’Curry, _Lectures on the Manners and Customs of the Ancient Irish_, vol. iii. p. 495, note; _Ulster Archæol. Journal_, vol. iv. p. 241. Mr. Innes’s attempt to explain these terms will show how essential an acquaintance with the ancient Irish laws is to the interpretation of our ancient Scotch customs. Footnote 295: _Chart. of St. Andrews_, p. 277. Footnote 296: Faciendo forinsecum servitium tantum quod pertinet ad quinque davachas terræ, servitium vero pertinens ad sextam davacham de Blar dictis canonicis remisimus.—_Liber Ecclesie de Scon_, p. 42. Footnote 297: Aliquod servitium nisi forinsecum servitium Scoticanum domini regis.—_Chart. of Moray_, p. 470. Footnote 298: Faciendo forinsecum servitium in exercitu quod pertinet ad predictas terras.—_Chart. of Arb._, p. 74. Footnote 299: Stubbs’s _Select Charters_, pp. 284, 293. Footnote 300: This more detailed explanation seems necessary, as the term is often used loosely, as if the feu-farm holding was a mere tenancy. See the author’s edition of Fordun, vol. ii. p. 415, for a fuller discussion of this. Footnote 301: The seven earls appear, according to Fordun, at the coronation of King Alexander the Second, and in the same year he passes some laws, apparently with consent of these earls, regarding the land. In the first the expression is, ‘Rex cum communi consilio comitum suorum.’ In the second, ‘Rex et _principes_ ejus.’ By Fordun they are usually called _magnates et proceres_. Footnote 302: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. i. p. 377. Two popular errors have prevailed with regard to the true character and position of the thanes. By the oldest of these they were regarded as the governors of provinces, having over them an _abthane_ or chief governor. Fordun seems the inventor of this, and to it belongs his mythic character Macduff, thane of Fife; but it is inconsistent with the account he subsequently gives of the tenure of the crown lands, and although it has received the sanction of Mr. Hill Burton, it has been justly discarded by such historians as George Chalmers, Joseph Robertson, Cosmo Innes, and John Stuart. The later theory, that the thanes were something entirely different from the English thane, and were merely crown officers or stewards appointed to levy the crown dues, has unfortunately received the powerful sanction of these writers, but the author has never been able to accept the theory. It appears to him a partial and incomplete view, and inconsistent with the facts recorded regarding them. Sir John Skene states his position correctly when he says, ‘Thanus was ane freeholder holding his lands of the king.’—_De Verborum Sig._, sub voce. The reader is referred to the author’s edition of Fordun, vol. ii. p. 414, for a discussion on this point. Footnote 303: ‘Milites, _Leg. Malc. Mab._, c. 2, and generalie in the auld lawes of this realme, are called freehalders, haldand their landes of barons in chief.’—Skene, _De Verborum Sig._, sub voce. Footnote 304: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. i. pp. 375, 377, 380, 382. Footnote 305: _Ib_. vol. i. pp. 400, 403. Footnote 306: _Ib_. p. 652. Footnote 307: _Ant. Ab. and Banff_, s. 492, iii. 112, iv. 116. The same loose notions have prevailed of the position of the _libere tenentes_ as of the thanes, and therefore it has been necessary to treat of both somewhat at length. _Libere tenentes_ are usually translated ‘free tenants,’ just as _tenant du Roi_, in Ragman Roll, is usually translated ‘king’s tenant,’ as if they were tenants in the modern sense of the term, from the unfortunate propensity to render a word in one language by its phonetic equivalent in another, though the meaning may be different; but the true rendering of the one is ‘freeholders,’ and of the other, ‘holding of the king _in capite_.’ Ware defines the _libere tenentes_ in Ireland as those _qui prædia habebunt, ad hæredes transmittenda_ (_Ant. Hib._, 209); and Craig gives a very clear account of these in Scotland (_Jus feudale_, 87. 6; 248. 28; 362. 42). According to Cowell, ‘Freehold frank tenement, _liberum tenementum_, is that land or tenement which a man holdeth in fee, feetail, or at least for term of life.’ Freeholders in the ancient law of Scotland were called _milites_; and tenement or tenementum, he says, ‘signifies, most properly, a house or homestall, but more largely either for a house or land that a man holdeth of another, and joined with the adjective Frank, it contains lands, houses, and offices, wherein we have estate for term of life or in fee.’ Footnote 308: Ochiern, ‘Ogitharius,’ is ane name of dignitie and of ane freehalder.—Skene, _De Verborum Sig._ Footnote 309: See Erskine’s _Institutes_, vol. i. p. 370, for a good account of the rentallers or kindlie tenants. Footnote 310: _Chart. of Arbroath_, pp. 44, 88. The word _terra_, here translated land, means usually arable land only. Treiglas is probably _Traighghlais_ or sea-shore, from Traigh, strand; and Glas, an old word for the sea. Footnote 311: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. i. p. 397. Footnote 312: Quod rex debet habere forisfactum _comitum si thani eorum_ remanserunt ab exercitu, etc.—_Acts of Parliament_, vol. vi. p. 398. CHAPTER VII. THE THANAGES AND THEIR EXTINCTION. [Sidenote: Review of the Thanages and their conversion into Baronies.] Such being the process by which the ancient tribe in the eastern districts passed into the thanage, the events which followed the death of Alexander the Third produced a change which entirely altered this position, so that the thanage in its original form may be said to have ceased with the dynasty of kings of which he was the last. The war with England which followed, the conflict between two families of Norman descent for the succession to the crown, the numerous confiscations of their respective partisans which accompanied it and led to their possessions falling to the Crown and the final establishment of a Norman dynasty of kings, naturally created a great revolution in the land-tenure of Scotland; the extension of the feudal holding of ward and relief became the established policy of the Crown, and the ancient Celtic tenures gradually gave way before the advancing feudalism, and eventually disappeared under its influence. After the wars of independence and succession we find most of the thanages had reverted to the Crown, and they were usually re-granted to Norman barons on a feudal tenure for military service. This will be illustrated by three charters of David the Second, all granted in the same year. By the first he infefts his cousin, Walter de Lesly, knight, heritably in the thanage of Aberkerdor and its pertinents in the county of Banff, and in the thanages of Kyncardyn; and then follows this instructive clause:—‘Yet because perchance the heirs of the thanes who anciently held these thanages in feu-farm might recover these thanages to be held in future as their predecessors held them, we grant to our said cousin, that if these heirs, or any of them, recover these thanages, or any of them, our said cousin and his heirs shall hold and possess the services of the heirs or heir of the said thanes or thane, and the feu-duties or feu-duty anciently due from the thanages or thanage.’ This clause seems to have interposed no obstacle to the feudal tenure of the thanages being completed, for it is followed by two charters to Walter de Lesly,—one of the fee of the thanages of Kyncardin, Aberluthnot, and Fettercairn, with their bondmen, bondages, and followers, and erecting the same into a feudal barony, with the usual jurisdiction, and under the obligation of rendering military service; and another of the thanage of Aberkerdor, likewise erected into a barony in similar terms.[313] A review of the thanages still existing at this time, with such information as the records afford us, will complete this view of their position. [Sidenote: Thanages in Moray and Ross.] Beginning with the north, we find in the great province of Moray and Ross but one thanage situated north of the Moray Firth, that of Dingwall; but we have merely a mention of its name in 1382 and 1383, when Euphame, lady of Ross, resigned the thanage and castle of Dingwall in the hands of the king for a re-grant.[314] Of the mythic thanage of Crumbachtyn or Cromarty, with which Wynton invests the usurper Macbeth, we find no trace whatever. Proceeding to the southern shores of the Moray Firth, we find a belt of thanages extending from the river Nairn to the Spey. Between the river Nairn and the burn of Lethen, which falls into the Findhorn near its junction with the sea, lay the four thanages of Dyke, Brodie, Moyness, and Cawdor. In a charter by Alexander the Second to the bishop of Moray, in the twenty-fourth year of his reign (1238), he grants twenty-four marks of the feu-duty (_feodofirma_) of Moythus or Moyness and sixteen marks of the feu-duty of Dike and Brothyn, by the hands of his _feodifirmarii_ of these lands.[315] In an Extent of the lands of Kylravoc and Estir Gedeys in 1295, William, thane of Moythes, and Donald, thane of Kaledor or Caldor, are among the jurors; and in 1311 Michael, son of Malcolm, thane of Dyke and Brodie, is mentioned; but it is only with regard to the thanedom of Caldor that we have any information beyond the mere mention of the name. There is preserved at Caldor an original charter by Robert the First to William, thane of Caldor, in which he grants to him in feu-farm (_ad feodofirmam_) the whole thanage of Caldor, with its pertinents, for an annual payment of twelve marks, as was wont to be paid in the time of Alexander, king of Scotland, our predecessor last deceased, to be held by him and his heirs of us and our heirs heritably in feu-farm, rendering to us the service due and wont to be rendered in the time of King Alexander.[316] This charter refers back to the time before the war of independence, when the thanage-tenure was still preserved intact. The thanage appears afterwards to have been held of the earls of Ross, but in the forfeiture of the earl of Ross in 1475 it fell once more to the Crown, and is confirmed by King James the Second to William, thane of Caldor; and his whole lands are erected of new into a thanage, with the privileges of a barony, and the feudal holding by ward and relief is combined with the customary annual payment,—thus retaining the name of a thanage while the character of the tenure is altered.[317] Among the lands incorporated in the new thanage were lands in the parish of Urquhart in the Black Isle, detached from the old thanage, and they afford a curious instance of the retention of the old Celtic name by a Gaelic-speaking population, for these lands became known by the term of _Fearintosh_ or the _Toishach’s_ land. Between the Lethen Burn and the Lossie lay the extensive thanage of Moravia or Moray, of which the forest of Darnaway appears to have formed a part.[318] We find this thanage mentioned in the Records, but have no particulars of its history; but it is no doubt from it that the family of De Moravia took its name, the earliest possession of this family having been Duffus, which, if not a part of it, was at least adjacent to the thanage. On both sides of the Lossie lay the thanage of Kilmalemnok, the greater part of which forms the parish of St. Andrews; and a charter by Archibald, Earl of Douglas, to James Douglas of Balvany, confirmed by King James the First, includes ‘all his lands lying in the thaynedomes in the lordship of Kilmalaman.’[319] The only other thanage in this province of which any mention is preserved was that situated in the interior of the country, as in 1367 Joannes de Dolais was thane of Cromdale, a district on the river Spey, at some distance from its mouth.[320] Besides the mention of these thanages, which are mainly to be found in the more level districts adjacent to the sea, we are not without indications that the different classes which, according to Fordun, were connected with the thanages, likewise existed in the interior districts of this province. Thus in an agreement between the bishop of Moray and Walter Cumyn, between A.D. 1224 and 1233, regarding lands in Badenoch, it is provided with regard to the native-men (_nativi_), that the bishop shall have all the cleric and two lay native-men—viz. Gyllemaluock Macnakeeigelle and Sythad mac Mallon, with all their chattels and possessions, and with their children and all their posterity, and the chattels of their children; and Walter Cumyn to have all the other lay native-men of lands in Badenoch; and when, after the war of independence, Robert the Bruce erected the whole lands extending from the Spey to the Western Sea into an earldom of Moray in favour of his nephew Thomas Randolph, the earldom was granted, with all its manors, burgh townships, and thanages, and all the royal demesnes, rents, and duties, and all barons and freeholders (_libere tenentes_) of the said earldom, who hold of the Crown _in capite_, and their heirs were to render their homages, fealties, attendance at courts, and all other services, to Thomas Randolph and his heirs, and to hold their baronies and tenements of him and his heirs, reserving to the barons and freeholders the rights and liberties of their own courts according to use and wont; and Thomas Randolph was to render to the king the Scottish service and aid due as heretofore for each davach of land.[321] [Sidenote: Thanages in Mar and Buchan.] Crossing the Spey and entering the province of Mar and Buchan, a rental of the crown lands in the reign of Alexander Third furnishes us with the names of ten thanages, with their yearly values. These are Aberdeen, Kyntor, Fermartyn, Obyne, Glendowachy, Aberkirdor, Conuath, Bugh, Munbre, Natherdale.[322] Of these thanages we find a line extending from the shore of the Moray Firth to the eastern sea at Aberdeen, and separating the eastern portion of Buchan from the inland districts on the west. The first of these thanages extends along the shore from Cullen to Banff, and includes the parishes of Boyndie, Fordyce, Deskford, and Ordiquhill, forming the greater part of the district of Boyne, which, with that of Enzie, makes up the modern county of Banff. It consisted of two parts,—the thanage of Boyne properly so called, containing the parish of Boyndie and parts of Fordyce and Banff, and the forest of Boyne adjoining it in the south. Of the early history of this thanage we have no information, till we find it converted into a feudal barony by King David II., who grants a charter in 1368 to John de Edmounstone of his whole lands of his thanage of Boyne, with an annual rent of four pounds from the town of Banff, to be held as a barony, with the tenandries and services and homages of the freeholders (_liberetenentium_). The forest of Boyne appears to have remained in the Crown.[323] East of this thanage was that of Glendowachy, also called Doune, which, in the Rental of Alexander the Third is valued at twenty pounds yearly. It appears to have been granted by Robert the First to Hugh, earl of Ross, but in 1382 Robert the Second grants to John Lyounn, knight, the whole lands of the thanage of Glendowachy, which had fallen to him by escheat from the late William, earl of Ross, who had alienated it without the royal consent—to be held by him for the accustomed services. Adjacent was the small thanage of Munbre, valued in the Rental at thirty-four pounds eight shillings and eightpence.[324] South of these thanages lay those of Aberkerdor and Natherdale, co-extensive with the parish of Marnoch, and that of Conveth, with the parish of Inverkeithnie. Of these thanages we have some information prior to the war of independence. Between 1286 and 1289, Simon, thane of Aberkerdor, founds the chapel of Saint Menimius on the banks of the Dovern, and grants certain lands to it; and in an inquisition regarding this foundation in 1369, it is found that Simon was thane of the two thanages of Conveth and Aberkerdor, and owing to derelict against the king he had seized both thanages, on which Simon made over six davachs of Conveth to the earl of Buchan, in order that he might recover the other thanage of Aberkerdor, and founded the chapel in consequence. He appears to have had an only daughter and heiress, and the thanage of Aberkerdor is found in the Crown in the reign of David II., who includes it in the grant to Walter de Leslie formerly noticed,[325] in whose favour it was erected into a barony. From the thanage of Conveth, co-extensive with the parish of Inverkeithnie, to the eastern seaboard between the Ythan and the Don, lay the extensive thanage of Fermartyn, the principal seat of which was Fyvie. Its annual value in the reign of Alexander the Third was 120 marks, and it appears to have been farmed by a tenant, as _Reginald Firmarius de Fermartyn_ accounts in the Chamberlain Rolls of that reign for its _firma_ or rent.[326] It consisted, like other large thanages, of thanage and forest, and among the missing charters of Robert the First is one to Sir John Broun of the thanage of Fermartyn, and another to Patrick de Monteath of the office of forestership of Killanell and Fermartyn, showing that the forest had become a royal forest; David the Second, however, grants one-half of his thanage of Fermartyn to William, earl of Sutherland, for his life, with its tenandries and services of the freeholders (_liberetenencium_), and with its bondmen, and their bondage services, native-men and their followers, to be held in free barony, and his heirs to hold it in ward and relief. The other half of the thanage was held, as appears by the Chamberlain Rolls, by Thomas Isaak, but it appears to have again fallen to the Crown, and is finally granted by King Robert the Third as a barony to Henry de Prestoune, with the town and castle of Fyvie.[327] Adjacent to Fermartyn on the sea-coast was the smaller thanage of Belhelvie. We know nothing of its history as a thanage prior to the war of independence, but in 1323 Robert the Bruce confirms to Hugo de Barclay for his homage and service the lordship of the thanage of Belhelvie, with the lands of Westerton, Keer, and Egie, within the said thanage, with the office of sergand, and the _Can_ of the church land of Belhelvie, extending to forty-pound land and rent, to be held as a free barony, rendering the Scottish service pertaining to a forty-pound land, and the lands to return to the king on failure of heirs of the body.[328] Between the rivers Dee and Don, which formed the old earldom of Mar, were five thanages. The old town of Aberdeen, on the south bank of the Don, near its junction with the sea, appears as a thanage in the reign of Alexander the Third. It is included as such in the Rental of the crown lands with the annual value of fifty merks, and in the Chamberlain Rolls for 1264 the sheriff accounts for twelve pounds received from the thane of Aberdeen; while in 1358 one-half of the thanage of Aberdeen appears in the Crown, and the other half in the hands of John Herys by concession of the king.[329] One of the missing charters of the reign of Robert the First is one to the burgh of Aberdeen of the forest of Stocket, which was no doubt the forest of the thanage. It merges after this time in the town and town lands of Aberdeen. One of the most important and instructive thanages between Don and Dee was that of Kyntor, now Kintore. It appears in the Rental of the crown lands in the reign of Alexander the Third, with the annual value of 101 merks, and in the Chamberlain Rolls of 1264 the sheriff receives £17 : 13 : 4 from the thane of Kintor. This thanage was of considerable extent, and, with the exception of a small part on the north side of the Don, extends along that river on its south side for about ten miles, and approaches on the south-east to within a mile of the river Dee. In that part of the thanage which is separated from the rest by the river Don is the church of Kinkell, a name which signifies the chief _Cill_ or church. This church had several chapels dependent upon it. Five of these were the chapels of Kintore, Kemnay, Kinnellar, Skene, and Dyce, all now erected into separate parishes, and this gives us the extent of the ancient thanage. Part of the old parish of Kinkell lay on the south side of the river Don, and this part formed the lands of Thaneston, or the Thane’s town. South of it lay the forest of Kintore, with the ancient keep of Hallforest. The name of the thanage, Kintore, contains the same prefix of _Kin_ or _Ceann_, signifying chief, and the latter part of the word is probably _Torr_, a mound or castle. These two names of Kinkell and Kintore—the one the name of the principal church, the other that of the thanage, or tribe territory which surrounded it—illustrate a passage in the Book of Deer, where we find mention of the burdens that fall ‘on the chief tribe residences of Scotland generally and on the chief churches’ (_Ardmandaidib_, _Ardchellaib_). The charters which follow the war of independence show very clearly the different classes by whom the thanage was occupied. In 1324 Robert the First confirms to Robert de Keith all the lands and tenements he held of the Crown _in capite_, and these include the forest of Kintore;[330] but in the following reign it appears to have been in the Crown, as David II. dates several of his charters from his manor of the forest of Kyntor;[331] but in 1407 Robert, duke of Albany, confirms a charter by William de Keith to his son Robert de Keith of the lands and barony of Aldene, and of the forest of Kyntor, with the freeholders (_liberetenentibus_) of said lands and their services.[332] The thanage itself forms the subject of other grants. In 1375 Robert the Second grants to John de Dunbarre, earl of Moray, all and whole our lands of the thanage of Kyntor, reserving, however, the tenandries, freeholders (_liberetenentibus_), lands of the freeholders, and the _Cans_, due to us from the said thanage, to be held as a barony, with the bondmen, bond services, native-men and their followers, for military service. This is followed by another charter in 1383, in which the lands of the thanage of Kyntor are granted, along with the tenandries, freeholders, and lands of the freeholders, and _Cans_ due from the thanage reserved in the previous charter, but still reserving the tenandry of Thaynston. This tenandry appears, however, to have passed likewise to the earl of Moray, and to have been held under him by a family of the name of Gothynnis, and to have fallen to co-heirs, for in 1450 Katerina de Gothynnis sells to Thomas Wardrop the fourth part of the lands of Thaneston, in the thanage of Kyntor, and the fourth part of the annual rent of Kynkell. In 1465 James III. confirms to Thomas Wardrope of Gottinys the lands of Thaneston, with the annual rent of ten shillings from the lands of Kynkell; and in 1467 Alexander Wardrope sells the lands of Thaneston, and the annual rent of thirty shillings from the lands of Kynkell, along with the township of Foulartoun, adjacent to said lands of Thaneston, in the thanage of Kyntor, and all _Cans_ of oats and cheese, and all money in name of _Ferchane_ due to him and his heirs from the lands of Kynkell and Dyse, within the said thanedom, rendering to our lord the king the usual and customary services.[333] The word here used of _Ferchane_ is the Gaelic equivalent of _manred_ or _manrent_, the homage and service due by a bondman, which was by this time very generally commuted to a money payment, as we see from a rental of the bishopric of Aberdeen, dated in 1511, where the rent of each holding paid in kind concludes with a sum of money amounting to 3s. 4d. for each two ploughgates, _pro bondagio_, in lieu of the services of the bondmen.[334] On Deeside, at some distance from its mouth, were three thanages—those of O’Neill, Birse, and Aboyne. The thanage of O’Neill is merely mentioned in a list of the second tithes due to the bishop of Aberdeen, who drew tithe from it, but as it is not contained in the rental of the crown lands in the reign of Alexander the Third, and the lands of O’Neill had fallen in that reign to the great nobleman Alan Durward, in part of a succession derived from the earls of Mar, it is probable that was a thanage held of these earls. The thanage of Birse lies on the south side of the river Dee, and is separated from O’Neill by that river, and of this thanage we have a very early notice, for King William the Lion in 1170 grants to the bishop of Aberdeen his whole lands of Brass, now Birse, consisting of sixteen townships under the kirkton or church land, and likewise the royal forest of Brass, with all the native-men of these lands, the thanes, however, being excepted. This exception is somewhat similar to the grant of the thanage of Kyntor with the exception of Thaneston, and as Thaneston was eventually conveyed by the Crown, so by a subsequent charter in 1241 Alexander the Second confers upon the bishops the right to hold the whole lands of Birse in free forest without excepting the thane’s land, and thus terminated the thanage.[335] Farther up the Dee was the thanage of Obeyn, now Aboyne, from which likewise the bishop draws second tithes. In 1328 we find this thanage mentioned in the Exchequer Rolls as being then in the hands of Sir Alexander Fraser heritably. The _firma_ or rent of this thanage, amounting to £100, belonged in 1348 to the queen.[336] [Sidenote: Thanages in Angus and Mearns.] Separated in part by the river Dee and in part by the great chain of the Mounth, and extending south as far as the Firth of Tay, lay the great province of Angus and Mearns. The latter earldom, which was much the smaller of the two, seems from an early period to have fallen to the Crown, and upwards of two-thirds of its territory was composed of thanages. These form two groups. The first extended from the river Dee to the Eastern Sea at Stonehaven, cutting off the north-east corner of the earldom, and consisted of the two thanages of Durris and Colly or Cowie. Both thanages were in the Crown as early as 1264, when we find the sheriff of Kincardine charging the expense of repairing the houses of Collyes and Durris, and both possessed forests which had become royal forests, for we find John, earl of Buchan, _custos_ or keeper of these forests in 1292.[337] The earl of Buchan was forfeited in 1305, and twenty years after, in 1328, King Robert the First grants to Sir Alexander Fraser and his son John, the king’s nephew, the forest of Cragy, in the thanage of Cowie, afterwards called the forest of Cowie, and in the same year there is the note of a missing charter to Sir Alexander Fraser of the thanage of Cowie.[338] There is also a notice of a missing charter of King David the Second to William Fraser and Margaret Murray his spouse of the thanage of Durris and thanage of Collie, which thanage of Collie was Alexander Fraser his father’s, with the lands of Eskyltul, in Kincardine. In 1359 we find the bishop of St. Andrews accused of having unjustly obtained the _Cans_ of the kirkton of Durris, but the sheriff, William de Keth, charges himself with the _firma_ of the thanages of Colly and Durris, but not the forest of Colly, which is said to be in his hands by concession of the king.[339] In 1369 King David II. grants to Alexander Fraser the lands of the thanage of Durris, which is erected into a barony,[340] and the thanage of Cowie shared the same fate, as, though no charter is extant, Alexander Fraser, lord of the baronies of Colly and of Durris, grants in 1400 a charter in favour of his son of certain lands in the barony of Durris, which is confirmed by the king.[341] Robert de Keith, son of William de Keith and Margaret Fraser, gets a charter from Robert II. of ‘the forest of Colly, the forest called the forest of the Month, the lands of Ferachy, Glastolach, Cragy, Clochnahull, whilk of old was of the thanage of Colly and vicecom. Kincardin.’[342] The other group of thanages forms the southern part of Mearns, and extends from the Grampians to the sea. The most westerly are those styled the thanages of Kyncarden, and consist of those of Kyncarden, Fettercairn, and Aberbuthnot. These three thanages, with the park of Kyncardyn, the castle and the _Cans_ of the same, appear in 1359 as in the hands of the Earl of Sutherland by royal concession.[343] Kincardine was from an early period a royal seat, and Robert the First confirms to Alexander Fraser six arable acres in the tenement of Auchincarie adjoining the royal manor of Kincardine. It embraces the greater part of the parish of Fordun, and as we find in it the name of Kinkell, there may probably have been a chief church corresponding to the name of Kincardine, as the same term of Kinkell did to Kintore. The thanage of Fettercairn is co-extensive with the parish of that name, and contained in it lands called the Thanestone, that of Aberluthnot with the parish of Marykirk. How these three thanages became converted into feudal baronies has already been noticed. On the west side of Fettercairn was the small thanage of Newdosk, which once formed a parish, now united to Edzell. Among the notices of missing charters is one by David II. to Ronald Chene of the thayndom of Newdoskis, and in 1365 he grants to Sir Alexander de Lyndesay all his lands in the thanage of Newdosk, to be held as a free barony.[344] On the west side of Kincardine was the important thanage of Aberbuthnot, now Arbuthnot. It contained twenty-three townships, beside the kirkton or church land of Arbuthnot. This thanage appears originally to have been co-extensive with the parish of Arbuthnot, and to have been broken up by King William the Lion, who grants the lands of Altrethis, now Allardyce, to the ancestor of that family, and the thanage itself to Osbert Olifard the crusader, while the lands of Kair, consisting of four townships, and those of Inchbreck, appear as separate possessions. The entire parish appears to have contained fifty-four ploughgates of land, giving an average of two ploughgates or a half davach to each township; but in the eighteenth century the separate possessions consisted of fourteen farms of two ploughgates each, twenty-two of one ploughgate, five of half a ploughgate, and six of a quarter ploughgate or husbandland.[345] This is probably a fair enough picture of how the land had been occupied in older days by the different classes of its possessors, and if the ploughgate in the main represents the Welsh _Tref_ the entire thanage in its oldest state was the equivalent of the Welsh _Cymwd_. A curious insight into the ancient state of this thanage is given us by a document, the original of which is preserved at Arbuthnot House. It is a decreet of the Synod of Perth in a cause betwixt William, bishop of St. Andrews, and Duncan de Aberbuthenot, in the year 1202. The church of Arbuthnot was in the diocese of St. Andrews, and the question related to the respective rights of the bishops of St. Andrews and of the Arbuthnots, who represented the old thanes, in the kirkton or church lands of Arbuthnot, and it preserves the evidence of the witnesses who were examined. The inquiry extends over a period of more than half a century, and during the episcopate of four bishops. During the episcopate of Richard, who became bishop in 1163, Osbertus Olifard appears as lord of the land, and the kirkton is occupied by a multitude of _Scolocs_. Then in the time of Bishop Hugo his successor Osbertus Olifard goes on a crusade, and lets the land to Ysaac de Bonevin for six years, who is termed _firmarius_, and the kirkton was then occupied by eight holders called _personæ_, having under them people having houses and pasturing beasts. Then, in the time of Bishop Roger, Walter Olifard, the next lord, gave his land of Arbuthnot to Hugo Swintun for his service, and his son Duncan was called De Aberbuthnot, removed the _Scolocs_, also called the native-men, from the kirkton, and first cultivated their land, that is, added it to his own demesne. These lords, from Osbert Olifard to Duncan of Aberbuthnot, evidently represented the old thanes, as it is said that no thane before Duncan had ever cultivated this land, nor that any thane had put a plough in that land before Duncan did so. Osbert Olifard, however, was, from his name, a Norman intruder, who had obtained it from the Crown after the thanages became crown land, and it seems to have passed in this way through many hands, as one witness had seen thirteen thanes possessing the land, but none of whom had vexed the men of the kirkton before Duncan. The result of the inquiry was that the bishop was entitled to _Conveth_ from the men of the kirkton, and to a rent of two cows, and one-half of the _blodwits_ and _mercets_, but the thane received the _Can_ and ten cheeses from each house in the kirkton, three men for harvest from each house, and men for the _Expeditio_ or _Feacht_.[346] This Duncan de Aberbuthnot was the ancestor of the noble family of Arbuthnot, who afterwards held the thanage as a barony. Next to Aberbuthnot was the small thanage of Morphie. It is mentioned in 1362 in the Exchequer Rolls, and among the missing charters by David II. are two of annual rents furth of the thanage of Morphie.[347] It is situated in the parish of St. Cyrus, formerly called Ecclesgreig, and here we come in contact with another designation of land which we noticed in a previous volume, viz., that of the _Abbacia_ or _Abthanrie_.[348] This was land which had formerly belonged to an abbey or monastery of the Columban Church, but had fallen to the Crown either by the monastery falling into the hands of lay abbots or by its extinction, and when they became crown lands we find them classed with the thanages. These _Abthanries_ are in the main confined to the country lying between the great mountain chain of the Mounth and the Firth of Forth; and the first we meet with is that of Ecclesgreig, which was granted by King William the Lion to the priory of St. Andrews. By his charter the king conveys the church of Ecclesgreig, with the chapel of St. Regulus, and with the half carucate or ploughland in which it is situated, and with the land of the _abbacia_ of Ecclesgreig, according to its ancient rights, and with its common pasture, canons, and men, and with my thane and my men throughout the whole parish of Ecclesgreig. The thane here mentioned seems to have been the thane of Morphie, as that thanage was within the parish, the rest of the land forming the _abbacia_ or _abthanrie_; and the thanage appears to have passed into the hands of David, earl of Huntingdon, as King Alexander the Second confirms the above grant with the exception of his thane and his men, and Earl David grants to the priory of St. Andrews ‘the whole _Can_ and _Conveth_ which the canons were due to him for the land of Ecclesgreig, and the services which their men were bound to render to him, which is confirmed by Earl John, his son.’[349] When we enter the earldom of Angus, which forms the southern and larger part of this province, we find that the thanages lie more apart, and bear a less proportion in extent to the whole land of the earldom. This arises from its greater importance, from its situation, its size, and the character of the land as a part of the territory in the heart of the kingdom, and the greater extent to which the land had been granted to foreign barons as feudal holdings. The oldest mention of the thanages in this earldom is in connection with the grants to the very ancient church of Restennot, near Forfar. A charter by David the Second in 1344 narrates that the kings Malcolm (Ceannmor), Alexander (the First), and David (the First), had granted to the prior and canons of Restennot, besides other donations, the tithe of all the fruits of their thanages and demesne lands, whether in money or in kind, within the sheriffdom of Forfar, which he confirms; and King Robert Bruce, in a charter confirming various rights and privileges to the prior and canons of Roustinot in 1322, which they had possessed in the time of Alexander the Third, includes the sum of twenty shillings and tenpence received annually from the thanage of _Thanachayis_ or Tannadyce, and the second tithes of the thanages of Old Monros, Duney, Glammes, Kingaltevy, and _Aberlemenach_ or Aberlemno, and likewise of the three bondages or servile lands of Forfar, viz., Trebog, Balmeshenor, and Esterforfar, six merks from the barony of Ketnes, and forty shillings and a stone of wax from the barony of Brechen; while a decreet of the deputies of the earl of Ross, as Justiciary of Scotland north of the Forth in 1347, finds that the prior was entitled to payment of the tithes of the thanages of Monyfoth and Menmur, as well as the other thanages and and royal lands within the shire of Forfar.[350] The thanages within the earldom of Angus fall into two groups in the northern and southern parts of the earldom respectively. Of the northern group the beautiful valley of Clova, through which flow the upper waters of the South Esk, forms the most westerly of the thanages, that of Cloveth or Clova. In 1328 King Robert Bruce grants to Donald, earl of Mar, his whole thanage of Cloveth, with two pendicles of land called Petnocys, to be held in fee and heritage for payment of a _firma_ of twenty pounds, and rendering the carriages and other small services due and customary in the time of Alexander the Third;[351] and in 1359 the sheriff of Forfar debits himself with nothing from the thanage of Cloveth and the two Lethnottys, which return annually forty-two pounds, because it is in the hands of the earl of Mar, but by what title he knows not.[352] Here we find the pendicles of land termed Petnocys in the charter are called Lethnottys in the rolls, which throws some light on the meaning of Pit as a denomination of land. Leth means the half of anything, and, as we have seen, was applied to the half of a penny land. It here probably refers to the half of a ‘villa’ or township expressed by ‘villula.’ Clova appears in the Record of Retours as a barony containing the kirkton and other seven townships, and as having a manor-place, mill, glens, and forests.[353] Proceeding along the course of the South Esk, we find on its north bank the thanages of Kingaltevy and Tannadyce, forming the parish of that name. The thanage of Kingaltevy appears to have remained in the Crown as late as the reign of Robert the Second, as that king grants in 1386 to Sir Walter de Ogilvy for his service an annual rent of twenty-nine pounds due and arising to him from the thanage of Kyngaltevy in the sheriffdom of Forfar, but it appears in the retours as a barony.[354] The thanage of Tannadyce, however, was granted by David the Second first to Peter Prendergast, and afterwards to Sir John de Logy and the heirs of his body, to be held blank for payment of a red falcon; and in connection with this thanage we have a manumission by the same monarch, the terms of which it will be interesting to preserve. It is termed a charter of liberty, and is addressed to all good men to whom these presents may come, and proceeds thus:—‘Be it known to you, that we have made William the son of John bearer of these presents, who, as we are told, was our serf and native man of our thanage of Tannadyce, within the sheriffdom of Forfar, our free man, as well as all who proceed from him, so that he and all proceeding from him, with all his progeny, shall be free to dwell within our kingdom wherever he will; and we grant to the said William and all proceeding from him that they shall be free and quit of all native servitude in future.’[355] In the retours this thanage too appears as a barony.[356] Adjoining Tannadyce on the east, but on the south bank of the river, was the thanage of _Aberlemenach_ or Aberlemno. Among the missing charters of King Robert Bruce is one to William Dishington of Balgassie, in the thanage of Aberlemnoche, and two to William Blunt, one termed ‘ane bounding infeft’ of the thanage of Aberlemnoche, and the other ‘of the mains of Aberlemnoche bounding;’[357] but in 1365 King David the Second grants to Sir William de Dysschynton his lands of Balmany and mill of Aberlemnache, and his lands of Tolyquonloch, and the annual rent of Flemyngton, in the thanage of Aberlemnache, for military service.[358] North of Aberlemno, and separated from it by the parish of Brechin lay the thanage of Menmuir. This thanage appears in the reign of David the Second as possessed by three persons, for he confirms a charter granted to the prior and canons of Rostynot by Andrew Dempster, Finlay, son of William, and John de Cullus, lords of the lands of Menmuir, regarding the tithes of these lands,[359] and in the retours it appears as a barony. On the shore in the north-east corner of Angus was the thanage of Old Monros or Monrose, and like Morphie this thanage was connected with an _abthanrie_, for King William the Lion, in his foundation charter of the monastery of Aberbrothok, includes in his grant the church of St. Mary of Old Monros, with the church land, which in Scotch is called _Abthen_; and in a subsequent charter grants to Hugo de Robesburg, his cleric, the lands of the abbacy of Munros, to be held of the monastery of Arbroath.[360] Two thanages are mentioned in close vicinity to it. On the south bank of the Esk was the thanage of Kynnaber, from which an annual rent of seven merks was granted by King Robert I. in 1325 to David de Grame; and on the south side of the water of Luan was the thanage of Edevyn, now Idvies. Two thanes are mentioned, viz., Gilys Thayn de Edevy in 1219, and Malys de Edevyn in 1254, but we have no further information with regard to either.[361] On the shore farther south was the thanage of Inverkeillor. This thanage appears as early as the reign of William the Lion to have been held feudally by the family of De Berkeley, for Walter de Berkeley grants to the church of Saint Macconoc of Innerkeledur (Inverkeillor), and Master Henry, its parson, the king’s cleric and mine, the _Grescane_, and every service which the church land and the men dwelling theron were wont to render to the Thanes of Inverkeillor, and afterwards to myself; and frees them from the _Grescane_ and every cane and rent belonging to us or to any lay person, with the right of common pasturage along with him and his men throughout the whole territory of Inverkeillor. This grant is confirmed by King William,[362] and presents an analogous case to that of Arbuthnot, whose cane was payable by the kirkton or church land to the thanes, and afterwards to the feudal lord. Of the southern group of thanages the most westerly, situated in the south-west corner of Angus, was the thanage of Kathenes or Kettins, the only notice of which is the appearance in 1264 of Eugenius, thane of Kathenes, as possessing a large grange;[363] but there appears to have been in connection with it an _abthanrie_, as certain lands in the parish are termed in the retours ‘the lands called Abden of Ketins,’ They form but a small part of the parish, the larger portion probably forming the thanage. North-east of Kettins, and separated from it by the parish of Newtyle, was the much more important thanage of Glammis, which possesses a fictitious interest from its supposed connection with the career of Macbeth. It too makes its first appearance in 1264, when we find a payment of sixteen merks to the Thane of Glammis for the lands of Clofer and Cossenys, subtracted from the thanage of Glammis; and in 1290 the sheriff of Forfar accounts for twenty-seven cows as the _Waytinga_ of one and a half nights of the thanage of Glammis during two years.[364] After the war of independence this thanage appears to have remained in the hands of the Crown till the reign of Robert the Second, when in the second year of his reign he grants to John Lyon his whole lands of the thanage of Glammis, erected into a barony, with the bondmen, bondages, native-men and their followers, and with the tenandries and services of the freeholders (_liberetenencium_).[365] On the shore of the Firth of Tay we find the thanedom of Monifieth, of which the only notice is a missing charter by King Robert Bruce to Patrick, his principal physician, of the lands of Balugillachie, within the thanage of Monifieth, but here we likewise meet with an _abthanrie_; the distinction, however, between the two is here apparent, for during the reign of Alexander the Second we find that the former was, like most thanages, held of the Crown, while the latter belonged to the earls of Angus. Thus King Alexander grants to the monastery of Arbroath ten merks annually, paid each year from his _firma_ or rent of Monifieth; while Malcolm, earl of Angus, in the same reign, grants to Nicholas, son of Bricius, priest of Kerimure, and his heirs, in fee and heritage, the whole lands of the _abthein_ of Munifeth.[366] Adjoining Monifieth, in the adjacent parish of Monikie, was the last of the Forfarshire thanages—viz., that of Duny or Downie. In 1359 the sheriff charges himself with nothing from the thanage of Duny, because it was then in the hands of the earl of Sutherland heritably through his marriage with the king’s sister.[367] But, at the same time, when Robert the Second erected Glammis into a barony in favour of John Lyon, he grants a similar charter in favour of Sir Alexander de Lyndesay of all and whole his lands of the thanage of Downy, erected into a barony, with the bondmen, bondages, native-men and their followers, and with the services of the freeholders (_liberetenencium_) of the said barony.[368] In connection with this thanage we find the waste land termed the Moor of Downie.[369] [Sidenote: Thanages in Fife and Fothriff.] Crossing the Firth of Tay and entering the province of Fife and Fothriff, we find the thanages few in number and at some distance from each other, and this arises from the land having been extensively granted at an early period as feudal holdings to the Saxon and Norman followers of the king. In Fife we find traces of three thanages, and in Fothriff of two. Those of Fife are, first, Kinneir in the parish of Kilmany. We have no early notice of Kinneir as a thanage, but it was afterwards a barony; and among the lands belonging to the barony we find mention of the thainis lands, viz., those of Straburne, Fordell, and Fotheris. Not far from it was the thanage of Dervesin or Dairsy. In a charter granted by Ernald, bishop of St. Andrews, to the church of St. Andrews, of the church of Dervesin, with a carucate of land in that township, in his demesne, among the witnesses is Hywan, son of Malcothen, Thain de Dervesin; and in the retours it appears as the barony and demesne lands of Dairsie.[370] In the parish of Cairnbee, not far from the shore of the Firth of Forth, we find the thanage of Kelly. When King David the First granted to the priory of May the lands of Balugallin, they were perambulated among others by Malmure, Thain de Chellin or Kelly, and among the missing charters of Robert the First is one to William Seward of the barony of Kelly.[371] In Fothriff we find in the interior the thanage of Falkland, mentioned at a very early period; for among those who perambulated the marches between Kyrkness and Lochore in the reign of Alexander the First was Macbeath, Thaynetus de Falkland, and we find that it afterwards became a royal forest.[372] The only other thanage was that of Kinross.[373] We find in 1264, I de Kynross, sheriff of Kynross, accounting for the Waytinga of four nights in the year, amounting to forty cows, besides pigs, cheese, and grain. This burden indicates that it had been a thanage, and it appears as such in the reign of Robert the First, when an inquisition was held at Kinross, on the 23d September 1323, regarding the lands of the forest of Kinross, and these lands were separated from the thanage of Kinross. It afterwards appears as a barony, with the castle, lake, and fishings of Lochleven.[374] [Sidenote: Thanages in Stratherne.] Crossing the range of the Ochils and entering the ancient earldom of Stratherne, we find one of the earliest residences of the old Scottish kings appearing as a thanage. In the reign of Alexander the Third the thane of Forteviot has to answer to the king for twenty merks, and we find the sheriff of Perth subsequently accounting for the _firma_ or rent-charge of the land of William of Forteviot;[375] while King Robert the First grants in 1314 to the church and canons of Inchaffray his lands of Cardnay and Dolcorachy in the thanage of Forteviot. It appears in the retours as a barony.[376] In this earldom we meet for the first time with a thanage held of the earl and not of the Crown. The foundation-charter of the abbey of Inchaffray, granted by Gilbert, earl of Stratherne, in the year 1200, is witnessed among others by Anechol Theinus or thane of Dunine, now Dunning; and in a subsequent charter the same earl terms him ‘Anechol, my thain of Dunyn.’ In 1247 a charter is granted by Malise, earl of Stratherne, to the abbey of Inchaffray, of twenty merks annually from the thanage of Dunyne and Peticarne, to be received for all time in future from the hands of those who hold the said lands for the time being; and in confirmation of this grant he addresses a mandate to Bricius, thane of Dunin, to see twenty merks at Dunin from the _firma_ due to the earl, paid to Inchaffray. The descent of these thanes of Duning can, however, be ascertained from the Chartulary. The most powerful family next to the earls was that of the seneschals or stewards of Stratherne. They descend from Gilleness, seneschal of Stratherne in the time of Earl Gilbert, who had two sons—Malise, who appears as seneschal in 1220, and Anechol, who was thane of Duning. From Malise proceeded a line of seneschals, the succession to which was carried by a daughter to the Drummonds. Anechol was succeeded as thane of Duning by Bricius, who likewise appears as thane of Duning; but in the time of Robert, earl of Stratherne, the son of Malise, the seneschalship had fallen to him likewise, and he witnesses a charter of that earl as ‘Bricius de Dunin, his seneschall.’[377] The lands of Duning and others were erected into the barony of Duncrub in favour of Andrew Rollo of Duncrub in 1540; and among the lands we find the thane lands also called Edindonyng.[378] One of the charters by Earl Gilbert, which is witnessed by Anechol, thane of Dunin, is likewise witnessed by Duncanus, Thanus de Struin. This is the only notice of this thanage, but the name corresponds with that of the parish of Strowan on the south bank of the Earn above Crieff. It is now united with the parish of Monzievaird, from which it is divided by the river. It was probably a thanage also held of the earl, and the old family of the Toschachs of Monzievaird no doubt derived their name and descent from its _Toschach_ or thane.[379] [Sidenote: Thanages in Atholl.] North of the earldom of Stratherne, and within the range of the Grampians, lay the ancient earldom of Atholl. It is from this district that the royal dynasty emerged which terminated with Alexander the Third, the founder of the house having been lay abbot of Dunkeld, and possessor of the _abthanrie_ of Dull,[380] and from his son Duncan proceeded not only the kings of Scotland, but likewise the ancient earls of Atholl. The _abthanrie_ of Dull was a very extensive district, and embraced a large portion of the western part of the earldom, and may be viewed as the original patrimony of the royal house. It contained within it two thanages, viz., those of Dull and of Fothergill, now Fortingall. Thus we find Alexander the Second issuing a mandate addressed to his theyns and other good men of Dul and Forterkil, in which he grants to the canons of Scon the right of taking materials from his thanages of Dul and Forterkil for the work at their church of Scon.[381] In the reign of Alexander the Third we find in 1264 Alan the Hostiary bound to account for the _firma_ of Dull, and in 1289, Duncan, earl of Fife, is _Firmarius_ or renter of the manor of Dull, the rent for two years being five hundred pounds seven shillings and fourpence.[382] He is also keeper of the prison of Dull, but while the _abthanrie_ with its two thanages is thus in the Crown, the church of Dull, with its chapels of Foss and Branboth in Glenlyon, belonged to the earls of Atholl, and was granted by Malcolm, earl of Atholl, to the priory of St. Andrews after the death of William his cleric. This grant is confirmed by the bishop of Dunkeld, reserving a right to give the latter, to the extent of ten merks, to a vicar, and an annual rent of twenty shillings due to him and his clergy from the _Abthanrie_ of Dull.[383] By king David the Second the bailiary of the _abthain_ of Dull was granted to John Drummond, and in his reign the thanages began to be broken up, for he grants a charter to John de Loorne, and Janet, his spouse, and our cousin, of the whole lands of Glenlion; another to Donald M‘Nayre of the lands of Estirfossach or Foss, in the abthanrie of Dull, which had been resigned by Hugo de Barclay; and a third to Alexander Meinzies of the barony of Fothergill, in the county of Perth.[384] Besides these thanages held of the Crown, we find mention of two held of the earl of Atholl, and two of the bishop of Dunkeld. On the north bank of Loch Tay was the thanage of Cranach, but it no sooner appears in the records than it vanishes as a thanage, for it passed into the Menzies family, and among their writs is a charter by David de Strathbogie, earl of Atholl and Constable of Scotland, to Sir Robert de Meygnes, knight, son of Sir Alexander de Meygnes, for his homage and service, of the whole thanage of Cranach, in the earldom of Atholl, with the lands of Cranach, Achmore, Kynknoc, the two Ketherowes, and Achnechroish, as a feudal holding for military service. The other thanage lay in the valley of Glentilt, near Blair, and of it we have more particulars. The earldom of Atholl had become vested in the person of Robert, Steward of Scotland, and before he succeeded to the throne in 1371 he grants a charter, as Lord of Atholl, which is undated, to Eugenius, thane of Glentilt, brother of Reginald of the Isles, of the whole thanage of Glentilt, being three davachs of land, for his faithful service, to be held of him in fee and heritage for ever, for payment of eleven merks in money, and the carriage of four horses once a year for hunting in the forest of Bencromby if demanded. There is a provision that should the yearly value of the thanage at any time not reach the sum of eleven merks, he is to pay such sum as may be fixed by an assize of the inhabitants of Strathguye and of those dwelling in the thanage. There is then a retour at Logyraite in the court of the earl of Athole, by which, on 29th July 1457, Andrew de Glentilt is served heir to his father John le thane de Glentilt, in the lands of Petnacrefe in Strathguay; and a charter of sale, in 1461, by Andrew, thane of Glentilt, to John Stewart of Fothergill, of the lands of Achnamarkmore, to be held of himself; and this is followed by a notarial instrument taken on the sale by Finlay ‘le thane de Glentilt,’ son and heir of the late Andrew le thane de Glentilt, on 27th April 1647, of the right of reversion of these lands for twenty pounds, payable in one day between sunrise and sunset. There is then a precept of sasine by Findlay, thane of Glentilt, in favour of Neill Stewart of Fothergill, as son and heir of Neill Stewart of Fothergill, of the lands of Achnamarkmore, given at Glentilt on 4th June 1500, in presence of John, Thane, son and heir-apparent of Findlay, and on 13th August 1501 a charter of sale by Finlay, thane of Glentilt, to Elenore, countess of Atholl, of Kincraigy. We have then two charters of even date, granted by John, earl of Atholl, and superior of All and Whole the lands of the _Thanagium Abnathie_, or the thanedom of Glentilt, to John Stewart, his son and heir, of the said lands _Thanagii Abnathie_, or le thanedom of Glentilt, which formerly belonged to Finlay Toschach, thane of Glentilt, and which he voluntarily resigned, as is proved to us by his corporal oath sworn on the holy evangels of God. The earl’s seal and the seal of Finlay Toschach are appended, at Dunkeld, the last day of May 1502, and these charters are confirmed by a charter under the Great Seal on 2d July 1502, of the thanage, with the bondmen, bondages, native-men and their issue.[385] According to this charter the thanage contained seventeen townships, including the two tenandries of Achnamarkmore and Kincraigy, giving an average of about the sixth part of a davach to each township; and we here see the family, which originally descended from that of the Isles, adopting the name of Toschach, from their designation of Thane. From them no doubt proceeded the M‘Intoshes of Tiriny in Glentilt, which is included among the lands of the thanage.[386] We find mention of two other thanages in Atholl, but it is not very clear whether they were held under the earl, or under the bishop of Dunkeld. King William the Lion confirms to the church and canons of Scone a grant made to them by Malcolm, earl of Atholl, of the church of Loginmahedd, now Logierait, with its chapels of Kilchemi, Dunfolenthi, Kelkassin, and Kelmichelde Tulimath, and with all its other lawful pertinents; but John, bishop of Dunkeld, grants and confirms to the abbots and canons of Sconie the church of Logymahedd, in Atholl, with the full tithes, benefices, and rights lawfully pertaining to said church, viz., of Rath, which is the chief seat of the earldom (_caput comitatus_), and of the whole thanage of Dulmonych, and of the whole thanage of Fandufuith, and with these chapels, Kylkemy, Dunfoluntyn, Kilcassyn, Kilmichell of Tulichmat, and all pertinents of said chapels, and a toft in Logyn, with common pasture, as is contained in a charter of Earl Henry.[387] The _Rath_ or fort is still visible on a height between the two rivers at the junction of the Tay and the Tummel, and the modern names of the places where the four chapels were situated are Killichangie, Dunfallandy, Killichassy, and Tullimet, and they are all within the parish of Logierait, but the two thanages seem not to have been included in Earl Malcolm’s charter, and are situated within the territory termed the bishopric of Dunkeld, now the parish of Little Dunkeld, for Fandufuith is now Fandowie in Strathbraan, and Dalmonych is probably Dalmarnoch, on the south bank of the Tay, in the same parish. We have no other notice of these thanages. [Sidenote: Thanages in Gowry.] Between the earldom of Atholl and the province of Fife and Fothriff, and separated from the latter by the Firth of Tay, lay the earldom of Gowry. In the account of the seven provinces of Scotland prior to the Scottish conquest, this earldom formed one province along with that of Atholl; but after the Scottish dynasty was seated on the throne it was attached to the province of Fife and Fothriff. It was the heart of the kingdom, as within it was situated the royal seat of Scone, where, as Fordun rightly tells us, ‘both the Scottish and Pictish kings had whilom established the chief seat of government;’ and from an early period it appears to have belonged to the royal family, as Bower makes the curious statement that Alexander the First had received at his baptism, as a donation from his father’s brother the earl of Gowry, the lands of Lyff and Invergowry, where, after he became king, he began to build a palace, and finally conferred them upon the abbey of Scone. These lands are in fact contained in the foundation-charter of Scone by Alexander the First, and that the earldom had been the appanage of Donald Bane, who alone can be meant, is probably true enough.[388] In the reign of Malcolm the Fourth, who confirms the foundation-charter of Alexander the First, we find mention of the four royal manors of Gouerin or Gowry paying _Can_ to the king, and these were Scon or Scone, Cubert or Coupar-Angus, Forgrund or Longforgan and Stratherdel; and these appear to have been likewise royal thanages. Thus Alexander the Second grants to the canons of Scone, in exchange for tithes which they exacted from the lands of Forgrund, one net of his fishings in the thanage of Scone, two acres of land in the territory of Scone where the Canon’s Well is situated, and a perpetual lease of his demesnes of Rath and Kynfaunes in Gowry; and finally King Robert the First grants to the abbot and canons of Scone the whole thanage of Scone, with all its pertinents.[389] Strathardell, too, was a thanage, as we find a charter granted in the reign of William the Lion by Laurence of Abernethy of the church of Abernethy to the monks of Arbroath is witnessed by Macbeth, sheriff of Scon, thane of Strathardel;[390] and though we have no notice of the royal manors of Cupar and Forgrund being termed thanages, it is probable that they were so. North of Cupar, however, was the thanage of Alyth, in which was situated the royal castle of Invercuych, as we find Robert the Second granting to Sir James de Lyndesay All and Whole the lands of Aberbothry, as also the place of the royal castle of Invercuyth and all the lands which belonged to John de Welhame and John de Balcasky, in the thanage of Alyth, to be held as a barony; and the same monarch includes the thanage of Alyth with its pertinents in a subsequent charter to Sir James de Lyndesay of the castle and barony of Crawford and other lands;[391] and in connection with this thanage there appears to have been a forest, as in two charters of King David the Second to the canons of Scone, Alyth is mentioned among the royal forests.[392] As Alyth with its royal castle was at the north-east extremity of Gowry, so we find at its north-west boundary the thanage and royal castle of Kinclaven, on the west bank of the Tay, near its junction with the river Isla. We find notices of the repair of the castle in 1264, while the sheriff of Perth accounts for its _firma_, and King Robert the Second grants to his illegitimate son, John, his lands of Ballathys, Invernate, and Mukirsy in the thanage of Kynclevin, with its tenandries and services of the freeholders, the native-men, bondmen, and their bondages and followers.[393] [Sidenote: Thanages south of the Forth.] The thanages of which we have thus given shortly the history were all situated north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, and in those eastern districts which formed originally the seat of the Pictish tribes, and afterwards fell under the dominion of a dynasty of kings of Scottish race. The Scots were thus a dominant race over a subject population, and under the succeeding dynasty, who adopted Norman customs and assimilated the laws and institutions of the country to those of a feudal monarchy, these districts became the theatre of a Saxon colonisation and of a gradually increasing settlement of Norman barons, who held the land on a feudal tenure from the Crown; and thus the more ancient tenures represented by the thanages were comparatively speaking few in number, and scattered in isolated situations. But while the thanages in general were thus situated, there was one thanage south of the Firth of Forth which appears to belong to the same class. It was situated on the south bank of the river Carron, and represented that small district, distinguished in the Irish Annals by the name of _Calathros_, and in Latin documents and chronicles as Calatria,—a name preserved in the more modern Callender. The name of _Ecclesbreac_ by which the church was known, and by which it is still called in the Highlands, indicates that it was inhabited by a Gaelic-speaking people, and the term _Breac_ is usually associated with those of Pictish race. They were probably the remains of the old Pictish population which gave their name to the Pentland Hills. Be this as it may, the notices of this thanage are in entire harmony with those of the thanages north of the Forth. A charter by King David the First to the canons of Stirling is witnessed by Dufotir, sheriff of Stirling; and the same Dufotir witnesses a charter of King David to the church of Glasgow, as Dufoter de Calatria. About 1190 appears Dominus Alwynus de Kalenter.[394] A charter by Herbert, son of Herbert de Camera, of a half carucate of land in his territory of Dumfries, consisting of four bovates or oxgangs near Louchbane, is witnessed by Malcolm, thane of Kalentyr, and Alexander the Second grants to the canons of Holyrood, in feu-farm, his whole lands of Kalentyr, which had been in his hands since the day on which he assigned to Malcolm, formerly thane of Kalentyr; forty pound lands in Kalentyr, which lands are reserved to the said thane. Then we find the old thanage converted into crown demesne, and the thane bought off with a feudal holding. In the same reign a charter by Maldouen, earl of Lennox, is witnessed by P., Thane of Kalentyr; and a missing charter of King David the Second ‘to William Livingston of the lands of Callanter by forfeiture of Patrick Calentyre,’ appears to terminate the line of the thanes, and to indicate the conversion of the lands into a barony in favour of the Livingston family.[395] A charter granted by David the First before his succession to the throne, when the province of Lothian and the ancient Cumbrian kingdom were under his rule, and addressed to all his faithful _Tegns_ and _Drengs_ of Lothian and Teviotdale,[396] shows that any thanes who appear in these districts where the population was entirely Anglic, belong to the Saxon organisation, and have no connection with the more northern thanages. [Sidenote: _Toshachdor_ and _Toshachdera_.] We have seen that the term Thane, in connection with that portion of the crown land north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde called a thanage, and considered as crown demesne, was the equivalent of the Gaelic _Toisech_ or _Toschach_, but we also find this word _Toschach_ used in Scotland in combination with two other words nearly resembling each other, and thus forming the two denominations of _Toschachdor_ and _Toschachdera_, indicating in this form a person, and in the form of _Toschachdoracht_ and _Toschachderacht_, an office, just as the function of the Toisech is expressed in the Irish system by _Toisecheacht_. Sir John Skene, in his treatise _De Verborum Significatione_, gives under the word _Toscheoderache_, several interpretations of it. He says that it was ‘ane office or jurisdiction, not unlike to a bailliarie, especially in the Iles and Hielandes.’ ‘Some alleagis it to be ane office pertaining to execution of summondis. Uthers understandis the same to be ane crowner. Last, summe understandis it to be ane searchour and taker of thieves and limmers.’ But it is obvious from his references that he confounds the two offices together. The _Toschachdoracht_ was the office like a bailiary, and the _Toschachdor_ was considered the equivalent of the coroner, and this office was mainly confined to the Highlands and Islands. The _Toschachdera_ he rightly explains, in his Notes to the Old Laws, as a name given by the original Scots and Irish to the serjeand or servitor of court who put the letters of citation in force, and that this office was commonly called ‘ane Mair of Fee.’[397] We find the two offices existed distinct from each other in the Isle of Man, and this throws some light upon it. That island was divided into six sheadings, and each sheading had two officers. The first was the coroner, and this office, says Mr. Train, in his _History of the Isle of Man_, is of the highest antiquity in the island. He is called in Manks _Toshiagh Jioarey_, or chief man of the law. There is likewise, says Mr. Train, an officer of unknown antiquity in every parish called a _Maor_, who collects all escheats, deodands, waifs, and estrays.[398] The _Toischeachdor_ derives his name from _Toisech_, and _Dior_, an old word signifying ‘of or belonging to law,’ and is obviously the same as the Manks _Toshiagh Jioarey_, and this office is not to be found in those eastern districts where the thanages prevail, for the simple reason that it is there represented by the _Toschech_ or Thane himself, but the _Toiseachdera_ or Mair of Fee occurs repeatedly in connection with them. Thus in the laws of King William the Lion, which gave the form of citation, it is directed to be made by the serjeand or coroner or _Tosordereh_ or other summoner;[399] and that the serjeand and _Toshachdera_ are the same, will be evident on comparing a charter of the thanage of Belhelvie, which mentions the office of smith and the office of serjeand, with one of the demesne lands of Davochindore in Kildrummy, where the same offices are called _Fabrisdera et Toshachdera_.[400] We find in connection with the thanage of Moravia the office of Mair of Fee,[401] and in 1476 the lord of Strathawin, in Banffshire, grants to Alexander Crom Makalonen the lands of Invercahomore, with the office of _Toshoderatus de Strathawin_.[402] We can trace the appearance of this office too in connection with the church lands in this part of Scotland. One of the earliest grants to the bishop of Aberdeen was the schyra or parish of Rayne. It contained the lands of Ledyntoschach, or the _Toschach’s_ half, and Rothmaise, in which the word _Rath_ appears. These lands were held under the bishop by a family of De Rane, and afterwards by a family called Tulidef, but in 1544 the bishop feus to Mr. Walter Stewart the lands of Invirquhaland, Newmore, and two parts of Rothtmaise _cum ly Derachthowis_.[403] The lands of Tarves, within the thanage of Fermartin, were conferred upon the abbey of Arbroath by Alexander the Second, and in 1384 the abbot of Arbroath confers the office of _Derethy of Terwas_ upon Thomas de Lochane and the heirs of his body in perpetuity.[404] In the thanage of Fettercairn we find, besides the thaneston, or mensal land of the thane, another portion termed _Deray_ lands, or the possession of the _Toschachdera_.[405] These notices will be sufficient to show the existence of this office in connection with the thanages, to which a portion of the land was assigned as official demesne. [Sidenote: Result of survey of thanages.] We have now completed our survey of the thanages which survived the war of independence, and we thus see that there existed in the eastern Lowlands isolated territories, scattered here and there among the feudal holdings, still bearing the name of _Thanagium_, and preserving many of the characteristics of the older Celtic tribe. These thanages during the period of the rule of the kings of the race of David the First were considered as forming part of the crown demesne, and were held of the kings by persons called Thanes in feu-farm for payment of an annual _firma_, rent or feu-duty, but their connection with the ancient tribe lands is indicated by the fact that the feuar bearing the Saxon name of Thane was likewise known by the Celtic name of _Toschach_, and therefore represented the ancient _Toisech_ of the _Tuath_ or tribe, and that his annual feu-duty was likewise known by the Celtic name of _Cain_, usually amounting to about twelve merks, while the land was subject to another burden termed _Conveth_, and afterwards _Waytinga_, which was no other than the _Coinmhedha_ or _Coigny_ of the Irish tribes. These thanages had therefore obviously replaced the more ancient _Tuath_, and what was now regarded as crown land was the ancient tribe territory. It varied in size, as did the Irish _Tuath_. Its principal measure of land bore the Celtic name of Davach, a name also retained when the land had passed into feudal holdings. Each davach contained four ploughgates, equivalent to the Irish _Bally_ and the Welsh _Tref_, and the fourth part of the ploughgate seems to have formed the smallest holding, and been known by the Celtic term of _Rath_. The size of these thanages or tribe territories held of the Crown varied from twelve to six davachs, and those held of the earls seem in general not to have exceeded three. Part of this territory was held by the thane or _Toschach_ in demesne, and was known as the Thanestown or thane’s lands, and was cultivated by bondmen or prædial serfs, of whom there were two kinds, the _bondus_, or occupier of a servile tenement, amounting usually to the fourth part of a ploughgate or township, and the native-man, who was servile by race. Another part of the thanage consisted of tenandries, or free tenements, held under the thane by a class of sub-vassals called _libere tenentes_, or freeholders, for payment of a _Cain_ or feu-duty, and these were likewise known by the Celtic name of _Octhigern_, the equivalent of the Irish _Oclach_. They were in fact the lower of the two divisions of the _Flaith_ or nobles of the Irish tribe, consisting of the _Aire ard_ and the _Aire desa_, while from the upper division the _Ri Tuath_ or _Toisech_, as the case might be, was chosen, and when we find the territorial name of Dyce connected with some of the thanages, as Fordyce in the thanage of the Boyne, Dyce in that of Kintore, Tannadyce in the thanage of the same name, we can hardly avoid recognising the _Deis_, or private property, which constituted the basis of the _Grad Flath_, or territorial nobles of the tribe. Between the class of freeholders and the servile class part of the land was occupied by the _liberi firmarii_, or free farmers, who had a mere usufruct of their possessions, which varied in size from the tenandry to the small holding of two oxgangs, or the fourth part of a ploughgate. These farmers usually held upon the system termed the Steelbow, when the stock and implements belonged to the proprietor, and were handed over to the tenant during his occupation of the land, who was bound to return an equal value at the termination of his tenure, his rent being usually paid in kind. This tenure closely resembled that of the _Saer_, or _Ceile_, of the Irish tribe, while the _Daer_, or bond _Ceile_, were represented by the _Bondi_, or occupiers of a servile holding in the thanage. Another portion of the thanage was the church land. When the church consisted merely of the Cill, or parish church, it was known as the _Terra ecclesiæ_, kirkton or Pettintaggart, and was cultivated by the _Scolocs_, who paid _Cain_ to the thane, and _Conveth_ to the bishop in whose diocese it was. It generally varied in size from a half davach to a half ploughgate, but when a Columban monastery had been founded in the thanage, it was of larger extent and fell into lay hands under the name of _abbatie_, or _abthanrie_, paying, however, both _Cain_ and _Conveth_ to the church. This was in fact the _termon_ lands of the Irish tribe. Lastly, what had originally been the waste land of the tribe became known as the forest, and became dissociated from the cultivated land of the thanage. It either formed the subject of a separate grant or was retained as a royal forest. CHAPTER VIII. THE FINÉ OR CLAN IN SCOTLAND. [Sidenote: Clanship in the Highlands.] Those influences which led to the _Tuath_ with its _Toisech_ passing over into the Thanage and the Thane in the eastern districts were less felt in the more mountainous regions of the north and west, where the power of the Crown was comparatively weak, and more nominal than real, and here the tribe went through a different process. While the large districts continued to be ruled by their _Mormaers_ and the _Mortuath_, and the Province existed intact, there was little of external influence to affect the social organisation of their Celtic population; but the same internal modification which led to the development of the sept or clan from the tribe was no doubt silently at work, and when the break-up of the great provinces and the alienation of the lands of the tribe to feudal lords removed the veil, the clan appears exhibiting in the main the characteristics of the Irish sept. The clan organisation was in the main limited to that part of modern Scotland known as the Highlands and Islands, where the mountainous and rugged character of the former and the comparative inaccessibility of the latter led to the preservation of a population of pure Gaelic lineage, speaking a Gaelic dialect. Here the introduction, by marriage or royal grant, of feudal overlords with apparently feudal holdings was purely nominal. It led to nothing like the Teutonic colonisation which characterised the Lowlands, and neither affected the Gaelic population nor the institution of clanship among them. [Sidenote: The Highland line.] The boundary line which separated the Highlands from the Lowlands, and known as the Highland Line, was in the main an imaginary line separating the Gaelic-speaking people from those using the Teutonic dialect, but it likewise coincides in part with the natural boundaries formed by those physical features of the country which have influenced the relative position of the Gaelic and Teutonic-speaking portion of the population respectively. The southern part of this boundary coincides with the great barrier formed by the mountain range of the Grampians, and where this range is intersected by rivers which take their rise in the interior of the highland region, and flow through this range to the eastern sea, in deep ravines or narrow glens, with high mountains on each side, were narrow passes which formed the entrances into the Highlands, and were easily defended, rendering the country almost inaccessible, while similar passes characterise the northern portion of the line where it crosses the great rivers. The Highland Line may be said at its southern end to commence at Loch Lomond, in the earldom of Lennox, where the Pass of Balmaha between the lake and the commencement of the mountain region leads into the district of which this lake is the centre. The line then enters the earldom of Menteith, and crosses the Forth, here called the _Avon dubh_, at Aberfoil, and proceeds from thence to Callander, where the pass on the north side of Loch Vennachar leads into the district formerly called Strathgartney, and the Pass of Leny forms the entrance to Strathire and to the district of Balquhidder. From Callander the line follows the range of the Grampians, through the earldom of Stratherne, and crosses the river Earn at Crieff, and the Almond at Findoch, where passes lead to the upper part of the Vale of the Earn and to Glenalmond respectively. From thence it follows the line of the Grampians to Dunkeld, where the King’s Pass forms the entrance to Strathtay, and through the district of Stormont in Gowry to Blairgowrie, where the passes lead into the district of Strathardell. From thence it follows the line of the Grampians till it crosses the Isla north-west of Alyth, and enters the earldom of Angus, where the minor range of hills forming the east side of Glenisla coincides with the line till it reaches the great chain of the Mounth, or backbone of the Grampians, at Cairn Bannoch. There it enters the earldom of Mar, and proceeds along the west side of Glenmuich to the Dee at Ballater, where the Pass of Ballater leads into the districts of Strathdee and the Forest of Braemar. North of these districts it includes likewise the district of Strathdon, crossing the river Don at Boat of Forbes, whence it proceeds to the river Spey at Craigellachie, including the district of Strathavon, and here a pass leads into the district of Strathspey, and separating the mountain region of the earldom of Moray from the level plains forming the southern seaboard of the Moray Firth, it terminates at the mouth of the river Nairn, which flows through the town of Nairn, and formerly separated the Gaelic-speaking people on its left bank from the lowland population on the right. The Highland Line thus intersects the old earldoms of Lennox, Menteith, Stratherne, Gowry, Angus, Mar, Buchan, and Moray, which represented the older great Celtic tribes or _Mortuath_, governed by their _Ri Mortuath_ or _Mormaers_, and the portion of each earldom included in the Highland Line consisted of that part which retained its Gaelic population intact, while the rest of it became more or less colonised by foreign settlers. [Sidenote: Break-up of the Celtic earldoms.] The earldoms of Atholl, Ross, and Sutherland were entirely comprehended within the Highland Line, as well as the great district of _Arregaithel_, or Argyll, in its most extended sense, reaching from the Clyde to Lochbroom, and a similar line drawn from the Ord of Caithness to Brinsness on the west side of Thurso Bay separated the Gaelic population in the more mountainous part of the ancient province of Cathanesia, which from an early period had passed into the possession of the Norwegian earls of Orkney, from the Teutonic settlers in the eastern and more level plains. As long as the native race of the _Mormaers_ remained, though assuming the new character of earls, the connection between them and the Gaelic population of the earldom remained unimpaired; but when, by marriage or otherwise, the earldom passed into foreign hands, the Gaelic population became the subjects of a foreign overlord, the greater tribe became broken up, and they emerged from it in the form of clans or broken tribes. [Sidenote: Moray.] The first of these great Celtic tribes to break up was that which formed the great earldom, or rather petty kingdom, of Moray. Here we find a family making their appearance in the eleventh century in the Irish Annals as _Mormaers_ of Moray, and occasionally bearing the title of _Ri_ or king. This line of Celtic kings or _Mormaers_ terminated with Maelsnechtan, son of that Lulach mac Gillcomgan who succeeded Macbeth as king of Scotland for three months. He appears as _Ri_ or king of Moray in 1086, and after him Angus, the grandson of Lulach by his daughter, bears the title of earl of Moray, and by his defeat and death in the beginning of the reign of David the First the line of the ancient kings or _Mormaers_ of Moray comes to an end, but the tribe appears to have been still held so far together by their support of the claims of the family of MacHeth to the earldom of Moray, whose founder Wymund asserted himself to be the son of Angus, and of that of MacWilliam who claimed to be the nearer line of the royal family to the throne of Scotland; and it was not till the year 1222 that the pretensions of these two families were finally extinguished by Alexander the Second. [Sidenote: Buchan.] About the same period the line of the Celtic Mormaers or earls of Buchan had come to an end. The Book of Deer furnishes us with a tolerably complete list of these Mormaers, from Bede the Pict in the sixth century to Colban, earl of Buchan, in the reign of David the First; and we can see from the history of the last four that they followed in the main the Pictish law of succession, which preferred daughters to sons after brothers. Donald, son of Ruadri, appears as _Mormaer_ of Buchan in the reign of Malcolm the Second. He is followed by Donald, son of MacDubhacain, who is succeeded by his brother Cainneach. The next _Mormaer_ mentioned was his son Gartnait, but he appears to have derived his right through his wife Ete, daughter of Gillamithil. He appears with the title of earl in the reign of Alexander the First, and his daughter Eva carries the earldom to her husband Colban. He is followed by his son Roger, and he by his son Fergus, whose only daughter Margaret carried the earldom to William Cumyn, who became in his right earl of Buchan, and by Alexander the Second was made guardian of the earldom of Moray in 1222. Six years after, the districts of Badenoch and Lochaber were conferred upon his son Walter Cumyn, on the rebellion, defeat, and death of a certain Gillespic, by whom they had apparently been forfeited. [Sidenote: Atholl.] The same reign of Alexander the Second witnessed the termination of the line of the Celtic earls of Atholl and Angus. The former earldom appears to have been an appanage of the family from whom sprang the kings of the race of Duncan, the son of Crinan, and its earls were descended from his younger son, a younger brother of Malcolm Ceannmor.[406] The last of this line was Henry, earl of Atholl, who died before 1215, and the earldom passed to the eldest of two sisters, Isabella and Forflissa, who married Thomas, earl of Galloway. On the death of his son Patrick in 1242 he was succeeded by his aunt Forflissa, the other sister, who married David de Hastings, and by his daughter it was carried to the Strathbolgie family, a branch of the earls of Fife.[407] But while the earldom passed into the hands of a succession of foreign earls, a family bearing the title of De Atholia continued to possess a great part of the earldom, and were probably the descendants of the older Celtic earls. The Gaelic population of the whole of the north-western portion of Atholl, bounded on the east by the river Garry, and on the south by the Tummel, remained intact under them, but the possession of the great western territory of the _abthanrie_ of Dull by the Crown led to the introduction of a foreign element among the landholders of the rest of the earldom, and much of the land passed permanently into the possession of the families of Menzies and Stewart, while the Celtic character of the whole earldom was notwithstanding preserved. [Sidenote: Angus.] The same reign saw also the extinction of the old Celtic earls of Angus. The Pictish Chronicle furnishes us with the names of three of its Mormaers—Dubucan, son of Indrechtaig, who died about 935, and Maelbrigdi, son of Dubucan, and this name again occurs in the ‘Dufugan Comes’ who appears among the seven earls in the reign of Alexander the First, and was no doubt earl of Angus. After him we have a succession of four earls from father to son, viz., Gillebride, Gilchrist, Duncan, and Malcolm; and Matilda, the daughter and heiress of the last earl, carried the earldom by marriage first to John Comyn, who died in 1242, and then to the Norman family of De Umphraville. The family of Ogilvie, who retained possession of a considerable portion of the earldom, appear to have been the male descendants of these old Celtic earls, and they likewise gave a line of earls to Caithness, who possessed, with the title of earl, one half of the land of the earldom. Of the land of the earldom of Angus the district of Glenisla was alone included within the Highland Line and preserved its Gaelic population. [Sidenote: Menteith and Stratherne.] The beginning of the reign of Alexander the Third saw the termination too of the line of the old Celtic earls of Menteith. No mention of the _Mormaers_ of this _Mortuath_ has been preserved, and the first earl, Gilchrist, appears in the reign of Malcolm the Fourth. He was succeeded by Murethac, who was followed by two brothers, both bearing the name of Maurice, between whom there was a contention for the earldom in 1213, which ended in the elder Maurice resigning the earldom to his brother and retaining some of the lands for his life;[408] but Earl Maurice left two daughters only, the eldest of whom married Walter Cumyn, and the younger Walter Stewart, and carried the earldom to these families. The western and more mountainous part of this earldom, consisting mainly of the districts of Strathgartney and Strathire, retained its Gaelic population. Of the early _Mormaers_ of the _Mortuath_ of Stratherne we have no mention, but the line of its Celtic earls continued unbroken till the reign of David the Second, when the forfeiture of one interposed for a time a Norman baron, and the succession terminated in co-heiresses, when the earldom came into the Crown, and was re-granted to one of the Royal Stewarts; the western districts within the Highland Line retained their Gaelic inhabitants. [Sidenote: Mar.] The only other of the frontier earldoms intersected by the Highland Line was that of Mar, and here, like Buchan, we are on historic ground, for a _Mormaer_ of Mar—Donald mac Emin mac Cainech—is recorded in a nearly contemporary document as having been present at the battle of Clontarff in Ireland, fought in the year 1014;[409] and Ruadri, _Mormaer_ of Mar, who is mentioned in the Book of Deer, appears among the seven earls in the reign of Alexander the First as ‘Rothri Comes.’ The line of the Celtic earls of Mar continued till the reign of Robert the Second, when it was carried by an heiress into the Douglas family, and afterwards to one of the Stewarts, by whom it was resigned to the Crown. A great part of the territory of the Celtic earls was at an early period carried off from them by the family of De Lundin or Durward, who claimed the earldom as representing the earls through a female, and were thus compensated, but this part consisted of Lowland districts, and the Highland districts of Strathdee, Braemar, and Strathdon constituted the ‘comitatus’ or demesne of the Celtic earls, and preserved their Gaelic population. [Sidenote: Ross.] The history of the _Mortuath_ or earldom of Ross is peculiar, and became eventually connected with that of the Lords of the Isles. Of the early Celtic _Mormaers_ we have no record, and the supposed connection of Macbeth with Ross as its _Mormaer_, which originated with George Chalmers, has no historic foundation. He was, as we have seen, _Mormaer_ of Moray. The name of Gillandres appears in Wyntoun as one of the earls who besieged Malcolm the Fourth in Perth in the year 1160; and the Gaelic name of the old Rosses as _Clanghillandres_ seems to connect him with this earldom, but it must have been immediately after in the Crown, for the same Malcolm undoubtedly gave it to Malcolm MacHeth, who appears as its earl, but was soon after expelled. It was afterwards bestowed by William the Lion upon a foreigner, the Count of Holland; but his successor, Alexander the Second, created Ferchard Macintaggart, the heir of a line of lay abbots of Applecross, earl of Ross, who thus united the extensive possessions of that monastery in North Argyll to the earldom, and from him the later earls are descended. It became for a time broken up, when an heiress carried the earldom to Walter de Lesly, and afterwards to Alexander Stewart, earl of Buchan, but it reverted through her daughter and heiress to the line of the Celtic Lords of the Isles. [Sidenote: The _Gallgaidheal_ and their lords.] But while the eastern and central tribes became broken up by the termination of the line of the Celtic earls of the respective great districts or _Mortuaths_, and thus either reverting to the Crown or passing by marriage to Norman barons, those of the western seaboard and of the Isles were held together for a longer period, and remained intact till towards the end of the fifteenth century. These Gaelic inhabitants of the Western Isles had been, as early as the ninth century, brought under the rule of the Danes and Norwegians, and the latter had in the eleventh century extended their sway over the western districts of the highlands and over Galloway. These Gael were termed _Gallgaidheal_, the word _Gall_ or foreigner being applied to both Danes and Norwegians, both from being under their rule and from their having been in some degree assimilated to their manners and become connected with them by intermarriage; but the word _Gallgaidheal_ as a geographical term became limited to the district of Galloway, which derived its name from them. The Islands became known as _Innsigall_, or the islands of the strangers, and western districts of the Highlands as _Airer_ or _Oirir Gaidheal_, the coast land of the Gael, from whence the name of Argyll is derived. Two Celtic chiefs, as we have seen, succeeded at the same time in driving the Norwegians out from the mainland of Scotland, and Somerled, establishing himself as king over the whole of the extensive district known by the name of Ergadia or _Oirirgaidheal_, extending from the Clyde to Lochbroom, and had likewise wrested from the Norwegian kings of the Isles the southern half of them lying to the south of the promontory of Ardnamurchan, over which his descendants ruled with almost regal sway, while Fergus founded a line of Celtic lords of Galloway. Somerled left three sons—Dubhgal or Dugald, Reginald, and Angus, among whom his dominions were divided. Dubhgal received the district of Lorn, extending from Lochleven to the Point of Ashnish, and also that of Morvern; Reginald obtained the districts of Kintyre and Cowall, and the islands which Somerled had possessed were divided between them, Dubhgal having Mull and the small islands adjacent to it, and Reginald the important island of Isla, with those in the Firth of Clyde. Angus’s possessions appear to have lain north of the others, but a struggle seems to have taken place between him and Reginald, which resulted in Angus being slain with his three sons in 1210 by the sons of Reginald. Soon after, the conquest of the great district of Argyll by Alexander the Second took place, and the descendants of Somerled appear to have been among the lords who were confirmed in their possessions by that monarch, but their possessions in the Isles were still held of the Norwegians till the cession of the Isles in the reign of Alexander the Third. Reginald had left two sons, Donald and Ruaidri or Roderick, the former succeeding his father in Kintyre and Isla, and the latter obtaining Bute and Arran, and likewise the possessions which had been wrested from Angus, and consisted mainly of the district extending from Ardnamurchan to Glenelg, and known by the name of Garmoran; while the district of Lochaber, which had been forfeited, passed into the possession of the Cumyns. The descendants of Dugald and Reginald thus shared the possessions of Somerled between them, and we find the heads of the respective families—Alexander, son of Eogan, son of Duncan, son of Dubhgal, Angus Mor son of Donald, and Allan son of Roderic—appearing at the Scottish parliament in 1284, when the crown was settled on the Maiden of Norway; but the families having taken opposite sides in the war of succession—the head of the line of Dubhgal, John of Lorn, supporting the cause of Baliol, and the head of the line of Reginald that of Bruce—the latter became the predominant family. Angus Og, son of Angus Mor, the head of the family who had supported Bruce, received from him when established on the throne the lands of Morvern, Ardnamurchan, and Lochaber, with the islands which had belonged to the Lords of Lorn. These lands and islands, with Kintyre and Isla, were confirmed to his son John by David the Second, who likewise confirmed to Reginald son of Roderic, the lands of Garmoran, with the small islands north of Ardnamurchan and the southern half of the Long Island; but Reginald having been slain in a quarrel with the earl of Ross at Perth in 1346, his possessions passed with his sister Amie by marriage to John the son of Angus,[410] and thus this latter family became known as the powerful Lords of the Isles, ruling over the territories of the Macdonalds of Isla and Kintyre, the MacRuaries of Garmoran and the North Isles, and a great part of those which had belonged to the Lords of Lorn. Their position was still further strengthened by the marriage of John, Lord of the Isles, with the daughter of Robert, High Steward of Scotland, for which connection he had apparently repudiated his first wife Amie; and when the line of the Lords of Lorn of the race of Dubhgal came to an end, and the lordship of Lorn passed to the Stewarts of Innermeath by marriage with the daughter and heiress of John, Lord of Lorn, before 1388, the Lords of the Isles were left without a rival in their rule of the Gaelic population of Argyll and the Isles. John, Lord of the Isles, had by his first marriage with Amie MacRuarie, three sons, John, Godfrey, and Ranald; and by his second marriage with the Lady Margaret Stewart likewise three sons, Donald, John, and Alexander; and when Robert the High Steward succeeded to the throne in 1370, his influence led to an arrangement by which the children of the Lord of the Isles by his second marriage, who were the king’s grandsons, were to be preferred to the children of the first marriage in the succession to the Isles, while the possessions of the MacRuarie family, which he had inherited through his first wife, were to be secured to the first family as the price of their acquiescence. Accordingly, in the first year of his reign, King Robert confirms to John, Lord of the Isles, the territory on the mainland and the Isles which had belonged to Alan, son of Roderic, and in the following year confirms a grant by the Lord of the Isles of these possessions to his son Reginald, the youngest of the three brothers, who appears to have agreed to the arrangement, the eldest son, John, having predeceased his father, and the second, Godfrey, having apparently refused to surrender his rights; and a few years later charters are granted to the Lord of the Isles and to the heirs of his marriage with Margaret, the king’s daughter, of the island of Colonsay with its pertinents, and the lands of Lochaber, Kintyre, and one half of Knapdale. On the death of the Lord of the Isles in 1380, Reginald fulfilled his engagement by causing Donald to be recognised as Lord of the Isles, and having him inaugurated by the usual Celtic solemnities as such; while Godfrey appears to have for a time maintained his right to his mother’s inheritance, which, however, was soon extinguished by the failure of heirs-male. Donald thus appears to have entered peaceably into possession of the lordship of the Isles, and his marriage with Margaret, daughter of Walter Lesly, earl of Ross, added a claim to that earldom on the death of her brother Alexander, earl of Ross, who left an only daughter who became a nun. This claim being contested by the Regent Duke of Albany, who had obtained a renunciation from the nun, led to the great battle of Harlaw, where the whole force of the Western Highlands and Isles, as well as those of the earldom, was pitted against the Government; and though the issue of the battle was doubtful, the Lord of the Isles maintained his possession of the earldom, and his title as Earl of Ross was eventually admitted, and he was succeeded in 1420 by his son Alexander, as Earl of Ross and Lord of the Isles. The position of the Lords of the Isles, as virtually independent rulers of nearly the whole of the Highlands with the Isles, was now so powerful, that their authority and that of the Crown came into constant collision, and it is necessary, for our purpose, that the leading incidents should be shortly stated. On the accession of James the First in 1424, he appears to have strengthened his party against the family of the Regent Albany by confirming the widow of the Lord of the Isles, and her son Alexander, in the earldom of Ross; and the latter, as Lord of the Isles and Master of the earldom of Ross, sat upon the jury which condemned Murdoch, Duke of Albany, and his father-in-law, the Earl of Lennox, to death; but after his object was attained, this vigorous monarch seemed to feel the necessity of bringing the Highlands more under his control. The mode by which he endeavoured to accomplish this was characteristic. He summoned, in 1427, a Parliament to meet at Inverness, at which the Highland chiefs were invited to attend, and as soon as they obeyed his summons, arrested them to the number of fifty and committed them to prison. The chroniclers enumerate among them—Alexander, Lord of the Isles, and his mother the Countess of Ross; Angus Duff with his four sons, leader of four thousand men of Strathnaver; Kenneth More with his son-in-law, leader of two thousand men; John Ross, William Lesly, Angus of Moray, and Mackmahon, leaders of two thousand men each; and he put to death Alexander Makreury of Garmoran, leader of a thousand men, and John Makarthur, a great chief among them, and likewise leader of a thousand men, who were beheaded. The rest were sent to various prisons, where, after a time, some were put to death and others liberated.[411] Among those who were liberated were the Lord of the Isles and his mother, and he seems to have lost no time in endeavouring to revenge himself, for in 1429 he summoned all his vassals in Ross and the Isles, and advanced against the town of Inverness, which he burnt to the ground after he had wasted the crown lands; but on the appearance of the royal army, with King James at its head, he retreated to Lochaber, where the king followed him, and the Lord of the Isles having been deserted by part of his troops, he was attacked and defeated, and eventually surrendered himself unconditionally to the king, when he was imprisoned in Tantallon Castle, and his mother was also arrested and confined at Inchcolm, in the Firth of Forth. Along with the earl of Ross, we find in prison Lachlane M‘Gillane, Torkill M‘Nell, Tarlan MacArchir, and Duncan Persoun.[412] The imprisonment of the earl of Ross and his mother led to an insurrection in the west, when the Highlanders under Donald Balloch, a cousin of the earl, defeated the royal troops, under the earls of Mar and Caithness, at Inverlochy in Lochaber in 1431, when the former was killed; but on the appearance of the king himself with additional forces, Donald Balloch fled to Ireland, and the other chiefs made their submission. In consequence of this insurrection, the king appears to have seen the policy of setting the earl of Ross at liberty and attaching him to his service by conferring upon him the important office of Justiciar of Scotland north of the Forth, an office which he held during the minority of James the Second. He appears, however, to have entered into a league with the earls of Douglas and Crawford, in 1455, for the dethronement of that monarch, but died in 1449 before any overt attempt had been made to carry it into effect. Alexander, earl of Ross, like his grandfather, seems to have formed one potent alliance with the Lowland nobility by his marriage with Elizabeth Seton, daughter of Alexander, Lord of Gordon and Huntly, while he had—either before or after—added to his possessions by marriage with daughters of Highland chiefs. By his countess Elizabeth he had John, who succeeded him as Earl of Ross and Lord of the Isles. By the daughter of Giollapadraig, the last of the lay abbots of Applecross, and known to tradition as the Red Priest, with whom he obtained the lands of Lochalsh, Lochcarron, and others, he had a son Hugh, to whom he gave the lands of Sleat in Skye; and by a daughter of _Mac Dubhshithe_ or Macphee, of Lochaber, he had Celestine or Gilleaspic, to whom he gave the lands of Lochalsh. During the reign of James the Second, John, earl of Ross, was occasionally at variance with the Crown, and at other times on good terms with the king, and under his influence was married to the daughter of Sir James Livingston; but soon after that king’s death, he entered into a league with the earl of Douglas and King Edward the Fourth of England for the conquest and partition of Scotland, in 1462, and immediately raised the standard of revolt. Having assembled a large force, he made himself master of the castle of Inverness, and proclaimed himself supreme over the sheriffdoms of Inverness and Nairn, which then embraced the whole of the north of Scotland over which he placed his natural son Angus as lieutenant. In consequence of this act, and of the treaty with England coming to light, he was summoned at his castle of Dingwall to appear before a Parliament in Edinburgh to answer to various charges of treason, and failing to attend, sentence of forfeiture was pronounced against him in 1475. In order to carry this sentence into effect, an expedition consisting both of a fleet and land force was sent against him under the command of the earls of Crawford and Atholl, and this led to his suing for pardon through the medium of the earl of Huntly, and he eventually surrendered himself to the royal mercy. He was restored to his forfeited estates, which he immediately resigned to the Crown. The earldom of Ross was annexed to the Crown, and the rest of his estates, with the exception of Kintyre and Knapdale, were regranted to him by royal charter, and he was created a baron banrent and peer of Parliament by the title of Lord of the Isles, with remainder to his two natural sons, Angus and John. The old Celtic lordship of the Isles was thus converted into a feudal barony in 1476. Angus was soon after married to a daughter of the earl of Argyll, by whom he had a son Donald Dubh, but was treacherously slain in 1490 at Inverness by an Irish harper. The repeated attempts which had been made to recover the earldom of Ross, and other acts committed in name of the aged Lord of the Isles, led to his being again forfeited and deprived of his titles and estates in a Parliament held at Edinburgh in May 1493, on which he retired to the monastery of Paisley, and died there in 1498, and was interred in the tomb of his royal ancestor King Robert the Second. Although several attempts were made after his death by the western chiefs to raise up his grandson Donald Dubh and his nephew Donald Gallda, the son of Celestine, as Lords of the Isles, this was the final termination of the dynasty of the Celtic Lords of the Isles, which practically ceased to exist in 1476 at his first forfeiture, and the Gaelic population, which had been kept together by the power and authority of their great chiefs, became now broken up.[413] [Sidenote: Lennox.] The line of the Celtic earls of Lennox had come to an end during the life of Alexander, earl of Ross, when Duncan, earl of Lennox, was executed in 1425, and the earldom passed into the hands of the Stewarts. [Sidenote: The _Toshachdoracht_.] The fifteenth century thus saw the last of the great Celtic tribes broken up; but while this process of disintegration from external influence had thus overtaken the greater tribes or _Mortuath_ one after another, their extinction as leading features in the Celtic tribal organisation did not disclose the lesser tribes or _Tuaths_ in their entirety. They, too, had been undergoing a process of internal change similar to that which had affected the Irish tribes and led to the development of the septs or clans, gradually severed more and more from the parent tribe, till the bond of union between them became impaired, and all tradition of their earlier existence as members of a larger organisation became lost. But while the original tribe had ceased thus to exist in that part of the country which retained its Gaelic population, as an actual element in its social organisation, it left an evidence of its previous existence in the lesser districts into which the larger territories were divided, and which still remained as a geographical feature; where an officer bearing the name and some of the functions of the ancient _Toisech_ of the _Tuath_ is still found in connection with some of them. This was the _Toshachdoracht_ or office of _Toschachdoir_, which was considered equivalent to Coroner. It was rendered in Latin by _capitalis legis_, and signified in English, principal of law. Thus, in that part of the great district of Argyll which formed the original kingdom of Dalriada, we find the districts of Cowall, Kintyre in its largest sense, and Lorn, obviously representing the ancient _Tuaths_ into which the population of the kingdom had been divided, and we likewise find Archibald, Master of Argyll, granting in 1550 to Campbell of Ardkinlas the office of Coroner, _alias Thoshisdoir_, viz., _Tosheochdorachtie_ of the lands of Cowall, from Claychin Toskycht to the Points of Toward and Ardlawmonth.[414] In 1539 Alane M‘Lane was appointed by King James V. _Toschachdoir_ of all Kintyre, from the Mull to Altasynach;[415] and the same king appointed, in 1542, Neill mac Neill to the same office.[416] In 1455, John, Earl of Ross and Lord of the Isles, confirms to Neill mac Neill a grant made by his father, Alexander, Earl of Ross and Lord of the Isles, to Torquel M‘Neill, constable of the castle of Swyffin, the father of Neill, of the office called _Toshachdeora_ of the lands of Knapdale.[417] In 1447 we find Sir Duncan Campbell as king’s lieutenant within the parts of Argyll, granting to Reginald Malcolmson, of Craignish, the offices of Steward, _Tosachdoir_, and Mair of the whole land of Craignish, and the office of _Tosachdoir_, _ex parte regis_, within the same bounds; when the heir was under age, to be held by his tutor, with consent of his clan, viz., the Clandowil Cragniche.[418] In 1572, Archibald, Earl of Argyll, grants to Colin Campbell of Barbrek certain lands with the coronership of the lands and baronies of Glenurquhay, the two Lochaws, Glenaray, Glenshyro, Ardskeodnich, Melfort, and Barbrek, that is, of the district forming the central part of Argyll between Lorn and Lochfyne.[419] In another grant, it is termed the office of _Tosheadorach_ of the lands lying west of Lochfyne.[420] That part of the great district of Argyll which pertained to the earldom of Moray contained the lesser districts of Lochaber, Morvaren, Ardnamurchan, and Garmoran, and here too we find the Lord of the Isles granting, in 1456, to his esquire Somerled, son of John, son of Somerled, for life, and to his eldest son for five years after his death, a _davach_ of his lands of Gleneves, with the office commonly called _Tocheachdeora_ of all his lands of Lochaber, and he seems to have derived from it the name of _Toche_ or _Toshach_, as in 1553 or 1554 the same lands of Gleneves are granted to his grandson, here called Donald Macallaster Mic Toche.[421] There is no trace of the office of _Toschachdor_, under this name, in connection with the more eastern districts of Moray, but there is no reason to doubt that such districts as Badenoch, Strathspey, Strathdearn, Strathnairn, Stratherrich, and the Aird, represented what had formerly been tribe territories or _Tuaths_, and the same may be predicated of similar districts in the northern earldoms. In Atholl, as we have seen, the thanages appear even though within the Highland Line, but here we find the office of _Toschachdor_ in connection with one district in Breadalbane which was adjacent to one of these thanages, for among the lands of the earldom of Breadalbane we find the thanage of Cranach, with the office of _Toshachdoiraship_ of Ardtholony,[422] and the office likewise appears in Lennox, where Malcolm, earl of Lennox, grants to Patrick de Lindsay the office of _Tosheagor_ of Lennox.[423] We find a trace of it, too, in Galloway, where the office of coroner between the rivers Dee and Nith and the _Toshachdoracht_ of Nithsdale appear to be the same.[424] [Sidenote: First appearance of clans.] But while the more ancient tribal forms had thus undergone a process of change and modification similar to that which characterised the Irish tribe, and left merely its shadow behind it in the geographical district and the function of the _Toshachdoracht_, it is in the reign of David the First that the sept or clan first appears as a distinct and prominent feature in the social organisation of the Gaelic population, and owing to the light thrown upon the ancient state of the earldom of Buchan as a Celtic _Mortuath_ by the Book of Deer only. During the period of the _Mormaers_ of Buchan prior to Garnait and Colban, who were _Mormaers_ or earls in the reign of David, we find the _Toisechs_ mentioned generally as concurring in grants of land; but in the time of these two _Mormaers_ a grant of land is made by Comgill mac Caennaig, _Tosech_ of Clan Canan; and Colban, _Mormaer_ of Buchan, and Eva, daughter of Garnait his wife, and Donnachach mac Sithig, _Toisech_ of Clan Morgan, mortmained all the previous offerings to God, Drostan, Columcille, and Peter, that is, to the monastery of Deer, and this grant is witnessed, among others, by the two sons of the _Toisech_. The _Toisech_ of the _Tuath_ had thus by this time acquired a sufficient _Deis_ to form a sept of his kin and dependants, of which he now appears as the head, but the clans in this district only show themselves to disappear at once before the advancing colonisation of the eastern districts by a Teutonic population. [Sidenote: Clan Macduff and its privileges.] In the same reign we find a Gaelic sept or clan appearing where we might least expect to find it, viz., in the province of Fife and Fothriff, where the Clan Macduff figures from an early period in both the mythic and the real history of Scotland, and has acquired a fictitious importance from the supposed connection of its founders with the usurper Macbeth, from which the privileges known as the law of the Clan Macduff were supposed to be derived. The well-known tale of how Macduff was Thane of Fife in the reign of Macbeth, how he incurred the resentment of the usurper and fled to England from his wrath, how his wife and children were slaughtered, and how he brought back Malcolm, the son of King Duncan whom Macbeth had slain, and how he killed Macbeth in the battle which placed Malcolm on the throne, first appears in the Chronicle of John of Fordun,[425] but he does not notice the privileges supposed to be conferred upon him and his descendants. These first appear in an addition made to the Chronicle by his interpolator Bower, the abbot of Inchcolm. According to him, after Malcolm was crowned, Macduff, thane of Fife, came to him, and requested and obtained three privileges, in reward for his faithful service, for himself and his successors, lords or thanes of Fife:—First, that they should place the king in his royal seat or chair on his coronation day; second, that they should lead the vanguard in every battle in which the royal standard was unfurled; third, that they, and every one of their kin, on the occasion of any sudden and unpremeditated homicide, should enjoy the privilege of the law of Macduff, the gentry on paying twenty-four marks as kinbot, and the commonalty on paying twelve marks receiving a plenary remission.[426] Wyntoun gives the same account of the three privileges, but adds— ‘Off this lawch are thre capytale; That is the Blak Prest off Weddale, The Thayne off Fyffe, and the thryd syne Quha ewyre be Lord of Abbyrnethyne.’[427] Sir John Skene, however, attaches the third privilege to the Croce of the Clan Macduff which divides Stratherne from Fife, as a privilege and liberty of girth in such sort that when any manslayer, being within the ninth degree of kin and blood to Macduff, sometime earl of Fife, came to that cross and gave nine cows and a colpindach, or year-old cow, he was free of the slaughter committed by him, and quotes a charter by David the Second to William Ramsay of the earldom of Fife, with the law called Clan Macduff.[428] The existence of this privilege is so far confirmed that in a Parliament of King Robert the Second, held in 1384, in which certain laws were enacted regarding _Katheranes_, the earl of Fife agreed that as ‘principal of law of Clan Macduff’ (_capitalis legis de Clen m’Duffe_), he would cause them to be observed within his bounds;[429] and in the fragmentary code of laws it is enacted that the _duellum_, or wager of battle, may be remitted in three instances, the second being ‘by the law of the Clan Macduff for the slaughter of one of the kin, if the kin of the other party can come in the place of combat when the appealer is proven, and his lance.’[430] We thus see that when the line of the Celtic Earls of Fife, the hereditary _Toshachs_ of the tribe, failed, they were replaced by the _Capitalis legis_, ‘Capytale of lawch,’ or _Toshachdor_, the principal being the alien Earl, to whom Wyntoun joins the priest of Wedale, a parsonage belonging to St. Andrews, and the Lord of Abernethy, the descendant of the old abbots of the monastery of that name. Hector Boece pushes the origin of the clan as far back as the reign of Kenneth MacAlpin, the founder of the Scottish dynasty, who, according to that veracious chronicler, appointed governors of the different provinces, that of Fife being a certain Fifus Duffus. There were of course no thanes of Fife at any time. The first appearance of the name on record is in the reign of David the First, when Gillemichel Macduff witnesses an early charter of that monarch to the monks of Dunfermline, along with five earls, one of whom is Constantine, earl of Fife, and he certainly is the same person who witnesses the foundation charter of Holyrood shortly after as ‘Gillemichel Comes,’ and had thus become earl of Fife. The demesne of the earls of Fife of this race appears to have consisted of the parishes of Cupar, Kilmany, Reres, and Cameron in Fife, and those of Strathmiglo and Auchtermuchty in Fothriff,[431] near which Macduff’s Cross was situated, but whether this sept were the remains of the old Celtic inhabitants of the province, or a Gaelic clan introduced into it when its chief was made earl, it is difficult to say, but it is not impossible that it may have been a northern clan who followed Macbeth when the southern districts were subjected to his rule, and that there may be some foundation for the legend that the founder of the clan had rebelled against him, and adopted the cause of Malcolm Ceannmor, and so maintained his position. The fact that the race from whom the _Mormaers_ of Moray derived their origin is termed in one of the Irish Genealogical MSS. Clan Duff, and the earls of Fife undoubtedly possessed from an early period large possessions in the north, including the district of Strathavon,[432] lends some probability to this supposition. The privileges of the clan, however, stand on a different footing. From the earliest period the territory of Fife comes prominently forward as the leading province of Scotland, and its earls occupied the first place among the seven earls of Scotland. The first two privileges of placing the king on the Coronation Stone, and of heading the van in the army, were probably attached to the province of Fife, and not to any particular tribe from which its earls might have been derived, while on the other hand the third seems derived from the institution connected with the ancient _Finé_, by which the kin formed a class of seventeen persons, consisting of the _Geilfiné_, _Deirbhfiné_, _Indfiné_, and _Iarfiné_, and the nine degrees of kindred of the Clan Macduff correspond to the first two, which consisted of nine persons, traces of which can also be found in the Welsh Laws. Whilst the sept or clan thus makes its appearance in these few instances beyond the Highland Line, it no doubt had already assumed an equally distinct form within that boundary; but whatever may have been the condition of the clans in the more inaccessible region of the Highlands, history throws little light upon their existence till they emerge beyond it towards the end of the fourteenth century. [Sidenote: Description of Highlanders—1363-1383.] Fordun, who concludes his Chronicle immediately before the first appearance of a Highland clan beyond the Highland Line, gives the following description of the inhabitants of the Highlands:—‘The Highlanders and people of the Islands are,’ he says, ‘a savage and untamed nation, rude and independent, given to rapine, ease-loving, of a docile and warm disposition, comely in person but unsightly in dress, hostile to the Anglic people and language, and, owing to diversity of speech, even to their own nation, and exceedingly cruel. They are, however, faithful and obedient to their king and country, and easily made to submit to law, if properly governed.’[433] This is a picture drawn by one who had no friendly feeling towards them, but the good qualities with which he credits them, of being of a docile and warm disposition, and faithful and obedient to their king and country, read as strangely to us when their subsequent history is taken into account, as Fordun’s opinion that the dress is unsightly hardly corresponds with modern taste. At the time he wrote, however, he was warranted in what he said, for from the time when Alexander the Second finally suppressed the rebellion of the people of Moray, and conquered Argyll in the early part of his reign, to his own day, they had not broken out beyond their mountain barrier, and these early rebellions arose from their adherence to a family which they believed had a rightful claim to the throne, just as those of the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries were the result of their attachment to the cause of the Stewarts. [Sidenote: Raid into Angus in 1391.] This state of quiescence was not destined, however, to continue long, and within eight years after the death of the chronicler the irruptions of the Highlanders into the low country were renewed, and they now appear in the form of separate septs or clans. Robert the Second had, in the first year of his reign, granted the lands of Badenoch, which had been forfeited by the Cumyns, to his fourth son, Alexander, who, from his fierce disposition, became known as the Wolf of Badenoch, and some years after he obtained grants of the lands of Strathavon, which had belonged to the earls of Fife, and of Abernethy in Strathtay. Alexander had no family by his wife Eupham, countess of Ross, but a number of illegitimate sons; and Bower tells us that in 1391 the Caterans, as he calls them, invaded the Braes of Angus with Duncan Stewart, one of his sons, at their head, and were encountered by Walter Ogilvy, sheriff of Angus, with such of the barons of Angus and their followers as he could hastily summon, at a place called by him Glenbrereth, where the sheriff was slain with sixty of his followers.[434] Wyntoun gives a very graphic account of this raid, which he places in the subsequent year, when he says, ‘There arose a great discord between Sir David of Lindsay, son of Glenesk, and the Highlandmen, and that in consequence of the former sending a secret spy into the Highlands, a great company of Highlandmen, to the number of three hundred and more, came suddenly into Angus under three chieftains, Thomas, Patrick, and Gibbon, whose surname was Duncanson, and encountered the sheriff at Gasklune, in the Stormont, where the latter was slain.’[435] It is unnecessary to enter into the particulars of the conflict, striking though the details are, but we have more certain information as to the leaders of the Highlanders in a Brief issued by King Robert the Third at a general council held at Perth on the 26th March 1392, and addressed to the sheriff and bailiffs of Aberdeen, directing them to put to the horn as outlaws the following persons, guilty of the slaughter of Walter de Ogilvy, Walter de Lichton, and others of the king’s lieges:—viz., Duncan and Robert Stewarts, Patrick and Thomas Duncansons, Robert de Athale, Andrew Macnayr, Duncan Bryceson, Angus Macnayr, and John Ayson junior, and all others their adherents; and as taking part with them in the slaughter, Slurach and his brothers, with the whole Clanqwhevil, William Mowat, John de Cowts, Donald de Cowts, with their adherents; David de Rose, Alexander M‘Kintalyhur, John M‘Kintalyhur, Adam Rolson, John Rolson, with their adherents; Duncan Neteraulde, John Mathyson, with their adherents; Morgownde Ruryson and Michael Mathowson, with their adherents.[436] They thus formed six groups. The first group who were directly implicated, with the exception of the Stewarts, belong to Athole; the Duncansons, with Robert de Athale, were the heads of the Clan Donnachie, descended from the old earls who possessed the north-western district bordering upon that of Badenoch; the Macnairs possessed Foss in Strathtummel, and the Aysons, Tullimet in Strathtay. The other five were art and part. The first were Slurach and his brothers, who with their followers formed a clan termed the Clanqwhevil. This is the first appearance of a distinct clan in the Highlands. The second group of the Mowats and Cowts belonged to Buchan, of which Alexander Stewart was earl; and the third of David de Rose and his followers, must have come from Strathnairn, where the Roses were situated. These groups were, therefore, probably dependants of the Wolf of Badenoch, and the cause of this raid seems to have arisen from this, that Sir David de Lindsay had inherited Glenesk in Angus and the district of Strathnairn from his mother, one of the daughters and co-heirs of Sir John Stirling of Glenesk, while another of the daughters had married Robert de Atholia. His possession of Strathnairn would bring him into contact with the Wolf of Badenoch and the northern clans, and a quarrel regarding the succession probably brought the Clan Donnachie into the field. [Sidenote: Combat of two clans on North Inch of Perth in 1396.] The Wolf of Badenoch died in 1394, and two years after, the only Highland clan hitherto mentioned with that designation, came more prominently into the foreground in the very remarkable combat which took place on the North Inch of Perth in the year 1396, and from its peculiarity seems to have attracted general notice, as well as given rise to a controversy with regard to the actors in it, for which it is difficult to provide any satisfactory solution. The account given by the chroniclers of this remarkable combat differs somewhat as to the details. The earliest account of it is probably that given by Wyntoun, who wrote his Chronicle between 1420 and 1424, or only about twenty-five years after the event. He says that the combat took place at Saint Johnstoun or Perth between sixty men, thirty against thirty, who belonged to two clans who had been at variance in old feud in which their fore elders were slain. He names the clans Clahynnhe (or Clan) Qwhewyl, and Clachiny (or Clan) Ha, and that their chieftains were Scha Ferqwhareisone and Christy Johnesone; that they fought within barriers with bow and axe, knife and sword; but that who had the best of it he could not say, and that fifty or more were slain, and but few escaped with life.[437] Bower, who wrote nearly twenty-five years later, gives further details. He says that a great part of the north beyond the Grampians had been disturbed by two turbulent caterans and their followers:—Scheabeg and his kin, who were called Clan Kay, and Cristi Johnson, and his, called Clanquhele, who could by no treaty or arrangement be brought to peace, nor could they be brought under subjection to the government, upon which David de Lyndesay of Crawford, and Thomas earl of Moray, interposed and treated between them, so that they agreed to settle their quarrel before the king at Perth, by a combat between thirty chosen men of their kin on each side, armed only with their swords, bows and arrows, and without their plaids or other arms. The combat took place on the North Inch of Perth, in presence of the king, the governor, and a great multitude, on the Monday before Saint Michael’s day, when, of the sixty, all were slain except one on the part of the Clan Kay and eleven on the other part. He adds that as they were entering within the barrier, one of the number dashed into the river and escaped by swimming across, on which one of the spectators offered to supply his place for half a mark, on condition that if he survived he was to be maintained during the rest of his life, which was agreed to. The result was that the north was for many years after at peace, and there was no further outbreak of the caterans.[438] The material difference between Bower’s account and Wyntoun’s is, that he reverses the connection of the chiefs with the clans, and adds the detail of the numbers slain on both sides, and the aid of the volunteer. The next account is given by Maurice Buchanan, in the Book of Pluscarden, who wrote in 1461, and differs very much from that of Bower. He connects this event with the raid into Angus five years previously, and implies that the same parties were concerned in both, but he does not name the clans. This was so far the case, that the Clan Qwhele took part in both. He says that in 1391 so great a contention had arisen among the wild Scots (_silvestres Scottos_), that their whole country was disturbed by it, and, on that account, the king finding himself unable to restore peace, arranged, in a council of the magnates of the kingdom, that their two principal captains, with their best and most valiant friends, amounting on each side to thirty men, should fight in an enclosed field after the manner of judicial combatants (_more duellancium_),[439] with swords only, cross bows having each three arrows only, and this before the king on a certain day on the North Inch of Perth; and this, by the intervention of the earl of Crawford and other nobles, was agreed upon and carried out, when all on both sides were slain except seven, five on the one side and two on the other escaping alive, of which two one escaped by flying to the river and escaping across it, and the other being taken was pardoned with the consent of the other party, though some say that he was hung. In the beginning of the conflict one of the number of one party disappeared and could not be found, on which one of the spectators, who happened to belong to the same clan (_parentela_) and was hostile to the other party, agreed to supply his place for forty shillings, fought most valiantly, and escaped with his life.[440] As the writer of this account was himself a Highlander, this is most probably the account given of the combat on the Highland side, while that of Bower was the account reported in the Lowlands; and the former has more appearance of being the correct account, and agrees better with that of Wyntoun, who could not tell which party gained. It also indicates that the conflict was of the nature of a judicial wager of battle, which is also probably the true view; for if the contention between the clans was a mere ordinary feud, it is difficult to see how this combat should have been the means of restoring peace, but if the dispute related to some difference as to some question of right or privilege which both claimed, it is quite intelligible that it should have been settled by judicial combat before the king. The only other early notice of this event is in a short chronicle contained in the Chartulary of Moray, which states that the combat took place on the 28th day of September at Perth before the king and the nobles of Scotland, because he found it impossible to establish peace between two clans (_parentelas_) called the Clan Kay and the Clan Qwhwle, whence there were daily slaughtering attacks committed by them. Thirty men on each side without armour, but with bows, swords, and dirks, met in conflict, when all on the side of the Clan Kay were slain except one, and of the other party ten survived.[441] [Sidenote: The Clan Chattan and Clan Cameron.] If this event was connected with the raid of Angus which preceded it, the events which followed may likewise tend to throw light upon the actors in this strange combat. When the royal forces attacked Alexander, Lord of the Isles, in 1429, and put him to flight in Lochaber, the chroniclers tell us, that at the sight of the royal standard, he was deserted by two tribes, who submitted to the royal authority. They are termed by Bower the Clan Katan and Clan Cameron, and by Maurice Buchanan, more correctly, the _Clan de Guyllequhatan_ and _Clan Cameron_. This was on the eve of St. John the Baptist’s day, that is, on the 23d of June, and on the following Palm Sunday, which is on the 20th day of the following month of March, we are told by the chroniclers that the Clan Chattan attacked the Clan Cameron when assembled in a certain church, to which they set fire and destroyed nearly the whole clan. Although the Clan Chattan are here said, in general terms, to have deserted the Lord of the Isles, it appears that a part of the clan still adhered to his cause, for after his restoration to liberty, we find him in 1443 granting a charter to Malcolm MacIntosh of the forty merk lands of Keppoch and others in the lordship of Lochaber, and in 1447 he confers upon him the office of bailie or steward of the lordship of Lochaber.[442] This Malcolm, who is called in the second charter his cousin, was related to the Lord of the Isles through his mother, who was a daughter of his grandfather Angus, Lord of the Isles, and was thus probably led to adhere to him. The same lands are confirmed to his son Duncan MacIntosh in 1466, by John, Lord of the Isles,[443] and in this charter he is termed Captain of Clan Chattan, which is the first appearance of this designation. Neither were the Clan Cameron entirely destroyed, for we find Alan, son of Donald Duff, appearing in 1472 as Captain of the Clan Cameron, and in 1492, Alexander of the Isles, Lord of Lochalsh and Lochiel, grants the lands of Lochiel to Ewen, son of Alan, son of Donald, Captain of Clan Cameron. It would thus appear that a part only of these two clans had deserted the Lord of the Isles in 1429, and a part adhered to him, that the conflict on Palm Sunday was between the former part of these clans, and that the leaders of those who adhered to the Lord of the Isles became afterwards recognised as captains of the respective clans. It further appears that there was, within no distant time after the conflict on the North Inch of Perth, a bitter feud between the two clans who had deserted the Lord of the Isles, and there are indications that this was merely the renewal of an older quarrel, for both clans undoubtedly contested the right to the lands of Glenlui and Locharkaig in Lochaber, to which William MacIntosh received a charter from the Lord of the Isles in 1336, while they unquestionably afterwards formed a part of the territory possessed by the Camerons. By the later historians one of the clans who fought on the North Inch of Perth, and who were termed by the earlier chroniclers _Clan Qwhele_, are identified with the Clan Chattan,[444] and that this identification is well founded, so far as regards that part of the clan which adhered to the royal cause, while that in the part of the Clan Cameron who followed the same course, and were nearly entirely destroyed on Palm Sunday, we may recognise their opponents the Clan Kay, is not without much probability. The Clan Chattan in later times consisted of sixteen septs, who followed MacIntosh as captain of the clan, but did not recognise him as one of the race, and regarded MacPherson of Cluny, head of the sept called _Clan Vuireach_, as the male representative of the founder of the clan. The first of the MacIntoshes who appears with the title of Captain of Clan Chattan is Duncan MacIntosh, the son of Malcolm, in 1400 and in 1466, and he was probably placed by the Lord of the Isles over that part of the clan who adhered to him. Eight of the septs forming the later Clan Chattan may be put aside as having been affiliated to the clan subsequently to the year 1429, as well as the family of MacIntosh, descended from Malcolm. The remainder represent the clan as it existed before that date. It consisted of an older sept of MacIntoshes, who possessed lands in Badenoch, the principal of which was Rothiemurchus, and appears to have claimed those of Glenlui and Locharkaig in Lochaber. The eight septs who then formed the Clan Chattan proper were the _Clan Vuirich_ or MacPhersons, and the _Clan Day_ or Davidsons, who were called the old Clan Chattan, and six stranger septs, who took protection from the clan. These were the _Clan Vic Ghillevray_ or MacGillivrays, the _Clan Vean_ or MacBeans, the _Clan Vic Govies_, the _Clan Tarrel_, the _Clan Cheanduy_, and the _Sliochd Gowchruim_ or Smiths. The _Clan Vic Govies_, however, were a branch of the Clan Cameron, and the _Sliochd Gowchruim_ were believed to be descendants of the person who supplied the place of the missing member of the clan at the combat on the North Inch of Perth, and who was said to have been a smith. The Clan Cameron, on the other hand, consisted of four septs. These were the _Clan Gillanfhaigh_ or Gillonie, or Camerons of Invermalie and Strone, the _Clan Soirlie_, or Camerons of Glenevis, the _Clan Vic Mhartain_, or MacMartins of Letterfinlay, and the Camerons of Lochiel. The latter were the sept whose head became Captain of Clan Cameron and adhered to the Lord of the Isles, while the three former represented the part of the clan who seceded from him in 1429. Besides these there were dependent septs, the chief of which were the _Clan Vic Gilveil_ or M‘Millans, and these were believed to be of the race of Clan Chattan. The connection between the two clans is thus apparent. Now there are preserved genealogies of both clans in their earlier forms, written not long after the year 1429. One is termed the ‘Genealogy of the Clan an Toisig, that is, the Clan Gillachattan,’ and gives it in two separate lines. The first represented the older MacIntoshes. The second is deduced from Gillachattan Mor, the eponymus of the clan. His great-grandson Muireach, from whom the Clan Vuireach takes its name, has a son Domnall or Donald, called _in Caimgilla_, and this word when aspirated would form the name Kevil or _Quhevil_.[445] The chief seat of this branch of the clan can also be ascertained, for Alexander, Lord of the Isles and Earl of Ross, confirms a charter granted by William, earl of Ross, in 1338 of the lands of Dalnafert and Kinrorayth or Kinrara, under reservation of one acre of ground near the Stychan of the town of Dalnavert, where was situated the manor of the late Scayth, son of Ferchard,[446] and we find a ‘_Tsead_, son of Ferquhar’ in the Genealogy at the same period. Moreover the grandson of this Scayth was _Disiab_ or Shaw, who thus was contemporary with the Shaw who fought in 1396. The gravestone said to mark the grave of Shaw _Corshiacloch_, or buck-toothed, whom tradition declares to be the Shaw who led the clan at the combat, was, according to Shaw, still to be seen in the adjacent church of Rothiemurchus. He is also said to have married the daughter of Kenneth Macvuireach, ancestor of the Macpherson of Cluny, and in him and his father-in-law we may probably recognise the ‘Kenethus Mor with his son-in-law, leader of two thousand men,’ who were arrested by James the First at his Parliament at Inverness in 1427.[447] With regard to the Clan Cameron, the invariable tradition is that the head of the MacGillonies or _MacGillaanaigh_ led the clan who fought with the Clan Chattan during the long feud between them, and the old Genealogy terms the Cameron’s _Clan Maelanfhaigh_, or the race of the servant of the prophet, and deduces them from a common ancestor the _Clan Maelanfhaigh_ and the _Clan Camshron_, and as the epithet _an Caimgilla_, when aspirated, would become _Kevil_, so the word _Fhaigh_ in its aspirated form would be represented by the _Hay_ of the chroniclers.[448] John Major probably gives the clew to the whole transaction, when he tells us that ‘these two clans’—the Clan Chattan and Clan Cameron, which we have seen had a certain connection through their dependent septs, ‘were of one blood, having but little in lordships, but following one head of their race as principal with their kinsmen and dependants.’[449] He is apparently describing their position before these dissensions broke out between them, and his description refers us back to the period when the two clans formed one tribe, possessing the district of Lochaber as their _Tuath_ or country, where the lands in dispute—Glenlui and Locharkaig—were probably the official demesne of the old _Toisech_ or head of the tribe. [Sidenote: The Chief and the Kinsmen.] The clans are here described as consisting of two divisions: The one of the Kinsmen, or those of the blood of the sept; the other of the dependants or subordinate septs, who might be of different race. The former clan are well defined in the Gartmore MS., written in the year 1747. The writer says that ‘the property of these Highlands belongs to a great many different persons, who are more or less considerable in proportion to the extent of their estates, and to the command of men that live upon them, or follow them, on account of this clanship, out of the estates of others. These lands are set by the landlord during pleasure, or a short tack, to people whom they call goodmen (_Duine Uasail_), and who are of a superior station to the commonalty. These are generally the sons, brothers, cousins, or nearest relations of the landlord (or chief). This, by means of a small portion, and the liberality of their relations, they are able to stock, and which they, their children and grandchildren, possess at an easy rent, till a nearer descendant be again preferred to it. As the propinquity removes, they become less considered, till at last they degenerate to be of the common people, unless some accidental acquisition of wealth supports them above their station. As this hath been an ancient custom, most of the farmers and cottars are of the name and clan of the proprietor.’ This exactly describes the Irish _Finé_ in its restricted sense, where the immediate kin of the _Ceannfiné_ or chief consists of seventeen persons, forming the _Duthach Finé_, from whence they pass by degrees into the _Duthaign Daine_ or commonalty of the _Finé_ or sept. [Sidenote: The native-men.] The dependent septs, on the other hand, represent the _Fuidhir_ of the Irish tribal system. Their position will be best understood by the Bonds of Manrent or Manred, which came to be taken by the chiefs from their dependants when the relation constituted by usage and traditional custom was relaxed by time, or when a new relationship was constituted at a later period. Thus in a bond by a sept of M‘Gillikeyr to John Campbell of Glenurchy, in 1547, he declares that they have chosen him of their own free motive to their chief to be their protector in all great actions, as a chief does in the countries of the Highlands, and shall have lands of him in assedation; and when any of them deceases shall leave to him and his heirs ‘ane cawlpe of kenkynie,’ as is used in the countries about. Again, in a bond by Duncan M‘Olcallum and others of the Clan Teir to Colyne Campbell of Glenurchay in 1556, they state that in consequence of the slaughter of Johne M‘Gillenlay, foster-brother of Sir Colyne Campbell of Glenurchay, their predecessor, for sythment and recompence of said slaughter, had delivered to him one of the principal committers of it called John Roy M‘Ynteir, to be punished at his will; and moreover had elected and taken him and his heirs for their chiefs and masters, and given to him their calps, which calps the said Colyne, Sir Duncan Campbell of Glenurchay, his son that deceased at Flodden (1513), and all other lairds of Glenurchay had since taken up; and the said Clan Teir of new ratify the bond in favour of Colyne, now of Glenurchay. Again, we find in 1559 Archibald, earl of Argyll, transferring to his cousin Colyne Campbell of Glenurchay and his heirs-male the manrent, homage, and service which his predecessors and he had and has of the ‘haill kyn and surname of the Clanlaurane and their posteritie,’ together with the uptaking of their calps, providing the said Colyne obtain their consent thereto.[450] It is unnecessary to quote more of these bonds, which are usually in the same terms; and we may conclude with the following taken from ‘ane list of the native-men of Craignish.’ In 1592 Malcolme Moir Makesaig and his sons appeared at Barrichbyan, and gave to their well-beloved Ronald Campbell McEan VcDonald of Barrichbyan and his heirs their bond of manred and calpis for ever, and shall follow and obey him and his heirs in whatever place he and his foresaids transport themselves in the country or without; and shall obey them as native-men ought and should do to their chief; and Ronald obliges himself and his heirs to be a good chief and master to them as his native-men, and to give to them their duty that they and their succession of men and women ought to have after calpis, conform to the use of the country. In 1595 similar agreements were made by other small septs, and in a bond of manrent granted by Gillicallum McDonchie VcIntyre VcCoshen to Ranald Campbell of Barrechebyan in 1612, in which he states, ‘Forasmuch as I understand of gude memorie that the surname of Clanntyre VcCoshen wer of auld native-men, servandis and dependaris to the house and surename of Clandule Cregnis, _alias_ Campbellis in Cregnis, and willing of my dewtie to renew the band and service of my sadis forbearis war of auld, and dewtie to the sadis house and surename, and acknowledging Rannald Campbell of Barrichbyan to be of the samin house and surname,’ he becomes bound, for himself and all others descended of his body, ‘to be leill, trew, and of auld, native-men in all lawlieness and subjection to the said Rannald and his airis-male for ever, and that according as my predecessors were in use of befoir, and as ony native-men are in use in Argyll, in special sall serve be sea and land the said Rannald, etc.; and in token to uplift from me at my decease the second but aucht that I sall have at the time foresaid in name of calp, to wit, ane hors, meir, or mart;’ and ‘providing alwayis the said Rannald and his airis do the dewtie of ane chief or maister to me and my airis male and female, as use is; attour I grant me, as use is, to haif gotten at the making heirof ane guid and sufficient sword, ressavit and deliverit be the said Rannald to remane as ane memoriall taikin of this my band of manrent.’[451] [Sidenote: Fosterage.] Another feature in the relation between the chief and his kinsmen with their dependent septs was the custom of fosterage which prevailed among the Highland clans as it characterised the Irish tribes. The written contracts of fosterage, which, like the bonds of manrent, superseded the unwritten usage during the transition period when the older Celtic law was losing its influence, and when it became necessary for the chiefs to secure their ancient privileges from passing away under the pressure of other influences, will afford us the best means of ascertaining the true nature of this custom. We may refer to the terms of a few of those which have been preserved. In 1510 we have an obligation by Johne M‘Neill Vreik in Stronferna, and Gregoure his brother, to receive Coleyne Campbell, lawful third son to Coleyne Campbell, the eldest son and heir of Sir Duncan Campbell of Glenurquhay, knight, in fostering, and to give him a bairn’s part of gear; and giving to the said Sir Duncan and his heirs their bonds of _Manrent_ and _Calps_, that is, the best aucht in their houses the times of their decease; the said Sir Duncan and Coleyne his son being bound to defend the said John and Gregour in the lands of Stronferna, and the rest of the _rowmis_ they possess, as law will.[452] Again, in 1580, there is a contract between Duncane Campbell, fiar of Glenurquhay, and his native servant Gillecreist Makdonchy Duff V^cNokerd and Katherine Neyn Douill Vekconchy his spouse, in which the latter bind themselves to take in fostering Duncane Campbell, son to the said Duncane, to be sustained by them in meat, drink, and nourishment till he be sent to the schools with the advice of friends, and to sustain him at the schools with reasonable support, the said father and foster-father giving between them of _Makhelve_ goods in donation to the said bairn at Beltane thereafter, the value of two hundred merks of ky and two horses or two mares worth forty merks; these goods, with their increase, to pertain to the said bairn as his own chance bears him to, but their milk to pertain to the said foster-father and mother so long as they sustain the said bairn, and until he be sent to the schools, except so much of the milk as will pay the mails of pasture-lands for the said cattle, which the said foster-father is bound to find for them upon Lochaw, and until such be got he finding for them the half of the lands of Auchakynnay, etc.[453] The next contract in date, which we shall quote, takes us to the Western Isles. It is a contract in 1612, by which Sir Roderick Macleod of Dunvegan gives his son Norman to John, son of the son of Kenneth, to foster; and it is a very remarkable document, for it is written in Gaelic in the Irish character of the time. The conditions are, that if John dies first the child is to remain with the widow, but the guardianship with John’s brother Angus, who is to have the entire charge of the child if the widow marries again; and Sir Roderick is to have a son’s share of the stock (the bairn’s part of the other contracts) during the life of himself and his heir and the foster-child, along with John’s heirs. The stock (_Sealbh_) which is to be put into possession of the foster-child is four mares given by the foster-father, and other four mares by the father Sir Roderick, along with three which he promised him when he took him to his bosom. The charge and keeping of the seven mares given by the father to be with the foster-father, in order to put them to increase for his foster-son; and the care and keeping of the four mares given by the foster-father to be with the father, to put them to increase for him in like manner. Among the witnesses to this contract are the ministers of Duirinish and Bracadale.[454] The last we shall notice is as late as the year 1665, and is a contract betwixt George Campbell of Airds in Argyllshire and Donald Dow M‘Ewin in Ardmastill and Roiss N’Odochardie his wife, by which George Campbell gives in fostering to Donald Dow and his wife, Isobell Campbell, his lawful daughter, for the space of seven years from next Beltane, and gives to her as M‘Heliff (_Shealbh_) two new-calved kyne with a calf and a year-old stirk, a two-year-old quey at Beltane next, and another two-year-old quey at Beltane 1667; and Donald Dow and his spouse give to their foster-child two farrow kyne, with a stirk and a two-year-old quey at Beltane, and another two-year-old quey at Beltane 1667. The whole of their cattle with their increase to be in the custody of the foster-father and mother during these seven years, the milk to belong to the foster-father and the increase of the cattle to the foster-child; but the father is to grass the yeald kyne yearly, if the foster-father have not sufficient pasturage for them. In addition to this, the foster-father and his spouse give the foster-child a bairn’s part and portion of their whole goods and gear which shall belong to them at their decease, as if she was their own lawful child.[455] [Sidenote: The Clan and its Members.] While the clan, viewed as a single community, thus consisted of the chief, with his kinsmen to a certain limited degree of relationship; the commonalty who were of the same blood, who all bore the same name, and his dependants, consisting of subordinate septs of native-men, who did not claim to be of the blood of the chief, but were either probably descended from the more ancient occupiers of the soil, or were broken men from other clans, who had taken protection from him, the influence of the acquisition of the right of property in land, which had originally developed the septs out of the tribe, likewise tended to make smaller septs within the clan. Those kinsmen of the chief who acquired the property of their land founded families, in which the land became hereditary, and which thus became the centres of a new organisation within the clan. The most influential of these was that of the oldest cadet in the family which had been longest separated from the main stem, and usually presented the appearance of a rival house little less powerful than that of the chief. There is perhaps no better description of the form which the clan ultimately assumed, and of the spirit which animated its members, than that given by an acute observer in the early part of last century.[456] ‘The Highlanders,’ he says, ‘are divided into tribes or clans, under chiefs or chieftains, as they are called in the laws of Scotland; and each clan again divided into branches from the main stock, who have chieftains over them. These are subdivided into smaller branches of fifty or sixty men, who deduce their original from their particular chieftains, and rely upon them as their more immediate protectors and defenders. The ordinary Highlanders esteem it the most sublime degree of virtue to love their chief and pay him a blind obedience, although it be in opposition to the government, the laws of the kingdom, or even to the law of God. Next to this love of their chief is that of the particular branch from whence they sprang, and, in a third degree, to those of the whole clan or name, whom they will assist, right or wrong, against those of any other tribe with which they are at variance. They likewise owe goodwill to such clans as they esteem to be their particular well-wishers; and, lastly, they have an adherence one to another as Highlanders in opposition to the people of the Low Country, whom they despise as inferior to them in courage, and believe they have a right to plunder them whenever it is in their power. This last arises from a tradition that the Lowlands, in old times, were the possession of their ancestors. The chief exercises an arbitrary authority over his vassals, determines all differences and disputes that happen among them, and levies taxes upon extraordinary occasions, such as the marriage of a daughter, building a house, or some pretence for his support and the honour of the name. This power of the chiefs is not supported by interest as they are landlords, but as lineally descended from the old patriarchs or fathers of the families.’ CHAPTER IX. THE CLANS AND THEIR GENEALOGIES. [Sidenote: State of the Highlands in the sixteenth century.] The forfeiture of the last Lord of the Isles, and the annexation of a great part of his territories to the crown, finally brought the whole clans of the Highlands and Islands into direct subjection to the royal authority, but the removal of the old hereditary rulers of the provinces, and the substitution of a central authority which could make itself but little felt beyond the Highland Line, left the clans without any practical control, and the sixteenth century is mainly characterised by internal conflicts between the clans themselves, which increased the power of some, and broke up the solidarity of others, and by the gradual advance in influence and extent of territory in Argyllshire of the Campbells, whose astuteness and foresight led them to a uniform support of the royal authority, while the Mackenzies acquired a hardly less influential position in Ross-shire.[457] From the early part of the fifteenth century, when Donald of the Isles had invaded the Low Country at the head of a Highland army of ten thousand men, till the outbreak of the civil war in the reign of Charles the First, the clans had never broken through the barriers which separated them from the Lowlands in the form of one united army; and it was not till Montrose raised the Highland clans to make a diversion in favour of the king in the north that their power as a united people was at all recognised. The rapid and brilliant campaigns of Montrose showed what the clans were capable of effecting when brought together and skilfully handled, though opposed by all the power and influence of Gillespie Gruamach, the Earl of Argyll and head of the Campbells. The normal relation of the Highlanders and Lowlanders to each other is graphically put by one of the greatest of modern writers, who was thoroughly acquainted with the subject, when he says, ‘The inhabitants of the Lowlands were indeed aware that there existed, in the extremity of the island, amid wilder mountains and broader lakes than their own, tribes of men called clans, living each under the rule of their own chief, wearing a peculiar dress, speaking an unknown language, and going armed even in the most ordinary and peaceable vocations. The more southern counties saw specimens of these men following the droves of cattle which were the sole exportable commodity of their country, plaided, bonneted, belted, and brogued, and driving their bullocks, as Virgil is said to have spread his manure, with an air of great dignity and consequence.[458] To their nearer Lowland neighbours they were known by more fierce and frequent causes of acquaintance; by the forays which they made upon the inhabitants of the plains, and the tribute, or protection-money, which they exacted from those whose possessions they spared.’[459] [Sidenote: Names and position of the clans.] Repeated attempts were made by the kings to control the turbulence of the clans, and to bring them under more complete subjection to the government, but it was not till the reign of James that a serious effort was made by Parliament to effect this, when three very important Acts were passed, which put us in possession of detailed information as to the number and names of the clans at the time. In 1587 an Act was passed ‘for the quieting and keeping in obedience of the disorderit subjectis inhabitants of the Borders, Highlands and Isles.’ It is unnecessary to enter into any detail as to the description given in this Act of the state of these parts of the country, which is sufficiently highly coloured, and of the remedies proposed by the statute; but annexed to it are two rolls—one ‘of the names of the Landlords and Baillies of lands dwelling on the Borders and in the Highlands where broken men has dwelt and presently dwells;’ and the other, ‘of the Clans that have Captains, Chiefs, and Chieftains, on whom they depend ofttimes against the will of their Landlords, as well on the Borders as the Highlands, and of some special persons of branches of the said clans.’[460] Here the landlord or feudal overlord is distinguished from the captain, chief, and chieftain, or tribal head of the clan, both characters being sometimes united in the same person, and at other times vested in different persons. Neither are the titles of captain, chief, and chieftain synonymous. The captain was the person who actually led the clan, whether representing the founder of the clan in the male line or not, while the chief was the _Ceanncine_, or hereditary head of the tribe, who possessed that character, and the chieftain, the _Ceanntighe_, or head of a subordinate sept. The chief was usually also the captain, but when he was either set aside from incapacity, or the pre-eminent military and administrative talents of a member of the clan led to the tribe taking the unusual course of adopting him to be their leader, as better able to protect them, he was simply termed Captain of the Clan, and the position and title usually remained with his descendants, especially if he had obtained a feudal title to the lands.[461] The whole of the clan, however, seldom acquiesced in the adoption of a leader separate from the hereditary chief, and in every clan where the actual head of it bore the title of Captain we find a controversy as to the right to the chiefship, and a part of the clan holding off from the rest.[462] Another statute was passed in 1594 ‘for punishment of thift, reif, oppression, and sorning.’[463] It contains within it a list of clans and surnames inhabiting the Highlands and Isles, and likewise a list of broken men of surnames inhabiting the sheriffdoms of Argyll, Bute, Dumbarton, Stirling, Perth, Forfar, Aberdeen, Banff, Elgin, Forres, Nairn, Inverness, and Cromarty; and stewartries of Stratherne and Menteith. These lists of clans and broken men, with a list furnished by MacVureach of the clans who joined Montrose, gives us a tolerably complete view of the state of the Highland clans at the time, and they may be thus stated, following the order of the districts which they inhabited. The Highland district of the earldom of Lennox was occupied by the Clan Pharlane, undoubted descendants of the old earls of Lennox. The clan takes its name from Parlane or Bartholomew, a great-grandson of Gilchrist, third son of Alain, earl of Lennox, and the steps of the pedigree rest upon charter evidence. Next to them were the Clan Gregor, on the east side of Lochlomond and around Loch Katrine. In Balquhidder we find the Clan _Labhran_ or Lauren, and in Atholl the clan possessing the largest territory was the Clan Donnachie, whose descent from Duncan, son of Andrew de Atholia, likewise rests upon charter evidence, and whose name of De Atholia sufficiently indicates that they were the male representatives of the old earls of Atholl. With Glenshee and Glenisla is connected a clan called the Clan M‘Thomas. Crossing the Mounth we find the Highland districts of Mar and Buchan occupied by the Clan Chattan, who likewise, with their branches and dependent septs, extended over Strathdearn, Strathnairn, and Badenoch, into the district of Lochaber. In Ross-shire were the Clan Andres or Rosses and the Clan Kenneth or Mackenzies, and in the Highland districts of Sutherland and Caithness, forming the north-west corner of Scotland, were the Clan Morgan or Mackays and the Clan Gunn. The clans which occupied the principal position in the great district of Argyll and the Isles were the different clans into which the descendants of the powerful Lords of the Isles and Knights of Argyll broke up on the termination of the main line. There were the Clann _Dubhgal_ or Macdougalls of Lorne, descended from Dubhgal, the eldest son of Somerled; the Clandonald descended from Domnall, son of Reginald or Ranald, his second son; and this great sept was again broken up into six clans. These were the Clandonald north and south, that is, the Clan _Hustain_ or MacDonalds of Slate, and the Clan _Eoin Mor_ or MacConnells of Isla and Kintyre, descended from Donald, eldest son of John, Lord of the Isles, by the king’s daughter, and from Eoin Mor, his second son, respectively. From Ranald, son of Alaster, his third son, sprang the Clanranald of Lochaber, or Macdonalds of Keppoch. From _Eoin Sprangaigh_ and Alaster Og, sons of Angus Mor, came the Clan _Ian_ or MacIans of Ardnamurchan, and the Clan _Alaster_ or MacAlasters of Loup in Kintyre. The most important clans after the Macdonalds were, in Argyll, the Clan _O’Duibhn_ or Campbells, whose original seat was the district of Lochow and Ardskeodnich, and who succeeded to their power. In the Isles the Clan Leod or Macleods of Dunvegan and Glenelg, and those of Lewis, descended from two brothers, were the most powerful; and next them the Clan _Gilleoin_ or Macleans of Dowart and Lochbowie, and the Clan _Neill_ or Macneills of Gigha and of Barra, and here we see the oldest cadets occupying quite as prominent a position as the main line. The other clans of Argyll and the Isles were, in Cowall, the Clan Lachlan, and the Clan _Ladmann_ or Lamont, and between Loch Fine and Lochow the Clan _Neachtan_ or MacNaughtons; while Glenorchy was the original seat of the Clan Gregor, and in Lochaber the _Clanchamron_, or Camerons of Lochiel, had their home. In Lochaber and Colonsay were the Clan _Dubhsithé_ or Macduffies, and in Mull and Skye the Clan _Fingaine_ or Mackinnons and the Clan _Guaire_ or Macquarries. [Sidenote: Meaning of Clann, and the personal names from which their patronymics were taken.] This word Clann signifies simply children or descendants, and the clan name thus implies that the members of it are or were supposed to be descended from a common ancestor or eponymus, and they were distinguished from each other by their patronymics, the use of surnames in the proper sense of the term being unknown among them. These patronymics, in the case of the _Ceannciné_ or chief and the _Ceanntighs_ or heads of the smaller septs, indicated their descent from the founder of the race or sept; those of the members of it who were of the kin of the chief or chieftain showed the personal relation; while the commonalty of the clan simple used a derivative form of the name of the clan, implying merely that they belonged to it. This system is quaintly described by John Elder, clerk, in his letter to King Henry the Eighth in 1542 or 1543. He says—‘Now and pleas your excellent Majestie, the said people which inhabitede Scotland afore the incummyng of the said Albanactus (as I have said), being valiant, stronge, and couragious, although they were savage and wilde, had strange names, as _Morrdhow_ .i. Mordachus; _Gillicallum_ .i. Malcolmus; _Donyll_ \.i. Donaldus, and so fourth. Then their sonnis followinge theame in manheid and valianntnes, called theameselves after this manner of wyse, leaving their proper names unexpressede, _Makconyll_ .i. filius Donaldi; _Makgillecallum_ .i. filius Malcolmi, etc., and so they have contenewide unto this daye.’[464] Thus the head of the whole Clan Donald was simply Macdonald, the chief of the Clan Ranald of Glengarry, _Macmhicalastair_, the captain of Clan Ranald, _Macmhicalain_, and one of the commonalty simply _Domnaillach_ or a Macdonald. Besides the clans the statutes distinguish what they term surnames. There were in Lennox, Buchanans, _M‘Cawlis_ or Macaulays, and Galbraiths; Grahames in Monteith; Stewarts in Atholl, Lorne, and Balquhidder; Menzieses, Fergusons, Spaldings, and MacIntoshes in Atholl; Farquharsons in Braemar; MacPhersons in Strathnairn; Grants in Strathspey; Frasers in the Aird; Rosses and Monros in Ross; and Neilsons in Sutherland. These surnames were of three kinds. There were first names which had a Gaelic form, as Macaulay and Macpherson; or the English equivalent of a Gaelic form, as Farquharson, Ferguson, etc.; secondly, those who had assumed a territorial name, or whose name bore that appearance, as the Buchanans, who likewise bore the name of _Macaustelan_, and took the former designation from their lands, Grants, Rosses, and Monroes; and thirdly, those which were foreign names and of foreign descent, but who had become so assimilated to the Gaelic people as to be identified with them in language, custom, and spirit of clanship, as the Stewarts, Frasers, Menzieses, Spaldings, etc., who had been long settled in the Highlands. The system of nomenclature, therefore, which characterised the clans and the surnames of Gaelic origin was one entirely based upon the personal name, and was in no respect territorial; but we find, on examination, that the personal names used by the Gaelic people were of different kinds, and constituted upon different principles. The earliest personal names used by the different branches of the Celtic people appear to have been formed in the same manner, and resemble each other in their structure. On analysing those both of the Cymric and the Gaelic people, we can see that they are compounded of two monosyllables, a certain number of which is used to form the first half of the name and a different set of monosyllables annexed as a termination, and these are combined with each other in every variety of form. The initial syllables are more numerous than the terminal, and it will only be necessary to specify a few to illustrate the formation of these names. Thus in Welsh, _Ael_, _Aer_, _Arth_, _Cad_, and _Cyn_ are common initial syllables; and _Teyrn_, _March_, _Gwyr_, and _Gwys_ common terminations. These form in combination the names _Aelgyvarch_, _Cadvarch_, _Cynvarch_, _Aerdeyrn_, _Cyndeyrn_, _Arthwyl_, _Cynwys_, etc. So in Gaelic _Aen_, _Art_, _Con_, _Dun_, _Dubh_, _Fear_, _Fin_, and _Gorm_ are common initial syllables; and _Gal_[465] and _Gus_, common terminations, and from them are formed _Aengal_, _Artgal_, _Congal_, _Dungal_, _Dubhgal_, _Feargal_, _Fingal_, _Gormgal_, and _Aengus_, _Congus_, _Feargus_, etc. Similar forms existed among the Pictish names, as in _Ungust_, _Urgust_, _Urgart_, _Dergart_, _Gartnaidh_, etc.; and besides the Pictish forms which are analogous to the Irish, we find such Pictish names as _Neachtain_, _Fingaine_, etc., occurring in the Highland Genealogies. The introduction of Christianity among these Gaelic tribes added another class of names to these older forms. These were formed by prefixing the words _Maol_, that is, bald in the sense of tonsured, and _Giolla_, or servant, first to the words _Iosa_ or Jesus, _Criosd_ or Christ, _Faidh_ the prophet, _Easpuig_ the bishop; as in _Maoliosa_ or _Giolliosa_, servant of Jesus, _Maolanfhaidh_ or _Gillanfhaidh_, servant of the prophet, _Giollachriosd_, servant of Christ, and _Gilleaspuig_, servant of the bishop: and secondly, to the names of the founders and patron saints of the churches, as in _Maolcoluim_ or _Giollacoluim_, servant of St. Columba; _Maolbride_ or _Giollabride_, servant of St. Bridget; _Giollachattan_, servant of St. Cathan; _Gillanaemh_, servant of the saints; _Giollaeoin_, servant of St. John, etc. In these latter names, when combined with the word Clan or Mac, if they commence with a consonant, the prefix _Giolla_ is usually omitted, as in Clanchattan, MacCallum, etc.; but if they commence with a vowel, they form that numerous class of names in which Mac is followed by the letter L. Thus _MacGiollaeoin_ becomes Maclean; _MacGiolla Adomnan_, MacLennan, etc. The conquest of the Western Isles, and the frequent occupation of parts of the mainland by the Norwegians and Danes, and the intermarriages between them, added to these forms, after the ninth century, Norwegian and Danish names, such as Godfred, Harald, Ragnall, Somarled, etc., which became _Gofraidh, Aralt, Ranald, Somhairle_, in the Highland Genealogies. It must not, however, be overlooked that the Norwegians frequently gave to Gaelic names a Norwegian form significant in their own language, as Dungadr for _Donnachaidh_, Griotgardr for _Gregair_, Melkolfr for _Maolcoluim_, etc. [Sidenote: Original importance and position of Clan pedigrees.] In considering the genealogies of the Highland clans we must bear in mind that in the early state of the tribal organisation the pedigree of the sept or clan, and of each member of the tribe, had a very important meaning. Their rights were derived through the common ancestor, and their relation to him, and through him to each other, indicated their position in the succession, as well as their place in the allocation of the tribe land. In such a state of society the pedigree occupied the same position as the title-deed in the feudal system, and the Sennachies were as much the custodiers of the rights of families as the mere panegyrists of the clan. As long as the Gaelic tribes and the governing and dominant race were of the same lineage, and regulated by the same laws, this system must have remained unaltered; but when the kingdom was formed by a combination of different races, and the influential class consisted of a feudal nobility, while the laws of the country were based upon feudal principles, the position of the Gaelic tribes must have been that of a people possessing a customary law, and an unrecognised social system opposed to the law acted upon by the governing authority, and the latter must always have prevailed in the long-run. When the conflict of these laws in regulating succession, and the frequent insurrections of the Gaelic population, with the confiscations which followed upon them, led to the breaking up of the Gaelic tribes, and to the severance of those ties which bound the septs or clans which had been developed within the tribe to each other, the pedigree would cease to be of value as between clan and clan. The competition between rival interests and rival races would lead to the gratification of vanity becoming the ruling motive, in order to maintain a _quasi_ superiority, and likewise, when the exigencies of their position required it, to a falsification and imposture in order to enable the clans to maintain their ground in a field of competition regulated by feudal principles. The pedigrees must then have been greatly influenced by those into competition with whom the clan families were thrown, and by the interests affected in consequence; and when the governing class belonged to a kindred but different race with a different nationality and nomenclature, there must always have been a tendency to assimilate their own traditions to those of the ruling powers. Till the ninth century the Highland tribes and the ruling powers were of the same race. During the two succeeding centuries these tribes appear to have remained intact, while the dominating race and the clergy were of a kindred race though of a different name and nationality, and the name of Scotia became transferred from Ireland to Scotland. Feudalism then commenced, and spread over the country, and the reigns of the kings of the second Scottish dynasty from the accession of David the First to the death of Alexander the Third was the period of the breaking up of the tribes, and the complete establishment of the clan system; and this likewise was the period of the manipulation of the Chronicles, and the gradual formation of that spurious system of national history which, originating in the ecclesiastical pretensions of St. Andrews, was developed during the great controversy regarding the independence of Scotland, and based upon a Scottish nationality and the supposed colonisation of the country long before the Christian era by Scota and her Scottish descendants, till it was finally reduced to a system by John of Fordun. Its leading features were the colonisation of the Highlands by Scots in the third century before Christ, their conversion in the second century by the relics of St. Andrew, the occupation of the mountain region of the north by the Picts entirely ignored, and that people relegated to the plains of the Lowlands, when they were finally exterminated by the Scots in the ninth century. [Sidenote: First change in Clan pedigrees. Influence of legendary history of Scotland.] It is hardly to be expected that the clans should not have claimed their share in these legendary glories, or that they should have lost the wish to maintain a separate descent with the gradual disappearance of its tradition, and thus this new and preponderating influence would naturally produce the first great change in the clan pedigrees. This change is very clearly exposed in the remarkable letter already quoted of John Elder, clerk, a Reddeshanke, to King Henry the Eighth. In that letter he thus gives the origin of ‘the Yrische Lords of Scotland, commonly called the Reddshanckes, and by historiographers, Picts.’ ‘Scotland,’ he says, ‘before the incoming of Albanactus, Brutus’s second son, was inhabited, as we read in ancient Yrische stories, with giants and wild people, without order, civility, or manners, and speaks none other language but Yrishe, and was then called Eyryn veagg, that is to say, Little Irland, and the people were callit Eyrynghe, that is to say, Irland men. But after the incoming of Albanactus, in reducing them to order and civility they changed the foresaid name Eyryn veagg, and called it Albon, and their owne names also and called them Albonyghe; which two Yrische wordes, Albon, that is to say Scotland, and Albonyghe, that is to say Scottish men, be derived from Albanactus, our first governor and king.’ At the time John Elder wrote, Yrishe, afterwards corrupted into Erse, was currently used for Gaelic; and deducting the nonsense about Eyryn veagg, which seems a fancy of his own, this is the legendary story contained in our earliest documents before the Chronicles were tampered with; but then he gave in to say, ‘which derivation the papistical cursed spirituality of Scotland will not hear in no manner of wise, nor confess that ever such a king, named Albanactus, reigned there. The which derivation all the Yrische men of Scotland, which be the ancient stock, cannot nor will not deny.’ ‘But our said bishops,’ he adds, ‘deriveth Scotland and themselves from a certain lady named Scota, which came out of Egypt, a miraculous hot country, to recreate herself amongst them in the cold air of Scotland, which they cannot affirm by no probable ancient author.’[466] [Sidenote: Second change. Influence of Irish Sennachies.] The clans, however, were soon after thrown into rapidly-increasing contact with those of Ireland, a people possessing similar pedigrees, and Sennachies surpassing those of Scotland in information and acquirements. The native Sennachies by degrees fell into the background, and the clans began to take their Sennachies from the rival race. The first connection between them which had this effect, was the marriage of Angus, Lord of the Isles, who assisted Bruce in his struggle for the crown, with the daughter of O’Kane, Lord of Fermanagh, and widow of the great O’Neill. During the two following centuries septs of the Highland clans were employed as auxiliaries by the great northern Lords of Ireland, under the name of _Galloglach_ or foreign soldiers, commonly called Galloglasses. There is ample evidence that during this period a great proportion of the Highland Sennachies were Irish, and that all reverted to Ireland for instruction in their art. It could hardly have been otherwise than that, with the disappearance of the old Highland pedigrees, every presumption and analogy would have driven these Sennachies to the better-preserved Irish pedigrees, to replace what had been lost by connecting them more directly with the Irish tribes, and thus the second great change in the character of their pedigree would be produced. For the clan genealogies at this time we must therefore refer to the Irish MSS., and they are in fact the oldest pedigrees which have been preserved. The MS. collections in which we find them are, first, the Book of Ballimote compiled in the year 1383, the Book of Lecain compiled in 1407, and a MS. belonging to the Faculty of Advocates bearing the date 1467, but the genealogies in which are obviously derived from the same source as those in the Book of Ballimote.[467] To these may be added a few genealogies in other MSS., and those preserved by MacVurich in the Book of Clan Ranald. [Sidenote: Analysis of the Irish Pedigrees.] In these MSS. we find detailed pedigrees of most of the clans enumerated in the Acts of Parliament of 1587 and 1594, and of several clans not there mentioned, as well as of some of the surnames. The later portion of these pedigrees, as far back as the _eponymus_ or common ancestor from which the clan takes its name, are in general tolerably well vouched, and may be held to be authentic. The older part of the pedigree will be found to be partly historical and partly mythic. So far as these links in the genealogic chain connect the clans with each other within what may be termed the historic period, the pedigree may be genuine; but the links which connect them with the mythic genealogies of the elaborate system of early Irish history, when analysed, prove to be entirely artificial and untrustworthy. In examining the nature of these pedigrees it will be convenient to group them according to their supposed connection with the legendary races of early Irish history.[468] The first group consists of the Clan _Cailin_ or Campbells, and the Clan _Leod_ or MacLeods, who are brought from a mythic personage, viz., _Fergus Leith Derg_, son of _Nemedh_, who led a colony of Nemedians from Ireland to Scotland. This Nemedian colony belongs to the older legendary history of Scotland before the Chronicles were corrupted, and may therefore indicate these clans as forming part of the older inhabitants of the districts they occupy. On examining the genealogy of the Campbells we may consider it as authentic as far back as Duncan, son of Gilleaspic, son of Gillacolum, son of Duibne, who is certainly the Duncan M‘Duibhn mentioned in one of the Argyll charters as possessing Lochow and Ardskeodnich, and who was contemporary with Alexander the Second. As the Campbells were undoubtedly known in Gaelic as the _Clan O’Duibne_,[469] the genealogy as far back as that eponymus of the race is probably authentic; but as soon as we pass that link we find ourselves in contact with Arthur and Uthyr Pendragon, and the other heroes of the Arthurian legend. With the Macleods we cannot proceed so far back, as Leod, the eponymus of the clan, cannot be placed earlier than the middle of the thirteenth century; and as soon as we pass these links in the chain of his pedigree, which have Gaelic names, we plunge into a confused list of names, partly Gaelic and partly of Norwegian and Danish kings of the Isles, with which they are mixed up, till we reach the mythic _Fergus Leith Derg_, whose grandson bears the Norwegian name of Arailt or Harald, centuries before the Norwegians made their appearance in the Isles. The earlier portion then of these two genealogies is obviously artificial. The next group consists of the supposed descendants of Colla Uais, son of Eochaidh Doimlein, king of Ireland, and comprised the clans descended from Somerled, the petty king of the great district of Argyll in the reign of Malcolm the Fourth. These genealogies, as far back as their great ancestor Somerled, are undoubtedly authentic. His father _Gillabride_, and his grandfather _Gillaadomnan_, both purely Gaelic forms, rest on the authority of the Irish Annals, and _Imergi_, the grandfather of the latter, is probably the Jehmarc, who appears as a Celtic petty king in the year 1031. Beyond this we have no fixed date, but between him and Colla Uais, whose death is placed at 323, we have only seven names given for a period of 700 years, or one hundred years to a generation, which is impossible, and betrays the artificial character of this part of the pedigree. The third group consists of clans supposed to be descended from the Hy Neill or race of _Neill naoi giallach_, king of Ireland, which brings us nearer historical times. They consist of the Lamonds, the Clan Lachlan, the MacEwens of Otter, and a Clan _Somairle_ which has not been identified. These clans are all taken back to a certain Aoda Alain, termed _Buirche_, son of Anrotan, son of _Aodha Atlamuin_, ancestors of the O’Neills. From Aoda’s son Gillacrist the Clan Lachlan came, and from another son Duinsleibe the Lamonds, MacEwens, and Clan Somairle. The genealogy of the Lamonds is authentic as far back as Fearchar, the son of Duinsleibe, but Ferchar’s son and grandson are mentioned in a charter in 1246,[470] while the death of Aodha Alain is recorded in 1047, and thus only three generations are placed in two centuries. This derivation too involves the difficulty of supposing that Cowall was peopled from Ireland in the eleventh century, a colony of which there is not a trace in history; but as these clans are locally grouped together we may accept the genealogies as indicating that they had a common origin. The fourth group consists of the old earls of Lennox and Mar, said to be descended from _Maine Leamna_ and _Cairbre Cruithneach_, sons of Corc, son of Lughaigh, king of Munster; but the artificial character of this descent is here very apparent, for Ailin, the first earl of Lennox, who lived in the beginning of the thirteenth century, is made the great-grandson of _Maine Leamna_, whose father was a contemporary of Saint Patrick in the fifth century. The rest of the Highland clans, whose genealogies are to be found in the Irish MSS., are all brought from the Dalriadic Scots. These clans are mainly connected with the province of Moray and Ross, and thus we have the great anomaly presented to us that the clans forming the great bulk of the inhabitants of Argyll and the Isles—such as the Campbells and Macleods, the great race of the Macdougalls of Lorn, and the Macdonalds of the Isles and Kintyre, and the MacLachlans and Lamonds of Cowall—are not connected by their genealogies with the Dalriadic colony, but this origin is reserved for the more eastern clans of the central Highlands. There is too the further anomaly that these clans are not deduced from the tribe of _Gabhran_, which furnished kings to Dalriada, and from which the Scottish dynasty founded by Kenneth MacAlpin probably sprang, but from the tribe of _Lorn_, which furnished two kings only to Dalriada, and only came to the front to be immediately annihilated by the Pictish monarch in 736, and then disappear entirely from history. The links in the chain of ancestry which connect these clans with the tribe of Lorn, however, present the same features of artificial construction which characterise the other. In examining these we must group them in four classes. First, those brought from _Fearchar Fada_, king of Dalriada, of the tribe of Lorn, who died in 697. These are first the _Mormaers_ of Moray. This genealogy is probably correct enough up to Ruadhri, who is made son of Airceallach, son of Ferchar; but allowing the usual average of thirty years to a generation, Ruadhri flourished about the year 840, that is, was contemporary with Kenneth MacAlpin, while the death of his supposed father Airceallach, by whom Ainbhcellach is probably meant, is recorded in 719. Then follows the genealogy of the MacNaughtons, whose eponymus _Neachtain Mor_ is made the son of Domnall Duinn, son of Fearchar Fada; but Neachtain Mor cannot be placed earlier than the beginning of the ninth century, and he too must have been contemporary with Kenneth MacAlpin, while his supposed grandfather died in 697. This is followed by the genealogy of the Clan Chattan, and here the anomaly is still greater, for _Gillachattan_, the eponymus of the race, must have flourished in the eleventh century, but between him and Fearchar Fada are only four links during three centuries and a half. Of these links the father Gallbrait and the grandfather Diarmada, called the _Fearleighinn_ or Lector, are probably historical. Along with these the Clan Cameron are placed, though their genealogy does not show the connection with the Dalriads. They were undoubtedly a kindred tribe with the Clan Chattan. The next group is connected with a _Fearchar Abraruadh_ son of _Feradach Finn_, and therefore a brother of Fearchar Fada, but unknown to history, and the only genealogy preserved is that of the _Clan Gillaeoin_ or Macleans. This genealogy is given with so much minuteness up to a certain _Sean Dubhgal Sgoinne_, or Old Dugald of Scone, and the ecclesiastical character of the upper links are so obvious, that it is difficult to avoid regarding it as so far trustworthy. This Dubhgal has a son Raingce; and he has three sons—_Cuduilig_, abbot of Leasamor, that is, lay abbot of the monastery of Lismore in Argyllshire, from whom descended _Gillaeoin_, the eponymus of the clan; _Cuchatha_, from whom sprang the _Clan Chonchatha_, in the district of Lennox, by whom possibly the Colquhouns are meant; and _Cusithe_, from whom came the _Clan Consithe_ of Fife, which has not been identified. According to the usual calculation, old Dugald of Scone must have flourished about 1100, and in a perambulation of the lands of Kyrknesse and Lochow, in the district of Fortrenn, not long after that date, we find the arbiters were Constantine earl of Fife, Magnus Judex or _Mormaer_ in Scotland, Dufgal, son of Mocche, who was aged, just, and venerable (_senex, justus, et venerabilis_), and Meldoinneth son of Machedath, a good and discreet judge (_judex bonus et discretus_).[471] It can hardly be doubted that this Dufgal senex is the _Sean Dubhgal_ of Scone of the pedigree, but in that genealogy he is made the son not of Mocche but of Fearchar Abraruadh, who must be placed four centuries earlier. The next group is brought from _Domnaill Duinn_, son of _Fearadhach Finn_, and consists of the _Clan Labhran_, or Maclarens, and the Clan Aidh. The _Clan Labhran_ are deduced from an abbot of Achtus, by which no doubt Achtow in Balquhidder, where this clan had its seat, is meant, and his pedigree is deduced from Domnall Og, son of Domnall Duinn. According to the usual computation, Domnall Oig must be placed in the ninth century, thus contemporary with Kenneth MacAlpin, while his father is made brother of Fearchar Fada, who died in 697. The same remark applies to the genealogy of the clan Aidh. They cannot be identified with any modern clan, but a Gillamithil, son of Aidh, the eponymus of the clan, falls about the same time with Gillemychel M‘Ath, father of Duncan, who, in 1232, excambs a davach of land in Strathardel, called Petcarene, with the bishop of Moray for the lands of Dolays Michel in Strathspey.[472] The remaining genealogies in these MSS. have one common feature, that the genealogy of each of the clans contains in it the name of Cormac, son of Airbertach, but he is differently connected with the line of Lorn, and is placed in many of the genealogies at a different period. They may be thus grouped. The first consists of the _Clan Andres_ or Rosses, the _Clan Cainig_ or Mackenzies, and the _Clan Matgamma_ or Mathesons. These are all brought from a common ancestor, _Gilleoin na hairde_ or Gilleon of the Aird, by which, no doubt, the mountainous region in the centre of Ross-shire, the old name of which was Airdross, or the Aird of Ross, is meant. The Rosses and Mathesons are brought from his son Cristin, and the Mackenzies from another son, Gilleon Og, father of _Cainig_ or Kenneth, the eponymus of the clan. _Gilleon na hAirde_ is made grandson of Loarn, son of Fearchar, son of Cormac mac Airbertach, and the usual calculation would place Cormac in the tenth century; but his father Airbertach is made son of Feradach, and brother of Fearchar Fada, who died in 697. To this group may be added the _Clan Duibsithe_ or Macduffys of Lochaber and Colonsay, who are brought from Fearchar, son of Cormac; but the connecting links are shorter and bring him down to two centuries later. The Macnabs are likewise brought from Loarn, son of Fearchar, son of Cormac, which would relegate him also to the tenth century; but in this genealogy, instead of placing Cormac in immediate connection with Fearadach, he is made son of Erc, son of Domnaill Duinn, son of Fearchar Abraruadh, thus corresponding more with the early part of the genealogy of the Clan Labhran and Clan Aidh. The Clan Gregor is likewise brought from Cormac by a son Ainnrias or Andrew, and by this genealogy he is placed in the twelfth century, and is made son of Fearchar Oig, son of Fearchar Fada, who died in 697. The last group consists of the _Clan Guaire_ or Macquarrys, the _Clan Fingaine_ or Mackinnons, the _Clan Gillamhaol_ or Macmillans, and the _Clan Gillaagamnan_ or Maclennans, descended respectively from four sons of Cormac—Guaire, Fingaine, Gillcrist called _Gillamhaol_, and Gillaagamnan. By these genealogies Cormac is brought down a century later, and this is probably his true date, and as an ancestor of these clans he is also probably an historical personage, for in the genealogy of the _Clan Gillamhaol_ it is added that his father Airbertach possessed twelve tribes or septs (_Treabh_) among the Norwegians—viz., in _Greagraidhe_ of the warriors, commonly called Mull, and in Tiree, and in _Craobhinis_, by which Iona is meant, while it is in Mull and the neighbouring islands that the Maclennans and Macquarrys had their possessions; but in these genealogies Airbertach is made son of Murcertach, son of Fearchar Og, and between the latter and Fearchar Fada, the names of Macbeth and his father Finnlaoch, which really belong to the genealogy of the Mormaers of Moray, are introduced. [Sidenote: Artificial character of these pedigrees.] It is thus obvious how artificial the earlier links of these genealogies are, and that none of them can in fact be pushed further back than the reign of Kenneth MacAlpin, the oldest link in many of them being contemporary with him, while others fall short of that period. Between the oldest link of those which reach that date and the Dalriadic king of the race of Lorn with which they are connected there is a complete blank, and it is thus plain that the same process of manipulation and artificial construction had taken place with these pedigrees, which had perverted the genealogy of the kings of the line of Kenneth MacAlpin. In the latter case an entire century, with all its events, from 740 to 840, had been suppressed, and Kenneth, the founder of the new dynasty in the ninth century, directly connected with the last of the old kings of Dalriada, of the race of Gabhran, who lived a century earlier. In like manner the genealogies of the clans which reach only to the ninth century, were directly connected with the last of the Dalriadic kings of the line of Lorn, who died in 697. It is not without some significance too that we find such Pictish forms as _Neachtain_, _Fingaine_, _Morgainn_, etc., occurring in the early part of these pedigrees. They may then be regarded as trustworthy only in so far as they show the links of the descent of each clan from its _eponymus_ as believed in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, and the grouping of certain clans together where a common ancestor within the historic period is assigned to them. [Sidenote: Third change. Influence of Act of 1597.] During the sixteenth century the clans were brought into direct contact with the Crown, and in the latter part of it serious efforts were made by the Legislature to establish an efficient control over them. These gave rise to the Acts of 1587 and 1594, already referred to; but they were followed in a few years by an important Statute, which had a powerful effect upon the position of the clans, and led to another great change in the theory of their descent. In the Parliament held at Edinburgh in December 1597, an Act was passed bearing the short but most pregnant title ‘That the inhabitants of the Ilis and Hielandis shaw their haldings.’ This Act proceeds on the narrative ‘that the inhabitants of the Highlands and Isles of this realm, which are for the most part of his Highness’s annexed property has not only frustrated his Majesty of the yearly payment of his proper rents and due service addebted by them to his Majesty furth of the said lands, but that they have likewise through their barbarous inhumanity made and presently makes the said Highlands and Isles, which are most commodious in themselves as well by the fertility of the ground as by rich fishings, be so altogether unprofitable both to themselves and to all others his Highness’s lieges within this realm, they neither interfering any civil or honest society amongst themselves neither yet admitted others his Highness’s lieges to traffic within their bounds with safety of their lives and goods;’ and in order that they ‘may the better be reduced to ane godly honest and civil manner of living It is statute and ordained that all landlords chieftains and leaders of clans, principal householders, heritors and others possessors or pretending right to any lands within the Highlands and Isles shall betwixt this and the fifteenth day of May next to come compear before the Lords of his Highness’s Exchequer at Edinburgh or where it shall happen to sit for the time and there bring and produce with them all their infeftments rights and titles whatsomever whereby they claim right and title to any part of the lands and fishings within the bounds foresaid, and then find sufficient caution acted in the books of Exchequer for yearly and thankful payment to his Majesty of his rents yearly duties and service addedit by them furth of the lands possessed and occupied by them or any in their names and that they themselves their men, tenants, servants, and dependants shall be answerable to his Highness’s laws and Justices.’ The penalty imposed upon them in case of their failure to appear and find caution was, that they were ‘to forfeit amit and tyne (lose) all pretended infeftments and other right and title they have or may pretend to have to any lands whatever they have holden or pretend to hold of his Majesty either in property or superiority which their pretended infeftments and titles thereof in case of failure are now as then and then as now declared by this present Parliament to be null and of no avail force or effect in themselves.’[473] It has been necessary to quote this Act at some length, in order to show what a powerful weapon it placed in the hands of the Crown, and the embarrassing and precarious position in which it placed the greater proportion of the clans. Many of them had received charters of their lands which had perished during the troubles and conflicts which had followed the forfeiture of the Lords of the Isles. Others had no other right to their lands than what was derived from the forfeited lords. In other cases, where the right to the clan demesne was the subject of dispute between different septs, both parties had received at different times a quasi-title to them. In many cases the nominal superiority was feudally vested in an alien family, while the land was actually possessed by one of the clans; and in many others they had no title but immemorial possession, which they maintained by the sword; while, on the other hand, those who already possessed a nominal right to the lands under feudal titles which they had been unable to enforce, or who saw a great prospect, through the threatened forfeitures, of acquiring possessions in the Highlands and Isles, would eagerly avail themselves of the opportunity afforded them by this Statute. The chiefs of the clans thus found themselves compelled to defend their rights upon grounds which could compete with the claims of their eager opponents, and to maintain an equality of rank and prestige with them in the Heralds’ Office, which must drive them to every device necessary to effect their purpose; and they would not hesitate to manufacture titles to the land when they did not exist, and to put forward spurious pedigrees better calculated to maintain their position when a native descent had lost its value and was too weak to serve their purpose. [Sidenote: Spurious Pedigrees.] From this period manuscript histories of the leading Highland families began to be compiled, in which these pretensions were advanced and spurious charters inserted, and from these manuscript histories were compiled the later account of the clans contained in the Peerage and Baronage, as well as in the ‘Inquiry and the Genealogy and Present State of the Ancient Scottish Surnames, with the Origin and Descent of the Highland Clans and Family of Buchanan, by William Buchanan of Auchmar,’ published in the year 1723. The form which these pretentious genealogies took was that of making the _eponymus_ or male ancestor of the clan a Norwegian, Dane, or Norman, or a cadet of some distinguished family, who succeeded to the chiefship and to the territory of the clan by marriage with the daughter and heiress of the last of the old Celtic line, thus combining the advantage of a descent which could compete with that of the great Norman families with a feudal succession to their lands; and the new form of the clan genealogy would have the greater tendency to assume this form where the clan name was derived not from a personal name or patronymic but from a personal epithet of its founder. Thus Hacken, a Norwegian, was said from his prowess to have been termed _Grandt_, or great, and his grandson _Aulan_, or Allan Grandt, marries Mora, daughter and heiress of Neil Macgregor, a descendant of Gregory the Great, king of Scotland, with whom he obtains the barony of Bellachastell and Freuchie in Strathspey, the patrimony of the Grants; _Cambro_, a Dane,[474] in the beginning of the reign of Alexander the Second, marries the daughter and heiress of MacMartin, proprietor of that part of Lochaber now possessed by Lochiel, chief of the Camerons;[475] Colin Fitzgerald, son to the earl of Kildare in Ireland, marries the daughter and heiress of Kenneth Matheson, from whom his son Kenneth was called _Mackenneth_ or Mackenzie, and obtained with her the lands of Kintail;[476] Angus MacIntosh, descended from Shaw Macduff, a second son of the earl of Fife, marries Eva, daughter and heiress of Gilpatrick, son of Dougal Dall, chief of the Clan Chattan, and obtained with her the lands of Glenluy and Locharkaig;[477] and even the powerful family of the Campbells, who had always supported the Crown, and whose chief had been created earl of Argyll, caught the infection, and now asserted that Malcolm, son of Duibhne, the _eponymus_ of the clan, had gone to Normandy, and there married the daughter and heiress of the Norman family of De Campobello, and took the name, which was corrupted into Campbell, and his son marries the inevitable Eva, daughter of Paul MacDuibhne, the last of the old line.[478] The foundation of the Grant story seems merely to be that the earliest Grant known was Gregory le Grant, whose sons Laurence and Robert called Grant (_dicti Grant_) witness an agreement between the bishop of Moray and John Bisset in 1258. The name Grant is obviously a personal epithet, and may as well be derived from the Gaelic _Grannda_, ill-favoured, as from the Latin _Grandis_, or any other foreign word which resembles it. The Clan Chameron, as we have seen, formed originally one tribe with the Clan Chattan, and their true ancestor in the early part of the reign of Alexander the Second can be ascertained, for the Irish MSS. deduce their descent from a certain Gillroid, son of Gillamartan, to whom a line of Celtic progenitors is given, and he seems to be the same person with the Gillroth who, according to Fordun, was the chief supporter of Gillespic Macohegan, of the line of MacWilliam, who raised an insurrection in 1222, as a charter of lands in Galloway, about the same period, is witnessed by Gillespic Macohegan and Gilleroth son of Gillemartan.[479] But the most remarkable of these spurious origins is that claimed by the Mackenzies. It appears to have been first put forward by Sir George Mackenzie, first Earl of Cromarty, who wrote an account of the family in the form of a letter, and afterwards a shorter account under the title of ‘The Genealogie of the Mackenzies preceding the year 1661, written in the year 1669 by a persone of qualitie,’[480] of which there is no doubt he was the author. The story, as told by him in the first account, is this:—‘Tradition informs us that our first was a sone of the earl of Kildare’s, who came to Scotland in King Alexander the Third’s time, called Coline Gerald, fought on the side of the Scots at the battle of Largs;’ but finding that there was no earl of Kildare till 1290, he corrects it by making him son of John Fitz-Thomas, chief of the Geraldines in Ireland, and father of John, first earl of Kildare, who was slain in 1261. But in the second account, two sons of John Fitz-Thomas, Colin and Galen, fled to Scotland, were graciously received by Alexander the Third, and the next year fought at the battle of Largs. After the battle Walter Stewart was sent with forces to reduce the Isles, and builds a fort in Kintail, called the Danting Isle, in which Colin Fitzgerald is placed with a garrison. He then marries the daughter of Kenneth _MacMahon_ or Matheson, with whom he gets one-half of Kintail, the other half belonging to the earl of Ross, and has a son Kenneth, from whom his descendants were called _M‘Channiches_, taking their patronymic from the M‘Mahon rather than from Colin, whom they esteemed a stranger. In support of this story two documents are quoted. First, a fragment of the records of Icolmkill, which he says were preserved by him, and mention the principal actors in the battle of Largs, among whom is ‘a stranger and Irishman of the family of the Geraldines, who, driven from Ireland, was in the following year graciously received by the king, remained at his court, and valiantly fought in the foresaid battle, and afterwards fought against the Islesmen, and was left among them in garrison.’[481] The other is a charter by King Alexander, granting, for faithful service rendered by Colin the Irishman (_per Colinum Hybernum_) to the said Colin the whole lands of Kintail as a barony. This charter bears to be granted in the sixteenth year of his reign, before the following witnesses—Archibald, bishop of Moray; Walter Stewart; Henry de Balioth, chamberlain; Arnold de Campan; and Thomas Hostiarius, sheriff of Inverness.[482] The same mistake is here committed, as is usual in manufacturing these pedigree charters, by making it a crown charter erecting the lands into a barony. Kintail could not have been a barony at that time, and the earl of Ross and not the king was superior, for in 1342 the earl of Ross grants the ten davachs of the lands of Kintail to Reginald, son of Roderick of the Isles;[483] and we find that the Mackenzies held their lands of the earl of Ross, and afterwards of the duke of Ross till 1508,[484] when they were all erected into a barony by King James the Fourth, who gave them a crown charter. An examination of the witnesses, too, usually detects these spurious charters, and in this case it is conclusive against the charter. Andrew was bishop of Moray from 1223 to 1242, and there was no bishop of that name in the reign of Alexander the Third. Henry de Baliol was chamberlain in the reign of Alexander the Second, and not of Alexander the Third. Thomas Hostiarius belongs to the same reign, and had been succeeded by his son Alan long before the date of this charter. The names of the witnesses seem to have been taken from some charter of Alexander the Second, which may have been granted in the sixteenth year of his reign. It may be said that this was a genuine charter of Alexander the Second, and that Colin Fitzgerald may have come over in his reign; but then what becomes of the fragment of the Chronicle of Icolmkill, which clearly connects him with the battle of Largs? The two must stand or fall together, and the evidence of the construction of a false legend is too palpable to be disputed.[485] The earl of Cromarty refers to tradition; but if not the actual inventor of the story, it must have taken its rise not very long before, for no trace of it is to be found in the Irish MSS., the history of the Geraldine family knows nothing of it,[486] and MacVureach, who must have been acquainted with the popular history of the western clans, was equally unacquainted with it. We have seen that in the second edition of the story the earl gives Colin a brother Galen, and he is claimed by the Macleans as their ancestor, who likewise superseded their older traditionary history by a Fitzgerald origin; but we can trace how this arose, and it will illustrate how these later forms of the clan origins were constructed. In the Irish MSS. the Mackenzies and Macleans have quite a different origin assigned to them, and there is no apparent connection between them. The Mackenzies are brought from a certain Gilleon Og, son of Gilleon na hairde, but in the genealogies of the Macleans there occurs at a later period a Gilleon, whose pedigree is quite different. In a later form of the genealogy, however, preserved by MacVureach, the two Gilleons have been identified, and a new genealogy manufactured from those of the two clans. The pedigrees of the Mackenzies and Mathesons are combined till they reach Gilleon na hairde, and they then merge into that of the Macleans. The Mackenzies and Macleans are thus brought from two brothers, and when the Mackenzies adopted the Fitzgerald origin the Macleans naturally followed suit. The earl, not content with putting forward this spurious pedigree of his own clan, showed his talent for constructing new pedigrees in the case of the Macleods, whom he took under his protection in consequence of the acquisition by the Mackenzies of the island of Lewis, the patrimony of one of the two great branches of that powerful clan. Their pedigree, as shown in the Irish MSS., had already been tampered with, for in a MS. history of the Rosses of Balnagown, written prior to the Cromarty MS., it is stated that three sons of the king of Denmark, called _Gwine_, _Loid_, and _Leandres_, came out of Denmark and landed in the north of Scotland. ‘_Gwine_, conquest the Hieland brayes of Cathness; _Loid_ conquest the Lewis, of whom M‘Loid is descended; _Leandres_ conquest Braychat be the sworde.’ By the _Gwine_ here mentioned the ancestor of the Clan Gunn seems to be meant, and _Leandres_ is obviously the Gilleandres from whom the Clan Andres, or old Rosses, took their name. This derivation of the Macleods did not satisfy the ingenious earl, and after narrating the history of the Norwegian kings of Mann and the Isles, taken entirely from the Chronicle of Mann, he adds that Harald, the son of Godred Don, who usurped the kingdom in 1249, and was arrested by the king of Norway when attending his court and detained there, was succeeded by Leodus, his only son, who married Adama, daughter to Ferquhar, earl of Ross, and by her had Torkell and Tormoth, who founded the families of Lewis and Harris.[487] Of this there is, however, not one word in the Chronicle, which knows nothing of Harald after his imprisonment in Norway. This is the first appearance of the supposed descent of the Macleods from the Norwegian kings of Mann, of which the ingenious earl was no doubt the author, if he was not also the inventor of the Fitzgerald story; but it is again improved upon by the account furnished to Douglas for his Baronage, where Harald is given up, and Olave the Black, king of Mann, who died in 1237, and whose second wife was Christina, daughter of Ferquhard, earl of Ross, is substituted, and said to have had by her three sons—‘_Leod_, the undoubted progenitor of the Clan Macleod; _Guin_, of whom the Clan Gunn in Sutherland are descended; and _Leandres_, of whom the Clan Leandres in Ross-shire;’ but the Chronicle which mentions his marriage knows nothing of these sons, and this filiation must be regarded as equally spurious with the other.[488] It is probable, however, that we have a fragment of the true pedigree of the Macleods in one of the Irish MSS., which places Leod in the thirteenth century, and makes him son of _Gillemuire_, son of _Raice_, son of _Olbair Snoice_, son of _Gillemuire_, whose mother is said to have been _Ealga_ of the Fair Locks, daughter of Harold, king of _Lochlan_ or Norway.[489] They were Celtic in the male line, Norwegian in the female. The supposed descent of the Macintoshes from the MacDuffs, earls of Fife, was, no doubt, based on the interpretation of the name, which means literally ‘the son of the thane;’ but this theory of their descent could only have arisen after the legend of Macduff, thane of Fife, assumed a prominent place in the fabulous history of Scotland. He was the thane _par excellence_, and the MacIntoshes were naturally connected with him as such; but, as there were in reality no thanes of Fife, and the old earls never bore that title, this descent cannot be supported, and must fall along with the supposed marriage with the heiress of Clan Chattan, and the charter said to have been granted in 1338 by David II., which is no doubt a spurious pedigree charter, and commits the usual blunder of making it a crown charter, while the superiority of Lochaber was in the Lords of the Isles. In the MS. histories of the MacIntoshes, the whole race, including the old MacIntoshes, is brought from the thane of Fife, but there is another form of it which attaches the legend to the later family, the descendant of Malcolm MacIntosh, who, by the influence of the Lords of the Isles, after the secession of the old Clan Chattan in 1429, acquired the position of Captain of the Clan; for we are told in the Knock MS. that Angus of the Isles had, by the daughter of John Gruamach Mackay, ‘the mother of the first Laird of MacIntosh, for a son of MacDuff, thane of Fife, coming after manslaughter to shelter himself in Macdonald’s house, got her daughter with child, went to Ireland with Edward Bruce, where he was killed; by which means MacIntosh is of natural (illegitimate) descent, his progenitor being got in that manner. MacIntosh in the ancient language signifies a Thane’s son. The boy was brought up by Macdonald, who in process of time procured a competent estate for him in the Braes of Lochaber and Braes of Murray.’[490] This was _Callum beg_ or Malcolm MacIntosh, whose son Duncan was the first Captain of Clan Chattan. The name MacIntosh, however, clearly implies that they were the descendants of a thane. In the family histories the MacIntoshes of Monzievaird in Stratherne and of Tiryny in Athole are made cadets of the Macintosh, but we know that they were in reality derived from the thanes of Struan and of Glentilt respectively, and we must likewise look elsewhere for the thane from whom the old Macintoshes of Badenoch descended. Now we find that in 1170 King William the Lion grants the lands of Brass, now Birse, in Deeside, to the bishops of Aberdeen, ‘his thaynes being however excepted,’ that is, retaining their lands as thanes. In 1226 King Alexander the Second grants to the bishop of Moray the lands of Rathmorcus or Rothymurchus to be held in free forest; and in 1241 to the bishop of Aberdeen the right to hold his lands of Brass or Birse in free forest.[491] These grants in free forest would exclude the thanes of their lands, but we find in 1382 a precept by King Robert the Second directed to his son Alexander Stewart, Lord of Badenoch, requiring him to restrain Farchard MacToschy and his adherents from disturbing the bishop of Aberdeen and his tenants in the lands of Brass, and to oblige him to prosecute his claim by form of law.[492] This Farchard appears in the genealogy of the old MacIntoshes at the time, and the Lord of Badenoch must have been regarded as his overlord. The tradition of the MacIntoshes is that Rothiemurchus was their earliest possession, and when Alexander MacIntosh obtains a feudal right to the lands in 1464 he is termed thane of Rothymurchus.[493] It seems probable that the name was derived from the thanes of Brass, who may also have been thanes of Rothiemurchus, and from whom the old MacIntoshes were descended. In their genealogy the name of _Gillemichael_, or the servant of St. Michael, appears in place of the spurious Angus, the supposititious husband of Eva, and St. Michael was the patron saint of the parish of Birse.[494] As possessors of Rothiemurchus they are brought into immediate contact with that branch of the old Clan Chattan whose principal seat was Dalnavert, and no doubt were, as indicated in the older genealogies, a branch of that clan. The representatives of these older MacIntoshes were, beyond doubt, the Shaws of Rothiemurchus and the Farquharsons of Strathdee, who extended from Badenoch as far as Birse, and whose head in 1464 was Alexander Keir MacIntosh. The resemblance of the name of Campbell in its more modern form to De Campobello no doubt led to the supposed descent of the Campbells from a Norman family of that name, but in order to produce a close resemblance the Norman name has been inverted. Its real form was not De Campobello, but De Bello Campo, and in Norman French Beauchamp. The resemblance is still further lost in the older form of the name of the clan, which was Cambell. The first of the race who appears on record with that designation is Gillespie Cambell, who is mentioned in 1263 as having received a grant of the lands of Mestreth and Salewhop, that is, Menstry and Sawchop, from King Alexander the Third.[495] In one of the Irish genealogies his father Dubhgal, son of Duncan, who is termed M‘Duine in the charter of David II., appears as ‘Dubhgal Cambel _a quo_’, that is, from whom the clan is named, and there seems little doubt that it was a personal epithet analogous to that of Cameron, and that from him the family formerly called MacDuibhne took his later name. His son was Cailin Mor, and from him the head of the family bears the name of MacCailin Mor, commonly corrupted to MacCallum Mor. A foreign descent has likewise been attributed to the old earls of Lennox, from whom the Clanpharlan and other Highland families were undoubtedly descended, and it has been supposed that Alwyn MacArchill, an Angle of Northumbria, was father of the first earl of Lennox. The first known earl of Lennox undoubtedly bore the name of Alwyn, who had a son Alwyn, second earl, father of Maelduin, and it is equally certain that an Alwyn MacArchill repeatedly appears as witnessing charters of David the First. This latter Alwyn first appears in the Lennox pedigree in Crawford’s Peerage, published in 1716, where he is identified with the first Alwyn. The next step in the process was to connect Arkill, the father of Alwyn, with a certain Archillus, son of Aykfrith, a Saxon, who had large estates in Northumbria, and fled to Scotland in 1070 to evade the vengeance of William the Conqueror, and thus a Saxon origin is assigned to the earls of Lennox. There is nothing, however, to support this theory except the resemblance of names. Alwyn MacArchill never appears bearing the title of Comes or Earl, and while he flourished during the reign of David the First, and never appears after the year 1155, the first mention of Alwyn, earl of Lennox, cannot be placed earlier than the year 1193, and between these dates we find David, earl of Huntingdon, the brother of Malcolm the Fourth and William the Lion, in possession of the earldom. There is therefore absolutely no authority for this descent, and it was certainly unknown prior to the eighteenth century.[496] On the other hand, Muredach Albanach, who was contemporary with Alwyn, earl of Lennox, gives him a Celtic father Muredach, and thus supports the old Irish pedigree, which makes him son of Muredach, son of Maeldobhen, a descent antecedently probable, as this name of Maldoven or Maeldouen occurs among the later earls, while the Annals of Ulster record that in 1216 ‘Trad O’Mailfabhail, chief of Cinel Fergusa, with his brothers and many others, was slain by Muireadhach, son of the _Mormaer_ of Lennox,’ and the Celtic title of _Mormaer_ could hardly be borne by a Saxon earl. This Maeldouen, the grandfather of Alwyn, first earl, and the true ancestor of the race, must have lived in the early part of the twelfth century, and is thus contemporary with Meldoinneth, the son of Machedach, the ‘judex bonus and discretus,’ who, with Constantine earl of Fife, and Dufgal son of Mocche, _qui fuit senex_, joined in perambulating the lands of Kyrknesse; and as the latter appears in the old Irish genealogy of the Macleans as the grandfather of a lay abbot of Lismore and the ancestor of a Celtic clan, so in Meldoinneth, son of Machedach, we may possibly recognise the Maldobhnaigh, the grandfather of Alwyn, and the ancestor of the Gaelic Lords of the Lennox. The group of clans which sprang from the Lords of the Isles had their origin within the historic period, and their pedigree is too well authenticated to render a spurious version of it possible; while as the lands they held of the Lords of the Isles were in the main confirmed after the forfeiture of the last lord by the Crown, they were left without any great motive to do so; but two other clans, who were in reality not connected with them, seem to have thought it for their interest to claim likewise a descent from the Lords of the Isles, and both were connected with the earldom of Athole. These were the _Clan Donnachie_ or Robertsons of Strowan, and the MacNabs of Glendochart. The former clan simply exchanged Andrew de Atholia, the undoubted father of Duncan de Atholia, the _eponymus_ of the clan, for Angus of the Isles, but as Duncan is repeatedly designated in charters and other documents the son of Andrew de Atholia, the supposed connection with the Lords of the Isles is untenable. The MacNabs are stated by Buchanan of Auchmar to be descended of a son of the first abbot of Inchaffray, whose surname was M‘Donald, in the beginning of the reign of Alexander the Second. Inchaffray, however, was founded in the reign of William the Lion, and the first abbot was Malis, a pastor and hermit, and the second was Innocent, who had been prior, and neither could have been connected with the Macdonalds. The name MacNab certainly means the son of the abbot, but we must look elsewhere for the monastery of which he must have been the lay abbot. In the seventh century St. Fillan founded a monastery in Glendochart, the upper part of which took its name of Strathfillan from him, and in the reign of King William we find the abbot of Glendochart ranking along with the earls of Atholl and of Menteath.[497] As the property possessed by the MacNabs lay in Glendochart, and we find the name of _Gillafaelan_, or servant of St. Fillan, occurring in their oldest genealogy, we may certainly recognise in them the descendants of the lay abbots of Glendochart. To the same class we may probably add the Clan Gregor. Besides the genealogy of this clan contained in the Irish MSS., Dean Macgregor furnishes us with one which may probably be viewed as the native tradition. In it Gregor, the _eponymus_ of the clan, has a different ancestry, and his pedigree is taken up to a certain _Aoidh Urchaidh_, or Hugh of Glenurchay, which, as Glenurchay was an old possession of the MacGregors, may be viewed as the native tradition and more probable descent. The usual calculation would place him in the end of the twelfth century, but the Dean connects him at once with Kenneth MacAlpin in the ninth century,[498] and thus the supposed royal descent of the MacGregors must be relegated to the same category with the descent of the other clans from the kings of Dalriada. The son of this Aodh bore, however, the name of _Gillafaelan_, or servant of St. Fillan, and as the MacGregors likewise possessed property in Glendochart, they were more probably connected with the MacNabs. The MacKinnons too were closely connected with the abbacy of Iona, and repeatedly furnished abbots to that monastery. The traditional connection between these three clans—the MacNabs, the MacGregors, and the MacKinnons—is further evidenced by two bonds of friendship—one in 1606 between the MacKinnons and the MacNabs, in which, as being come of one house and being of one surname, Finlay MacNab of Bowane acknowledges Lauchlan MacKinnon of Strathardel ‘as ane kynd chieff and of ane house;’ the other somewhat later between Lachlan MacKinnon of Strathardill and James MacGregor of MacGregor, in which they are said to be ‘descended lawfully frae twa brethren of auld descent.’[499] The Clan Lawren we have seen were also descended from an abbot. The Clan _Mhic Duibhside_ or Macduffys may have derived their name from _Duibhside_ who appears in the Annals of Ulster in 1164 as _Ferleighinn_ or lector of Iona, and Diarmada, the grandfather of Gillachattan, the _eponymus_ of the Clan Chattan, is said in the old Irish genealogy to have been called the _Ferleighinn_ or lector. Tradition attaches to Gillachattan the epithet of _Clerech_ or Cleric, and he and his descendants the Clan Vuireach are said to have been hereditary lay parsons of Kingussie, one of whom, Duncan the son of Kenneth, appears in 1438 as Duncan parson. From him the chief of the Clan Vuireach takes his name of Macpherson. The earls of Ross too descend from the lay priests of Applecross. [Sidenote: Result of analysis of pedigrees.] The conclusion, then, to which this analysis of the clan pedigrees which have been popularly accepted at different times has brought us, is, that so far as they profess to show the origin of the different clans, they are entirely artificial and untrustworthy, but that the older genealogies may be accepted as showing the descent of the clan from its eponymus or founder, and within reasonable limits for some generations beyond him, while the later spurious pedigrees must be rejected altogether. It may seem surprising that such spurious pedigrees and fabulous origins should be so readily credited by the Clan families as genuine traditions, and receive such prompt acceptance as the true fount from which they sprung; but we must recollect that the fabulous history of Hector Boece was as rapidly and universally adopted as the genuine annals of the national history, and became rooted in those parts of the country to which its fictitious events related as local traditions. When Hector Boece invested the obscure usurper Grig with the name and attributes of a fictitious king, Gregory the Great, and connected him with the royal line of kings, the Clan Gregor at once recognised him as their eponymus ancestor, and their descent from him is now implicitly believed in by all the MacGregors. It is possible, however, from these genealogies, and from other indications, to distribute the clans in certain groups, as having apparently a closer connection with each other, and these groups we hold in the main to represent the great tribes into which the Gaelic population was divided before they became broken up into clans. The two great tribes which possessed the greater part of the Highlands were the _Gallgaidheal_ or Gael in the west, who had been under the power of the Norwegians, and the great tribe of the Moravians, or Men of Moray, in the Central and Eastern Highlands. To the former belong all the clans descended of the Lords of the Isles, the Campbells and Macleods probably representing the older inhabitants of their respective districts; to the latter belong in the main the clans brought in the old Irish genealogies from the kings of Dalriada of the tribe of Lorn, among whom the old _Mormaers_ of Moray appear. The group containing the Clan Andres or old Rosses, the Mackenzies and Mathesons, belong to the tribe of Ross, the Clan Donnachy to Athole, the Clan Lawren to Stratherne, and the Clan Pharlane to Lennox, while the group containing the MacNabs, Clan Gregor, and MacKinnons, appear to have emerged from Glendochart, at least to be connected with the old Columban monasteries.[500] The Clans, properly so called, were thus of native origin; the surnames partly of native and partly of foreign descent. [Sidenote: Termination of Clanship in the Highlands.] It is not much more than a century and a half since the Highland clans combined, in the eighteenth century, to alter the dynasty of Great Britain, and shook the stability of the throne, and since the President of the Supreme Court laid before Government a memorial giving a detailed statement of their names, their military strength, and the names of their chiefs; and not much more than a hundred years later, the same Court has been called upon to answer the question, What is a clan? and to determine whether the word has any legal significance whatever in the social organisation of the Highlands. In 1632, James, earl of Moray, let the lands of Faillie and others to Donald MacGillephadrich, head of the sept of Clan Bean, one of the sixteen tribes which made up the Clan Chattan, for his lifetime and the lifetime of the two next heirs-male, and for three periods of nineteen years to his heirs-male and assignees of the Clan Chattan, and this tack was confirmed to his son Donald MacBean. In 1771 the earl of Moray grants a feu-right of these lands to Donald MacBean, and his heirs-male and assignees whatsoever of the said Clan of Clan Chattan, and in the same year Donald MacBean sells the lands to Captain William Macgillivray, the head of another of the sixteen clans, and to his heirs and assignees of the Clan Chattan. His son, the last of the direct line of the Macgillivrays of Dunmaglass, died in 1852, and the question arose whether his heirs-at-law, who were not of the clan, could succeed. In order to determine this question, the collateral heir-male, John Macgillivray of Dunmaglass, raised an action in the Supreme Court to have it declared that no person was entitled to succeed to the late John Lachlan Macgillivray of Dunmaglass, who was not a member of the Clan Chattan, but the Court held that clanship of Clan Chattan, as a condition of heirship and a limitation of the succession of heirs, could not be recognised or enforced by law. The Court thus defined the modern position of a clan:— ‘The lapse of time and the progress of civilisation, with the attendant influences of settled government, regular authority, and the supremacy of law, have entirely obliterated the peculiar features, and destroyed the essential qualities and character of Scottish clanship; but whether they are viewed as they once were, or as they now are, a Court of law is equally precluded from recognising clans as existing institutions or societies with legal status, the membership of which can be inquired into or acknowledged for ascertaining the character of heirs called to succession. ‘The inquiry which the pursuer’s averments would here demand must be attended with extreme practical difficulty; but the recognition of a clan as an institution or society known to law, so that membership thereof shall be a quality of heirship and a condition of succession, is open to serious objection in point of principle. ‘In an earlier age, when feudal authority and irresponsible power were stronger than the law, and formidable to the Crown, clans and chiefs, with military character, feudal subordination, and internal arbitrary dominion, were allowed to sustain a tolerated, but not a legally recognised or sanctioned existence. ‘In more recent times clans are indeed mentioned, or recognised as existing, in several Acts of Parliament. But it is thought that they are not mentioned or recognised as institutions or societies having legal status, legal rights, or legal vocation or functions, but rather as associations of a lawless, arbitrary, turbulent, and dangerous character. ‘But nothing now remains either of the feudal power and independent dominion which procured sufferance in one age, or of the lawless and dangerous turbulence which required suppression in another. When all military character, all feudal subordination, all heritable jurisdiction, all independent authority of chiefs, are extracted from what used to be called a clan, nothing remains of its essential and peculiar features. Clans are no longer what they were. The purposes for which they once existed, as tolerated but not as sanctioned societies, are not now lawful. To all practical purposes they cannot legally act, and they do not legally exist. The law knows them not. For peaceful pageantry, social enjoyment, and family traditions, mention may still be made of clans and chiefs of clans; but the Highlands of Scotland, no longer oppressed by arbitrary sway, or distracted by feudal contentions, are now inhabited by loyal, orderly, and peaceful subjects of the Crown of Great Britain; and clans are not now corporations which law sustains, nor societies which law recognises or acknowledges.’ Such being the view of the Supreme Court of the country as to the modern position of the clan, it remains for us to inquire how far any of the features of the ancient tribal land tenure are still preserved in the Highlands and Islands of Scotland. CHAPTER X. LAND TENURE IN THE HIGHLANDS AND ISLANDS SUBSEQUENT TO THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY. [Sidenote: Changes in tenure of land.] If the position of the clans was, as we have seen, greatly affected by the statutes passed towards the end of the sixteenth century, the following century witnessed the commencement of a process of change which no less affected the position of the members of the clan as regarded their tenure of the land, which was influenced partly by positive enactments of the Legislature, partly by the increased efficacy of the law of the land, which ignored all Celtic usages inconsistent with its principles, and regarded all persons possessing a feudal title as absolute proprietors of the land, and all occupants of the land who could not show a right derived from the proprietor as simply yearly tenants, and partly by changes which took place in the profitable employment of the land. [Sidenote: Abolition of Calps.] The first relation which was assailed was that of the position of the native-men and subordinate septs to the chief, and in 1617 a statute was passed which proceeded on the narrative, that ‘his Majestie’s lieges have sustained great hurt and skayth these many years bygone by the chiefs of clans within the Highlands and Isles of this kingdom, by the unlawful taking from them their children and executors after their decease under the name of Caulpes of their best aucht whether it be on mare, horse, or cow, alleging their predecessors to have been in possession thereof for maintaining and defending of them against their enemies and evil willars of old and ordained that in no time coming none of his Highness’s lieges presume nor take on hand to intromit with nor uplift the said Caulpis within any part of this kingdom.’[501] In the same Parliament a statute was passed for the protection of the ‘forests within the realm in which deer are kept, and which are altogether wasted and decayed by sheallings, pasturing of horses, mares, cattle, oxen, and other bestial cutting of woods within the bounds of the said forests shooting and slaying of deer and wild fowls with hagbuttis and with dogs in forbidden time.’[502] [Sidenote: Size of townships.] The land occupied by the members of the clan was divided into townships or farms, each township consisting of a certain portion of arable land, meadow, green pasture, and muirland. They were of various sizes, and occupied the lower part of the country, extending in the straths or valleys from the stream, and from the shore of the sea, and the arms of the sea or lochs, to the ridge of the hill behind. A stone fence, called the head-dyke, or an imaginary line answering to it ran along the brae or slope, and separated the arable, meadow-ground, and pasture of the milch cows from the muirland or hill pasture, where the horses, yeld-cattle, and sheep of the farm ranged. The arable land of the township which lay within the head-dyke was usually divided into infield and outfield. In the former the steading, or town as it was called, was situated, and it was kept in tillage, on which all the manure was laid. The outfield consisted of such plots at the bottom of the valleys as were level enough and free of wood or stones to be ploughed, and were kept in corn and lea alternately, the cattle being folded upon them for manure called tathing. The meadows were patches among the fields, too wet, woody, or stony, to be ploughed, and kept under scythe and sickle for a scanty supply of hay; while the faces of the braes, roots of the hills, woody or stony wastes at the bottom, with a small plot near the house, termed the door-land, for baiting horses, were kept as pasture for cattle in summer and sheep in winter; while the sheep and horses were pastured during summer on the muirland or hill pasture, which lay immediately above the head-dyke, and contiguous to the green pasture-grounds. [Sidenote: Occupation of townships.] These farms or townships were occupied in three different ways. They were either possessed by the tacksmen or goodmen themselves, in which case they kept on them a number of cottars, to each of whom they gave a house, grass for a cow or two, and as much ground as would sow about a boll of oats; or they were possessed by sub-tenants, to whom the tacksmen sub-let the whole or a part of the farm, or else they were held direct from the proprietor in joint tenancy by a number of tenants. These tenants and sub-tenants formed a sort of village community, having their houses together, holding the arable land in runrig, which was divided annually by lot among them, and the pasture land in common, each tenant being entitled to pasture a certain number of cattle, sheep, and horses, in proportion to his share of the arable land, which was termed his souming and rouming. In most cases the land was held on what was called a steelbow tenure, when the stock on the farm was the property of the landlord or tacksman, and was let along with the land, and at the end of the lease the tenant or sub-tenant had to return an equal amount of stock or pay the difference. In the Western Isles there was also a kind of tenancy called half-foot, where the possessor of the farm furnished the land and seed-corn, and the other party cultivated the land, the produce being divided. [Sidenote: Average size of township in Central Highlands.] In the central Highlands the average township consisted of about 90 acres within the head-dyke, of which 20 acres were infield, 15 acres outfield, 10 acres meadow, 35 acres green pasture, and 10 acres woody waste; and the muirland beyond the head-dyke 250 acres. The smaller township contained within the head-dyke 5 acres infield, 4 acres outfield, 2½ acres meadow, 20 acres green pasture, 2½ acres waste, and beyond the head-dyke 75 acres of muirland or hill pasture. [Sidenote: Township in the Islands.] In the Islands the township usually consisted of what was called a penny land, but occasionally of the halfpenny land, termed Leffen (_Lethphein_). These penny lands, however, were of different sizes. Thus of three penny lands on the south side of Loch Scriden, in the island of Mull, one consisted of 64 acres of infield arable land, 16 of outfield arable, 19 of green pasture, and 497 of hill pasture; another contained 106 acres of infield arable land, 44 acres of outfield arable, 19 acres of green pasture, and 704 of hill pasture and the third consisted of 68 acres of infield arable land, 27 of outfield arable, 29 of green pasture, and 872 of hill pasture. This latter township was occupied by eight tenants, each pasturing twelve cows, with their followers.[503] [Sidenote: Highland deer-forests.] The great mountain ranges and the groups of larger hills either formed deer-forests or lay waste, and within their bounds were shealings or summer pasture attached to farms, when the contiguous muir was not sufficient for hill stock in summer, and here the cows were brought in summer and kept for six or seven weeks.[504] The peat-mosses furnished the tenants of the farms with their fuel. The principal deer-forests were to be found in the two great mountain ranges of the Mounth, which extended across the island from the eastern to the western sea, and Drumalban, or the backbone of Scotland, which divided the eastern from the western waters. These forests existed from time immemorial. Thus we find that in 1630 the earldom of Atholl was granted by Charles I. to John, earl of Atholl, with the free forest of Bynzecromby, and all the other free forests of the earldom, the office of forester, and the privileges of the same; and in the Acts of Parliament a statute regarding a forest in the latter range in 1662, when Parliament ratifies a charter granted by King James the Sixth in 1617, constituting the Campbells of Glenurchay heritable foresters and keepers of the forests and woods of Mamlorne, Berinakansauche _alias_ Bendaskerlie, Finglenbeg and Finglenmor; and in order to protect the forest more effectually they have power to escheat or forfeit all horses, mares, kyne, sheep, goats, swine, and other cattle and bestials that shall be found in any time coming feeding within the said woods and forests, or any part of the bounds thereof.[505] In the year 1695 a statute was passed to abolish the system of holding land in runrig,[506] but it was so expressed as to apply only to cases of joint proprietary of the runrig lands, and not to that of a joint tenancy, as was the case in these Highland townships. [Sidenote: Causes affecting the population in the eighteenth century.] In the following century the social position of the Gaelic population in the Highlands and Islands became affected by several causes. These were in the main the introduction of sheep-farming and emigration of the people from various districts; the increased manufacture of kelp; the extension of the culture of the potato, and the system of crofting. When the cessation of these causes, which had kept the Highlands distinct from the rest of the country, brought all classes into contact with a different and more advanced state of society, and the old feudal relations of superior and dependant gradually passed into those of proprietor and tenant, the natural consequence was, from the conversion of services and the different estimate of the relative value of land and people, that the rents were everywhere raised; and this gave rise to the extensive emigration of those who were unwilling to submit to or could not find a place in the new system. Then followed the more profitable occupation of the hill pasture under sheep stock, and the introduction of sheep-farming. The farms held by the tacksmen were very generally converted into sheep-farms, and new ones were created, as opportunity offered, by throwing the townships occupied by the joint tenants into larger farms, and adding extensive ranges of hill pasture to them. So far as the latter was concerned, the placing under sheep of extensive ranges of hill country which had previously either lain waste or been occupied as deer-forests, had no effect upon the population; but it became necessary to remove the small tenants, in order to convert their holdings into wintering for the sheep, and this led to a large portion of the population being dispossessed.[507] The emigration of the people which had been created by these causes was checked by the American war, but recommenced to even a greater extent after the peace, and continued till the passing of the Emigration Act in 1803. As this emigration had generally consisted of entire families, and many of the tacksmen were accompanied by their dependants, and thus, as the large farms were introduced on the one hand, the dispossessed population emigrated on the other, there was nothing in the change of policy, whether it was desirable in itself or not, which was not in accordance with the principles of social economy, so far as population is concerned. It is estimated that of those who were dispossessed from the sheep-farming, two-thirds emigrated in the beginning of the present century. Various circumstances led, however, to a check being then given to emigration, one principal cause of which was the new source of wealth to the proprietors, and of employment to the population of those districts bordered by the sea and of the Islands, which arose from the increased manufacture of kelp. This manufacture was first introduced so far back as the year 1734, but did not rise into notice till the American war, when kelp reached the remunerating price of £8 per ton. After the termination of that war the price fell, owing to competition in barilla and potash, and kelp was manufactured to but a limited extent till the present century, when it again rose into importance, and had reached in 1806 an average price of £16 per ton, and in 1808, 1809, and 1810 the enormous price of £22 per ton. The increased profits arising from this manufacture caused a great demand for labour, and created a powerful interest in all classes engaged in it to encourage population. At the same time, as it only afforded employment during two months in summer, and, from its being a great object to bring a large quantity as quickly as possible to market, demanded a large amount of labour at one season of the year only, an additional resource was found in the potato, introduced in 1743, but cultivated to a limited extent till this period, when its culture extended as rapidly as the manufacture of kelp had increased, until it became the principal means of subsistence of a large portion of the population. [Sidenote: Townships in the Inner Hebrides in 1850.] The increase of the population, and the extension of the culture of the potato which accompanied it, may be illustrated from the statistics of one parish in Skye. The population of this parish in 1801 was 2555. In 1841 it had increased to 3625. In 1801 the produce of the parish consisted of 1600 bolls of oats and bere, and of 5000 barrels of potatoes. In 1841,1618 bolls of grain and 32,000 barrels of potatoes. Thus, while the population showed an increase of 1070, the produce of the cereal crops had undergone little change during the forty years preceding 1841; but the cultivation of the potato had increased sixfold, and consequently furnished the sole additional production to meet the requirements of the additional population. The crofting system was first introduced by the arable portion of the small farms or townships previously held in common and cultivated in runrig, being permanently divided among the joint-tenants in separate crofts, the pasture remaining in common. This, though an improvement with reference to the cultivation of the farm, was unfortunately not accompanied by any practical guarantee against subdividing, by the security of leases, or by the encouragement and attention which the crofters required. The previous system, where the arable land was held in joint-tenancy, though necessarily implying a low state of agriculture, yet afforded some guarantees in the joint-interest created by it against subdivision; but when the employment afforded by the manufacture of kelp became the principal dependence of all classes, and the cultivation of the land of secondary importance, the comparative independence of the tenants on each other, which resulted from the possession of separate crofts, afforded fatal facilities for subdivision and sub-letting, which were carried to a great extent. This result was likewise increased by separate lotting on the part of the proprietors or of those in the management of their estates. The Fencible regiments had been raised, in many cases, on a promise to give lots or possessions to the recruits, and, when disbanded, these promises had to be redeemed. A system of general and indiscriminate lotting was introduced and carried on, by which separate lots were provided for the population as they pressed still more upon the land, while the employment afforded by the kelp and the increased culture of the potato provided a resource for their occupants. The tendency of all this was greatly to increase the cottar class, who were sub-tenants under the tacksmen and small tenants, their labour being usually taken in place of rent, in return for the lots they held; but with a limited potato-culture and no extraordinary demand for labour, this class had hitherto not been very numerous. Other circumstances still further tended to add to this class of the community. The British Fishery Society had established in 1788 the fishing villages of Tobermory, Ullapool, Stein, and others, with a view of prosecuting a permanent fishing trade; and proprietors had followed their example in setting similar communities on the sea-coast as a resource for the dispossessed population. Small lots, generally about two acres, were given to the proposed fishermen, but these villages failed in the main from various causes, and formed a refuge for the dispossessed population of neighbouring properties, till they furnished examples of the poorest class of lotters or cottars. The extension of the large farms and the removal of the former occupants of the land unaccompanied by emigration—the Highland clearing in the proper sense of the term—necessarily added to the numbers of the same class, and any subsequent enforced emigration was too often of a character which not only did nothing to reduce the numbers of this class, but rather tended to aggravate the evil, as the families it removed were generally of the better class of small tenantry able to provide some part of the cost of transit, while the land they occupied was at the same time withdrawn from cultivation, and those of its occupants who did not emigrate were necessarily thrown upon the cottar population. Such was the position of the population, when the manufacture of kelp, after proving a source of wealth and employment, ceased to be so remunerative after the repeal of the salt-duty in 1817, and was finally prostrated under the competition produced by the reduction of the duty on barilla. The people had become to a great extent dependent on the potato for a considerable portion of the year, and the employment afforded by the kelp supplied the period between the consumption of the potato crop of one year and that of the succeeding crop. All classes appear to have forgotten that the profits of the kelp manufacture were not the legitimate produce of the land, on which they could depend as proprietors and tenants, but that they were in fact engaged in a manufacture subject to the fluctuations of trade arising from the state of the market, and might be placed in the same position as a manufacturing population during one of the periodical stagnations of trade. The sudden withdrawal of this resource left the main part of the Highland population in a similar situation, except that they had become rooted to the soil and confirmed in habits which unfitted them to meet the crisis. A considerable portion of the population disclosed the appearance of a parasite class, pressing largely upon the means of subsistence and the resources of others, and the cottars having lost the resource of the kelp became exposed to an annual destitution during the period which intervened between the consumption of the produce of each potato crop, until the partial failure of that crop in the years 1836-37, and the more extensive destruction of it in 1847 and three succeeding years, reduced a large portion of the population to a state of absolute destitution for the time, and brought their social position prominently under the notice of all classes of the community. The statistics of the same parish in Skye will afford a fair illustration of their position during the failure of the potato crop. The parish consisted then of 4826 acres of arable land, 4339 of green pasture, and 37,305 of hill pasture. There were four large farms containing about 1200 acres of arable land, and on these farms there were twenty-five families of cottars. The remaining 3676 acres of arable land were distributed among thirty-seven townships held by 334 families of crofters; and upon these 334 families of crofters there was a parasite population of 300 families of cottars. The particulars of two of these townships will show still more clearly the state of the population at this time. One, consisting of 205 acres, was held by nine tenants, whose families amounted to forty-three persons. Of these 205 acres, 42 were under cultivation, the usual produce of which was sixty-one bolls. They had twenty-four cows, sixteen sheep, and six horses, and the total rent paid by them was £84, and upon this farm there were besides ten families of cottars, giving a population of eighty-six souls on a farm paying only £84 of rent. Another township contained 161 acres, and was held by four families of croft tenants. There were only 22 acres under cultivation, yielding on an average thirty-two bolls. They had eight cows, twenty-one sheep, and four horses, and paid £55 of rent, and on this farm were seven families of cottars. In another parish in the same island, a township paying £68 of rent was held by twenty-two families of crofter tenants, while there were located in the township no fewer than twenty-five families of cottars, giving a population of 250 souls dependent on the produce of the ground for subsistence.[508] [Sidenote: Existing townships in the Outer Hebrides.] It might, however, be expected that the features of the older state of the occupants of the soil would be longer preserved in the Outer Hebrides where there was less intercourse with the mainland, and an account of the present state of some of the townships in the Long Island has been kindly communicated for this work by Mr. Alexander Carmichael, a gentleman who has been long resident among them, and is intimately acquainted with their condition, which will furnish an appropriate conclusion to this chapter. ‘Old systems are tenacious. They linger long among a rural people, and in remote places. Of these is the land system of runrig (_Mor Earann_), which characterises more or less the land system of some of the Western Isles (Innsi-Gall). The Outer Hebrides are called the Long Island (_Eileann Fada_, _Innis Fada_). They are a series of islands 119 miles in length, and varying from half-a-mile to twenty miles in breadth. This kite-like chain of 40 inhabited and upwards of 150 uninhabited islands contains a population of 40,000. Much of the land is held by extensive tacksmen on leases (_Fir-Baile_), and, there being no intermediate tenantry, the rest of the land is occupied by small tenants at will without leases. These number 4500, the majority of whom fish as well as farm. ‘The country is divided into townlands of various extent. The arable land (Fearann grainsich) occupied by the small tenants of these townlands is worked in three ways—as crofts wholly, as crofts and runrig combined, and as runrig wholly. In Lewis and Harris the arable land is wholly divided into crofts; in Uist and Barra the arable land is divided, in part into crofts, and in part worked in runrig; while in the townlands of Hosta, Caolas Paipil, and the island of Heisgeir in North Uist, the arable land is worked exclusively upon the runrig system of share and share alike. The grazing ground of the tenants of each townland throughout the Long Island is held in common (in Lewis called _Comhpairt_). ‘The soil varies from pure sand to pure moss. Along the Atlantic there is a wide plain of sandy soil called _Machair_. This merges into a mixture of sand and moss (_Breacthalamh_, or mottled soil), which again merges into the pure moss (_Mointeach_) towards the Minch. As the soil is dry and sandy, if the summer is dry the crop is light. On the other hand, if the summer is moist the crop is heavy and good. In order that all may have an equal chance, the _Machair_ belonging to them is equally divided among the tenants of the township. Obviously the man who is restricted to his croft has fewer advantages than the man who, together with his croft, has his share of the _Machair_, and still fewer advantages than the man who has, rig for rig with his neighbours, the run of the various soils of his townland, which gives name to the system. Consequently, a wet or a dry season affects the tenant of the croft system more than the tenant of the combined system, and the tenant of the combined system more than the tenant of the runrig system. ‘The townland of Hosta is occupied by four, Caolas Paipil by six, and the island of Heisgeir by twelve tenants. Towards the end of autumn, when harvest is over, and the fruits of the year have been gathered in, the constable (_Constabal_, _Foirfeadeach_) calls a meeting of the tenants of the townland for Nabachd (preferably _Nabuidheachd_, neighbourliness). They meet, and having decided upon the portion of land (_Leob_, _Clar_) to be put under green crop next year, they divide it into shares according to the number of tenants in the place, and the number of shares in the soil they respectively possess. Thereupon they cast lots (_Crannachuradh_, _Cur chrann_, _Tilgeadh chrann_, _Crannadh_), and the share which falls to a tenant he retains for three years. A third of the land under cultivation is thus divided every year. Accordingly, the whole cultivated land of the townland undergoes redivision every three years. Should a man get a bad share he is allowed to choose his share in the next division. The tenants divide the land into shares of uniform size. For this purpose they use a rod several yards long, and they observe as much accuracy in measuring their land as a draper in measuring his cloth. In marking the boundary between shares, a turf (_Torc_) is dug up and turned over along the line of demarcation. The ‘torc’ is then cut along the middle, and half is taken by the tenant on one side and half by the tenant on the other side, in ploughing the subsequent furrow; similar care being afterwards exercised in cutting the corn along the furrow. The tenant’s portion of the runrig is termed Cianag and his proportion of the grazing for every pound he pays Coir-sgoraidh. ‘There are no fences round the fields. The crop being thus exposed to injury from the cattle grazing along the side, the people leave a protecting rig on the margin of the crop. This rig is divided transversely into shares, in order to subject all the tenants to equal risk. The rig is called indiscriminately _Iomair ionailt_ browsing rig, _Iomair a chruidh_ the cattle rig, and _Iomaire comachaidh_ the promiscuous rig. The arrangement is named _Comachadh_, promiscuous. Occasionally and for limited bits of ground, the people till, sow, and reap in common, and divide the produce into shares (_Rainn_, _Ranntaichean_) and draw lots. This too is called _Comachadh_, promiscuous. The system was not uncommon in the past, though now nearly obsolete. ‘In making their own land arrangements for the year, the tenants set apart a piece of ground towards the support of their poor. This ground is called _Cianag nam bochd_, the _Cianag_ of the poor, and _Talamh nam bochd_, the ground of the poor. Farm produce given to the poor who go about when the crop is being secured is termed _Feigh_, _Faigh_, or _Faoigh_. The produce for which the suppliant travels denotes the nature of the _Faoigh_ or aid, as _Faoigh cloimh_ wool-aid, _Faoigh arair_ corn-aid, or _Faoigh buntata_ potato-aid. ‘In reclaiming moorland (_Mointeach_, _Sliahb_, _Riasg_), the tenants divide the ground into narrow strips of five feet wide or thereby. These strips, called lazy-beds (_Feann-agan_, from _Feann_ to scarify), the tenants allot among themselves according to their shares or crofts. The people mutually encourage one another to plant as much of this ground as possible. In this manner much waste land is reclaimed and enhanced in value, and ground hitherto the home of the stonechat, grouse, snipe, and sundew, is made to yield luxuriant crops of potatoes, corn, hay, and grass. Not unfrequently, however, these land-reclamations are wrested without acknowledgment from those who made them. ‘The sheep, cattle, and horses of the townland (_Spreidh a bhaile_) graze together, the species being separate. A tenant can only keep stock conformably to his share in the soil. He is, however, at liberty to regulate the proportions of the different kinds, provided that his total stock does not exceed his total grazing rights. He may keep a larger number of one species and a corresponding smaller number of another. Or he can keep a greater number of the young and a corresponding less number of the old of the same species, or the reverse. About Whitsuntide, when the young braird appears, the people remove their sheep and cattle to the grazing ground behind the arable land (_Gearruidh_, _Culcinn_, _Sliabh_, or _Beinn_). This is called clearing the townland, and is variously termed in various districts—_Reiteach a bhaile_, _Glanadh a bhaile_, _Fuadach_, _Cartadh_, _Cusgaradh_, _Cursgaradh_, _Usgaradh_, and _Ursgaradh_. The tenants bring forward their stock (_Leibhidh_), and a souming (_Sumachadh_) is made. The _Leibhidh_ is the amount of the tenant’s stock, the _Sumachadh_ the number he is entitled to graze in common with his neighbours. Should the tenant have a croft, he is probably able to graze some extra stock thereon, though this is demurred to by his neighbours. Each penny (_Peighinn_) of arable land has grazing rights of so many soums. Neither, however, is the extent of land in the “penny” nor the number of animals in the soum uniformly the same. The soum (_Sum_, _Suim_) consists of a cow with her progeny (_Bo le h-al_).[509] Conformably to the code of one district this includes only the cow and her calf, and according to the Gaelic distich the calf becomes a stirk at All-Hallows— _La Samhna theirear gamhna ris na laoigh, La ‘Illeain theirear aidhean riu na dheigh_. At Hallowmas the calf is called a stirk aye, At Saint John’s the stirk becomes a quey. ‘In another district the soum (_Bo le h-al_) means the cow and her three immediate descendants—the calf, the one-year-old stirk, and the two-year-old quey. ‘In a third district the soum or _Bo le h-al_ comprehends five animals, viz., the cow, her calf, her one-year-old stirk, her two-year-old quey, and her three-year-old heifer. When the calf has attained four years of age it is ousted from the soum and classed with the cows. ‘The people conform to their code in equalising their stock. Different species of animals are placed against one another, and the same species at different ages. This is called _Coilpeachadh_, equalising. The grazing equivalents of a cow are eight calves, four one-year-old stirks, two two-year-old queys, one three-year-old heifer, and one stirk, eight sheep, twelve hoggs,[510] sixteen lambs, or, sixteen geese. The grazing equivalents of the horse are eight foals, four one-year-old fillies, two two-year-old fillies, one three-year-old, and one one-year-old filly, or two cows. The horse is deemed to have arrived at grazing maturity at four years of age. Three one-year-old hoggs are considered equal in grazing to two sheep, and one two-year-old hogg is deemed equal to one sheep. The cow is entitled to her calf. Should a tenant have two cows without calves, the cows are entitled to get one one-year-old stirk or its equivalent along with them. And, should he have four cows without calves, the cows claim two one-year-old queys, or their equivalents. ‘If the stock, or soum, of a tenant be complete, it is termed _Leibhidh slan_ and _Sumachadh slan_, that is, whole _Leibhidh_ and whole soum, and _Fiar slan_, or whole grass. The animals which go to complete the stock or soum are called _Slanuich_, _Slanuichean_, completers. Should the stock or soum be incomplete, it is _Leibhidh briste_, broken stock; _Sumachadh briste_, broken soum, or _Fiar briste_, _Bristiar_, broken grass. The odd animals beyond the complete stock or soum are _Bristich_, _Bristichean_, or _Beacha briste_, broken beasts. ‘In the event of a tenant having an overstock (_Barr leibhe_), or an oversoum (_Barr-suma_, _Barr-suime_), he must provide for it independently. He may buy grazing from a neighbour in his own or contiguous townland who has an understock (_Gior-leibhe_), or an undersoum (_Gior-suime_), or the community may allow the overstock to remain on the grass till he can dispose of it. If the latter, payment of the grazing of the extra animals is exacted according to their code. The amount is paid over to the fund of the community, which is used for the common good towards buying fresh stock, bulls, tups, or for some such purpose. ‘The souming is amended at Lammas (_Lunastain_), after the first markets are held, and re-amended at Hallowtide, after the last markets are over, when the final and winter arrangements are made. ‘In Lewis and Harris the crofters keep stock according to every pound of rent they pay. This system is termed _Cosgarradh_, evidently _Coir-sgoraidh_, the right of grazing. ‘There being no fences to protect the fields, during summer and autumn the herds are placed at night in enclosures to secure them against trespassing on the crop. The enclosure for horses is called _Marclan_, _Comhlong_; for cattle, _Buaile_, _Cuithe_; for sheep, _Cro_, _Fang_, _Faing_; for goats, _Mainnir_, _Cro_; and for calfs and lambs, _Cotan_. ‘Lest any of these should break loose and damage the corn, two men watch the folds together at night. This duty is called _Cuartachadh_ rounding the folds, and devolves upon two of the tenants in rotation. Should the watchers become remiss towards the dawn, when the herds begin to move, some of the animals may break through the enclosure and cause loss. If so, the two tenants are held liable, and are required to make reparation (_Dioladh_). The damage is appraised by the constable, who is sworn to do justice, and in this capacity is termed _Foirfeidach_, the just one, or _Measaiche_, the valuator. The constable’s valuation is held final, unless he should be interested, when the eldest tenant takes his place. ‘The crofters have a code of regulations, for which, if broken, reparation is made. Should a crofter’s horse break loose, or his fowls stray, and so destroy a neighbour’s corn, the injury is valued and the amount paid into the common fund. All fines and reparations (_Cain_, _Dioladh_) are paid over to this fund, or used for the common good. The crofter paying the fine does not lose all interest therein, nor does the crofter to whom reparation is made derive the exclusive benefit therefrom. This reparation is exacted by the farm constable in his official capacity as representing the crofters of the farm as a body.[511] ‘Having finished their tillage, the people go early in June to the hill-grazing with their flocks. This is a busy day in the townland. The people are up and in commotion like bees about to swarm. The different families bring their herds together and drive them away. The sheep lead, the cattle go next, the younger preceding, and the horses follow. The men carry burdens of sticks, heather, ropes, spades, and other things needed to repair their summer huts (_Sgitheil_, _Bothain_). The women carry bedding, meal, dairy and cooking utensils. Round below their waists is a thick woollen cord or leathern strap (_Crios-fheile_, kilt-band), underneath which their skirts are drawn up to enable them to walk easily over the moors. Barefooted, bareheaded, comely boys and girls, with gaunt sagacious dogs, flit hither and thither, keeping the herds together as best they can, and every now and then having a neck-and-neck race with some perverse animal trying to run away home. There is much noise. Men—several at a time—give directions and scold. Women knit their stockings, sing their songs, talk and walk as free and erect as if there were no burdens on their backs nor on their hearts, nor sin nor sorrow in this world of ours, so far as they are concerned. Above this din rise the voices of the various animals being thus unwillingly driven from their homes. Sheep bleet for their lambs, lambs for their mothers; cows low for their calves, and calves low for their dams; mares neigh for their foals, and foals reply as they lightly trip round about, little thinking of coming work and hard fare. All who meet on the way bless the trial, as this removing is called. They wish it good luck and prosperity, and a good flitting day, and, having invoked the care of Israel’s Shepherd on man and beast, they pass on. ‘When the grazing-ground has been reached and the burdens are laid down, the huts are repaired outwardly and inwardly, the fires are rekindled, and food is prepared. The people bring forward their stock, every man’s stock separately, and, as they are being driven into the enclosure, the constable and another man at either side of the gateway see that only the proper souming has been brought to the grazing. This precaution over, the cattle are turned out to graze. ‘Having seen to their cattle and sorted their shealings, the people repair to their removing feast (_Feisd na h-imrig_ or shealing feast, _Feisd na h-airidh_). The feast is simple enough, the chief thing being a cheese, which every housewife is careful to provide for the occasion from last year’s produce. The cheese is shared among neighbours and friends, as they wish themselves and cattle luck and prosperity. (‘_Laoigh bhailgionn boirionn air gach fireach Piseach crodh na h-airidh_.) ‘Every head is uncovered, every knee is bowed, as they dedicate themselves and their flocks to the care of Israel’s Shepherd. ‘In Barra, South Uist, and Benbecula, the Roman Catholic faith predominates; here, in their touching dedicatory old hymn, the people invoke with the aid of the Trinity, that of the angel with the cornered shield and flaming sword, Saint Michael, the patron saint of their horses; of Saint Columba the holy, the guardian over their cattle, and of the golden-haired Virgin Shepherdess, and Mother of the Lamb without spot or blemish. ‘In North Uist, Harris, and Lewis, the Protestant faith entirely prevails, and the people confine their invocation to, ‘The Shepherd that keeps Israel, He slumbereth not nor sleepeth. (‘_Feuch air Fear Coimhead Israeil, Codal cha’n aom no suain_.) As the people sing their dedication, their voices resound from their shealings, here literally in the wilderness, and as the music floats on the air, and echoes among the rocks, hills, and glens, and is wafted over fresh-water lakes and sea-lochs, the effect is very striking. ‘The walls of the shealings in which the people live are of turf, the roof of sticks covered with divots. There are usually two shealings together; the larger the dwelling, the smaller the dairy. This style of hut (Sgithiol) is called _Airidh_ or shealing, and _Both cheap_, or _Bothan cheap_, turf bothy; to distinguish it from the _Both cloiche_ or _Bothan cloiche_, stone bothy. This is entirely constructed of stone, the roof tapering to a cone more or less pointed. The apex of the cone roof is probably finished off with a flag, through the centre of which there is a hole like that through an upper millstone, the opening for the egress of smoke and the ingress of light. There is a low doorway with a removable door, seldom used, made of wicker-work, wattles, heather, or bent. In the walls of the hut, two, three, or four feet from the floor, are recesses for the various utensils in use by the people, while in the bosom of the thick wall low down near the ground are the dormitories wherein the people sleep. The entrance to these dormitories, slightly raised above the floor, is a small hole, barely capable of admitting a person to creep through. This sleeping-place is called _Crupa_, from _Crupadh_, to crouch. It was a special feature in the architecture of the former houses of St. Kilda, the houses themselves being called _Crupa_ from this characteristic. These beehive houses are still the shealings of the Lewis people. Invariably two or three strong healthy girls share the same shealing. Here they remain making butter and cheese till the corn is ripe for shearing, when they and their cattle return home. The people enjoy this life at the hill pasturage, and many of the best lyric songs in their language are in praise of the loved summer shealing. ‘A tenant is liable for his own rent only. Formerly the rent was paid in four different ways. The first part was paid in money, the second in meal, the third in butter and cheese (_Annlann_), and the fourth part in cattle fit for selling or killing (_Crodh creic_, _Creiche_, _no Seiche_). In Uist, where kelp (_Ceilp_) is made, the kelp is placed to the credit for rent of the tenants who make it. There was also a system of labour. The people gave so many days’ work, the days being divided in certain proportions between the four seasons of the year. When the land was held direct from the proprietor the labour was called _Morlanachd_, occasionally _Borlanachd_. Probably this term is from _Mur_ a fortress and _Lann_ an enclosure. This system of labour may have had its origin in return for the shelter the enclosed fortress of the chief afforded the people in time of danger. When the land was held under the tacksman or middleman, and indirectly from the proprietor, the labour was called _Cairiste_, from _Caithris_, unrest, a word sufficiently indicative of the mode of its exaction. ‘The shepherd, cattle-herd, and march-keeper (_Coimheadaidh_, _Criochaire_, _Fear coimhid_) are paid in kind, invariably in seaweed, land, and grazing. This mode of payment is called _Fairthadh_. The term is also applied to corn, meal, or potatoes, given to men-servants in payment of wages, and also to bits of extra tillage granted by their neighbours to help poor tenants. In parts of Lewis the term is applied to the ground set apart for the poor. ‘The shepherd, as his name implies, tends the sheep, the cattle-herd the cattle, and the march-keeper, grass-keeper, or watcher, watches the open marches of the townland to prevent trespass. Having no interest in the matter, the march-keeper is often sent out from the people to call out the lots. The watcher may also be required to act as perchman (_Peursair_, or shoreherd, _Buachaille cladaich_). His duty is to erect a pole, on the top of which is a bundle of seaweed (Gaelic, _Topan todhair_) to indicate that the seaware is on the shore. When the people see the raised sign they hasten to the shore with their horses and carts, and creels, to land the spoils of the sea to put life in the land (_an tabhartas todhair a chuireas beatha an talamh,—an tabhartas todhair chuireas cobhair an uir_,—the seaweed offering that feeds the land). No tenant is permitted to take seaweed till his neighbours have time to arrive. Occasionally the sea-weed is divided into pennies, and lots drawn for the different shares, as for land. ‘The people adhere to their traditional code, and if this be transgressed in any part reparation is exacted. If a tenant, through carelessness, allows his horse to go loose, he is amerced in a fine (_Cain_). The fine is exacted where no damage results. The shepherd, cattle-herd, and watcher are subject to the same rigorous exactions if they allow injury to the crop. ‘The proprietor is represented on the estate by a factor (_Bailidh_). In Lewis the factor is called Chamberlain. The factor is represented by a _Maor_ in every district, and the _Maor_ by a constable in every townland. The factor communicates with his _Maors_, the _Maors_ with their constables, who communicate with the tenants of their townlands. The people, however, are allowed to apply their own customs (_Cleachdna_) in working their land, and their own regulations (_Riaghailt_) in managing their stock. The _Cleachdadh_ is their unwritten law, the _Riaghailt_ their unwritten regulations; and to these they are attached as the result of experience and the wisdom of their fathers. The _Cleachdadh_ and _Riaghailt_ differ in different parishes, and occasionally in different districts of the same parish. The closer the runrig system is followed, the more are these customs and regulations observed. The more intelligent tenants regret a departure from them. The people defer to the wishes of the many as against the wisdom of the few, and obey the decision of the majority. ‘When required by the proprietor or the people, the constable convenes a meeting of the tenants. If the constable presides, the meeting is _Nabac_; if the _Maor_ presides, the council is the more important, _Mod_ or moot. Perhaps the people have met to confer about making or repairing a district road (_Utraid_), the digging or deepening of a ditch, or trench (_Dig_), the planting or repairing with bent (_Muran_) the drifting sandbanks of their _Machair_, or the buying or selling of a bull. The man who presides explains the business, and makes a motion. If the people assent, the matter is decided; if not, discussion ensues. Some of the people speak well. They reason forcibly, illustrate fittingly, and show complete mastery over their native Gaelic, which with them is plastic, copious, and expressive. Everything calculated to mar neighbourliness is discountenanced. Reasoning, they say, shall obtain hearing, and sooner or later victory; but the most contemptible of contemptible things are doggedliness and vulgar abuse (_Ghiobh comhdach buaidh agus luath no mall eisdeachd, ach diubhaidh dubh an domhain, coinealachd agus graisgealachd_). Nevertheless, personalities occur, offensive allusions and remarks are made, even the proprietor’s representative in the second or third degree removed being not always treated with immunity, though always with respect. When contention is imminent, the people of the townland, and possibly of other townlands, come to hear. The council meet on a knoll at the house of the _Maor_ or the constable. The subject is decided by votes. Those who approve go sunwise to the south and to the right of the official presiding; while those who disapprove go sunwise to the north and to the left of the representative. These directions are symbolic—the one being propitious, the other unpropitious. Should the votes be equal, lots are drawn three times—the two times carrying against the one time. If a man holds out against his neighbours, perhaps faithful amongst the faithless, he is reproached as _aon an aghaidh pobuill_, one against people, and is derisively addressed as _Fiacill gaibhre_, goat-tooth. ‘Highlanders are essentially monarchical in their economic institutions and social tendencies. In this they say they but follow the example or instincts of the lower animals, all of which follow their chief. The leader of the herd or flock is called _Ceannard_, _Ceann-iuil_, but more frequently _Snaodaire_. The leader of the horses is _Ceannmarc_, _Ceannmharc_, _Marccheann_; of the cattle, _Ceannabha_, _Ceannabhoin_, _Boinecheann_; _ceannnith_; of the sheep, _Ceannciora_, _Cioracheann_; of the goats, _Ceannabhoc_, _Ceann-gaibhre_, _Ceannaghabhar_, _Gabhar-cheann_; of the swine, _Ceann-cula_, _Cula-cheann_, _Speile-cheann_; of the deer, _Ceanna-ghreigh_, _Grecheann_; of birds, _Ceann-ianlainn_, _Iala-cheann_, _Iolcheann_; and of the fish, _Ceann-snaoth_. _Ceann-snaoth_ is particularly applied to the salmon, as _Ceann snaoth an eisg_, the leader of the fish, which is also called _Righ nan iasg_, the king of the fish. The eagle is called _Righ nan ian_, the king of the birds, and _Righ na h-ealtain_, king of the bird universe. The eagle is also termed _Firein_, true bird, _an t-ian_, the bird par excellence. _Firein_ is a symbolic name applied to a Christian. ‘The leader of the herd is the first to rise and the last to lie down, and even when asleep would seem to be awake. A male is not necessarily the leader. Among cattle this position is often assumed by a cow. ‘_An te is urranta dhe’n chrodh Is i ghiobh a bhuaidh_. ‘The ablest of the cows Achieving victory. But whether male or female the leader is the least despotic animal in the herd, the most contemptible being invariably the most despotic. ‘The houses of the tenants form a cluster (_Gnigne_, _Grigne_, _Griogsa_, _Creaga_, _Carigean_). In parts of Lewis the houses are in straight line called _Straid_, street, occasionally from one to three miles in length. They are placed in a suitable part of the townland, and those of the tenants of the runrig system are warm, good, and comfortable. These tenants carry on their farming operations simultaneously, and not without friendly and wholesome rivalry, the enterprise of one stimulating the zeal of another. ‘Not the least pleasing feature in this semi-family system is the assistance rendered by his neighbours to a tenant whose work has fallen behind through accident, sickness, death, or other unavoidable cause. When death occurs in a family, all the other families of the townland cease working till the dead is buried—_gu’n cuirear uir fo uir_—till earth is placed under earth. ‘Compassion for the poor, consideration towards the distressed, and respect for the dead, are characteristic traits of these people. This is inculcated in their sayings— ‘_Comhnadh ris_ a bhochd, cobhair ris a bhas, agus baigh ris a bhron, tri nithe ris nach do ghabh duine glic aithreachas riabh. ‘Succour to the poor, aid to the dead (in burying), and sympathy with the distressed, are three things which a wise man never regretted. ‘Their modes of dividing the land and of equalising their stock may seem primitive and complex to modern views, but they are not so to the people themselves, who apply these amicably, accurately, and skilfully. The division of the land is made with care and justice. This is the interest of all, no one knowing which place may fall to himself, for his neighbour’s share this year may become his own three years hence. Portioning the stock according to the grazing rights of individual tenants, and equalising (_Coilpeachadh_) the stock so portioned, are evidently the result of accurate observation. ‘Whatever be the imperfections, according to modern notions, of this very old semi-family system of runrig husbandry, those tenants who have least departed from it are the most comfortable in North Uist, and, accordingly, in the Outer Hebrides.’ It will probably surprise many to find that a state of society such as is above described should still exist in some of the townships of the Outer Hebrides. It is not many years since similar communities were to be found in the other islands and on the mainland. Their customs and regulations are obviously pervaded by the spirit of the old tribal communities, as exhibited in the Brehon Laws, and still possess, in more or less degree, some of its characteristic features. These farm communities, as they may be called, holding the arable land in runrig, and the pasture land in common, are fast disappearing under the influence of modern agricultural improvement, and it is well that this record of the older system, with its characteristic features still existing in some of the Highland townships, should be preserved ere it passes away for ever. ----- Footnote 313: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, pp. 66, 71. Footnote 314: Robertson’s _Index_, p. 124, No. 25. Footnote 315: _Chartulary of Moray_, p. 34. Footnote 316: _The Thanes of Cawdor_, p. 3. Footnote 317: _Ib_. p. 56. Footnote 318: _Record of Returns for Elgin_, Nos. 25, 178. Footnote 319: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, p. 47. Footnote 320: Shaw’s _Moray_, p. 227. Footnote 321: _Chartulary of Moray_, pp. 83, 342. Footnote 322: _Chartulary of Aberdeen_, vol. i. p. 55. Footnote 323: _Ant. Ab. and Banff_, vol. ii. p. 130, 132. Footnote 324: _Ib_. p. 363. Footnote 325: _Ant. Ab. and Banff_, vol. ii. p. 216. Footnote 326: _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. p. 21. Footnote 327: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, 52, 183. Footnote 328: _Ant. Ab. and Banff_, vol. i. p. 286. Footnote 329: _Exchequer Rolls_, i. pp. 11, 551. Footnote 330: _Ant. Ab. and Banff_, i. 250. Footnote 331: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, 24. 19, 43, 117. Footnote 332: _Ib_. 224. 14. Footnote 333: _Ant. Ab. and Banff_, i. 571. Footnote 334: _Chartulary of Aberdeen_, vol. i. p. 360. These services consisted mainly of the obligation on the tenants to cut the proprietor’s corn. They continued to be exacted from the small tenants in many parts of the north-eastern Lowlands, under the name of Bonnach or Bonnage, till late in the eighteenth century. Each tenant had to give three days’ labour annually, which were called his Bondage days.—_Stat. Acc._, 1433, vi. 146. Footnote 335: _Ib_. vol. i. pp. 12, 15. Footnote 336: _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. p. clxxxi. 442. Footnote 337: _Rotuli Scotiæ_, vol. i. p. 10. _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. p. 12. Footnote 338: Robertson’s _Index_, pp. 17, 18. Footnote 339: _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. p. 586. Footnote 340: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, p. 68, No. 229. Footnote 341: _Ant. Ab. and Banff_, vol. iii. p. 362. Footnote 342: Robertson’s _Index_, p. 117, No. 72. Footnote 343: _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. p. 585. In later allusions to Fettercairn and Kincardine in these Rolls they are always spoken of as convertible names for the same Thanage. Footnote 344: Robertson’s _Index_. Footnote 345: _Stat. Account_ (1791), vol. xvii. p. 387. Footnote 346: _Misc. of Spalding Club_, vol. v. p. 209. Footnote 347: Robertson’s _Index_, p. 32. Footnote 348: See _ante_, vol. ii. p. 343. Footnote 349: _Chartulary of St. Andrews_, pp. 229, 234, 238, 240. Footnote 350: _Charters of Rostenoth._ Footnote 351: _Ant. Aberd. and Banff_, vol. iv. p. 711. Footnote 352: _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. p. 588. Footnote 353: _Retours for Forfar_, Nos. 377, 507. Footnote 354: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, p. 171; _Retours for Forfar_, 116. Footnote 355: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, pp. 32, 72. Footnote 356: _Retours for Forfar_, 536. Footnote 357: Robertson’s _Index_, pp. 18, 23. Footnote 358: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, p. 44. Footnote 359: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, p. 43. Footnote 360: _Chart. of Arbroath_, pp. 4, 67. Footnote 361: _Ib_. pp. 163, 325. _Hist. MSS. Rep._ II. p. 166. Footnote 362: _Chart. of Arbroath_, pp. 38, 39. Footnote 363: _Exchequer Rolls_, i. p. 10. Footnote 364: _Ib_. pp. 8, 50. Footnote 365: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, p. 124. Footnote 366: _Chart. of Arbroath_, pp. 204, 330. Footnote 367: _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. p. 589. Footnote 368: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, p. 88. Footnote 369: _Retours for Forfar_, Nos. 424, 449. Footnote 370: _Chart. of St. Andrews_, p. 128; _Retours, Fife_, 1370. Footnote 371: _Chart. of May_, p. 2; Robertson’s _Index_, p. 25. Footnote 372: _Chart. of St. Andrews_, p. 117; _Retours, Fife_, 131. Footnote 373: On the shore of the Firth, near North Queensferry, was probably a thanage of Fordell, as in 1451 we find a grant to the monastery of Dunfermline by John, Thane de Fordell, and Alexander Thain, his son; but from the late date it is possible that this may have been a proper name.—_Chart. of Dunfermline_, p. 326. Footnote 374: _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. p. 16; Robertson’s _Index_, 28; _Retours, Kinross_, 2. Footnote 375: _Exchequer Rolls_, i. pp. 18, 534. Footnote 376: _Chart. of Inchaffray_, p. 24; _Retours, Perth_, 305. Footnote 377: _Chart. of Inchaffray_, s. 15, 16, 28. Footnote 378: _Third Report of MS. Commission_, 406; _Retours, Perth_, 954. Footnote 379: _Chart. of Inchaffray_, p. 20; _Retours, Perth_, 140, 471, 729. Footnote 380: Crinan, the founder of the house, is termed in the Chronicles abbot of Dunkeld, and by Fordun Abthanus de Dull. There was no such title as abthanus, but the abthanrie of Dull appears in the Crown from the earliest period. Footnote 381: _Liber de Scon_, p. 41. Footnote 382: _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. p. 348. Footnote 383: _Chartulary of St. Andrews_, pp. 245, 295. Footnote 384: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, 74; Robertson’s _Index_, 57. Footnote 385: These charters are, or were, in the Atholl charter-chest, but are not noticed by Mr. W. Fraser in his account of the Atholl charters in the _Seventh Report of the Hist. MSS. Commission_, p. 703. Footnote 386: Mr. Innes, in his _Legal Antiquities_, p. 80, where a short notice of the thanage is given, inadvertently confounds the M‘Intoshes of Tiriny in Atholl with the M‘Intoshes of Monzievaird in Stratherne. Footnote 387: _Liber de Scon_, pp. 21, 36. Footnote 388: _Scotichronicon_, B. vi. c. 36. Donald Bane is improperly made by the peerage-writers father of Madach, first earl of Atholl, and progenitor of these earls; but there is no real authority for this; and the claim of Cumyn to the crown of Scotland, through his grand-daughter, shows that he left no male descendants, and that there were no subsequent earls of Gowry adds probability to the fact. Footnote 389: _Liber de Scon_, pp. 6, 41, 45, 46, 95. Footnote 390: _Chart. of Arbroath_, p. 27. Footnote 391: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, pp. 137, 172. Footnote 392: _Liber de Scon_, pp. 112, 113. Footnote 393: _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. pp. 3, 17, 18; _Reg. Mag. Sig._, p. 166. Footnote 394: _Chartulary of Cambuskenneth_, pp. 250, 199; _Chart. of Glasgow_, p. 9. Footnote 395: _Chartulary of Cambuskenneth_, p. 108; _Chart. of Holyrood_, p. 51; Robertson’s _Index_, 38; _Chart. of Glasgow_, p. 120. Footnote 396: _National MSS._, vol. i. Footnote 397: Toscheoderach Barbarum nomen, priscis Scotis et Hybernis usitatum pro serjando vel serviente Curiæ, qui literas citationes mandat executioni. Quod officium dicitur vulgo, ane Mair of Fee.—_Reg. Maj._, p. 13. Footnote 398: Train’s _History of the Isle of Man_, vol. ii. p. 209. Footnote 399: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. i. p. 58. Footnote 400: _Ant. Ab. and Banff_, vol. iv. p. 453. Footnote 401: _Retours, Elgin_, 25. Officium marisfeodi terrarum comitatus de Murray, viz., Thanagie de Murray. Footnote 402: _Ant. of Ab. and Banff_, vol. iv. p. 476. Footnote 403: _Chartulary of Aberdeen_, pp. 4, 6, 88, 428. _Ant. of Ab. and Banff_, vol. iii. p. 428. Footnote 404: _Reg. Nigrum de Aberbrothoc_, p. 128. Footnote 405: _Retours for Kincardine_, No. 19. Footnote 406: The peerage-writers make Madach, earl of Atholl, son of Donald Bane, which, as we have stated, is disproved by the claim of the Cumyns, through female descent from him, to the throne. The _Orkneyinga Saga_ names him Melcolm or Melmare. Footnote 407: The line of these earls is very incorrectly given by the peerage-writers. They give the two sisters an elder anonymous sister, whom they marry to Alan Durward, who is mentioned in the _Chartulary of Arbroath_ (p. 76) as earl of Atholl in 1235; but as Thomas of Galloway died in 1231, leaving Isabella a widow, and her son succeeded in 1242, it is obvious that Alan held the earldom either as husband of the widow or guardian of the son. Then by misdating a charter by which John de Strathbolgie, earl of Atholl, and Ada, countess of Atholl, confirm the donation of the lands of Invervach made to the monks of Cupar by David de Hastings, earl of Atholl, father of Ada, in 1283 in place of 1254, which is the date given by Sir James Balfour, by whom alone a note of this charter has been preserved, they confound David de Strathbolgie, earl of Atholl, who died in a pilgrimage to the Holy Land in 1269, with his grandfather, David de Hastings, earl of Atholl, and his son John, earl of Atholl, with his grandfather, John earl of Atholl, the husband of Ada. Footnote 408: See Riddell’s _Remarks on Scotch Peerage Law_, p. 149, for an account of this dispute. Footnote 409: _The War of the Gaedhil with the Gaill_, pp. 171, 211. Footnote 410: ‘Benedict XII. Dispen. Joanni quondam Engussii de Isle Sodoren. et Amiæ quondam Roderici de Insulis ... 1337.’ Footnote 411: _Scotichronicon_, vol. ii. p. 489. Footnote 412: Et domino Comiti Rossiæ, Lachlano M‘Gillane, Torkell M‘Nell, Tarlano M‘Archir et Duncano Persoun de mandato domini regis ut patet per literas suas subsigneto ostensas super computum sub periculo computancium. Et eidem comiti pro panno laneo, pro capucio tunica caligis et pellibus rubeis pro juppone liiij lb iiij s. 14th July 1438.—_Exchequer Rolls_, vol. v. p. 33. Footnote 413: In the Appendix will be found a translation of part of the Red Book of Clanranald, containing the traditionary history of the Lords of the Isles; and Mr. Gregory’s History of the West Highlands and Isles of Scotland may be referred to for the above sketches. Footnote 414: _Reg. Mag. Sig._, lib. xxx. No. 552. Footnote 415: _Reg. Sec. Sig._, vol. xiii. fol. 17. Footnote 416: _Ib._ vol. xvi. p. 1. Footnote 417: MacNeill Charters. Footnote 418: Argyll Charters. Footnote 419: Protocol Book of Gavin Hamilton. Footnote 420: Poltalloch Charters. Footnote 421: Letterfinlay Charters, _Orig. Par._, vol. ii. p. 61. Footnote 422: _Acts of Parliament_, v. 114. Footnote 423: _Chart. of Lennox_, p. 49. Totum officium quod dicitur Tosheagor de Levenax. Footnote 424: _Record of Retours_, Kirkcudbright, No. 30. Robertson’s _Index_, 146. 25. Footnote 425: Fordun’s _Chronicle_, Book v. Footnote 426: _Scotichronicon_, ii. p. 252. Footnote 427: Wyntoun, vol. ii. p. 141 (ed. 1872). Footnote 428: Skene, _De Verborum Significatione_, _voce_ Clan Macduff. Footnote 429: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. i. p. 551. Footnote 430: _Ib_. p. 746. Footnote 431: _Historical Documents of Scotland_, edited by J. Stevenson, vol. i. p. 415. Footnote 432: _Chart. of Moray_, p. 12. Footnote 433: Fordun, _Chronicle_, vol. ii. p. 38. Footnote 434: _Scotichronicon_, vol. ii. p. 420. Footnote 435: Wyntoun’s _Chronicle_, vol. iii. p. 58. Footnote 436: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. i. p. 579. Footnote 437: Wyntoun’s _Chronicle_, ed. 1879, vol. iii. p. 63. Footnote 438: _Scotichronicon_, vol. ii. p. 420. Footnote 439: See Skene, _De Verborum Sig_., voce _Duellum_. Footnote 440: _Book of Pluscarden_, vol. i. p. 330. Footnote 441: _Chart. of Moray_, p. 382. Footnote 442: MacIntosh Charters. Footnote 443: _Reg. Mag. Sig_., lib. xiii. No. 96. Footnote 444: Hector Boece terms them the Clan Quhete, substituting simply _t_ for _l_. His translators Bellenden, Leslie, and Buchanan, all have Clan Chattan. Footnote 445: Just as Saint Caimhghin of Glendalough became Saint Kevin, so Caimhghilla became Kevil. Bower uses _k_ for _c_ and _quh_ for _ch_. Footnote 446: _Miscellany of the Spalding Club_, vol. iv. p. 26. Footnote 447: _Hist. of Moray_, p. 67. This Shaw was believed to be the first of the Shaws of Rothiemurchus, but the earlier part of the pedigree of this family is quite fictitious, for he is made to be the son of Gilchrist, son of John, who was in fact his opponent. He is said by Shaw to have died in 1405, but the traditionary dates connected with the Clan Chattan history are quite unreliable. Footnote 448: These genealogies are printed in the Appendix. Footnote 449: Tribus hæ sunt consanguinei parum in dominiis habentes, sed unum caput progeniei tanquam principem sequentes cum suis affinibus et subditis.—J. Major, _Scot. Hist._, lib. vi. f. 132. Footnote 450: _Black Book of Taymouth_, pp. 185, 200. Many others of the same description will be found in this book. Footnote 451: _Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis_, p. 206. Footnote 452: _Black Book of Taymouth_, p. 179. Footnote 453: _Black Book of Taymouth_, p. 223. Footnote 454: _National MSS. of Scotland_, vol. ii. No. 84. Footnote 455: _Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis_, p. 20. Footnote 456: _Letters from a gentleman in the North of Scotland in 1726_, vol. ii. p. 1. A few unnecessary expressions have been omitted. Footnote 457: The history of the clans from the forfeiture of the Lords of the Isles in 1492 to the year 1625 is given with great accuracy and detail in Mr. Gregory’s _History of the West Highlands and Isles of Scotland_. Footnote 458: In 1566 the Privy Council issued a proclamation ‘that none presume to molest the Highlanders resorting to markets in the Lowlands.’—_Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis_, p. 151. Footnote 459: Article on the Culloden Papers in the _Quarterly Review_ for January 1826, written by Sir Walter Scott. Footnote 460: _Acts of Parl._, vol. iii. p. 462. Footnote 461: Thus it was only after the temporary break-up of the Clan Chattan and Clan Cameron in 1429 that we find captains of these clans appearing; and when Hector MacIntosh, bastard son of Ferquhard MacIntosh, who died in 1574, led the clan for a time, he is termed in 1529 Captain of Clan Chattan. The first Captain of Clanranald was Ian Mudortach, the bastard son of a second son; and the only time that this title appears in connection with the Clan Hustain, or Macdonalds of Sleat, is when it was led by an uncle of the chief, then in minority, who appears as Captain of the Clan Hustain. Footnote 462: As in the Clan Chattan, where the Clan Vuireach, or old Clan Chattan, seldom recognised the authority of the captain; and in the Clanranald, where the MacDonells of Glengarry held aloof. Footnote 463: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. iv. p. 71. Footnote 464: _Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis_, p. 27. Footnote 465: This syllable _Gal_ must not be confounded, as is often done, with _Gall_, a stranger; whence the names _Fingall_ and _Dubhgall_, white and black foreigners, were applied to the Norwegians and Danes. Footnote 466: _Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis_, pp. 26, 27. Footnote 467: The genealogy of the Clan Dubhgal in the Book of Ballimote has the mistake of making Dubhgal the son of Ragnall son of Somairle, in place of making him, as he was, son of Somairle and brother of Ragnall; and the same mistake occurs in the MS. of 1467. Footnote 468: The genealogies contained in these MSS. will be found thus grouped in the Appendix, No. VIII. Footnote 469: President Forbes, in his Memorial states that the Campbells were in Gaelic, Clan Guin or O’Duine. Footnote 470: Charter ‘Duncanus filius Ferchar et Laumannus filius Malcolmi nepos ejusdem Duncani’ to the monastery of Paisley, of the lands of Kilmor inter 1230 et 1246.—_Chartulary of Paisley_, p. 132; confirmed by Angus, son of Duncan, in 1270. Footnote 471: _Chart. of St. Andrews_, p. 117. Footnote 472: _Chart. of Moray_, p. 87. Footnote 473: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. iv. p. 138. Footnote 474: Manuscript Hist. of the Grants. Footnote 475: Buchanan of Auchmar’s Inquiry. Footnote 476: MS. Hist. of M‘Kenzies. Footnote 477: MS. Hist. of M‘Intoshes. Footnote 478: MS. Histories of the family. See also Campbell’s _West Highland Tales_, vol. iii. p. 87. Mr. Campbell, however, erroneously translates the name of Duimhn as Brown. The word has no connection whatever with the Gaelic Donn, which signifies brown. Footnote 479: _Chartulary of Melrose_, vol. i. p. 172. Footnote 480: The first account has been printed by Mr. W. Fraser in his _Earls of Cromartie_, vol. ii. p. 462. The second account was printed some years ago. Footnote 481: Peregrinus et Hybernus nobilis ex familia Geraldinorum, qui proximo anno ab Hybernia pulsus apud Regem benigne acceptus, huiusque in curia permansit, et in præfato prælio strenue pugnavit. De quo supra in prælio ad Largos, qui postea se fortiter contra Insulanos gessit, et ibi inter eos in præsidium relictus. Footnote 482: Alexander Dei gracia rex Scottorum omnibus probis hominibus tocius terre sue clericis et laicis salutem. Sciant presentis et futuri me pro fideli servicio michi navato per Colinum Hybernum, tam in bello quam in pace, ideo dedisse et hac presenti carta mea concessisse dicto Colino et ejus successoribus, totas terras de Kintaile; Tenendas de nobis et successoribus nostris in liberam baroniam cum guardia: Reddendo servicium forinsecum et fidelitatem. Testibus Andrea episcopo Moraviensi, Waltero Stewart, Henrico de Balioth, camerario, Arnoldo de Campania, Thoma Hostiario, vicecomite de Invernes. Apud Kincardine, ix. die Januarii anno regni domini regis xvi. Footnote 483: Robertson’s _Index_, p. 100. Footnote 484: Two other charters, said to be granted by David II. in 1360 and Robert III. in 1380, are equally suspicious. Footnote 485: Notwithstanding of this, it has found a defender in Mr. W. Fraser, who, in his _Earls of Cromartie_, not only maintains the genuineness of both documents, but declares the Irish MS. of 1467, containing the earlier genealogy, to be ‘quite fabulous.’ As Mr. Fraser never saw the MS. in question, and probably does not include among his requirements a knowledge of Irish MSS., his opinion is not entitled to much weight. The MS. does not, however, stand alone. Footnote 486: In 1638 a history of the two Geraldine families—viz., the Earls of Desmond and Kildare—was compiled by a Dr. Russell, which may have attracted the Earl to this family, but there is no trace in it of Colin Fitzgerald. Footnote 487: _Earls of Cromartie_, vol. ii. p. 509. Footnote 488: Douglas’s _Baronage_, p. 375. _Chronicle of Man_, ed. Munch, pp. 19, 25. An inscription upon an Irish meather or wooden drinking-cup preserved at Dunvegan has been supposed to indicate this descent from the kings of Mann. The inscription, says Sir Walter Scott, in the notes to the _Lord of the Isles_, p. 312, may run thus at length:—‘Ufo Johannis Mich Magni principis de Hr Manæ Vich Liahia Magryneil et sperat Domino Ihesu dari clementiam illorum opera. Fecit Anno Domini 993, Onili Oim;’ which may run in English, ‘Ufo, the son of John the son of Magnus, Prince of Man, the grandson of Liahia Macgryneil, trusts in the Lord Jesus that their works will obtain mercy. Oneil Oimi made this in the year of God nine hundred and ninety-three.’ The true reading is as follows:—‘Katharina Nigryneill uxor Johannis Meguigir principis de Fermanac me fieri fecit Anno Domini 1493. Oculi omnium in te sperant Domine et tu das escam illorum in tempore opportuno.’ That is, ‘Katharine MacRannal, wife of John Macguire, Lord of Fermanagh, caused me to be made in the year of our Lord 1493. The eyes of all hope in Thee, O Lord, and Thou givest them food in due season.’ Footnote 489: See Genealogy of M‘Leans in Appendix, No. VIII. Footnote 490: _Collectanea de Rebus Albanicis_, p. 291. Footnote 491: _Chart. of Aberdeen_, vol. i. pp. 12, 15; _Chart. of Moray_, p. 21. Footnote 492: _Chart. of Aberdeen_, vol. i. p. 136. Footnote 493: _Chart. of Moray_, p. 419; _Spalding Miscellany_, ii. 252. Footnote 494: The district of Glenchatt in Birse, and the burn of Chattie, may have some connection with the name of Clanchattan. Footnote 495: _Exchequer Rolls_, vol. i. p. 24. Footnote 496: In a History of the Drummonds, compiled in 1861, the first Alwyn, there called Malise, is made a son of Ferchad, Earl of Stratherne, and marries Ada, daughter of David, earl of Huntingdon. This spurious descent of the earls of Lennox from the Northumbrian Archill was questioned by Lord Hailes, and rightly rejected by Mr. Robertson in his _Scotland under her Early Kings_, and by Mr. Cosmo Innes, but has again been revived by Mr. W. Fraser in his book of _The Lennox_, who is unable to produce any further authority for it than that it must have been received from the Laird of Macfarlane, because it appears in Douglas’s _Peerage_, to which that distinguished antiquary contributed some of the materials, and that the old earls of Lennox are called by the Gaelic bards ‘Siol Arkyll,’ that is, descendants of Arkill, but in both instances he is mistaken, for Douglas took his statement from Crawford, and it is not true that the old earls were ever called by the Gaelic bards ‘Siol Arkyll,’ and Mr. Fraser gives no authority for the statement. Footnote 497: Item si calumpniatus vocaverit warentum aliquem in Ergadia que pertinet ad Scociam tunc veniat at Comitem Atholie vel ad Abbatem de Glendochard et ipsi mittent cum eo homines suos qui testentur super dictam attestam.—_Acts of Parliament_, vol. i. p. 372. Footnote 498: The Dean makes Gregor son of John son of Malcolm son of Duncan Beg son of Duncan a Sruthlee (that is, of Stirling) son of Gillafaelan son of Aodh Urchaidh son of Kenneth son of Alpin.—_Dean of Lismore’s Book_, p. 161; and Gaelic portion, p. 127. See also poems, p. 141. Footnote 499: Douglas’s _Baronage_, pp. 497, 498. Footnote 500: In the main the author has seen little reason to alter the distribution of the clans in an earlier work, _The Highlanders of Scotland_, published in 1837, to which the reader is referred for their detailed history. Footnote 501: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. iv. p. 548. Footnote 502: _Ib_. p. 547. Footnote 503: This account is taken mainly from Marshall’s _Agriculture of the Central Highlands_, and from private information. Footnote 504: This is very similar to the custom in the Bavarian and Austrian Alps, where the summer pasture is termed an Alp and the bothies _Sennerhütte_. Footnote 505: _Acts of Parliament_, vol. vii. p. 438. Footnote 506: _Ib_. vol. ix. p. 421. Footnote 507: The old servile condition of the small tenants, by which they were attached to the soil, and could not be severed from it, which is usually regarded as an oppressive custom, would probably have been valued at this time as a privilege. Footnote 508: The preceding sketch has been mainly taken from the reports of the Board for the Relief of Highland Destitution in the years 1847-1850 (Third Report for 1848, p. 24; Second Report for 1850, p. 40). The author filled the office of Secretary to the Board, which necessarily brought the state of the population under his notice, and these reports were compiled by himself. Footnote 509: Bo le h-al, cow and her progeny. A cow is said to be entitled to her calf for a year and a day. Footnote 510: A name applied in the Highlands to one-year-old sheep. Footnote 511: The constable of the townland is sometimes termed _am Maor beg_, the little or sub-Maor. Maor is a frequent name of an office-holder, as _Maor gruinnd_, ground-officer; _Maor fearainn_, land-steward; _Maor ceilp_, kelp-officer; _Maor cladaich_, shore-officer; _Maor coille_, forester. APPENDIX. I. TRANSLATION of a part of the BOOK OF CLANRANALD, containing the Legendary History of the Lords of the Isles, as given by the Macvurichs, hereditary Sennachies of the Clan. The children of Eochaidh Duibhlein, son of Cairbre Lithfeachar, son of Cormac, were three sons, who were called the three Collas,—Colla Uais, Colla Da crioch, and Colla Meann; their baptismal names were Caireall, Aodh, and Muireadhach, as says the poet— Caireall, the first name of Colla Uais; Aodh, of Colla Meann of great vigour; Muireadhach, of Colla Da chrioch; They were imposed on them after rebelling. Colla Uais, son of Eochaidh Duibhlein, assumed the sovereignty of Erinn in the year of the age of Christ 322; and he was four years in the sovereignty of Erinn when Muireadhach Tireach opposed him with a powerful army, and gave battle to the three Collas, and expelled them to Alban, where they obtained extensive lands, for Oileach, daughter of the king of Alban, was their mother. In the time when Cormac Finn was in the sovereignty over Alban, 362 (326), they spent some time in Alban, until a war broke out between Muireadhach Tireach, king of Erinn and the Ulltaibh, viz., the Clanna Rughruidhe; and he invited the sons of his father’s brother, that is, the three Collas, to Erinn to assist him against the Clanna Rughruidhe and the adjoining districts. They responded to the king of Erinn, and waged a fierce war against the Clanna Rughruidhe; and Feargus Foga, king of Uladh, and his three sons, fell by them; and they took possession of the province of Uladh, and of the Oilltrian of the province of Connacht, and many other possessions which were inherited by their race in succession from the kings of Erinn. As to Colla Uais, after he had terminated that war he returned back to Alban, and left all those possessions to his brothers; and having spent fifteen years there he went on a free visit to Erinn, and died at Teamhair of the kings, Anno Domini 335. Colla Uais had four good sons, namely, Eochuidh and Fiachra Tort, and Fearadhach and Maine. All the Clann Domhnuill in Alban and in Erinn are of the race of Eochuidh. The Turtruighe and Fir Luirg are of the race of Fiachraidh Tort. The Fir Li and Fir Lacha are of the race of Fearadhach. The race of Main is not known to us. A goodly race, descended from Colla Da chrioch, flourished in Erinn, namely Maguire, chief over the country of Fermanagh; Mac Mahon, chief over the country of Monaghan; O’Hanlon, and O’Kelly, and many others. I have seen nothing written of the race of Colla Meann, except such holy men of them as went into the Church. Many of the holy people of Alban and Erinn were descended from the three Collas. Here is the direct line of descent from Colla Uais. Eochaidh was begotten of Colla Uais; Carran was begotten of Eochaidh; Earc was begotten of Carran; Maine was begotten of Earc; Fearghus was begotten of Maine; Gothfruigh was begotten of Fearghus; Niallghus was begotten of Gothfruigh. [The genealogy of Macdomhnuill of Clann cheallaigh: Flannagan, son of Tadhg, son of Fearmara, son of Tadhg, son of Lochlann, son of Art, son of Fianacht, son of Domhnall, from whom are the Clann Domhnaill of Clann Ceallaidh, son of Colgan, son of Ceallach, son of Tuathal, son of Maolduin, son of Tuadan, son of Tuathal, son of Daimhinn, son of Cairbre, son of Dom Airgid, son of Niallghus.] Suibhne was begotten of Niallghus; Mearghach was begotten of Suibhne; Solomh was begotten of Mearghach; Giolla Oghamhnan was begotten of Solomh. It is from this Giolla Oghamhnan descended the Clann Domhnaill of Ros Laogh, from a brother of Giolla Bride, son of Giolla Oghamhnan; and it was Giolla Oghamhnan that erected Mainistir-na-Sgrine, in Tir Iarach, in the county of Sligo, in the province of Connacht, and his name is there. (And be it known to you that the constant title borne by the clann of this tribe, from Ragnall, son of Somairli, up to Colla Uais, was O’Colla and Toisech of Eargaoidheal.) Giolla Bride, son of Gille Oghamhnan, son of, and from him, the Toisechs of Earargaoidheal (Argyll), having been among his kindred in Erinn, that is, from the Clann Colla, which are the Manchuidh and Mathdamnaidh, viz., the tribes of Macguire and Macmahon, it happened that this tribe held a meeting and conference in Fermanagh, on the estate of Macguire, and among the matters to be transacted was that Giollabride should get some estate of his own country, since he had been in banishment from his inheritance, by the power of the Lochlannach and Fionngallach (Norwegians). When Giollabride saw a large host of young robust people in the assembly, and that they were favourable to himself, the favour he asked of his friends was, that so many persons as the adjacent fort in the place could hold should be allowed to go to Alban with him, in the hope that he might obtain possession of his own inheritance and portion of it. Giolla Bride proceeded with that party to Alban, where they landed. They made frequent onsets and attacks on their enemies during this time of trouble, for their enemies were powerful and numerous at that time. All the islands from Manann (Mann) to Arca (Orkneys), and all the Oirir (border land) from Dun Breatan (Dumbarton) to Cata (Caithness) in the north, were in the possession of the Lochlannach; and such of the Gaedhal of those lands as remained were protecting themselves in the woods and mountains; and at the end of that time Giolla Bride had a good son, who had come to maturity and renown. It happened that the small party who were followers of Giolla Bride and Somairli (Somerled) were in the mountains and woods of Ardgobbar (Ardgour) and of the Morbhairne (Morvern), and they were surprised there by a large force of Lochlannach and Fionnghallach. All the soldiers and plundering parties which Somerled had, gathered round him, and he arranged them front and rear. Somerled put them in battle order, and made a great display of them to his enemies. He marched them three times before them in one company, so that they supposed there were three companies there. After that he attacked them, and they were defeated by Somerled and his party, and he did not halt in the pursuit till he drove them northward across the river Sheil, and a part escaped with their king to the Isles; and he did not cease from that work till he cleared the western side of Alban of the Lochlannach, except the Islands of the Fionnlochlann (Norwegians), called Innsigall; and he gained victory over his enemies in every field of battle. He spent part of his time in war and part in peace, until he marched with an army to the vicinity of Glaschu (Glasgow), when he was slain by his page, who took his head to the king, in the year of our Lord 1180 (1164). His own people assert that it was not to make war against the king that he went on that expedition, but to obtain peace, for he did more in subduing the king’s enemies than any war he waged against him. Somerled had a good family, viz., Dubhghal and Raghnall, and the Gall mac Sgillin, this man being so named from whom are descended the Clann Gall in the Glens. Bethog, daughter of Somerled, was a religious woman and a Black Nun. It is she that erected Teampall Chairinis, or the Church of Cairinis, in Uibhist (Uist). Dubhgal, son of Somerled, took the chiefship of Eargaoidheal and Ladharna (Argyll and Lorn). Raghnall and his race went to Innsigall and Ceanntire, where his posterity succeeded him. Ragnall, king of Innsigall, and Oirirgaoidheal (the Isles and Argyll), was the most distinguished of the Gall or Gaoidheal for prosperity, sway of generosity, and feats of arms. Three monasteries were erected by him, viz., a monastery of Black Monks (Benedictines) in I (Iona), in honour of God and Columcille; a monastery of Black Nuns in the same place, and a monastery of Grey Friars at Saghadul (Saddle in Kintyre), and it is he also who founded the monastic order of Molaise. Be it known to you that Ragnall with his force was the greatest power which King Alexander had against the King of Lochlann at the time he took the Islands from the Lochlannach, and after having received a cross from Jerusalem, partaken of the Body of Christ, and received unction, he died, and was buried at Reilic Oghran in I (Iona) in the year of our Lord 1207. And it was some time after this that Ragnall, son of Gofraidh, king of the Fionngall (Norwegians), was treacherously killed by Amhlamh, son of Gofraidh, in the year of our Lord 1229. From this forth the rightful inheritance of Innsigall came to Ragnall, and his race after him, for the daughter of Amhlamh Dearg, son of Gofraidh, was the mother of Ragnall, son of Somerled. This daughter of Amhlamh was the lawful heir of her father and of her two brothers, viz. Ragnall and Amhlamh Dubh. Messages came from Teamhair (Tara in Ireland) that Domhnall, son of Ragnall, should take the government of Innsigall and of the greater part of the Gaoidheal. He had good children, viz. Aonghus Mor, the heir, and Alasdair, from whom descended the Clann Domhnaill Renna, Mac William of the province of Connaught, and the Clann t-Sidhigh (Sheehy) of Munster, who are sprung from Siothach an Dornan, son of Eachuin, son of Alasdair. Aonghus Mor, son of Domhnall, son of Ragnall, took the place of his father, and it was in his time that the war of the Baliols and the Bruces broke out. The tribe of Dubhgal, son of Somerled, took the side of the Baliols, and the race of Ragnal, son of Somerled, the side of Robert Bruce, and all the garrisons from Inbhear Feothfar (Dingwall) in the Ross to the Mull of Kintyre were in the possession of MacDubhgal during that time, while the tribe of Ragnall were under the yoke of their enemies. Aonghus Mor had good children, viz. Aonghus Og, the heir, and Eoin, from whom sprang the Clann Eoin of Ardnamurchan, and Alasdair, from whom descended the Clann Alasdair; and Aonghus na Conluighe, from whom are sprung the Clann Donchaidh and Robertsons; and much may be written about this Aonghus Mor which is not here. He died in Ile (Isla) in the year of our Lord 1234 (1294). Aonghus Og, son of Aonghus Mor, son of Domhnall, son of Ragnall, son of Somerled, the noble and renowned high chief of Innsigall. He married the daughter of Cuinnbhuighe O’Cathan. She was the mother of Eoin, son of Aonghus, and it is with her came the unusual retinue from Erinn, viz. four-and-twenty sons of clan families, from whom sprang four-and-twenty families in Alban. Aonghus had another son, viz. Eoin Og an Fhraoich, from whom descended the Clann Eoin of Glencomhan (Glencoe), who are called the Clann Domhnall an Fhraoich (of the heather). This Aonghus Og died in Ile (Isla), and his body was interred in I (Iona) in the year of our Lord 1306 (1326). Eoin, son of Aonghus Og, succeeded his father in the chief government of Innsigall. He had good children, viz. three sons by Anna, daughter of Ruadhri, son of Ailin, high chief of Lagarna (Lorn), and one daughter Mairi, and that Mairi was the wedded wife of Eachduinn MacGiolla Eoin (Hector MacLean), Lord of Dubhard (Duart), and Lochlan was his brother, and she was interred with the Lord of Coll in I (Iona), in the church of the Black Nuns. The eldest sons of Eoin were Ragnall, Gothfruigh and Aonghus; however he did not marry the mother of these men from the altar, but came to the resolution of marrying her at the time of her death, for she was a sufficient wife for him; but his advisers opposed him regarding it, for it appeared to them that he could get a suitable match if an heir was made from his first progeny, although he was young and vigorous. Therefore he made a provision for his son Ragnall, and that was all the land which extended from Cillchuimin in Obuirthairbh (Abertarff) to the river Sheil, and from the river Sheil to the Belleith in the north, Eig and Rum, and the two Uibhists (North and South Uist). And after that he proceeded to the mouth of the river of Glascu, and had threescore long-ships with him, and he married Margaret, the daughter of Robert Stuart, whom we call King of Alban, but the real person was Robert, Earl of Fife, that is the brother-german of old Robert Fearingiora, that is the king, and he was governor of Alban. And she bore to Eoin three good sons, viz. Domhnall of Ile, the heir, and Eoin Mor the Tanist, and Alasdair Carrach, the third son. Eoin had another son, viz. Marcos, from whom descended the Clann Domhnall of Cnoic-an-chluith in Tir Eoghain (Tirone in Ireland). This Eoin enjoyed a long life. It is he that made donations to Icolumcille in his own time, and it is he also that covered the chapel of Elan Eorsag and the chapel of Elan Finlagan, and the chapel of Elan Suibhne (island in Loch Sween), with all their appropriate instruments for order and mass and the service of God, for the better upholding of the monks and priests this lord kept in his company; and it is he that erected the monastery of the Holy Cross a long time before his death; and he died in his own castle of Ardtorinis, while monks and priests were over his body, he having received the body of Christ and having been anointed, his fair body was brought to Icolumcille, and the abbot and the monks and vicars came to meet him, as it was the custom to meet the body of the king of Fionnghall, and his service and waking were honourably performed during eight days and eight nights, and he was laid in the same grave with his father in Teampal Oghrain in the year of our Lord 1380. Ragnall, the son of Eoin, was High Steward over Innsigall at the time of his father’s death, being in advanced age and ruling over them. On the death of his father he called a meeting of the nobles of Innsigall and of his brethren at one place, and he gave the sceptre to his brother at Cill Donan in Egg, and he was nominated MacDonald and Domhnall of Ile (Isla) contrary to the opinion of the men of Innsigall. A man of augmenting churches and monasteries was this Ragnall, son of Eoin, son of Aonghus Og, from whom the name of Clann Raghnall has been applied to his race. He bestowed a Tirunga (unciata) of land in Uibhisd (Uist) on the monastery of I (Iona) for ever, in honour of God and of Columcille. He was governor of the whole of the Northern Oirir (Coastland) and of the Isles, until he died in the year of the age of Christ 1386, in his own manor of Caislen Tirim, having left a family of five sons. We shall now treat of Domhnall a hile (Donald of Isla), son of Eoin, son of Aonghus Oig, the brother of Ragnall, how he took the lordship with the consent of his brethren and the nobles of Innsigall, all other persons being obedient to him, and he married Mairi, daughter of the Earl of Ros, and it is through her that the earldom of Ros came to the Clan Domhnall. He was styled Earl of Ros and MacDomhnall, and High Chief of Innsigall. There are many exploits and deeds written of him in other places. He fought the battle of Gairfech (Garrioch or Harlaw) against Duke Murdoch in defence of his own right and of the earldom of Ros, and on the return of King James the First from the captivity of the King of Sagsan (England), Domhnall of Ile obtained the king’s goodwill and confirmation of Ros and the rest of his inheritance, and Duke Murdoch and his two sons were beheaded. He (Domhnuill) was an entertainer of clerics and priests and monks in his companionship, and he gave lands in Mull and in Isla to the monastery of I, and every immunity which the monastery of I had from his ancestors before him; and he made a covering of gold and silver for the relic of the hand of Coluimcille, and he himself took the brotherhood of the order, having left a lawful and suitable heir in the government of Innsigall and of Ros, viz. Alasdair son of Domhnaill. He afterwards died in Isla, and his full noble body was interred on the south side of Tempall Oghran. Alasdair, his son, succeeded his father in the earldom of Ros and lordship of Innsigall. He married Margaret Livingston, daughter of the Earl of Lithcu; she was mother of Eoin, who was called Eoin of Ile or Isla, son of Alasdair of Ile, son of Domhnall of Ile. Aonghus Og, son of Eoin, who was called the heir of Eoin, married the daughter of Mac Cailin (Earl of Argyll), and a disagreement arose between him and his father about the division of his territory and land, in consequence of which a war broke out between the chiefs of Innsigall and the tribe of MacDomhnaill, the tribe having joined Aonghus, and the chiefs having joined Eoin. And the affair having been thus carried on, Eoin went to Mac Cailin and gave him all that lay between Abhuinn Fhada (the river Add) and Altna Sionnach at Braigh Chinntire (that is, the lands of Knapdale), for going with him before the king to complain of his son. Shortly afterwards this Aonghus Og had a large entertainment with the men of the north side at Inbhearnis, when he was murdered by Mac ICairbre, his own harper, who cut his throat with a long knife. His father lived a year after him, and all the territories submitted to him, but, however, he restored many of them to the king. The daughter of Mac Cailin, the wife of Aonghus, was pregnant at the time he was killed; and she was kept in custody until she was confined, and she bore a son, and Domhnall was given as a name to him, and he was kept in custody until he arrived at the age of thirty years, when the men of Gleann Comhan (Glencoe) brought him out by a Fenian exploit. On his coming out of custody he came to Innsigall, and the nobles of Innsigall rallied round him. During the time that Domhnall Dubh had been in custody there was a great struggle among the Gaoidheal for power, so that Mac Ceaain of Ardnamurchan almost destroyed the race of Eoin Mor, son of Eoin of Ile and of Ceanntire. Eoin Cathanach, son of Eoin, son of Domnall Balloch, son of Eoin Mor, son of Eoin, son of Aongus Og, Lord of the race of Eoin Mor, and Eoin Mor, son of Eoin Cathanach, and Eoin Og, son of Eoin Cathanach, and Domhnall Balloch, son of Eoin Cathanach, were treacherously taken prisoners by MacCeain on the island of Fionnlagan in Ile; and he conveyed them to Duneidin, and a gallows was erected for them at that place which is called Baramuir (Boroughmuir), and they were executed, and their bodies buried in the church of Saint Francis, which is called Teampal Nua (New church) at this time. There were none left of the children of Eoin Cathanach but Alasdair, son of Eoin Cathanach, and Aongus Ileach, who were hiding in the Glens in Erinn. And it is related of MacCeaain that he expended much wealth of gold and silver in making axes for the purpose of cutting down the woods of the Glens, in the hope he might be able to banish Alasdair, son of Eoin Cathanach, out of the Glens and out of the world. It happened at length that MacCeaain and Alasdair made an agreement and a marriage-contract with each other. Alasdair married his daughter, and she bore a good family to him. In a similar manner a misfortune came over the Clann Domhnall of the north side, for after the death of Eoin of Ile, Earl of Ros, and the killing of Aongus, Alasdair, son of Giollaeaspuig, son of Alasdair of Ile, took possession of the earldom of Ros and of the northern Oirir entirely, and married the daughter of Morbhair Moireagh (Earl of Moray). However, some of the men of the northern side came, when the Clann Choinnidh (Mackenzies) and others rose up in opposition to Alasdair, and fought the battle of Blar, which they call Blar na Pairce. Alasdair had no men left but such as he had of the men of Ros. Alasdair came to the coast after that to seek for a force in Innsigall, and he embarked in a long-ship to the southern Oirir to see if he could find a few remaining of the race of Eoin Mor. Mac Ceaain observed him, and followed him on his track to Oransay of Colonsay, and entered the house upon him, where Alasdair, son of Gilleaspuig, was killed by Mac Ceaain and by Alasdair, son of Eoin Cathanach. This matter remained so for a space of time, until Domhnall Gallda, son of Alasdair, son of Gilleaspuig, came of age; and he came from the Galltachd (the Lowlands) by the direction of Morbhar Moireagh (the Earl of Moray), until he came to Innsigall; and he brought Macleod of Leoghas with him, and a good number of the nobles of Innsigall. They went out on Rudha-Ardnamurchan (the Point of Ardnamurchan), and there they met Alasdair, son of Eoin Cathanach, and he and Domhnall, son of Alasdair, made a compact and agreement with each other; and they together attacked Mac Ceaain at a place called Creagan Airgid, and he and his three sons and many of his people were slain there. Domhnall Gallda was nominated Mac Domhnall of this side of Ruga Ardnamurchan (the Point of Ardnamurchan), and the men of Innsigall submitted to him; but he did not live after that but seven or eight weeks. He died at Cearnaborg in Mull, leaving no family or heir; but three sisters he had, viz. the three daughters of Alasdair, son of Gilleaspuig. A settlement was made on those daughters in the northern Oirir, but they gave up Ros. Alasdair, son of Gilleaspuig, had a natural son, of whose descendants there is some account, viz. Eoin Cam, son of Alasdair, from whom are sprung the men of Achuidh na Cothaichean in the Braighe, and Domhnall Gorm, son of Raghnall, son of Alasdair Dubh, son of Eoin Cam. With regard to Domhnall Dubh, son of Aongus, son of Eoin of Ile, son of Alasdair of Ile, son of Domhnall of Ile, son of Eoin of Ile, son of Aongus Og, viz. the lineal lawful heir of Innsigall and of Ros, on his release from confinement he came to Innsigall, and the men of Innsigall gathered about him; and he and the Earl of Leamnachd (Lennox) made an agreement to raise a large army for the purpose of his getting into possession of his own property; and a ship came to them from England to Caol Muile (Sound of Mull), with money to help them in the war. The money was given to MacGilleoin of Dubhard (MacLean of Duart) to divide among the leaders of the army; they did not get as much as they desired, and therefore the army broke up. When the Earl of Leamhnachd heard that he dispersed his own army, and made an agreement with the king. Macdomhnaill then proceeded to Erinn to request a force to carry on the war, and on his way to Baile Atha Cliath (Dublin) he died at Droichead-Ath (Drogheda) of a fever of five nights, without leaving a son or daughter as his offspring. O’Henna made this on Eoin of Ile:— The sovereignty of the Gael to the Clann Colla, It is right to proclaim it; They were again in the same battalions, The heroes of Fodla (a name of Ireland). The sovereignty of Erinn and of Alban Of the sunny lands Was possessed by the sanguinary sharp-bladed tribes, The fighting champions. The government of the entire tribes was obtained By Eoin of Ile. Alasdair, the lord of hospitality, obtained The profit of kings. Domhnall, Eoin, and two Aonghus’, Who were hospitable and joyful, Four that gained tribute from kings, And to whom the Gael submitted. Domhnall and Raghnall to kings Never did give; Somairle, who was not deceived by flattery, The chief of heroes. Four from Somairle of the blue eyes Up to Suibhne; Four whose dignity was not obscure, It is right to remember them. Six from Suibhne before mentioned To king Colla; Wine they had on the banks of the Banna In angular cups. Were I to enumerate all those connected with him Of the nobles of the Gael, I might give every generation up to Adam, Such as no other man has attained. This is a sketch of the genealogies of the Gael, As I have promised; This tribe with whom no comparison should be made, And to whom sovereignty was due. Age of our Lord 1473, the year that Giollaespuig, son of Alasdair of Ile, died, and his body was interred at Rosmhaircni, viz. the brother of Eoin of Ile, and the father of Alasdair, son of Giollaespuig, was killed by Mac Ceaain in Orbhansaigh Colbhansaigh (Oransay of Colonsay); and the daughter of Mac Duibhsithe of Lochaber was the mother of this Giollaespuig, son of Alasdair of Ile. Age of the Lord 1437. In this year the King of Alban, viz. King James the First, was treacherously killed in the town of Pheart (Perth) by his father’s brother, viz. Morbhair Athfall (Earl of Athole). In the same year died Aonghus, bishop of Innsigall, son of Domhnall of Ile, son of Eoin, son of Aonghus Og. His noble fair body was buried, with his crozier and his episcopal habit, in the transept on the south side of the great choir, which he selected for himself while alive. Domhnall of Ile had another son, a monk, and it was in his time that Baile-an-Mhanuidh in Uibhisd (Uist) was given to the church, anno Domini 1440. In this year died Mairi Leisli Banmorbhair (Countess) of Ros, and Lady of Innsigall, viz. the wife of Domhnall of Ile. I have given you an account of everything you require to know of the descendants of the Clanns of the Collas and Clann Domhnall to the death of Domhnall Dubh at Drochead Atha, viz. the direct line who possessed Innsigall, Ros, and the Garbhchriochan (rough bounds) of Alban. This Domhnall was the son of Aonghus (that was killed at Inbhernis by his own harper Mac IChairbre), son of Eoin of Ile, son of Alasdair, son of Domhnall of Ile, son of Eoin of Ile, son of Aonghus Og, and I know not which of his kindred or friends is his lawful heir. Except these five sons of Eoin, son of Aonghus Og, whom I set down to you, viz. Raghnall and Gothfraigh, the two sons of the daughter of Mac Dubhgaill of Lagairn (Lorn), and Domhnall, and Eoin Mor, and Alasdair Carrach, the three sons of Mairgred Sdiuord, daughter of the Earl of Fife, and governor of the King of Alban. The race of Raghnall, Lord of Clann Raghnaill, viz. the House of Oilen Tirim, and the Lord of Gleann Garadh (Glengarry). Gothfruith left no offspring, except a few poor people who are in North Uibhisd. The offspring of Domhnall of Ile, the eldest son of Mairgred Stiubhord, was Alasdair of Ile, Earl of Ros and Morbhair of the Islands. This Alasdair married Mairgred Livisdon, daughter of the Earl of Lithcu, to whom she bore Eoin the Earl. Alasdair had other children, viz. Huisdinn, by a daughter of Giolla Phadraig Riaigh, son of Ruaighri, son of the Green Abbot, son of the Earl of Ros, whose surname was of the Rosses. He had for patrimony the third part of Lewis, and other lands upon the mainland. It is he that was killed in the parts of Gallolach (Garrioch) when along with Mac Domhnall, viz. Domhnall of Ile. For there were four that went out of the army before any part of the main force went with them, viz. Tormord Macleoid and Torcuill his brother, Lochluinn mac Gillemhaoil and Giolla Padraig mac Ruaighri. Giolla Padraig mac Ruaighri and Lochluinn mac Giollamhaoil were killed, but Tormoid and Torcuill escaped safe from the pursuit. It was this Huisdinn, son of Alasdair, that plundered Orcain (Orkney), and William Macleoid of Heradh (Harris), and the youth of Innsigall were along with him in that expedition. Huisdinn caused Domhnall Gallach, son of Huisdinn, to marry the daughter of Cruner Gall (the Coroner of Caithness), and she was of the Gunns. Huisdinn had other good children, viz. Domhnall Herach, son of Huisdinn, and the daughter of Macleoid of Heradh was his mother; and Eoin, son of Huisdinn, and the daughter of Mac Cean of Ardnamurchan was his mother; but that Eoin left no issue, and Giollaespuig, son of Huisdinn, possessed the lordship, and other sons who are not mentioned here. Domhnall Gruamach, son of Domhnall Gallach, and Domhnall Gorm, son of Domhnall Gruamach, and Catriana, daughter of Alasdair, son of Ailin, Lord of Clann Raghnaill, was his mother, whose descendants still possess the lordship. Giollaespuig, son of Alasdair of Ile, whose mother was daughter of Mac Duibhsithe of Lochabar, and Alasdair, son of Giollaespuig, who obtained possession of the earldom of Ros, and Domhnall, his son, died without issue. Eoin Mor, son of Eoin, son of Aonghus Og, the Tanist to Mac Domhnall, married Mairi Bised, and it was with her the seven Tuaths of the Glens came into the possession of the Clann Domhnall. Alasdair Carrach, the third son, married the daughter of Morbbair Leamhna (the Earl of Lennox), but she bore no children to him. Aonghus, son of Alasdair, whose mother was a daughter of Mac Dubhshibhe, but she was not married to him. Alasdair, son of Aonghus, from whom are descended the race of Alasdair, son of Aonghus, in the Braes of Lochabar. There you have the descendants of these four sons of Eoin, son of Aonghus Og. II. BAILE SUTHAIN SITH EAMHNA. An Irish poem relating to the Kingdom of the Isles, copied from a fragment (paper) of an Irish MS. written _circa_ A.D. 1600, in the possession of W. M. Hennessy, Esq., collated with a copy contained in the Book of Fermoy (R. I. Academy), transcribed about A.D. 1457. II. TRANSLATION BY W. M. HENNESSY, Esq. I. Baile suthain sioth Eamhna, Cruthaidh an chrioch a ttarla, Raith chaomh os cionn gach diongna ’Nab iomdha craobh fhionn abhla. I. A perpetual place is Sith-Eamhna, Beauteous the territory in which it is found A fair Rath above every fort, In which fair apple-trees are plenty. II. Eamhoin abhlach as uire, Teamhoir na tteaghlach mbuaidhe, Tearc dun na cnoc as caoimhe, Na mbrot naoidhe (naeighi) n-ur n-uaine. II. Eamhain of the apples, the freshest, The Tara of the victorious households, Few the duns and hills more fair, In their young, fresh, green garments. III. Eamhuin raith aoibhin ionnfhuar (fhinnfhuar), Raith as faoilidh fa fhionndan, Geabhuidh rod go ro seandun, Bo bheannur og ar ioman. III. Emhain, the delightful, cool Rath, The Rath to which fair art is welcome; The road to the old fort will A young-horned cow a-driving take. IV. Iomhda an Eamhoin fhinn fhear uir D’fhearaibh ar a sil saor shuil, Marcach eich duinn go dioghair Tre dhreich siodhain ccuir (cuir) ccraobhuir (craebair). IV. In bright Emhain of the fresh grass, Many the men on whom a noble eye looks; Many the vehement rider of a brown steed Approaching in peace through the branchy woods. V. Iomhda an (ind) Eamhoin (Emain) na n-innbhear (indmher), Ris nar dhealaigh a doinnfleadh, Guirt ar na nar a bhfagmar (an fhamur), Dharbhar ghlan chuirp an choimdeadh (choimghedh). V. Many in Emhain of the estuaries (From which their deep floods have not departed) The fields tilled in harvest With clear corn of the Lord’s body. VI. Suairc bfhairche fhir an dumha (fir in duma), Atibh na tairthe meala, Dul go sidh (cu sid) bhlaith an (in) bhrogha. Dola go (cu) raith mhin meadha. VI. Joyous the estate of the man of the _dumha_ Which has drunk the showers of honey; To go to the sweet _sidh_ of the Brug Is to go to the smooth Bath of mead. VII. Eamhain (Em̄) abhlach na n-iobhar Sleamhain barrdhath a bileadh, Baile nua san (fan) dubh droighean, Nar hoilead lugh ua an fhilead. VII. The appley Emhain of the yews, Smooth, top-coloured are its trees; A new place under the black thorn, In which was nursed Lugh, descendant of the poet.[512] VIII. Eamhain (Em̄) na nabhall ccumhra (cumra), Teamhair (Temair) Mhanann gan (cin) mheabhla, As iad (assiat) cuaine saor (saer) Sadhbha, Abhla craobh (craebh) n-uaine n-Eamhna. VIII. Emhain of the juicy apples, The Tara of Manann, without disgrace; The noble progeny of Sabia Are the apples of the green branch of Emhain. IX. Tusa (tussa) mac Sadhbha saoire, As (is) tu an slat (intshlat) abhla as (ar) aille, Ca dia do bhru na boinne Do roine ria thu a taidhe. IX. Thou, the son of noble Sabia, Thou the most beauteous apple rod; What God from Bru of the Boyne Created thee with her in secret? X. A Raghnuill, a ri an (in) diongna, Ra dhruim (druim) dha (da) thi ar ti tearla (herrla) Do gheabhae (ghebha) a meic saoir Sadhbha, Labhra on leic a ttaoibh (ttaeibh) Theamhra. X. O Raghnall, king of the fortress,[513] If thou comest with the object of seeking it, Thou wilt obtain, O son of noble Sabia, A sound from the flag by the side of Tara.[514] XI. Da madh leat sloigh fhear (bfher) bhfuinigh (fhuinidh). O bhoinn go mbean (cu mben) re tibhir. Mo dheit ar mhil ’sar mheadair (megair) Eamhain mheic Lir mheic Mhidhr. XI. If thine were the hosts of the men of the setting (the west), From Boyne till it touches the Tiber, Greater to thee for joy and pleasure, Were the Emhain of the son of Lir, son of Midir.[515] XII. A mheic Gofraidh chaoimh (chaeimh) cruthaig, Nar lo traigh (traid) re taoibh (taeibh) tacair (tacoir), Ni miadh (miad) leath (lat) e (he) ot athair, Macathach (mac ath) retre ad rathaigh (rathoigh). XII. O son of the fair, shapely Goffraidh, That withdrawest not a foot in battle; It beseems not, on thy father’s account, That any man in thy time should be thy surety. XIII. Nior (nir) uaisle (uaisli) inaoi (inai) ri Romhan, As (is) i do ghnaoi (ghnai) an (in) ghnaoi (ghnai) lainfhial, Nor uaisle rath riogh (righ) Suiriam, Na sgath chuilfhiar griobh (gribh) Ghailian. XIV. Not nobler was the king of the Romans than thou, Thy face is the generous face; Not higher the fortune of the king of Syria, Than that of the long-tressed griffin of Gailian.[516] XIV. Anu ni fhuighbhe (fuidbhi) Eamhain (Emain), Suirghe mar thu, as tu an cobhair (in chabhair), Tulchan mar e (he) na aghaidh, Faghaigh e (he) ar drumchlar domhain. XIV. To-day, Emhain will not obtain A lover like thee—thou art the help; A hillock like it in comparison, Find ye it on the surface of the earth. XV. Doirse t’ fhearainn (ferainn) as iomdha (imdha), Soillse inaid (inait) sreabhainn ghorma, As (is) daoibh (dib) a chraobh (craebh) chuain Eamhna (Emna) Uaim fhearna, uaim chaomh cnodhbha (chnoghdha). XV. Many are the doors of thy country, Brighter than the blue rills; Of them, O branch of the stock of Emhain, Are the cave of Ferna, the fair cave of Knowth. XVI. Do raghainnse gan ro (a) luing Is ann (in) Manainn (Manaind) se (si) mholaim Go mbeinn (cu mbeind) thuaidh re taobh thfearainn, Da leanainn uaim chaoimh chorainn. XVI. I would go, without a stately ship, Into this Manainn which I extol; That I might be north near thy land, If I followed the noble cave of Corann. XVII. Roinnfe (roindfi) ar dho Mhanuinn mhaigh (do Manaind maid) reidh, Ar raluing is ar ionnshloigh, Sleibhte ar fhud do ghort n-glainreidh Tug daighmheinn ort a fionn bhoinn (find bhoind). XVII. The smooth-plained Manann, thou wilt divide in two, For fleets and also for large armies; The hills along thy clear level fields, That have given thee beauty, O fair Boyne. XVIII. Coisgfe ar (fher) agus airgfe, Loisgfe teagh agus tolgbfae (tolcfaidh), Nar ladh caor ar dho ceardchae, Seargfae ar a lar caol colpae. XVIII. Thou wilt restrain menslaughter, and wilt plunder, Thou wilt burn houses and wilt demolish; That no bolt may fall on thy forge, The narrow Colpa thou wilt dry up. XIX. Airgfe Ath cliath an chomhlainn, Is do sgiath ar sgath do ghlanbhuinn, Ait toighe ar ttocht (thocht) go Duibhlinn, Cuinghim ort roimhe a Raghnuill. XIX. Thou wilt plunder Ath-cliath of the combat, With thy shield guarding thy clear side; The site of a house, on coming to Dublin, I ask of thee in advance, O Raghnall. XX. A Raghnaill, a ri an Domhnan, A ri dha ttabhraim (da thabhraim) tulgradh, Ad dhiaigh um chnoc o Colman, Buaidh orghan stoc is sdurghan. XX. O Raghnaill, O King of the Domhnan;[517] O king, to whom I give ardent love; After thee, about Cnoc-O’Cholman (Tara), Shall be organs, trumpets, and clarions. XXI. Maith theangnamh, cruaidh do chroidhe, A fhlaith ceannghlan chuain Mhuile, Cloidheamh cruaidh oigfhir eile Beire a truaill bhroighib (broigil) bhuidhe. XXI. Good thy prowess, brave thy heart, O bright-headed prince of the harbour of Mull; The hard sword of another young man Thou wilt bear in a yellow-bordered scabbard. XXII. Do shleagh dhearg ar dho (do) dhearnainn, Gach fear a searg (scarc) re a slimrinn, Gombi (cumbi) a grainne (graine) tre a ghlandruim (geal no glan), Saidhe a Raghnuill i (hi) a n-ïmlinn. XXII. Thy red spear in thy right hand, With (from) whose slim (sharp) point every man is in love (sickness), Until its edge is through the clear back, Thrust it, O Raghnaill, in the navel. XXIII. Geibhe ghlaic (glaic) a cuirr chairre (cnairre), Geibe shlait (slait) nduinn gan duille, Do theid (teit) chruinn (cruinn) shleamhain (slemain) sreinge, Seinne a cuirr leabhair luinge. XXIII. Take, in thy round, stout hand, Take a brown leafless rod, Thy round smooth, strung rope, Whilst we are on the poop of thy roomy ship. XXIV. Sibhse fir na mbarc mbreactha. Ni mo chin tracht na ttiocfa (ticfa), Aitnidh dhaoibh troigh re toptha (tophta), Do ghoin ochta caoimh chniochta. XXIV. You, ye men of the speckled barks, I love not the strand to which ye come not; To you is known the quick step, To the wounding of the bosoms of noble knights. XXV. A ua ghil Gofraidh Mhearaigh (Mheraigh), A fhir do lotraigh luirigh, Do mhoid (moit) a ri re (ri) rioghain (righain), Do dhiogail si ar a suilibh. XXV. O fair descendant of Godfrey Mearagh,[518] O man that hast hacked coats of mail; A king has boasted to a queen, That he would avenge thee before her eyes. XXVI. A mheic (mic) Ghofraidh fheil fearrdha (fherrdha), A mheic reidh sochraigh shadbha, Dho bhloghais do moigh (bhloigh) dhomhna (domna), Chomhla solais ngloin ngarrdha. XXVI. O son of generous manly Godfrey, O mild sedate son of Sabia; Thou hast broken off from Magh-Domhna (a part of Domhna) The clear bright garden gate. XXVII. A ua Lachluinn na laoidheang A ua glan Chuinn na ngeibhionn Iarrfam (iarfain) cuan ar cul Arann Ag (ac) sur traghann nfhuar n-eirionn (n Erenn). XXVII. O descendant of Lochlainn of the ships; O fair descendant of Conn of the fetters;[519] We will ask a harbour behind Aran, Whilst searching the cold strands of Erin. XXVIII. Iomdha (Imda) ad luing ar lar bhleighe (bleidhi), Ris nach buing sal na suidhe (snidi), Peisd is i na hor bhuidhe, Is duine ag ol di dighe (dhighi). XXVIII. Many is the goblet in the hold of thy ship, Fixed and untouched by the brine; Circled by a serpent of yellow gold, Out of which a man quaffs a drink. XXIX. Deocha dod (dot) chuirm (cuirm) nom ceanglann (nomcenglann) Do mhuirn ga muirn nach diongbhann, Duadh (duna) ga nibhe ni fhoghbham, Mire chormann bfhuar (fuarr) bFhionnghall. XXIX. Draughts of thy ale bind me; What delight does not thy delight repel! Fatigue in quaffing it I feel not; Merrier it is than the cold ale of Fingal.[520] XXX. Ceim (ceir) ad thigh (atigh) ar ti comhoil. Fir dhon fheinn a ri ad ralaimh Easgra (escra) caomh fad chuirm nglanthuair, Laom (laem) ra ghuail nguirm ar gabbail. XXX. To advance into thy house to banquet, Men of the Fiann, O King, are at hand, Fair goblets are under thy clear cool ale, As the blaze of blue coals is ascending. XXXI. A Radhnaill a ri Cola Gach ni ad ghlanluing do gheabha Rug ar shluagh sniomh an mhara, Fion tana fhuar na heala. XXXI. O Raghnall, O King of Coll, All things in thy fair ship thou ’lt find; Which to the host has the winding sea brought— The thin cold wine of the swans. XXXII. [B]og an dream re (ac) dail rochruidh, Fearr ina a dhail go (cu) dochraid, Cruaidhe ne fir re (ri) fearthoin (ferthoin), Fearchoin (ferchoin) cuaine (chuaine) ghil Ghofraidh. XXXII. Generous the band in distributing stock; Better this than to deal it niggardly; Hardy the men for fighting— The man-dogs of the pack of fair Godfrey. XXXIII. Beri bhuidhin (bhuighin) mbrat ccuanda (cuanna), Lat do na muighibh mora Gluaisid gaoth dhod chionn craobha, Mar chaonna (caenda) fhionn mhaoth mhona (find maeth mona). XXXIII. Take a company elegantly clothed With thee, from the great plains. May the wind blow over thy topmasts Gently, as the rustling of soft white moor-grass. XXXIV. Aithne ar dho (do) bharr ag bandail (cun banail), Anall tar faithche fhainn fheoir, Gluaisid cuirn do chuil chlann uir, Mhall (mall) shuil nguirm n-uir (uir) dha haindeoin. XXXIV. The women will admire thy head, As thou comest past the prone-grassed green; Before the rustling of thy youthful locks The soft blue eye will unwillingly move. XXXV. Dorad (dorat) daoibh (daibh) snuadh ar shambchnaibh, Ag ad (acat) shluagh a shaoir shochraig, Leaga corn ur re a n-aighthibh (n-aighthibh), Aithghin shul ngorm o n-Gofraidh. XXXV. The choicest of hues on happy limbs Is with thy army, O noble, honest chief; As the sounding of full trumpets before their faces, Is the glance of the blue eye of Godfrey’s heir. XXXVI. Do rosg (rosc) mar bhogha an (in) bharraidh (barraid), Ag tocht tar rogha an (in) rinn fheoir, Cosmhail blath do chuil choimmoir, Re snath bronnoir uir dhinneoin. XXXVI. Thine eye is like the modest hyacinth Peeping through the surface of the pointed grass; The hue of thy flowing locks is like Fresh thread of gold from the anvil (or furnace). XXXVII. Ni tearc a craobh ur eadtrom (etrom), Searc (serc) dhod (dot) chul shaor mar seadbharr (sedbharr); Ni tug (tuc) bean (ben) ead (et) ar thogbhonn (tocbonn), A gheag (gheg) brogdhonn (broccdhonn) gheal gheagmhar (ghegmhar). XXXVII. Not scarce, a fresh, light branch, Is love for thy glorious gem-like locks; No woman has been without jealousy regarding thee, Thou brown-white mighty scion of a great branch. XXXVIII. A ghoill do gleire an (in) bhrogha (brogha), Mar teidhe (theighi) tar moing mhara, Ruisg chuanda (cuanna) a cuirr na heala, Buinn gheala gruadha glana. XXXVIII. O Gall of the choicest of the Brugh, As thou goest across the surface of the sea; Bright are thine eyes, thou of the swan-like neck, The white feet and the clear cheeks. XXXIX. Camdhlaoi ar chaoin (camdlaidarchain) do dhonnbhairr (donnbharr), A i (hi) Amhlaoibh shaoir sheangdhuinn, Red laochlaimh reidh a Raghnaill, Samhlaim eill maothbhain meamruim. XXXIX. On thy brown head is a twisted tress, Thou descendant of the noble, slender-brown Amhlaibh;[521] To thy soft hero-hand, O Raghnall, I compare a strip of soft white parchment. XL. Samlaim do li is li an chubhair, A Raghnaill as ri ar Eamhain (Emain), Realta (relta) ghlas mall fad (fat) mhalaigh, Samail bharr na n-gas n-geamhair (ngedhair). XL. Thy colour I compare to the hue of foam, O Raghnall, who art king over Emain; Under thy brows are slow blue stars Like to the tops of blades of corn-grass. XLI. Maith thinneall chuil (tindell cuili) is cheibhe, Ar a silleann (sillenn) suil uaine, Gris chaomh ar ccar (char) a smaile, Aille thaobh nglan do ghruaidhe. XLI. Good is thy arrangement of tresses and locks, On which a blue eye looks; With noble ardour is inflamed The bright surface of thy cheek. XLII. Taobh gruaidhe uir dho ionnlais, Craobh uaine ad (at) shuil mar shamfhrais, Ar fhraoch thfuilt (hfhuilt) a i (hi) Fhearghais (Fherghais), Do earmais (ermais) gaoth (gaeth) phuirt Parrthais. XLII. Thy fair fresh cheek thou hast bathed; In thine eye is a blue beam soft as summer showers; Over the locks of thy hair, O descendant of Fergus,[522] The wind of Paradise has breathed. XLIII. A fhir na greadha gile, A fhir na heala duibhe, Garbh shaithe agus min mheile, Sgin (scin) eimhe blaithe buidhe. XLIII. O man of the white steed; O man of the black swan, The fierce band and the gentle mood, The sharp blade and the lasting fame. XLIV. Tugais (tucais) ruaig mhadhma ar Maoilbheirn, Is badhbha uaid na hurdhuirn, Iomdha a n-glinn fir faonmhaidhm, A (o) shaorbhaidhbh ghil shing shul ghuirm. XLIV. Thou hast inflicted a rout-defeat on Maelbheirn;[523] Fierce on thy part were the heavy blows; Numerous are the men dispersed in the glen, O (from the) noble bright slender blue-eyed hero. XLV. A i (hi) Chuinn, a i (hi) Chormaic, Gus an luing na luing raidhbhric, Sgaoi (scai) do chreich ar each (ereach) ionnraic, Do iomlait neach eich aimhghlic. XLV. Descendant of Conn, and descendant of Cormac Thou with the speckled ship of ships; Pursue thy raids on a worthy steed; For a foolish steed carries one astray. XLVI. Olc dhuinn (dhunn) gan an (in) ghlais (glais) ghaibhnionn (ngaibhnenn), Anocht ga chul (cul) tais tiormfhann (tirmfhann), Olc dhunn (dhun) gan an dubh soighleann, Ar sgur goirmsheang ur Fhionnghall. XLVI. Evil for us that the Glas-Gaibhnionn[524] Is not now in her soft dry sloping corner; Evil for us that the Dubh-Soinglenn[525] Is not now in the brilliant stud of Fingal. XLVII. Mo chuairt thall tuillmheach dhamhsa, A bharr suairc druimneach donnso, Do guala a ri saor seaghsa, Leamsa ar don i ’sa n-orsa (hi san orrsa). XLVII. Profitable to me was my visit yonder, O joyous, diademed, brown head; Thy shoulder, O noble king of Seghais Were to me equal to this gold. XLVIII. Ar n-dol damlisa od dheaghthoigh (ot degh thoigh), Mhalmsa ni halmsa dochraig, Measa an teagh riogh dha (da) rachair, Marthain ag siol geal Ghofraidh. XLVIII. On my going from thy good house, My alms were not pitiful alms; No better king’s house canst thou go to; Long life to the bright race of Godfrey. XLIX. A mheic Gofraidh ghuirt Mhuile, Do ghuirt gonfaidh ar n-aire, Tain go trachtaibh do thighe, Biri o thraigh mbarc ghloin m-baile. Baile Suthain. XLIX. O son of Godfrey of Mull’s field Our attention shall thy fields retain; Spoils to the shores of thy house bear thou, From the bright-barbed Traigh-bhaile.[526] NOTES. ----- Footnote 512: Lugh mac Ethlenn, for whom see O’Curry’s _Lectures_, p. 388. Footnote 513: Reginald, son of Godred, Norwegian King of Man and the Isles from 1188 to 1226. Footnote 514: The Lia Fal at Tara, which sounded at the tread of the rightful heir to the throne. See O’Curry’s _Lectures_, p. 388. Footnote 515: Manannan Mac Lir, one of the Tuath De Danann. He is connected by tradition with Emhain Abhlach, or Emain of the apples, which is explained to mean the Island of Arran. See _Four Ancient Books of Wales_, vol. i. p. 78. Footnote 516: Gailian, a rude form of the name of the Gaileon in Leinster, one of the three tribes of the Firbolg. Footnote 517: Domhnan, another of the three tribes of the Firbolg. Footnote 518: This was Godred Crovan, called in the Irish Annals Gofraidh Meranach, the founder of the Norwegian kingdom of Man and the Isles, and ancestor of Reginald. Footnote 519: This line alludes to Reginald, son of Somerled, who ruled over part of the Isles from 1164 to 1204, and who was supposed to be descended, through Colla Uais, from Conn of the Hundred Battles, one of the traditionary kings of Ireland. Footnote 520: It is doubtful whether the Ossianic hero can be referred to here, or in St. 46. He never appears in Irish poetry under the form of Fionngall, but simply Fionn. Fionngall was a name applied to the Norwegians, and to the land they occupied. Hence the Lord of the Isles was called in poetry ‘Ri Fhionngall,’ from the Islands having belonged to the Norwegians. Footnote 521: Olaf Bitling, grandfather of Reginald, son of Godred; but he was also grandfather of the other Reginald, whose mother was his daughter. Footnote 522: Reginald, son of Somerled, was supposed to be descended from a certain Gofraidh, son of Fergus. Footnote 523: Perhaps Morvaren. Footnote 524: The celebrated Cow of Gaibhnen the Smith. See _Annals of Four Masters_, note to A.M. 3330. Footnote 525: One of Cuchulain’s horses. Footnote 526: Dundalk strand. III. THE DESCRIPTION OF THE ISLES OF SCOTLAND.[527] The haill Iles of Scotland were devidit in four pairts of auld, viz. Lewis, Sky, Mule, and Yla, and the remanent haill Iles were reknit but as pertinents and pendicles of the said four Iles, and were devidit amangis thir four Iles and annext thairto in this manner. First to the Ile of Lewis wes annext the Iles of Wist, Barra, Harragis, Ronalewis, Pabla in Harreik, Helsker, Collismown, and Iit. To the Ile of Sky were annext Raarsa, Eg, Romb, Canna, Ellan na muck, and Scalpa. Perteining to the Ile of Mule were Lismoir, Tuahannais, Ulloway, Commatra, Inschkennycht, Sanct Colmisinche _alias_ Colmkill, Tireich, and Coll. And to the fourth Ile of Yla wes conjoynit the Iles of Dewra _alias_ Jura, Colonsa, Geiga, Rauchlyne, Seillonyng, Scarba. But now thir Iles are becum under sundrie mens dominions, quhairthrow thai answer not to the saids four principall Iles, yit thai keip the lawis and uses of the samine for the maist pairt, and speciallie of thair yeirlie dewties, as heireftir shall be declairit. Be thir Iles foirsaids thair is mony small Ilands and Inches in Scotland, quhairof the names are not publist, nor yit in reputation, but worthie of habitation or descryving, quhairthrow we omitt the samyn quhill thai be better inhabite and esteimit of. Thair is also ane Ness passand southwest fra the lands of Ardmwrche, quhilk Ness is called Romwrche (Point of Ardnamurchan), and divides thir haill Iles in twa; viz. in South and North Iles, viz. the Iles of Yla and Mule with thair saids pertinents, lyand fra the said Ness to the south, and the Iles of Lewis and Sky to the north. The first Ile callit Lewis is conjoynit with Harreik, but the sea cummis almaist betwix thame, saifand ane small grip of the lenth of twa or thrie pair of buttis, quhilk narrow grip is haldin the march betwix the Iles of Lewis and Herreis. They are baith 40 miles of lenth, quhairof Lewis is 32 miles, and Herreis 8 miles. The pairt of this Ile that is callit Lewis perteins to McCloyd Lewis. His kin are callit Clan Leod, _alias_ callit Sheill Torquill, that is, the offspring of that man namet Torquill. His principall place thair is callit the Castell of Steornoay, and he may raise on this pairt of this Ile callit Lewis 700 men with Rona, by thame that labours the ground, of the quhilkis nane are chairgit or permittit to gang to ony oisting or weiris in all the haill Iles, but are commandit to remane at hame to labour the ground. This Ile of Lewis is very profitable and fertile alswell of corns as all kind of bestiall wild fowl and fishes, and speciallie of beir, sua that thair will grow commonlie 20, 18, or at the leist 16 bolls beir yeirlie eftir ilk bolls sawing. It is 40 lb. land of auld extent and pay is yeirlie 18 score chalders of victuall, 58 score of ky, 32 score of wedderis, and ane great quantitie of fisches, pultrie, and quhyte plaiding by thair Cuidichies, that is, feisting thair master quhen he pleases to cum in the cuntrie, ilk ane thair nicht or twa nichtis about, according to thair land and labouring. Thair is na great waters nor rivers in this Ile, but small schaule burnis quhairby the salmond and uther fishes swymming thairupon will appear twa pairt dry for fault of water to cover thame, and are slane with treis and bastonnis, and hes na uthir craft nor ingyne to slay thame. Thair is na woods in the Lewis, but ane great wildernes or forest callit Osirsdaill, quhairin is sustenit mony deir, thairfor it is pleasant hunting. In this Ile thair is ane little Cove biggit in form of ane kirk, and is callit the Pygmies Kirk. It is sa little, that ane man may scairslie stand uprichtlie in it eftir he is gane in on his kneis. Thair is sum of the Pygmies banes thairinto as yit, of the quhilkis the thrie banes being measurit is not fullie twa inches lang. The uther pairt of this Ile callit Harrayis perteins to McCloyd Harreis. His kin and surname is callit Sheall Tormoyd, that is, the offspring of that man callit Tormoyd, and albeit this man McCloyd hes landis, as ye shall heir heireftir, and that his principall place callit Dunvegane be in the Ile of Sky, yit he is stylit be this Ile of Herreis. He may raise seven score of able men. This Ile of Herries is also fertile, commodious, and profitable in all sorts effeirand to the quantitie thairof as the Ile of Lewis. Thair is nather woods, great waters, nor rivers thairin, but small burnis as in the Ile of Lewis, and the people thairof as unskilfull in slaying of the fishes and salmond that cummis as thair neighbours are. Thair is ane fair forrest called Otterisdaill in this Ile, quhairin is mony deer and thairthrow pleasand hunting, albeit it be but 20 merk land of auld extent. This Ile payis 3 bolls malt and 3 bolls meill for ilk day in the yeir, 40 mairtis and eight score wedderis, by customs, pultrie, meill, with oist silver. The Ile of Wist is 40 miles of length, but of small breid, and the north pairt thairof perteins to ane clan callit Clandoneill, the south pairt thairof to Clan Ranald. The haill is reknit to be sevenscore merk land, quhairof the Clan Doneill hes threescore merk land, and the Clan Ranald fourscore merk land. The Clan Doneill on thair pairt thairof will raise 300 men, and the Clan Ranald on thair pairt thairof will raise 300 men. Thair is na woods nor great rivers in it, but thair is mony deir in it. Ilk merk land in this Ile payis 20 bolls victuall, by all uther customes, maills, and oist silver, quhairof thair is na certane rentall. The customes of this Ile are splendit, and payit at the Landslordis cumming to the Ile to his Cudicht. The Ile of Barra perteins to McNeill Barra. His surname and kin are callit Clan Neill. His principall dwelling-place thair is callit Keissadull, quhilk is ane excellent strenth, for it standis on the seaside under ane great craig, sua that the craig cummis over it, and na passage to the place but be the sea, quhairof the entrie is narrow, but that ane scheip may pass throw, and within that entres is an round heavin and defence for schippis from all tempestis. This Ile is five miles of lenth or thairby, and is 20 lb. land, and may raise on this Ile, with four or five small Iles that he hes beside it, 200 gude men. Item, in this Ile is ane weill quhairin growis cockles, quhilk is at the fute of ane hill callit the Hill of Barra, twa mile fra the sea. Rona[528] (Bernera) Lewis is ane Ile of four mile long perteining to McCloyd Lewis, and it is 80 merk land. It payis 120 bolls victuall yeirly by all uther customes and maillis. It is verie fertile of corns and store of gudes and quhyte fisches, but saltis na fisches, but eittis thair staiking and castis the rest on the land, and will raise 60 men. Pabba is ane little Ile ane mile lang. It perteins to McCloyd Hereik, and albeit it be but twa merk land, it payis yeirlie 60 bollis victuall, and will raise 40 gude men to the weiris. Bernera[528] (Rona) is ane uther little Ile of the lyk quantitie and payment, perteining to McCloyd Hereik. Helsker is ane gude, commodious, and fertile Ile, alsweill of gudes as of corns; for albeit it be but ane mile lang and ane merk land of auld extent, it payis yeirlie to the monasterie of Colmkill, to quhom it apperteins, 60 bollis victuall by uther customes. It is possesst evir by ane gentill man of the Clandonald. Thair is nather moss nor woods in this Ile, but all manurit arable land. It will raise 20 or 24 men. Colsmon is but ane little Ile of ane quarter mile lang and als mekell breid, quhairin is na inhabite nor manurit land, but lyes waist. Mony fisches resortis and hantis thairto and generis within the same; and the principall man of the north end of Wyist, wha is ane of the Clandoneill (as said is), passes with ane number of men in cumpanie anes in the yeir to this Ile, and slayis and takis sa many as they please of the selches, and careyis away with thame. Irt (St. Kilda) is ane little Ile of ane mile lang, perteining to McCloyd Hereik. It is maist fertile of scheip and foullis, quhairof it payis ane great matter yeirlie to the said McCloyd and his factors. And albeit thay use na pleuchis, but delvis thair corn land with spaiddis, yet thai pay yeirlie 60 bollis victuall. Thair is na horse nor meiris in this Ile, and but few nolt to the number of 60 or thairby. Thair cummis na men furth of this Ile to oisting or weiris, becaus they are but a poor barbarous people unexpert that dwellis in it, useand na kind of wappinis; but thair daylie exercitation is maist in delving and labouring the ground, taking of foullis and gaddering thair eggis, quhairon thay leif for the maist pairt of thair fude. Thay make na labour to obtene or slay ony fisches, but gadderis sum in the craigis, albeit thai micht have abundance thairof utherwayis gif thai wald ony way make labour thairfore. Anes in the yeir ane Priest or Minister cummis to thame and baptizes all the bairnis born amangis thame sin his last being thair, and celebrattis marriage to the parteis desyrand, and makes sic uther ministration of the sacraments to thame as he thinkis gude, and gifts thame sic directiounis as he wills thame to use and keip for ane yeir thairefter, and gadderis payment of thair teinds (quhilk thai pay maist thankfullie and justlie of ony people), and departs quhill the next yeir agane. In all times thai sustenit ane auld priest or clerk continuallie amangis thame, to shaw and tell to thame the halie dayis to be keipit in the yeir. The Ile of Sky is ane Ile 40 mile lang and alsmuckle of breid, swa that it is almaist round. It perteinit all haill in auld times to McConneill, but now be his disposition thair is divers heritors of sundrie pairts thairof, the maist thereof extending to 80 merk land lyand almaist in the middis of the Ile caleit Trouternes, and 30 merk land lyand at the south pairt of the Ile quhilk is caleit Slait. It pertenis to Scheall Hutcheoun, that is to say, the offspring of that man callit Hutcheoun, but his principall surname is Clandoneill. Trouternes payis yeirlie ilk merk land thairof twa bollis meill, twa bollis malt, four mairtis, 16 wedderis, 16 dozen of pultrie, twa merks by the auld maills and utheris dewteis accustomat. Thair was ane castell in Trouternes callit Duncolmen, quhairof the wallis standis yit. Slait is occupiet for the maist pairt be gentlemen, thairfore it payis but the auld deuteis, that is, of victuall, buttir, cheis, wyne, aill, and aquavite, samekle as thair maister may be able to spend being ane nicht (albeit he were 600 men in companie) on ilk merk land. There is twa strenthie castells in Slait, the ane callit Castell Chammes, the uther Dunskeith. Trouternes will raise 500 men, and Slait 700 men. Ane pairt of this Ile of Sky callit Strathvardeill pertenis to ane Laird callit McKynvin, given to him be McConneill for to be judge and decide all questionnis and debaitts that happenis to fall betwin pairties throw playing at cairtis or dyce or sic uther pastime, and will raise aucht score men. McKynvin hes a castell thair callit Dewnakin. McCloyd Lewis hes 20 merk land in this Ile callit Watternes, quhairon he will raise 200 men. McCloyd Herreis hes three cuntries in this Ile, the first callit Durenes quhilk is 28 merk land, and will raise twelf score men, quhairin he hes ane strenthie dwelling place. The second callit Bracadale, quhilk is 16 merk land, and will raise sevin score men. Thair is mony woods in all pairtis of this Ile of Sky, speciallie birkis and orne; but the maist wood is in Slait and Trouternes. Thair is ane wood in Slait, of aucht mile of lenth, with mony deer and rae, and it is verie fertile, with all kinds of bestiall and corns. Thair is great plentie of salmond and hering tane in this Ile. Thair is mony lochis in this Ile, and speciallie in Strathvardill, quhilk is callit Loch Slepan, Loch na Neist, and Loch na Daill. Betwixt Trouternes and Strathtodill lyes ane loch callit Loch Sleggasthe. Raarsa is ane Ile of five mile lang and thrie mile braid, perteining to the Bischop of the Iles; but it is occupiet and possest be ane gentleman of McCloyd Lewis kin, callit Gillechallum Raarsa. His offspring bruikis the same yit, and are callit Clan Gillehallum of Raarsa. He hes ane strange little castell in this Ile, biggit on the heid of ane heich craig, and is callit Prokill. It is but 8 merk land, and will raise 80 men. It payis yeirlie to the bischop 16 merks, but to the capitaine thairof it payis of sundrie tributes better nor 500 merks. Thair is na woods, but great heich craigis in this Ile. It is commodious for corn and all kinds of bestiall, and chieflie horses. Eg is ane Ile verie fertile and commodious baith for all kind of bestiall and corns, speciallie aittis, for eftir everie boll of aittis sawing in the same ony yeir will grow 10 or 12 bollis agane. It is 30 merk land, and it perteins to the Clan Rannald, and will raise 60 men to the weiris. It is five mile lang and three mile braid. Thair is mony coves under the earth in this Ile, quhilk the cuntrie folks uses as strenthis hiding thame and thair geir thairintill; quhairthrow it hapenit that in March, anno 1577, weiris and inmitie betwix the said Clan Renald and McCloyd Herreik, the people with ane callit Angus John McMudzartsonne, their capitane, fled to ane of the saidis coves, taking with thame thair wives, bairnis, and geir, quhairof McCloyd Herreik being advertisit landit with ane great armie in the said Ile, and came to the cove and pat fire thairto, and smorit the haill people thairin to the number of 395 persones, men, wyfe, and bairnis. Romb is ane Ile of small profit, except that it conteins mony deir, and for sustentation thairof the same is permittit unlabourit, except twa townis. It is thrie miles of lenth, and alsmekle of breid, and all hillis and waist glennis, and commodious only for hunting of deir. It perteinis heretablie to ane Barron callit the Laird of Challow (Coll), quha is of McClanes kin, but is possest and in the handis of Clan-Rannald. It is ten merk land, and will raise 6 or 7 men. Canna. This Ile is gude baith for corn and all kind of bestiall. It perteins to the Bischop of the Iles, but the said Clan-Rannald hes it in possessioun. It is thrie mile lang and ane braid. It is six merk land and will raise 20 men. In this Ile is ane heich craig callit Corignan weill braid on the heicht thairof, and but ane strait passage, that men may scairslie climb to the heid of the craig, and quhan the cuntrie is invadit the people gadderis thair wives and geir to the heid of the craig and defend thame selfis utherwayis the best thay may, and will not pass to the craig, because it may not be lang keepit onlie for fault of water. Ellan na Muk is but ane little Ile of ane mile lang and half mile braid. It perteins also to the foirsaid Bischop, and is possesst be the Laird of Ardinmwrthe callit Maken. It is four merk land, and payis to the said Laird and his factors aucht score bollis victuall, quhairof four score to the Bischop and four score to the Laird. It will raise to the weiris 16 able men. Scalpa is four merk land perteining heritablie to McClane, gevin to him be McConneill. It is thrie mile lang, twa mile braid, mair fertile and commodious for deir and hunting nor it is ather for corns or store. It will raise 20 men. Mule. This Ile is 24 mile of lenth and in sum pairtis 16 mile braid, and in uther pairtis thairof but 12 mile braid. It is all 300 merk land, and will raise 900 men to the weiris. McClane Doward, callit Great McClane, hes the maist pairt thairof, extending to aucht score merk land and ten, and will raise on it with the pairt he hes of the Bischop 600 men thairupon. McClane of Lochbuy hes thriescore merk land, and will raise 200 men thairon. The Bischop hes 30 merk land thair, but McClane Doward hes it in his possession occupiet be his kin. The Laird of McKynvin hes 20 merk land, and the uthir 20 merk land pertenis to the Laird of Schellow (Coll) but thay will raise 100 thairon. Thair is mony woods and saltwater lochis in this Ile, and it is verie plentifull of all kind of fisches, speciallie hering and salmond. It is na less commodious for guides and store nor ony of the remanent Iles; but not sa gude for cornes. In everie pairt thairof are mony deiris, raes, and wild foullis. McClaue of Doward hes twa castellis in this Ile, the ane named Doward, the uther callit Aross, quhilk sumtime perteinit to McConneill. McClane of Lochbuy hes ane castell thairintill callit the Castell of Lochinbuy. Ilk merkland in this Ile payis yeirlie 5 bollis beir, 8 bollis meill, 20 stanes of cheese, 4 stanes of buttir, 4 mairtis, 8 wedderis, twa merk of silver, and twa dozen of pultrie, by Cuddiche, quhanevir thair master cummis to thame. Lismoir is ane Ile of aucht mile lang lairge, and twa mile breid. It is 80 merk land of auld, and pertenit sumtime to McConneill, but now to my Lord Argile the twa pairt thairof, and the third pairt thairof to the Laird of Glenurquhir. McCowle of Lorn hes the stewardship of the haill Ile and manrent thairof, and will raise thairon to ony weir 100 men. It is very fertile for all kind of corns and speciallie for beir, and will grow alsmekle eftir ane boll sawing as in the Lewis or ony pairt thair with less gudeing or labour; for in mony pairtis thairof are great mosses, and thay will cast ane fowssie or stank throw the ane pairt of the moss, quhairby the water may easier pass away, and teillis syne the remanent of the moss, sa far at the leist as becumis dry be vertue of the fowssie castin, and takis it that thai cast out of the fowssie and guidis the teillit earth thairwith, and thairon will grow the best beir in the Iles, of sic quantitie that I think shame to write it, albeit that I have honest authors to affirm the same. It is plane land without ony woodis or hillis, but all manurit land and moss. It is commodious also for nolt and horses, but best for cornes. It is gude for saltwater fisches, and na uther. It has na set rentall of dewtie, because it is everie yeir alterit or set. Thair is twa castellis thairin upon the pairt perteining to my Lord Argile, ane callit Dunnagaill, but it is not mantenit, albeit it wes of auld ane great strenth for saltwater fisches, ane uther callit the castell of Auchindewne, upon the west side thairof anent the Mule, quhilk wes biggit be ane Bischop of the Iles. On the uther Laird Glenurquhirts pairt thairof wes ane auld castill callit Bealwothar, but is not mantenit. The twa Iles callit the Hwnayis, the ane thairof and maist pertenis to ane kinsman of the said McCoule of Lorn. It is twa mile lang and ane braid, ane plane land but ony hills, but all arable land, moss and birkin wood, quhairthrow it is onlie gude for corn, nolt, and horse; it is 8 merk land. The uther pertenis to John Stewart of Hoping (Appin); it is ane mile lang and half mile braid; it is four merk land. The said John Stewart hes it all under maynes, and quhan he settis the same it payis six score bollis victuall, by all uther dewties. Baith thir Iles will raise three score men. Ulloway is ane Ile twa mile lang, ane mile braid. It is twelf merk land perteining to McCower (McQuarrie). It is plane land but ony hillis or woodis, and will raise thrie score men. Ilk merk land payis conform to the Ile of Mule. Coamatra is ane Ile of ane mile lang conteinand but twa towns. It is four merk land, and pertenis to McClane of Dowart; it is plane, fair, and verie commodious for corns and catell of sa mekle. It payis yeirlie as Mule payis. It will raise 16 or 20 men. Inschenycht (Inchkenneth) is ane Ile perteining to the said McClane, of a lyke lenth, halding payment and commodities in all sortis as the said Ile of Coamatra. Sanct Colms Inche (Iona) is ane Ile ane mile lang, large half mile braid, but is 30 merk land. In this Ile is the Bischop of the Iles principall dwelling places. Thair is twa religious places—ane thairof for monkis, ane uther for nunnes. In this Ile is the sepulchre of all the kingis of Scotland of auld. It is verie commodious for corns and catell, but na woodis nor mosses, quhairthrow thai are scant of fire, but that that cummis to thame furth of other Iles be sea. In this are all the Gentlemen of the Iles buryit as yit. Collow (Coll) is ane Ile of 12 mile of lenth, 4 or 6 mile of breid in sum pairtis thairof. It is 30 merk land, and pertenis to the Laird of Collow, quhairin he hes ane castell callit Brekauche, quhilk is ane great strenth be reason of the situation thairof verie neir to the sea, quhilk defendis the half thairof, and hes three walls about the rest of the castell and thairof biggit with lyme and stane, with sundrie gude devises for defending of the tower. Ane uther wall about that, within the quhilk schippis and boittis are drawin and salvit. And the third and the uttermost wall of tymber and earth, within the quhilk the haill gudes of the cuntrie are keipit in tyme of troublis or weiris. It is very fertile alsweill of corns as of all kind of catell. Thair is sum little birkin woodis within the said Ile. Ilk merk land payis yeirlie as is declarit of the Ile of Mule, and will raise seven score men. Tierhie (Tiree) is ane Ile of aucht mile of lenth, and in sum pairtis but thrie mile braid, and at the braidest is six mile braid. But it is commodious and fertile of corns and store of gudes. It is 140 merk land, and will raise to the weiris 300 men. It pertenis to great McClane of Doward, gevin to him be McConneill. It was callit in all tymes McConnells girnell; for it is all teillit land, and na girs but ley land, quhilk is maist nurischand girs of ony other, quhairthrow the ky of this Ile abundis sa of milk that thai are milkit four times in the day. The yeirlie dewtie thairof is sa great of victuall, buttir, cheis, mairtis, wedderis, and other customes, that it is uncertain to the inhabitants thairof quhat, thai should pay, but obeyis and payis quhatevir is cravet be thair maister for thair haill deuties, only to tak sa mony firlotts as micht stand side be side round about the haill Ile full of victuall, half meill, half beir, and it wes refuseit. Ila is ane Ile of 24 mile lang and twenty mile braid. It is 18 score merk land, and will raise 800 men. McClane of Doward hes the half thairof, and the other half pertenis to ane of the Clan Donald cum of McConneills house. This Ile is plenteous of woodis, quhairin are mony deir, raes, and wild foullis. It is also commodious for all kinds of fisches, and speciallie salmond, be reason of diverse rivers rynnand throw the same, quhairin swymes not only mony salmond, but in all the small burnis of this Ile are multipill of salmond and other fisches. McClane hes ane strenthie castell thairin, quhilk standis in ane niche within ane fresche-water loch callit Lochgormen; the uther castell pertenis to the Cland-donald, it is callit Downerie. Ilk merk land in this Ile payis yeirlie three mairtis and ane half, 14 wedderis, 2 geis, 4 dozen and 8 pultrie, 5 bollis malt with ane peck to ilk boll, 6 bollis meill, 20 stane of cheis, and twa merk of silver. And ilk merk land man sustein daylie and yeirlie ane gentleman in meit and claith, quhilk dois na labour, but is haldin as ane of their maisters household men, and man be sustenit and furneisit in all necessaries be the tennent, and he man be reddie to his maisters service and advis. Ilk town in this Ile is twa merk land and ane half, and payis yeirlie of Gersum at Beltane four ky with calf, four zowis with lamb, four geis, nine hennis, and 10s. of silver. Jura, _alias_ Deura, is 24 mile lang, and 8 mile braid quhair it is braidest. It is 30 merk land. The half pairt thairof pertenis to the said McClane, and the uther half to the Clan Donald. The haill will raise, with the Ile of Scarba (quhilk is baith but ane parochin), 100 men. Sa mekle as is labourit and teillit of this Ile is excellent land, and verie fertile for corns; but it is for the maist pairt wildernes and woodis, quhairin is mony deir, raes, and other wild beistis, quhairthrow thair is better hunting in this Ile nor ony of the rest. Sa mekle labourit land as is in this Ile, it payis alike to Ila of dewties. Collonsa and Orandsay are baith ane Ile, except that the full sea of the flwde flowis in betwix thame. Collonsa is 18 mile of lenth and five mile braid. It is 30 merk land, and pertenis to the Laird thairof callit Makasie (Macduffy), ane dependar on the Clan Donald. Orandsay is but ane mile of lenth, and alsmekle of breid. It is 4 merk land, quhairin is but ane town, quhilk is an abbay place dedicat to St. Columb, it pertenis to the Bischop of the Iles. Thir twa Iles will raise 100 men, and payis according to the Ile of Ila. Na woodis nor wildernes is in thir Isles, but all teillit land. Seill is ane Ile of 5 mile lang, thrie mile braid, and is threescore merk land. It pertenis to the Earle of Argile, and will raise thairon six score men. It is all plane manurit land, but ony wildernes or woodis, quhairby it is verie fertile of store and corns and payis zeirlie conform as we have spoken before of the Ile of Lismoir. Loyng is ane little Ile thrie mile lang, twa myle braid, and is fourty merk land. It pertens heritablie to my Lord Argile, but McClane Doward hes it of my Lord Argile for service. This Ile payis zeirlie of mairtis and ferme as Lismoir and Seill payis. Scarba is ane Ile thrie mile lang and twa mile breid. It is 4 merk land, and pertenis to McClane of Lochbuy in heritage. It is all woodis and craigis, except twa tounis, and thairfore it is better for sustentation of bestiall nor for cornes. It payis zeirlie samekle as is labourit thairof, as the remanent Iles payis, and will raise 17 men. Geiza (Gigha) is ane Ile of five mile lang, twa mile braid, and is 30 merk land; it pertenis to the Clan Donald. It is very plane, profitable, and fertile land for all kind of corns, but any woodis, hillis, or craigis; and ilk merkland thairof payis as Ila payis, except in mairtis and wedderis, because it is not gude for store. It will raise 100 men. Rauchlynne is an Ile five mile lang, thrie or four mile braid; it is 30 merk land. It pertenis to the Clan Donald, and is but four mile of sea fra Irland. It is fair, fertile, and profitable baith for girs and corn, with sum grene hillis in it, and na woodis nor craigis. Thairfore thair zeirlie dewtie is conform to use and consuetude of Ireland, quhilk is to sustein ane number of men in meit and fie, and payis ane certane quantitie of all kind of thing that growis amangis thame anes in the yeir to thair maister, and sum taxations as thair maister happens to have ado, and may raise 100 men. Thair is ane auld castell, verie strenthie, callit the Auld Castell. Thair is twa Iles that pertenis to thir saids four Iles named Arran and Boyd (Bute). Arran is 24 miles lang, 12 and 8 miles in sum pairtis braid, and is 300 merk land, perteining to my Lord Hamiltoun, quhairin is twa castells. Arran will raise 100 men. Boyd is aucht mile lang, four mile braid, quhairin stands ane great Burrowstown callit Rosa. It will raise 300 men, and is of na less commoditie and profit nor Arran. Thir haill Iles abovewritten, gif thai were on ane end, are fourteen score and twelve mile of lenth and miles of breid. The common accustomat of raising of thair men is 6000 men, quhairof the 3d pairt extending to 2000 men aucht and sould be cled with attounes and haberchounis, and knapshal bannetts, as thair lawis beir. And in raising or furthbringing of thair men ony time of yeir to quhatsumevir cuntrie or weiris, na labourers of the ground are permittit to steir furth of the cuntrie quhatevir thair maister have ado, except only gentlemen quhilk labouris not, that the labour belonging to the teiling of the ground and wynning of thair corns may not be left undone, albeit thai byde furth ane haill zeir, as ofttimes it happins quhen ony of thair particular Ilands hes to do with Irland or neighbours, that the haill cuntriemen bides furth watching thair enemies ane zeir, half ane zeir, or thairby, as thai please. Not the les the ground is not the war labourit, nor the occupiers thairof are nather molestit, requirit, troublit, nor permittit to gang furth of thair awin cuntrie and Ile quhair thay dwell. Finis. NOTES. ----- Footnote 527: This description must have been written between 1577 and 1595, as the former date is mentioned in connection with the cruel slaughter of the inhabitants of Egg by the Macleods, and John Stewart of Appin, who died in 1595, is mentioned as alive at the time it was written. It has all the appearance of an official report, and was probably intended for the use of James the Sixth, who was then preparing to attempt the improvement of the Isles, and increase the royal revenue from them. See Gregory’s _History of the Highlands and Islands_, ch. vi. Footnote 528: The names of Rona and Bernera have been here misplaced. The larger island is obviously Bernera, and the smaller Rona. IV. On the AUTHENTICITY of the LETTERS PATENT said to have been granted by King WILLIAM THE LION to the EARL of MARR in 1171.[529] This deed was first made known by the learned antiquary John Selden, who printed it in his ‘Titles of Honor’ (p. 700) to illustrate his remarks upon the title of Thane. It is in the form of letters patent, and not of a charter; and is addressed by William, King of Scots, to all bishops, earls, abbots, priors, barons, knights, thanes, and provosts, and all other good men of the whole land, as well cleric as laic. It then narrates that Morgund, son of Gillocher, formerly Earl of Marr, had come before the king at Hindhop Burnemuthe, in his new forest, on the tenth day of the calends of June, in the year of grace 1171, demanding his right to the whole earldom of Marr, before the common council and army of the kingdom of Scotland there assembled: that the king had caused inquisition to be made into his claim by several men worthy of credit, who were barons and thanes of his kingdom, and who found that Morgund was the lawful son and heir of the said Gillocher, Earl of Marr; upon which the king granted and restored to Morgund the whole earldom of Marr, in which his father Gillocher had died vest and seized, to be held by the said Morgund and his heirs of the king and his heirs in fee and heritage, with all pertinents, liberties, and rights, as freely, quietly, fully, and honourably as any other earl in the kingdom of Scotland; he and his heirs rendering to the king and his heirs the ‘forinsecum servicium videlicet servicium Scoticanum,’ as his ancestors had been wont to render to the king and his ancestors. Further, on the same day and at the same place, after doing homage before the common council of the kingdom, the said Morgund demanded that right should be done him for the whole earldom of Moray, in which Gillocher his father had died vest and seized; upon which petition, inquisition having been made by several men worthy of credit, who were barons, knights, and thanes of the kingdom, they found that Morgund was the true and lawful heir of the earldom of Moray; and because at that time the king was engaged in the heavy war between him and the English, and the men of Moray could not be subjected to his will, he was unable to do justice to Morgund, he promised that, when he could terminate the war between him and his enemies, and subjugate the rebels of Moray, he would well and truly recognise the right of Morgund and his heirs to the earldom of Moray. And in order to certiorate to others this deed, the king gave these letters patent to the said Morgund. They then conclude with these words: ‘Teste meipso eodem anno die et loco supradicto.’ This is undoubtedly a very remarkable production, if genuine; and Selden adds: ‘I have it writ in parchment in a hand of the time wherein it is dated, but without any seal to it.’ It is referred to by Lord Hailes in his additional case for the Countess of Sutherland, without any doubt being expressed as to its authenticity; and no suspicion seems to have attached to it till the late George Chalmers assailed it in 1819 in a paper printed in the nineteenth volume of the ‘Archæologia’ (p. 241). In this paper he proposes to show that this document is supposititious. He states his objections to it under nine heads, and concludes that Selden had been imposed upon with a spurious deed. His first objection relates to the orthography of the document; the second to the formula of the address; the third to the history of the earldom; the fourth to the minuteness of the date; the fifth to the reserved services; the sixth to the claim to the earldom of Moray; the seventh to the allusion to the war with England; the eighth to the form of letters patent; and the ninth to the words ‘teste meipso,’ which is peculiar to letters patent as distinguished from charters, which at this period invariably have a list of witnesses. The form ‘teste meipso’ first occurs, he says, in 1190. Professor Cosmo Innes, in his preface to the first volume of the ‘Acts of Parliament,’ alludes to this document, ‘the authenticity of which,’ he says, ‘however, is very doubtful;’ and he prints it in a note with the following remarks; ‘Selden’s authority is not lightly to be rejected; and some of the reasons against the genuineness of this charter, urged by the late Mr. Chalmers in a paper in the “Archæologia,” founded on the spelling, etc., are of no weight. But it is open to serious objections, whether we consider the narrative or the occasion, and the time and place of its granting and the manner of testing. For instance, it is almost certain that in 1171 there was no war with England. On the other hand, it is difficult to devise a motive for inventing such a document. If it should be considered a very early forgery it is scarcely less important than if admitted to be genuine’ (p. 13). Professor Innes’s authority on such a question is of course very great; and not less so is that of the late Dr. Joseph Robertson. He says, in the ‘Antiquities of the Shires of Aberdeen and Banff,’ vol. iv. p. 691, that ‘Earl Morgund is said to have been the son of Gillocher, Earl of Marr. But this rests only on the letters patent of King William the Lion, first printed by Selden, which I think it is impossible to receive as authentic. The facts which they set forth may perhaps be true in part, but as a whole I don’t see how they are to be reconciled with what is elsewhere recorded on undoubted authority. Nor do I think that the letters can be successfully defended from the objections to them on other grounds—such as their style, the time and place of granting, and the manner of testing. I must, therefore, believe them to be spurious. It is obvious, at the same time, that they were forged at an early period. The learned and accurate Selden thought them to be in a hand of the time, and they seem to be alluded to in the year 1291. They may have been forged at that time, or more probably during the contests for the earldom of Marr between the earl in possession and Thomas Durward before 1228, and between Earl William and Alan Durward in 1257. These contests supply what seems to have been thought wanting—”a motive for inventing such a document.”’ In the main I concur with the opinions of the late Professor Innes and Dr. Joseph Robertson, and especially with that of the latter, which shows his usual acuteness and sagacity. I consider that the first and second objections made by Chalmers have no weight. With regard to the third, which is that the deed is inconsistent with the known history of the earldom, there is good reason for thinking that some such transaction really took place; for Sir Francis Palgrave prints, in his ‘Documents and Records relating to the Affairs of Scotland,’ preserved in the Treasury of Her Majesty’s Exchequer, an appeal prepared in the name of the seven earls of Scotland, and of the community of the realm, to Edward the First of England, which concludes with the following memorandum: ‘That when William, King of Scotland, restored to Morgund, son of Gyloclery, the predecessor of the Lord Dovenald, Earl of Marr, this earldom of Marr, according as the same is contained in a writing which Dovenald, Earl of Marr, possesses, there was wanting then to the said Morgund, and there is still wanting to the earl, three hundred pound land, partly in domain and partly in holdings and more, for which he claims that right should be done him’ (Palgrave, p. 21). The writing here referred to seems to have been this very deed. The fourth and fifth objections have also no weight. Hindhop Burnemuthe is a hamlet on the coast about five or six miles south of Berwick, and there is no improbability in there having been a royal forest there while Northumberland belonged to the Scottish king. With regard to the sixth objection, that the Earl of Marr could have no claim to the earldom of Moray, the documents printed by Sir Francis Palgrave, in connection with the competition for the crown, do show that the Earl at that time did claim to represent the earldom of Moray; for in the same document Dovenald, Earl of Marr, appeals in name of himself as one of the seven earls of Scotland, and _in name of the freemen of Moray_, and the other relations, connections, and friends of the said Earl. But while I reject all these grounds of objection as not conclusive, I am obliged to admit that the seventh objection, which relates to the allusion to the war with England, and to insurrection in Moray, is fatal to the authenticity of the deed. The war with England did not commence till two years afterwards, in 1173; and the insurrection in Moray broke out after the captivity of the king in 1174, and Moray continued in a state of rebellion from that year till 1181. But during the first eight years of King William’s reign he was at peace with England, and there was no appearance of the royal authority not having been recognised in Moray. Unfortunately it is during this period that the supposed letters patent are dated. Then as to the last two objections, which relate to the form of the deed as letters patent, and form of the testing, ‘teste meipso,’ there is no instance, so far as I am aware, of this form being used at as early a period as the reign of William the Lion. It is somewhat remarkable, that while these distinguished antiquaries were discussing the question of the authenticity of the letters patent as printed by Selden, it seems never to have occurred to any of them to endeavour to ascertain what became of the original, which Selden said he possessed, and whether it might not be recovered. Selden left his papers to Sir Matthew Hale, and Hale left his to the benchers of Lincoln’s Inn, by whom they were deposited in their library. The search was therefore not a difficult one, and on examining these papers the so-called original was at once found, which I have had photographed by the autotype process. It is undoubtedly a very old document, but not so old as the reign of King William the Lion. The handwriting is, I think, that of the early part of the reign of King Alexander the Third, and it must have existed prior to the document printed by Sir Francis Palgrave already quoted. In this reign, too, there are frequent specimens of deeds in the form of letters patent with the form of ‘teste meipso.’ Three of them are printed in the National MSS. of Scotland, Nos. 62, 63, and 64, and dated respectively in 1261, 1275, and 1282, and if the handwriting is compared it will be seen at once that this document belongs to the same period. The Earl of Marr at this time was William, grandson of Morgund by his son Duncan. He was one of the most powerful barons of Scotland at the time, and was chamberlain of Scotland in 1252. He was one of those who were removed from the administration of affairs in Scotland at the instance of King Henry the Third of England in 1255, being replaced, among others, by Alan Durward. He was recalled to the king’s council in 1257, and took a leading part in Scotland till the year 1273, when he appears to have died. Now we find that in 1257 a question was raised between Alan Durward and William, Earl of Marr, as to the right of the latter to the earldom. A papal rescript issued in that year, directing an inquest to be held, proceeds on the narrative that ‘Our beloved son the nobleman Alan called the Dorrward hath signified to us that, whereas the nobleman William of Marr of the diocese of Aberdeen hath withheld the earldom of Marr of right belonging to the aforesaid Alan, and the same doth occupy to the prejudice of him the said Alan, and that Morgund and Duncan deceased, to whom the said William asserts his succession in the said earldom, were not begotten in lawful matrimony,’ William, however, remained in possession, and certainly the production of a charter finding that Morgund was the lawful son and heir of his father, and containing a grant of the earldom to him and his heirs, would be most opportune in determining this question, and, if a genuine deed of this kind did not exist, probably the earl would neither have much difficulty nor much scruple in producing one that would pass muster. If the letters patent are a forgery, I think it must have been manufactured about this time, and I am not sure that we have far to seek for the forger. A charter by William, Earl of Marr, confirming a grant by his grandfather, Morgund, in 1267, is witnessed among others by ‘Magistro Ricardo Veyrement.’ This Master Richard Veyrement was one of the canons of St. Andrews, and I have shown in the introduction to Fordun’s Chronicle that he is probably the author of a ‘Historia’ which existed in the Great Register of St. Andrews, now lost; and the veritable Veremundus, from whom Hector Boece says he derived a great part of his fabulous history. His connection with William, Earl of Marr, at this very time, and his witnessing a charter confirming a grant by that Morgund whose legitimacy was challenged, certainly leads to the suspicion that the clever manufacturer of these letters patent was no other than the arch-forger of the spurious history of Scotland, and that if he had not been unfortunate in the selection of his date, it might even now have escaped detection. The following is the text of the document:— Willielmus Rex Scotorum universis Episcopis Comitibus Abbatibus Prioribus Baronibus Militibus Thanis et Praepositis et omnibus aliis probis hominibus totius terrae suae tam clericis quam laicis salutem eternam in Domino: Sciatis presentes et futuri Morgundum filium Gillocheri quondam Comitis de Marre in mea præsentia venisse apud Hindhop Burnemuthe, in mea nova foresta decimo kalendarum Junij Anno Gratiæ MCLXXI. petendo jus suum de toto Comitatu de Marre, coram communi Consilio et exercitu Regni Scotiae ibidem congregato. Ego vero cupiens eidem Morgundo et omnibus aliis jura facere secundum petitionem suam jus suum inquisivi per multos viros fide dignos, videlicet per baronias et thanos Regni mei per quam inquisitionem inveni dictum Morgundum filium et haeredem legitimum dicti Gillocheri Comitis de Marre per quod concessi et reddidi eidem Morgundo totum Comitatum de Marre tanquam jus suum hæreditarium sicut praedictus Gillocherus pater suus obiit vestitus et saisitus; Tenendum et habendum eidem Morgundo et hæredibus suis de me et hæredibus meis in feodo et hæreditate cum omnibus pertinentis libertatibus et rectitudinibus suis adeo libere quiete plenarie et honorifice sicut aliquis Comes in Regno Scotiæ liberius quietius plenarius et honorificentius tenet vel possidet; Faciendo inde ipse et hæredes sui mihi et haeredibus meis forinsecum servicium videlicet Servicium Scoticanum sicut antecessores sui mihi et antecessoribus meis facere consueverunt. Eodem vero die et loco post homagium suum mihi factum coram communi Consilio Regni mei prædictus Morgundus petiit sibi jus fieri de toto Comitatu Moraviae de quo praedictus Gillocherus pater suus obiit vestitus et saisitus super qua petitione sua per quamplures viros fide dignos Barones Milites et Thanos Regni mei inquisitionem facere feci et per illam inquisitionem inveni dictum Morgundum verum et legitimum hæredem de comitatu Moraviæ et quod eodem tempore propter guerram inter me et Anglicos graviter fuissem occupatus et Moravienses pro voluntate mea non potuissem justificare dicto Morgundo nullum jus facere potui. Sed cum guerram inter me et adversarios meos complere et rebelles Moravienses superare potero et dicto Morgundo sibi et hæredibus suis promitto pro me et hæredibus meis fideliter et plenarie jus facere de toto comitatu Moraviæ. Et ut hoc factum meum aliis certificaretur prædicto Morgundo has literas meas dedi Patentis. Teste me ipso eodem anno die et loco supra dicto. NOTE. ----- Footnote 529: This paper was read to the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland on the 8th of April 1878, and appears in their _Proceedings_ for that Session, p. 603. The photograph of the Letters Patent was deposited in their library. V. ON THE EARLDOM OF CAITHNESS.[530] The earldom of Caithness was possessed for many generations by the Norwegian Earls of Orkney. They held the Islands of Orkney under the King of Norway according to Norwegian custom, by which the title of Jarl or Earl was a personal title. They held the earldom of Caithness under the King of Scotland, and its tenure was in accordance with the laws of Scotland. We find from the Orkneyinga Saga that during this period the Orkney Islands were frequently divided into two portions, and each half held by different members of the Norwegian family, who each bore the title of earl. We likewise find that the earldom of Caithness was at such times also frequently divided, and each half held by different Earls of Orkney, though whether both bore the title of Earl of Caithness does not appear. It is unnecessary for our purpose to go further back than the rule of Thorfinn, Earl of Orkney, who died about A.D. 1056, and undoubtedly held the whole of the Orkneys and the entire earldom of Caithness for a long period. He had two sons, Paul and Erlend, who after his death ruled jointly without dividing the earldoms, and their descendants may be termed the line of Paul and the line of Erlend. After their death the islands were divided between Hakon, son of Paul, and Magnus, son of Erlend, each bearing the title of earl. The latter was the great earl known as St. Magnus. After his death, Earl Hakon appears to have possessed the whole. Earl Hakon had two sons, Harald Slettmali and Paul, who again divided the islands, each having an earl’s title, but Earl Harald appears to have held the whole of Caithness from the King of Scots. On his death Earl Paul obtained possession of the whole. In the meantime the line of Erlend failed in the male line, in the person of Earl Magnus, but his sister Gunhild married a Norwegian called Kol, and had by him a son Kali, who claimed a share of the islands, when the King of Norway gave him the name of Rognwald, an earl’s title, and divided the islands between him and Earl Paul. Earl Paul’s sister Margaret had married Maddad, Earl of Atholl, and had by him a son Harald, and, by a revolution which took place, Earl Paul abdicated, and his nephew Harald was made earl in his place, and shared the islands with Earl Rognwald. The latter then went on a pilgrimage to Jerusalem, and in his absence Malcolm IV. made Erlend Ungi, son of Harald Slettmali, Earl of Caithness, and gave him half of Caithness, Earl Harald Maddadson having the other half. Earl Rognwald then returns, and on Erlend’s death Orkney and Caithness were shared between him and Earl Harald. The line of Erlend again failed on the death of Earl Rognwald, who left an only daughter Ingigerd, who married a Norwegian, Eirik Slagbrellir, and had three sons, Harald Ungi, Magnus Mangi, and Rognwald, and three daughters, Ingibiorg, Elin, and Ragnhild. Earl Harald now possessed Orkney and Caithness, but soon after the King of Norway gave Harald Ungi an earl’s title with the half of the Orkneys, and by agreement with Earl Harald, King William the Lion gave Harald Ungi the half of Caithness which had belonged to Earl Rognwald, but they afterwards quarrelled, and Earl Harald Ungi was slain by the other Earl Harald, who again possessed the whole. Owing to the mutilation of the Bishop of Caithness by Earl Harald, he was attacked by King William in 1201, and only allowed to retain Caithness on payment of 2000 merks of silver, while the district of Sutherland was taken from him and given to Hugo Freskin de Moravia. Earl Harald died in 1206, and was succeeded by his son David, who died in 1214, when his brother John became Earl of Orkney and Caithness. Fordun tells us that King William made a treaty of peace with him in that year, and took his daughter as a hostage, but the burning of Bishop Adam in 1222 brought King Alexander II. down upon Earl John, who was obliged to give up part of his lands into the hands of the king, which, however, he redeemed the following year by paying a large sum of money, and by his death in 1231 the line of Paul again came to an end. In 1232, we find Magnus, son of Gillebride, Earl of Angus, called Earl of Caithness, and the earldom remained in this family till between 1320 and 1329, when Magnus, Earl of Orkney and Caithness, died; but during this time it is clear that these earls only possessed one half of Caithness, and the other half appears in the possession of the De Moravia family, for Freskin, Lord of Duffus, who married Johanna, who possessed Strathnaver in her own right, and died before 1269, had two daughters, Mary married to Sir Reginald Cheyne, and Christian married to William de Fedrett, and each of these daughters had one-fourth part of Caithness, for William De Fedrett resigns his fourth to Sir Reginald Cheyne, who then appears in possession of one-half of Caithness (Chart. of Moray, Robertson’s Index). These daughters probably inherited the half of Caithness through their mother Johanna. Gillebride having called one of his sons by the Norwegian name of Magnus, indicates that he had a Norwegian mother. This is clear from his also becoming Earl of Orkney, which the King of Scots could not have given him. Gillebride died in 1200, so that Magnus must have been born before that date, and about the time of Earl Harald Ungi, who had half of Caithness, and died in 1198. Magnus is a name peculiar to this line, as the great Earl Magnus belonged to it, and Harald Ungi had a brother Magnus. The probability is that the half of Caithness which belonged to the Angus family was that half usually possessed by the earls of the line of Erlend, and was given by King Alexander with the title of Earl to Magnus, as the son of one of Earl Harald Ungi’s sisters, while Johanna, through whom the Moray family inherited the other half, was, as indicated by her name, the daughter of John, Earl of Caithness of the line of Paul, who had been kept by the king as a hostage, and given in marriage to Freskin de Moravia. Magnus, Earl of Orkney and Caithness, the last of the earls of the Angus line, died before 1329, when ‘Caterina Comitissa Orcadiae et Cathanesiae’ grants a charter ‘in viduitate.’ In 1330 we find a claim on the earldom of Caithness by Simon Fraser and Margaret his spouse, one of the heirs of the Earls of Caithness (Acta Parl. vi.). In 1331 we find Malise, Earl of Stratherne, charged on the Chamberlain Rolls (p. 404) with the rents of the fourth part of Caithness; and in 1334 Malise appears as earl of the earldom of Stratherne, Caithness, and Orkney (Chart. Inchaffray). It is clear, therefore, that the half of Caithness which belonged to the Angus earls, had like the other half passed to two co-heirs, and that the title of earl, with one-fourth of the earldom, had gone to the Earl of Stratherne, and the other fourth to Margaret, wife of Simon Fraser.[531] There is some difficulty in clearing up the history of the last few earls of Stratherne, and of discriminating between them, as they all have the name of Malise. The first of the name of Malise was the son of Robert, Earl of Stratherne, and Fordun (Bower) fixes the date of his death when he says, in 1271, ‘Malisius comes de Stratherne in partibus Gallicanis decessit et apud Dunblane sepelitur.’ In giving the death of Magnus, king of Man, in 1269, he adds, ‘cujus relictam comes Malisius de Stratherne _postea_ duxit videlicit filiam Eugenie de Ergadia;’ but the _postea_ refers to after 1271, and this was the second Malise the son of the former, for we find in 1291, Malise, Earl of Stratherne, does homage to Edward I. at Stirling on 12th July, and twelve days after ‘Maria Regina de Man et Comitissa de Stratherne’ does homage at Perth in presence of Earl Malise. He died before 1296, as among the widows who are secured in their possessions by the King of England in that year is ‘Maria quæ fuit uxor Malisii Comitis de Stratherne.’ In point of fact Malise (2d) must have died before February 1292, for in that year ‘Maria Comitissa de Stratherne quæ fuit uxor Hugonis de Abernethyn’ is summoned to Parliament to show cause why Alexander de Abernethyn, son of Hugo, should not have his lands in Fyfe and Perth (Act. Parl. vi.); and that she was not the same Maria as the Queen of Man is clear from this, that she appears along with her in the list of widows in 1296 as ‘Maria quæ fuit uxor Hugonis de Abernethyn.’ She must therefore have been the wife of Malise (3d), son of Malise (2d). This Malise (3d) is said in Wood’s ‘Peerage’ to have been killed at the battle of Halidon Hill in 1333; but he died long before, for we find that his second wife was Johanna de Menteith, whom he married in the reign of Robert Bruce, as that king confirms a grant by Malise, Earl of Stratherne, to Johanna, daughter of John Menteith, his spouse (Rob. Index), and she after his death married John, Earl of Atholl, for there is in Theiner a dispensation in 1339 for the marriage of Johanna, Countess of Stratherne, widow of John, Earl of Atholl, to Maurice de Moravia. Now this John, Earl of Atholl, was himself undoubtedly killed at the battle of Halidon Hill in 1333. In point of fact Malise (3d) must have died before 1320, for King Robert also grants a charter to Maria de Stratherne, wife of Malise of Stratherne, of the lands of Kingkell, Brechin, which were David de Brechin’s (Rob. Index). She must have been therefore married to Malise (4th) during the lifetime of his father Malise (3d), as he is not termed earl; but this Maria is undoubtedly the Comitissa de Stratherne who was implicated along with David de Brechin and William de Soulis in a conspiracy in 1320 (Fordun), and Malise (4th) must then have been earl. Malise (3d) had two daughters—Matilda, married to Robert de Tony, and Maria to Sir John Murray of Drumsagard; for in 1293 we find him contracting for the marriage of his daughter Matilda, then under 20, to Robert de Tony (Hist. Doc. i. 394); and in the Chartulary of Inchaffray are two charters by Malisius Comes de Stratherne to John de Moravia and his heirs by Maria filia nostra; and his son Malise (4th) confirms a grant soon after 1319 by Malisius ‘pater noster quondam comes de Stratherne’ to John de Moravia et Maria filia Comitis. In 1320, Malise, Earl of Stratherne, signs the letter to the Pope. This must have been Malise (4th); and in 1334, in a charter in which he styles himself earl of the earldoms of Stratherne, Caithness, and Orkney, he grants to William, Earl of Ross, the marriage of his daughter Isabel by Marjory his wife, declaring her his heir of the earldom of Caithness failing an heir-male of the marriage of the said Earl Malise and Marjory (Cart. Inch.) She must have been his second wife. It has usually been assumed that Isabel married the Earl of Ross, but this is impossible, for in another deed in 1350 the Earl of Ross styles Marjory, Countess of Stratherne, his sister. He was therefore Isabel’s uncle, and the deed was granted at the time of Earl Malise’s forfeiture, when Isabel was probably still a child, and was intended if possible to protect the succession. Earl Malise (4th) had several other daughters. In 1353 Erngils, a Norwegian, gets from the King of Norway the title of Earl of Orkney in right of his mother Agneta, which he forfeits in 1357. In that year Duncan son of Andrew protests for Alexander de le Arde in right of his mother Matilda, called eldest daughter of Earl Malise. In 1364 Euphemia de Stratherne appears as one of the heirs of the late Earl Malise. In 1374 Alexander de le Arde resigns his rights through his mother Matilda to the King. In 1379 Henry St. Clair and Malise Sperre claim the Earldom of Orkney. Henry becomes earl and calls his mother Isabella St. Clair in a charter of lands of which she was heiress. Matilda was probably daughter of Maria the first wife, and the little favour shown to her rights may have arisen from her mother’s complicity in the conspiracy in 1320. The other daughters were probably children of Marjory, and the Earl of Ross appears to have married his niece Isabella to Sir William St. Clair, the father of Henry. It is clear the right to Orkney and Caithness could not have come to the Earls of Stratherne through the Queen of Man, wife of Malise (2d), nor through either of the wives of Malise (4th), as his daughters by both wives claimed. He must, therefore, have derived his right through his mother, one of the wives of Malise (3d), but this could not have been Johanna de Menteith, and therefore Maria, widow of Hugo de Abernethyn, seems the only possible heiress of the earldom of Caithness. NOTES. ----- Footnote 530: This paper was also read to the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland on 11th March 1878, and appears in their _Proceedings_ of that Session, p. 571. Footnote 531: In 1375 Alexander de le Arde resigned to King Robert the Second the earldom of Caithness, the principal manor or mansion, with the title of Earl, and all other rights belonging to him in right of his mother Matilda, eldest daughter of Earl Malise; and King Robert granted to his son David the castle of Brathwell, its lands, and all other lands inherited by Alexander de le Arde in right of Matilda de Stratherne, his mother (Robertson’s _Index_, pp. 120, 129). The castle of Brathwell, now Braal Castle, is in the vale of the Thurso river, and the possession of the principal messuage carried the title of Earl. The other lands of the earldom appear to have been held in _pro indiviso_ fourths. VI. ORIGINAL OF THE POEM ON THE LENNOX. MUIREADHACH ALBANACH, C͞C. Saer do lennan a Leamhain, Alun og mac Muireadhaigh A chul druimnech gan duibhe, Ua Luighdech a liathmhuine. Maith do chonach gilla ngeal, O do charais do cheidfhear, Mac righ bealaigh do bhi an dan, [Gur] bhi Leamhain a leannan. Gearr-abhand hainm eacht oile, A reimheas na rioghroidhe, Go riacht Corc Muimnech tar muir; Folt druimnech os a dhearcuibh. Da tainic Fearadhach fionn, Mac righ Alban na noirphioll, Da ndearna re Corc cleamhnas, Ar thocht ina thighearnas. Tug Fearadhach, feirrde leom, A inghean do Corc chuil-fhionn, Lan da tairm Teamhair Mide, Leamhain ainm na hinghine. Toircheas rioghna rug Leamhain, Maine mac Chuirc chuil-leabhair, Do thaisigh na hucht an ten, Do Chore Chaisil na coilen. Aen do laithibh do Leamhain, Mathair Mhaine mheirleabhair, Caega inghen fa ban bonn, Ag snamh innbhir na habhonn. Baidhter i an ucht an chalaidh, Leamhain inghean Fhearadhaigh, Baister Leamhain ort da eis, Meabhair nach olc re a fhaisneis. Dob annamh ceim catha gall, Fa timlibh uaine a abhann, Fa meince leat a Leamhain, Mac eillte fa tinnbhearaibh. Do fhas chughat Alun og, Mac Muireadhaigh na min rod, Aluinn snuadh a ghlac nglan-ur, Slat do chuan an ched Alun. Noch ar leathchumthach leanna, Alun og ua hOilealla, Bi an gheag do fhine Alun, Cead ag ibhe in aen ghalun. Gen co beith acht aen tunna dfhion, Ag fine Chuirc na caeimhriog, Ni sochma siol ceann-glan Chuirc, Da ndearna fion do anairt. Mormhaer Leamhna leaca mhin, Deagh-mhac inghine Ailin, A gheal-lamh, a thaebh, a throigh, Saer do leannan a Leamhain. Saer. VII. COMPARISON between the HIGHLAND CLANS and the AFGHAUN TRIBES. Written in 1816 by Sir Walter Scott. The genealogies of the Afghaun tribes may be paralleled with those of the Clans; the nature of their favourite sports, their love of their native land, their hospitality, their address, their simplicity of manners, exactly correspond. Their superstitions are the same, or nearly so. The _Gholée Beabaun_ (demons of the desert) resemble the _Boddach_ of the Highlanders, who ‘walked the heath at midnight and at noon.’ The Afghaun’s most ordinary mode of divination is by examining the marks in the blade-bone of a sheep, held up to the light; and even so, the Rev. Mr. Robert Kirk assures us, that in his time, the end of the sixteenth century, ‘the seers prognosticate many future events (only for a month’s space) from the shoulder-bone of a sheep on which a knife never came. By looking into the bone, they will tell if whoredom be committed in the owner’s house; what money the master of the sheep had; if any will die out of that house for a month; and if any cattle there will take a _trake_ (_i.e_. a disease), as if planet-struck.’[532] The Afghaun, who, in his weary travels, had seen no vale equal to his own native valley of Speiger, may find a parallel in many an exile from the braes of Lochaber; and whoever had remonstrated with an ancient Highland chief on the superior advantages of a civilised life, regulated by the authority of equal laws, would have received an answer something similar to the indignant reply of the old Afghaun: ‘We are content with discord, we are content with alarms, we are content with blood, but we will never be content with a master.’[533] The Highland chiefs, otherwise very frequently men of sense and education, and only distinguished in Lowland society by an affectation of rank and stateliness somewhat above their means, were, in their own country, from the absolute submission paid to them by their clans, and the want of frequent intercourse with persons of the same rank with themselves, nursed in a high and daring spirit of independent sovereignty which would not brook or receive protection or control from the public law or government, and disdained to owe their possessions and the preservation of their rights to anything but their own broadswords. Similar examples may be derived from the History of Persia by Sir John Malcolm. But our limits do not permit us further to pursue a parallel which serves strikingly to show how the same state of society and civilisation produces similar manners, laws, and customs, even at the most remote period of time, and in the most distant quarters of the world. In two respects the manners of the Caubul tribes differ materially from those of the Highlanders; first, in the influence of their Jeergas, or patriarchal senates, which diminishes the power of their chiefs, and gives a democratic turn to each separate tribe. This appears to have been a perpetual and radical difference; for at no time do the Highland chiefs appear to have taken counsel with their elders, as an authorised and independent body, although, no doubt, they availed themselves of their advice and experience upon the principle of a general who summons a council of war. The second point of distinction respects the consolidation of those detached tribes under one head, or king, who, with a degree of authority greater or less according to his talents, popularity, and other circumstances, is the acknowledged head of the associated communities. In this point, however, the Highlanders anciently resembled the Afghauns, as will appear when we give a brief sketch of their general history. But this, to be intelligible, must be preceded by some account of their social system, of which the original and primitive basis differed very little from the first time that we hear of them in history until the destruction of clanship in 1748.—Review of Culloden Papers, _Quarterly Review_, vol. xiv. p. 289. VIII. LEGENDARY DESCENT OF THE HIGHLAND CLANS, ACCORDING TO IRISH MSS. I. CLANS supposed to be descended from FERGUS LEITH DERG, son of Nemedh, who led the Nemedian colony to Ireland. I. GENELACH CLANN CAILIN ANNSO[534] GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN COLIN OR CAMBELLS, NOW CAMPBELLS. Cailin oig mac Sir Colin Cambell of Lochaw (chr. in 1407) son of Gillaeaspic ruaidh mic Sir Archibald Cambell (has a chr. in 1368 of lands as freely as his progenitor Duncan Mac Duine) son of Cailin mic Sir Colin Cambell of Lochow son of Neill mic Sir Neill Cambell of Lochaw son of Cailin moir mic Sir Colin Mor Cambell of Lochaw son of Gilleeaspic mic Gillespic Cambell (1266, Exch. Rolls) son of Dubgaill Cambel a quo mic Dugald Cambel, from whom came the name of Cambell, son of Donnchach mic Duncan son of Gillaeaspic mic Gillespic son of Gillacolaim renabarta mic Duibne Malcolm, called Mac Duine, son of mic Duibne[535] on raithir mic Duibhne, from whom the name is taken, _son of_ Eiranaid or Fearadoig mic _Fearadoig son of_ Smeirbi mic _Smeroie son of_ Artuir mic _Arthur son of_ Uibher .i. rig andomain[536] mic _Uibher, king of the world (Uther Pendragon), son of_ Ambrois mic _Ambrosius son of_ Considin mic _Constantine son of_ Amgcel mic _Amgcel son of_ Toisid mic _Toisid son of_ Conruirg mic _Conruirg son of_ Considin mic _Constantine son of_ Artuir na laimh mic _Arthur of the hand, son of_ Laimlin mic _Laimlin son of_ Artuir laimberg mic _Arthur Redhand son of_ Bene Briot mic _Bene Briot son of_ Artuir mic _Arthur son of_ Allardoid mic _Allardoid son of_ Artuir Fad Eaglais mic _Arthur of the long church, son of_ Lamdoid mic _Lamdoid son of_ Findluga mic _Findlay son of_ Artuir oig mic _Arthur the young, son of_ Firmara mic _Firmara or the man of the sea, son of_ Artuir moir mic _Arthur the great, son of_ Bene Briot mic _Bene Briot son of_ Briotus mic _Briotus son of_ Briotan o bfuilid Breatnan mic _Briotan, from whom came the Britons, son of_ Fergusa Leithderg mic _Fergus Redside, son of_ Nemed _Nemedius_. ----- Footnote 532: _Essay on the Nature and Actions of the Subterranean Invisible People going under the name of Elves, Fairies, and the like._ London, 1815. Footnote 533: _Account of Caubul_, p. 174 note. Footnote 534: From the MS. 1467, Kilbride MS., c. 1540, and MacFirbis’s Gen. MS. Footnote 535: The later spurious pedigrees made this Duibhne, son of Diarmaid McDuimhn, by Graine his wife, from whom the Campbells were called Siol Diarmaid, _i.e_. Diarmed’s seed, and place between him and Earanaid seven imaginary Duimhns, Arthurs, and Fearathors (Campbell’s _West Highland Tales_, iii. p. 89), thus importing the Ossianic hero Diarmed o Duine into the pedigree from mere similarity of name. There is no reason to suppose that the clan were ever really called Siol Diarmed. Footnote 536: MS. 1467 stops here, but elsewhere says the Cambells and Macleods were descended from Nemedius. The earlier part is taken from two other MSS. MacFirbis gives a different list of names, eleven in number, but likewise terminating with Briotan, son of Fergus Lethderg. They are ‘Iobar or Uther Mac Lidir mic Brearnaird mic Muiris mic Magoth mic Coiel mic Catogain mic Caidimoir mic Catogain mic Bende mic Mebrec mic Grifin mic Briotain, o taid Bretnaig, mic Fergusa Leithderg mic Nemid,’ etc. II. GENELACH MIC LEOD ANNSO[537] GENEALOGY OF MACLEOD here. (Alasdran) mic Alexander Macleod son of[538] ( ) mic William Macleod son of ( ) mic John Macleod son of ( ) mic William Macleod son of (Giollacolum) mic Malcolm Macleod son of (Tarmoid) mic Tormode Macleod son of[539] Leod on raithir mic Leod, from whom the clan is named, _son of_ Oloig mic _Oil the young, son of_ Oib mic _Oib son of_ Oilmoir mic _Oib the great, son of_ Iamhar oig mic _Ivor the young, son of_ Sin Iamhar mic _Old Ivor son of_ Sgoinne Sgandlan mic _Sgandlan of Scone, son of_ Iamhar Athacliath mic _Ivor of Dublin, son of_ Connla mic _Connal son of_ Connaill cl. derg mic _Connall of the red sword, son of_ Ceallach mic _Ceallach son of_ Mardoid mic _Mardoid son of_ Ceallach Catluanid mic _Ceallach Catluanid son of_ Cuilinnan mic _Cuilinnan son of_ Connla mic _Connal son of_ Dergdian Sgotheg mic _Dergdian Sgotheg, son of_ Manuis oig mic _Manus the young, son of_ Magnus na luingi luaithe mic _Magnus of the swift ship, son of_ Magnus Aircin mic _Magnus of Orkney, son of_ Iamhar uallach mic _Ivor the skilful, son of_ Dergi mic _Dergi son of_ Arailt mic _Harald son of_ Iamhar nam Breat mic _Ivor of the judgments, son of_ Ubhaidh mic _Ubhaidh son of_ Arailt mic _Harald son of_ Aspuig mic _Aspac son of_ Ceallach mic _Ceallach son of_ Connla mic _Connal son of_ Lamus mic _Lamus son of_ Lungbard mic _Longobard son of_ Lamus mic _Lamus son of_ Lochlan mic _Lochlan son of_ Arailt mic _Harald son of_ Laigh laidere o.r. clann Laigh mic _Laigh the strong, from whom called Clan Laigh, son of_ Fergus Leighderg _Fergus of the red side_. ----- Footnote 537: From the Kilbride MS., c. 1540. The first six names have been carefully erased, probably by a partisan of the rival house. They are supplied from other sources. Footnote 538: Alexander Macleod has charters as son and heir of the deceased William John Maclodeson of Dunvegan, on the forfeiture of the Lord of the Isles in 1498.—_Reg. Mag. Sig._ Footnote 539: There is a charter by David II. to Malcolm, son of Tormode Macloyde, of two parts of Glenelg.—R. I. III. GENELACH MIC NICAIL GENEALOGY OF THE NICOLSONS.[540] Eoin mic John son of Eogain mic Ewen son of Eoin mic John son of Nicail mic Nicail son of Aigi mic Aigi son of Neailb mic Neailb son of Nicail mic Nicail son of Gregill mic Gregill[541] son of Gillemure mic Gillemure _son of_ Sealbar mic _Sealbar son of_ Toircinn mic _Toircinn son of_ Tottha mic _Tottha son of_ Trostain mic _Trostain son of_ Sdacaill mic _Sdacaill son of_ Erble o fuiled ic Erble mic _Erble, from whom Mac Erble, son of_ Arailt mic _Harald son of_ Murechaich mic _Murechach son of_ Fogacail mic _Fogacail son of_ Poil mic _Paul son of_ Ailin mic _Allan son of_ Airfin mic _Airfin son of_ Taidg mic _Teague son of_ Amlaim mic _Amlaimh son of_ Turcinn Atacliath mic _Turcinn of Dublin, son of_ Arailt mic _Harald son of_ Asmainn mic _Asmainn son of_ Airdil _Airdil_. ----- Footnote 540: This genealogy is added from MS. 1467, as it contains a jumble of Gaelic and Norwegian names somewhat similar to that of the Macleods. It will be observed that the Pictish name Trostain or Drostain occurs among them. II. Clans supposed to be descended from COLLA UAIS, son of Eochaidh Doimlein, King of Ireland. I. NA TRI COLLA.[542] A deir an croinicil go ttugadar na tri Colla seacht ccatha re seacht laithe a ndiaigh a cheile dultachaibh agus gur marbadh ri uladh san chath deigheanach didh .i. Fergus fogha .i. i cath achaidh deirg. Don taobh a bhus do ghlionn Righe do rinneadh torann gleanna righe on iobur anuas eatarra agus Clanna Rughraidhe, agus nir fhilleadar Clanna Rughraidhe anun o sin ale. Do chuir Ri eireann .i. Muireadhach Tireach gairm ar chlainn Eachach Duiblen .i. na tri Colla agus tugadh go teamraigh iad agus tug saorrse agus sochra dhoibh fein agus da noighrighibh na ndiaigh go siordhaighe agus do mhaith marbhadh a athar doibh ar a ccongnamh do beith leis o sin amach agus tug a noireadsa do dhutbaigh doibh as cionn a ngabaltais a nultaibh .i. Triocha ced in gach cuigeadh eile deirinn agus baile in gach Triocha ced agus teach agus garrdha in gach baile. Ag so an chuid eile dona sochraibh .i. coimheirghe rompa ar fhearuibh eirionn a naonach agus a noireachtus acht Ri eireann amhain agus gan iadsan deirghe re cach. Trian eadala a ccuantaibh long doibh. Tus dighe tus leapta agus ionnalta re mileadhaibh eireann i ttighibh miodhcurta aca. Coinnmeadh da ndaoinibh ar fhearaibh eireann an feadh beidis gan buanacht dfhaghail. Gan eiric fola do dhul uatha. Coimhed ghiall eireann aca. Giodh be do rachadh ar a nionchuibh comairce go ceann mbliadhna aige. Gach arm nochtar a naonach no a noireachtus do beith aca. Ni raibe ag righ eireann acht braighde ar braighdibh uatha. Leathghuala Righ eireann ag righ sleachta na ccolla agus fad a laimhe agus a lainne dfholmhughadh eder e agus cach. Coinnmeadh eachra agus chon o shamuin go bealtuine ar feadh eirenn aca. Da mbuantaoi creach na ndiaigh dhiobh agus siad ar sluaigheadh righ eireann se ba san bhoin doibh uadha. Bo ar fich agus tuarasdul do gach aoin da maithibh o righ eireann ar sluaigheadh. Triocha colg ded. Triocha balt airgid. Triocha sleagh. Triocha brat o righ eireann do righ sleachta na ccolla iar bhfhilleadh da sluaigheadh agus da mbeidis geill uatha ag righ eireann ni bhiodh do chuibhreach ortha acht slabrad oir. No a mbeith fa reir a ccuideachtain righ eireann. Oir as uime a dearar oirgiallaibh riu .i. or as glais da ngiallaibh. Ag sin a sochair maille re sochraibh eile nach airmtear annso. A siad na ceithre haibhne as uaisle a nultaibh toranna fearainn chloinne na ccolla .i. Boinn, Banna, an Eirne agus an Fhionn. Iomthusa Cholla Uais nior bhfhiu leis fuireach ar a chuid don duthuigh no do na sochraibh sin a dubramar o do bi ere agus an rioghacht aige fein roime sin. Ragbhais a fhearann agus na sochair sin aga braithribh. Dala Colla Uais anais a mbun a gabaltais fein a nalbain agus a bhfhionnlochlannuibh o shoïn ale agus a ngablaigheann uadha acht ar fhill go heirinn diobh a mbun a nduthchasa. Ase so craobhsgaoileadh shleachta righ eireann .i. Colla Uais .i. Clann Domnaill a neirinn agus a nalbain agus a ngablaigeann uatha. Mar a taid Clann Raghnaill a tuaigh agus Clann Eoin Airnamurchann agus Macdubhghuill lathairn agus Clann Alasdair a neirinn agus a nalban agus Clann tsithigh na Munchan agus moran do maithibh oile nach airemtear sonn. OF THE THREE COLLAS. The chronicle says that the three Collas fought seven battles during seven days, one after another, to the Ulidians, and that the king of Ulad, _i.e_. Fergus Fogha, was slain in the last battle of them, viz. the battle of Achadh-derg. On this side of Glen-Righe the boundary of Glen-Righe from the Ibar down (from Newry northwards) was made between them and the Clan Rughraidhe, and the Clan Rughraidhe did not return across from that to this. The king of Erin, viz. Muredach Tireach, invited the sons of Eochaidh Duiblen, viz. the three Collas; and they were brought to Tara; and he gave freedom and emoluments to themselves and their heirs after them for ever. And he forgave them the killing on condition that they would aid him from henceforth. And he gave them this much of possessions beyond their acquisitions in Ulad, viz. a Triocha ced in every other province of Erin, and a bally in every Triocha ced, and a house and garden in every bally. This is another part of the privileges, viz., that the men of Erin, excepting the king alone, should rise up before them in fair and assembly, and that they should rise up before none. They should have a third of the profits of ship-harbours; precedence of drink, bed, and ablutions before the knights of Erin, in banquet-halls. Coigny for their people whilst they might be without getting Bonaght. That they should not lose blood-eric; should have the guarding of the hostages of Erin; that whoever sought their guarantee should have protection for a year; that they should have every weapon unsheathed in fair or assembly. The king of Erin had from them only pledge for pledge. The king of the race of the Collas should have the half-shoulder of the king of Erin (the right to sit or stand beside him), and the length of his hand and spear should be vacant between him and all others. They should have maintenance for horse and hound throughout Erin from Allhallowtide to May. If a prey were taken from them in their rear, when on the hosting of the king of Erin, they should have six cows from him for every cow. The pay of each of their goodmen from the king of Erin, on a hosting, was 21 cows. The king of the race of the Collas should get from the king of Erin, after returning from his hosting, 30 swords, 30 silver belts, 30 spears, 30 garments, and if the king of Erin had any hostages from them, there was no manacle on them save a gold chain, or they would be under control in the suite of the king of Erin; for the reason they are called Oirgialla is that gold (_or_) is the lock (_glas_) for their hostages (_gialla_). These are their privileges, together with other privileges not enumerated here. The four noblest rivers in Ulad are the boundaries of the lands of the Clan Colla, viz. the Boyne, the Bann, the Erne, and the Finn. As regards Colla Uais, he did not think it worth while remaining with his share of the country, or of those privileges we have mentioned, for he himself had Erin and the kingship ere then. He left the land and those privileges to his brothers. With regard (further) to Colla Uais, he remained in the foundation of his own acquisitions in Alban and Finnlochlann (Innsigall) from that time to this, and all who descend from him, except those that returned to Erin or the foundation of their inheritance. These are the branches of the race of the king of Erin, viz. Colla Uais, viz. the Clan Donald of Erin and Alban, and those who descend from them, as are the Clan Ranald of the north, the Clan Ian Ardnamurchan and MacDougall of Lorn, and the Clan Alaster of Erin and Alban, and the Clan Sheehy of Munster, and many other good men not enumerated here. II. GENEALACH MIC DOMHNALL NA GENEALOGY OF THE MACDONALDS OF HALBAN[543] ALBAN. Eoin mac John (_Lord of the Isles, died 1380_) son of Aengusa oig mic Angus og (_Lord of the Isles_) son of Aengusa moir mic Angus mor (_Lord of the Isles_) son of Domhnall mic Donald (_Lord of the Isles_) son of Raghnaill mic Reginald, King of the Isles, son of Somairli mic Somerled (_Kinglet of Argyll_) son of Gillebrigde mic Gillebride son of Gilleadamnain mic Gilladomnan son of Solaimh mic Solomon son of Imergi[544] mic Jehmarc (_did homage to Canute 1029_) _son of_ Suibhne mic _Suibhne son of_ Niallgusa mic _Niallgusa son of_ Amaini mic _Maine son of_ Gofraidh mic _Godfrey son of_ Fergusa mic _Fergus son of_ Eirc mic _Erc son of_ Echach mic _Echach son of_ Colla Uais _Colla Uais_. ----- Footnote 541: The author of the Statistical Account of Edderachylis (_Stat. Acct._, vi. p. 278) mentions that the Nicolsons are traditionally descended from a certain Krycul, who must have lived in the thirteenth century, and so far the pedigree may be genuine. Footnote 542: From MS. T.C.D., H. 3, 18. The author is indebted to Mr. Hennessy for the translation of this tract. Footnote 543: Taken from the Books of Ballimote and Leccan. III. CRAEBSGAIELED CLANN DOMNALL ANSO THE BRANCHES OF THE CLAN-DONALD .i. Clann Eoin a hile[545] Eoin here, viz. the children of John, agus Ragnall agus Gofraig tri mic Lord of the Isles, John and E. mhic Ruaidri; Domnall og agus Reginald and Godfrey, the three Eoin agus Aengus agus Alexandair sons of Amie mac Rory; Donald og IIII. mhic inghen Galtin .i. rig and John and Angus and Alexander, Alban. four sons of the daughter of Galtur (Robert), king of Alban. Ag Eoin a hile condregaid Clann The Clan Donald, Clan Ranald, and Domnall agus Clann Ragnall agus Clan Godfrey meet at John Lord of Clann Gofruig. the Isles. Clann Ragnall Ailin agus Eoin dobi The children of Reginald were Allan dall fadeoig agus Domnall agus and John, who was blind from Aengusa Riabhach agus Dubgaill youth, and Donald and Angus agus ag so clann a sin .i. Clann Riabhach and Dugald; and these Ailin Ruaidri agus Uisdinn agus are the children of Allan, viz. Eoin. Roderic and Huistein and John. Clann Domnall mhic Ragnall Eoin dar The children of Donald son of mathair Laiglib inghen Cimair Reginald were John, whose mother agus Alexandair na caillie agus was Laiglib daughter of Cimair, Aengus oig Clann inghean mhic and Alexander of the woods, and Cimisin. Angus og, children of the daughter of Macimie. Eoin dall acu mac les .i. Eoin. Blind John had but one son, viz. John. Aengus Riabhach aen mac mait aige Angus Riach had one good son, viz. .i. Aengus oig aig airobusa fein Angus og, and had in him a amaelanac oig. bald-headed youth. Clann Dubgaill mhic Ragnall The children of Dugald son of agus Aengus Ruadh. Clann Reginald are ... and Aengus the Gofruig Aengus agus Eoin agus red. The children of Godfrey were Somairli agus Ragnall. Angus and John and Somerled and Reginald. Aengus trath nir fagail clann mae Angus dying early did not leave any agb ata sil. male children who had offspring. ----- Footnote 544: MacFirbis gives this name as Meargaidhe, and adds _a quo_. He terms the clan Ua Meargaidhe, meaning that this name was derived from this Meargaidhe. The name is unknown in Scotland. Footnote 545: Taken from MS. 1467. IV. THE CLAN ALASTAIR.[546] Marcus mac Marcus son of Somairlig mic Somerled son of Alaxandair mic Alexander son of Aengusa mor Angus mor, Lord of the Isles. Eoin mac John son of Raghnaill[547] mic Reginald son of Alexandair mic Alexander son of Aengusa moir Angus mor. Aengus og mac Angus og son of Aengusa mic Angus son of Alaxandair mic Alexander son of Aengusa moir Angus moir. Eoin mac John son of Somairli mic Somerled son of Eoindub mic Black John son of Alaxandair mic Alexander son of Angus mor Angus mor (_Lord of the Isles_). Godfrey mac Godfrey son of Angus mhic Angus son of Alexander oig Alexander oig. Angus odhar mac Angus the pale son of Toirdealbach mhic Tearlach son of Alexander oig Alexander oig. Somairli mac Somerled son of Gillabrigdi mic Gillebride son of Gofraig mic Godfrey son of Alexandair oig Alexander oig. ----- Footnote 546: The following branches, descended from Alaxandair, son of Angus mor, are taken from the Books of Ballimote and Leccan and MS. 1467, and, though bearing no title, are obviously the Clan Alasdair. Footnote 547: Raghnall mac Alaxandair, heir of the Clann Alaxandair, is mentioned in the Annals of Ulster in 1363. V. THE CLAN IAN OF ARDNAMURCHAN.[548] Domnall mac Donald son of Aengus mic Angus son of Eoin sprangaig mic John the bold son of Aengusa mor Angus mor (_Lord of the Isles_). VI. Domnall mac[549] Donald son of Alaxandair mic Alexander son of Domnaill mic Donald (_Lord of the Isles_) son of Raghnaill mic Reginald (_Lord of the Isles_) son of Somairli Somerled. Dondchad agus Eachond da mhic Duncan and Eocha two sons of Alaxandair mic Alexander son of Domnall mic Donald son of Raghnaill Reginald. Eoin agus Gillaespic da mhic John and Gillespie two sons of Donnchaid mic Duncan son of Alaxandair mic Alexander son of Domnaill mic Donald son of Raghnaill Reginald. Toirdealbach agus Lochlan da mhic Tearlach and Lochlan two sons of Eachduind mic Eocha son of Alaxandair mic Alexander son of Domnaill mic Donald son of Raghnaill Reginald. VII. GENEALACH MAC DUBHGAILL[550] GENEALOGY OF MACDOUGALL. Eoin mac John son of Ailin mic Alan son of Eoin mic John son of[551] Alaxandair mic Alexander son of Eogan moir mic Ewen mor son of Donchadh mic Duncan son of Dubhgaill mic[552] Dougall son of Raghnaill Reginald gu concraigid na tri cineduigh .i. where the three tribes of the Clan Clann Domnaill agus Clan Dubgaill Donald, Clan Dubgall, and MacRory agus MacRuaidri converge. Eoin mac[553] John son of Eoin mic John son of Alaxandair Alexander. Alaxandair og mac Alexander og son of Eoin mic John son of Alaxandair Alexander. Eoin agus Somairli agus Ailin agus John and Somerled and Allan and Alaxandair og Ceithri mhic Eoin Alexander og were the four sons mic of John son of Alaxandair mic Alexander son of Donnchaidh Duncan. ----- Footnote 548: This pedigree, taken from Book of Leccan and MS. 1467, though without a title, is evidently that of the Clan Ian Ardnamurchan. Footnote 549: The following descendants of Alexander, son of Donald, Lord of the Isles, from Book of Leccan and MS. 1467. Footnote 550: From Book of Ballimote and MS. 1467. It also occurs in Book of Leccan under the name of ‘Clann Somairli.’ Footnote 551: Appears in 1491 as Dominus Johannes de Ergadia filius nobilis viri Domini Alexandri de Ergadia. Footnote 552: Dubgall is erroneously made son of Reginald. In Book of Leccan he is correctly made son of Somerled. Footnote 553: From the Book of Leccan. VIII. CLANN EOIN BOGAIG[554] CLAN OF JOHN THE LAME. Eoin mac John son of Lochland mic Lochlan son of Somairli mic Somerland son of Donnchadh mic Duncan son of Dubhgail Dougall. Dondchad mac Duncan son of Alaxandair mic Alexander son of Eoin mic John son of Donchaid Duncan. Malcolaim mac Malcolm son of Lochland mic Lochlan son of Eoin mic John son of Donchad Duncan. Fearchar agus Lochland agus Imar Ferchard and Lochlan and Ivor three tri mhic sons of Gillacolum mic Malcom son of Imair mic Ivor son of Dubhgaill mic Douugall son of Lochland mic Lochlan son of Donchad mic Duncan son of Dubgaill Dougall. Alaxandair agus Somairli da mhic Alexander and Somerled two sons of Eoin mic John son of Alaxandair mic Aalexander son of Donnchaidh mic Duncan son of Dubhgaill Dougall. IX. GENEALACH MHIC RUAIDRI[555] GENEALOGY OF MACRORY. Tomas mac Thomas son of Ragnall finn mic Ranald the white, son of Lochloind mic Lochlan son of Ailin mic Allan son of Ruaidri mic Roderic or Rory son of Ragnaill Reginald (_Lord of the Isles_). Ragnall finn eile mac[556] Another Ranald the white, son of Ruaidri mic Roderic son of Ailin mic Allan son of Ruaidri mic Roderic son of Ragnaill Reginald (_Lord of the Isles_). Fearchar agus Donnchad da mhic[557] Ferchard and Duncan two sons of Dondchaid mic Duncan son of Dubgaill mic Dougall son of Ruaidri mic Roderic son of Raghnaill Reginald (_Lord of the Isles_). Do Raghnall sin Comraig Clann At this Reginald meet the Clan Domnall agus Clann Ruaidri[558] Donald and Clan Rory, for Roderic .i. Ruaddri agus Domnall da mhic and Donald were the two sons of Raghnall. Dearbrathair do Reginald. His brother-german was Raghnall sin Dubgall a quo Clann Dougall, from whom were descended Dubgaill the Clan Dougall. ----- Footnote 554: From Book of Leccan and MS. 1467. Footnote 555: From Books of Ballimote and Leccan and MS. 1467. Footnote 556: From Book of Leccan and MS. 1467. Reginald filius Roderici has a charter of Garmoran and other lands from David II., and his father Roderic filius Alani of the same lands from Robert Bruce. Footnote 557: From Book of Leccan. Footnote 558: MS. 1467 has erroneously Condrecaidh Clann Ruaidri agus Clann Domnall agus Clann Dubgaill—converged the Clan Rory, Clan Donald, and Clan Dougall. III. Clans supposed to be descended from the HY NEILL or race of Niall Naoi Giallach, king of Ireland, through Niall Glundubh, head of the northern Hy Neill and king of Ireland, slain 917. I. GENELACH CLANN LADMANN[559] GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN LADMANN OR LAMONTS. Roibert mac Robert son of Donchadh mic Duncan son of Eoin mic John son of Giollacoluim mic Malcolm son of Ladmainn mic Ladmann son of Giollacoluim mic Malcolm son of Fearchair mic Ferchard son of Duinsleibe mic Duinsleibhe _son of_ Aeda Alain .i. Buirche mic _Aeda Alain the Buirche, son of_ Anradan mic _Anradan son of_ Flaithbertaig mic _Flaherty son of_ Murcertach mic _Murcertach son of_ Domnall mic _Donald son of_ Murcertach mic _Murcertach son of_ Neill Glundub _Niall Glundubh (or Black Knee)_. ----- Footnote 559: This and the three following are from the MS. 1467 and MacFirbis. II. DOGENELACH MHIC LACHLAN OG GENEALOGY OF MACLACHLAN. Caineach mac Kenneth son of Eoin mic John son of Lachlan mic Lachlan son of Gillapadruig mic Gillapadrig son of Lachlan moir mic Lachlan Mor son of Gillapadruig mic Gillapadrig son of Gillacrist mic Gillacrist _son of_ Aeda Alain _Aeda Alain_ renabarta Buirche mic _called Buirche son of_ Anradan condregaided _Anradan, where it converges with_ Clanna Neill Nai Giallach _the Clan Niall Naoi Giallach_. Caitrina ingen Catherine the daughter of Donchadh mic Duncan son of Ladmann mathair Ladmann was mother of Cainig agus Padraig agus Gillaespic Kenneth, Patrick, and Gillespie, agus and Agnes the daughter Agais ingen of Macdonald was the mic Domnaill mathair mother of Eoin agus John and Ealusaid ingen Elizabeth daughter of Mormair Comgaill mathair the Lord of Cowall was Lachlain oig agus mother of Lachlan og and mathair Gillapadruig ingen the mother of Gillapadrig Domnall mic was the daughter of Donald Eiri mic son of Eric mac Kennedy Lord Ceinnedon tigerna Cairge agus of Carrick and the daughter of ingen Lachlan mic Lachlan mac Rory was the Ruaidri mathair mother of Gillapadric, viz. Gillapadruig .i. Ateg no M. Ateg or M. III. GENELACH CLANN SOMAIRLE GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN SORLEY. Domnall mac Donald son of Gillaespic mic Gillespic son of Aengusa mic Angus son of Domnaill mic Donald son of Somairle mic Somerled son of Ferchair mic Ferchard son of Duinsleibe son of Buirche Dunslebhe _son of Burche_. IV. GENELACH MHIC EOGAIN NA HOITREAC GENEALOGY OF MACEWEN OF OTTER HERE. ANNSO Baltuir mac Walter son of Eoin mic John son of Eogain mic Ewen son of Gillaespic mic Gillespic son of mic son of mic son of Saibairan mic Saveran son of Duinsleibe mic Dunslebhe _son of_ Aeda Alain renabarta _Aeda Alain called_ Buirche mic _Buirche son of_ Anradan mic _Anradan son of_ Flathbertaigh _Flaherty_. IV. Clans supposed to be descended from CORC, son of Lughaidh, king of Munster, of the line of Heber. I. Mungfhionn ingen Fearadaig[560] Mungfinn daughter of Feradach Finn Feachtnaigh righ Finn Fachtnaigh king of the Cruithneach Alban[561] mathair Picts of Alban was the mother ceithre mhic do Corc .i. of four sons to Corc, viz. Cairbre Cruithnechan agus Cairbre Cruithnechan and Maine Leamna a quo Maine Leamna from whom are Leamnuigh an Alban the people of Lennox in Alban. Cairbre a quo Eoganacht From Cairbre are the Eoganacht Muighegearrain in Alban[562] of the Mearns in Alban. Cairbre Luachra a quo Cairbre Luachra from whom Eoganacht Locha Lein are the Eoganacht of Lochalein, agus Aois arta agus Aois Aos Arta, Aos Alla and Aos Alla agus Aois greine Greine; Cronan a quo Cruithn Cronan from whom are the rige Eamain Cruithnigh of the kingdom of Eamania. An da Cairbre .i. Cairbre The two Cairbres viz. Cairbre Luachra[563] agus Cairbre Luachra and Cairbre Cruthnechan, Cruthneachan amus diobh settled in Alban on an Alban orba mathair the inheritance of their do Cruithneachanuibh mother who was of the Picts Alban .i. Cairbre Cruthneachan of Alban viz. Cairbre Cruthnechan a Muighgearrain in the Mearns agus Maine Leamna a and Maine Leamna in Muighe Leamna the plain of the Leven. ----- Footnote 560: From MS. T. C. D., H. 25. There is another edition of this legend in MS. Bod. Rawl., 502. Footnote 561: The Bodleian MS. has Cruithintuath, that is, Pictland. Footnote 562: The Bod. MS. adds ‘dia rabi Aengus ri Albain,’ ‘through whom was Angus, king of Alban,’ a name given by Tighernac to Angus, son of Fergus, king of the Picts, who died in 761. Footnote 563: Cairbre Luachra is here inserted by mistake for Maine Leamna. II. GENEALACH MORMAOR LEAMNA ANSO GENEALOGY OF THE MORMAERS OF LENNOX SIOS[564] DOWN HERE. Donnchach mac Duncan (_eighth earl of Lennox_) son of Baltair mic Walter[565] (_de Fasselane_) son of Amlaimh mic Awley son of Donnchach mic Duncan son of Amlaoimh og mic Awley the young, son of Amlaoimh mor mic Awley mor, son of Ailin mic Ailin (_second earl of Lennox_) son of Ailin mor mic Ailin mor (_first earl of Lennox_) son of Muireadhaigh mic Muredach son of Maoldomhnaigh mic Maeldovnaigh _son of_ Maine Leamna mic _Maine Leamna son of_ Cuirc mic _Corc son of_ Lughaidh _Lughaidh_. ----- Footnote 564: From MS. T. C. D., H. 1, 7; and MS. 1467. Footnote 565: Walter de Fasselane married Margaret, daughter and heiress of Donald, sixth Earl of Lennox. His father Alan is by the peerage-writers identified with Awley, grandson of Aluin, second earl, but this would put him in the same generation with his wife’s grandfather. This pedigree supplies the omitted links. V. Clans supposed to be descended from the Kings of Dalriada in Scotland. First Group—Clans descended from Fearchar fada, son of Fearadach of the Tribe of Lorn, king of Dalriada; died 697. I. GENEALACH CLANN DUBH[566] GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN DUFF. Maelsnechta mac Maelsnectai (_king of Moray, d. 1085_) son of Lulaig mic Lulach (_king of Scotland, d. 1058_) son of Gillicomgan mic Gillcomgan (_Mormaer of Moray, d. 1032_) son of Maelbrigde mic Maelbrigda son of Ruadri mic Ruadri son of Domnall mic Donald son of Morgaind mic Morgan son of Domnall mic Donald son of Cathmail mic Cathmail son of Ruadri mic Ruadri _son of_ Aircellach mic _Aircellach son of_ Ferchair fhoda mic _Ferchar fada son of_ Fearadaig mic _Feradach son of_ Fergusa mic _Fergus, son of_ Sneachtain mic _Sneachtain son of_ Colmain mic _Colman son of_ Buadan mic _Buadan son of_ Eathaig mic _Ethach son of_ Muredaig mic _Muredaig son of_ Loarn moir mic _Loarn mor son of_ Eirc mic _Erc son of_ Ethach munreamhar _Ethach munreamhar_. MacBiad mac Macbeth (_king of Scotland, d. 1058_) son of Finnlaeic mic Findlaech (_Mormaer of Moray, d. 1020_) son of Ruadri mic Ruadri son of Domnall mic Donald son of Morgainn Morgan. ----- Footnote 566: This genealogy occurs in the Books of Leinster, Ballimote, and Leccan, in MS. 1467, MS. Bod. Rawl., 502, and T. C. D., H. 2, 18, where it is called the Genealogy of the Clan Duff, in the Book of Leinster the Clan Lulaigh, in MS. Bod. Ri Alban. II. GENELACH MIC NEACHTAIN[567] GENEALOGY OF MACNACHTAN. Muiris mac Maurice son of Malcolum mic Malcom son of Muiris mic Maurice son of[568] Maelcoluim mic Malcolm son of Gibuin mic Gilbert[569] son of Ferchaer mic Ferchard son of Gillchrist mic Gilchrist son of Domnaill mic Donald son of Neachtain mic Nachtan son of Artuir mic Arthur son of Gibuin mic Gilbert son of Neachtain mic Nachtan son of Isog mic Isaac son of Gillamartain mic Gillamartan son of Aengusa mic Angus son of Imhair mic Ivor son of Neachtain og mic Nachton the young, son of Neachtain nisin mic Nachtan of the wounds, son of Neachtan moir mic Nachtan mor _son of_ Domnaill duinn mic _Donald donn (or the brown) son of_ Ferchair fada mic _Ferchar fada son of_ Feradaigh mic _Feradach son of_ Fergusa mic _Fergus son of_ Neachtan mic _Neachtan son of_ Colmain mic _Colman son of_ Buadan mic _Buadan son of_ Eathach mic _Eathach son of_ Muiredaig mic _Muredach son of_ Loarn moir mic _Loarn mor son of_ Eirc mic _Erc son of_ Echach muinreamhair _Ethach munreamhar_. ----- Footnote 567: From MS. 1467. Footnote 568: Maurice MacNaughton has a charter from Colin Campbell of Lochow of lands in Over Lochow. III. DO GENELACH CLANN AN TOISIGH ANNSO GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN AN TOSHACH .I. CLANN GILLACATAN[570] HERE, VIZ. THE CLAN GILLACHATTAN. William agus Domnall da mhic William and Donald two sons of William mic William son of Ferchair mic Ferchard (_mentioned in 1383_) son of William mic William son of Gillamichol mic Gillamichael son of Ferchair mic Ferchard son of Disiab mic Shaw son of Gillacrist mic Gilchrist son of Aigcol mic Aigcol son of Eogain mic Ewen son of mic mic son of the son of Neill Neill. Lochlaine mac Lochlan son of Suibne mic Suibhne son of Disiab mic Shaw son of Leoid mic Leod son of Tsead mic Scayth (_mentioned in 1338_) son of Ferchar mic Ferchard son of Gillacrist mic Gilchrist son of Maelcolaim mic Malcolm son of Domnaill renabarta Donald, called the in Caimgilla mic Caimgilla, son of Mureach mic Mureach son of Suibne mic Suibhne son of Teadh mic Tead son of Neachtain mic Nachtain son of Gillachatain o fuiled Clann Gillachattan, from whom descended Gillacatan mic the Clann Gillachattan, son of Gallbrait mic Gallbrait son of Diarmada renabarta Diarmad called an Fear Leighinn mic the Lector, _son of_ Erc mic _Erc son of_ Conlait mic _Conlaith son of_ Fearchair fota mic _Ferchar fada son of_ Fearadaigh _Feradach_. ----- Footnote 569: In 1292 terra Gilberti MacNaughton. Footnote 570: From MS. 1467. IV. GENELACH CLANN MAELANFHAIGH GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN MILLONY OR (CLANN GILLACAMSROIN)[571] CLAN CAMERON. Eoghan mac Ewen son of Domnall duibh mic Donald dubh son of Ailin maelanfaid mic Allan Millony son of Poil mic Paul son of Gillapadruig mic Gillapatrick son of Gillamartain mic Gillamartan son of Poil mic Paul son of Mailanfaid mic Millony son of Gillroid a quo Gillacamsroin agus Gilleroth,[572] from whom descended clann Maelanfaigh the Clan Cameron o fuilid[573] ... mic and Clan Millony, son of Gillamartain og mic Gillamartan og son of Gillaganiorgan (?) mic Gillaniorgan son of Gillamartan moir mic Gillamartan mor son of Gilleogain mic mic Gilleewen son of Gillapaill mic Gillapaul son of Eacada mic Eacada son of Gartnaid mic Gartnaid son of Digail mic Digail son of Pouilacin mic Pouilacin son of Airt mic Art son of Aengusa moir mic Angus mor son of Erc mic Erc son of Telt Telt. Second Group—Clans descended from Fearchar abraruadh, son of Fearadach Finn of the Tribe of Lorn. GENEALACH MHIC GILLEOIN[574] GENEALOGY OF THE MACLEANS. Lochloinn mac Lachlan son of Eachduinn mhic Eachduinn (or Hector) son of Lochloinn mhic Lachlan son of Eoin mhic John son of Giollacolum mhic Malcolm son of Maoiliosa mhic Maoiliosa son of Gilleeoin mhic Gilleeoin son of Mecraith mhic MacRath son of Maoilsruthain mhic Maolsruthain son of Neill mhic Neill son of Conduilig .i. Ab Leasamoir mhic Cuduilig, Abbot of Lismore, son of Raingce mhic Raingce son of Sean Dubhgaill Sgoinne mhic Old Dougall of Scone, _son of_ Fearchar abradruaidh mhic _Ferchar abraruaidh son of_ Fearadhaigh reambraidhte mhic _Feradach, above mentioned, son of_ Fergusa, ut supra, mhic _Fergusa, as above, son of_ Neachtain, etc. _Neachtan_, _etc_. Tri meic Raingce .i. Raingce had three sons, viz. Cucatha a quo Clann Chonchatha Cucatha[575] from whom the Clan iccric Leamhna agus Conchatha, in the district of Lennox, and Cusidhe a quo Clann Consithe a Bhib Cusidhe,[575] from whom the Clan agus Consithe in Fife and Cuduiligh a quo Clann Conduiligh Cuduilig, from whom the Clan .i. Clann mec Gille-Eoin in Conduilig, that is, the Clan oilenaibh Muile MacLean in the island of Mull. Gilleeoin mac Mecraith tri meic les Gilleeoin son of MacRath had three .i. Bristi, Giollabrighde agus sons, Bristi, Gillebride, and Maoliosa Maoliosa. Giollacolum mac Maoilosa tri meic Malcolm son of Maoliosa had three les .i. sons, viz. Domhnall Niall agus Eoin Rioghnach Donald, Niall, and John.[576] inghean Gamhail Mormair Cairrige Rignach, daughter of Gamail, lord mathair an trir sin of Carrick, was the mother of these three sons. Maoliosa agus Eoin da mac an Maoliosa and John were the two sons Domhnaill sin. Beatog agus of the above Donald. Beatrice and Aithbric a dha ingen Aithbric his two daughters. Niall umorro da mhac les .i. Niall moreover had two sons, viz. Diarmuid agus Giollacoluim Diarmad and Malcolm. Eoin diu da mhac maithe les .i. John had long before two good sons, Lochloinn agus Eachdhonn viz. Lachlan and Hector. Lachluinn cuig mec les .i. Eoin, Lachlan had five sons, viz. John, Eachdhonn, Lochlainn Niall agus Hector, Lachlan. Niall, and Somhairle Somerled. Fionnghuala agus Maria a dha ingen Finnguala and Maria were his two daughters. Eachdonn mac Eoin clann lais .i. Hector, son of John, had these Murchadh, Donnall, sons, viz. Murdoch, Donald, Toirrdhealbach, Eoghan, Charles, Ewen, Tamas agus Gillecaluim Thomas, and Malcolm. Clann Crisitiona ingene Macleoid They were the sons of Cristina, .i. Murcadh mac daughter of MacLeod, viz. of Murdoch, son of Tormoid mhic Tormoid son of Leoid mhic Leod son of Gillemuire mhic Gillemuire son of Raice mhic Raice son of Olbair snoice mhic Olbair snoice son of Gillemuire. Ealga fholtalainn Gillemuire. Ealga of the beautiful ingean Arailt mic Semmair righ locks daughter of Harald son of Lochlan mathair an Gillemuire sin Semmair, king of Lochlann (_or Norway_) was the mother of that Gillemure. Third Group—Clans descended from Donald donn, son of Fearadach Finn of the Tribe of Lorn. I. GENEALACH CLANN LABHRAN[577] ANSO GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN LAWREN HERE. Eain agus Domnall agus John and Donald and Anilgolga oig mhic Anichol the young, sons of Colim mhic Malcolm son of Domnaill mhic Donald son of Eogain mhic Ewen son of Barthur mhic Walter son of Ab Achtus mhic The Abbot of Achtus[578] son of Aeid mhic Aedh son of Eogain mhic Ewen son of Iaig mhic Iaig son of Disiab mhic Shaw son of Gillacrist mhic Gilchrist son of Gillamicol mhic Gillamichael son of Pilip mhic Philip son of Finlaeic oig mhic Finlaech og son of Finlaeic moir mhic Finlaech mor son of Dubgaill mhic Dougall son of Baltuir mhic Walter son of Carlusa mhic Carlusa _son of_ Domnaill oig mhic _Donald og son of_ Domnaill duinn mhic _Donald donn son of_ Fearadhach Finn _Feradach Finn_. II. GENEALACH CLANN AID ANNSO[579] GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN AY HERE. Fearchair mac Ferchard son of Imair mhic Ivor son of Gillacrist mhic Gilchrist son of Gillaespic mhic Gilespic son of Gillananaemh mhic Gillananaemh son of Gillacrist mhic Gilchrist son of Cormac mhic Cormac son of Gillamitel mhic Gillamichael son of Aid mhic Aidh son of Gallbuirt mhic Gallbuirt son of Gillacatan mhic Gillacatan son of Domnaill mhic Donald son of Eogain mhic Ewen son of Pilip mhic Philip son of Disiab mhic Shaw son of Eirdi mhic Erdi son of Aengusa mhic Angus son of Finlaeic mhic Finlaech son of Carla mhic Carla _son of_ Domnaill oig mhic _Donald og son of_ Domnaill duinn mhic _Donald donn son of_ Feradhach _Feradach_. Fourth Group—Clans said to be descended from Cormac, son of Airbeartach. I. Clans said to be descended from FERADACH FINN through Cormac mac Airbeartach. I. GENEALACH CLANN AINNRIAS[580] GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN ANDRES. Pal mac Paul son of Tire mhic Tire son of Eogain mhic Ewen son of Muredaig mhic Muredach son of Poil mhic Paul son of Gilleainnrias mhic Gillandres son of Martain mhic Martin son of Poil mhic Paul son of Cainnig mhic Kenneth son of Cristin mhic Cristin son of Eogain mhic Ewen son of Cainnig mhic Kenneth son of Cristin mhic Cristin son of Gillaeoin na hairde mhic Gillaeoin of the Aird, son of Eirc mhic Erc son of Loairn mhic Lorn son of Ferchair mhic Ferchard son of Cormac mhic Cormac son of Airbertaigh mhic Airbertach _son of_ Fearadhach _Feradach_. II. GENEALACH CEANN CAINNIG[581] GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN KENNETH Murchaid mac Murdoch son of Cainnig mhic Kenneth son of Eoin mhic John son of Cainnig mhic Kenneth son of Aongusa mhic Angus son of Cristin mhic Cristin[582] son of Cainnig[583] mhic Kenneth son of Gillaeoin oig mhic Gilleeoin og son of Gillaeoin na hairde Gilleeoin of the Aird. III. GENEALACH MHIC MATGAMNA[584] ANSO GENEALOGY OF THE MATHESONS DOWN SIS HERE. Murechach mac Murdoch son of Donncaig mhic Duncan son of Murechach mhic Murdoch son of Donnchach mhic Duncan son of Murechach mhic Murdoch son of Cainnig mhic Kenneth[585] son of Matgamna mhic Matgamna (_or Mahan_) son of Cainnig mhic Kenneth son of Cristin Cristin. IV. GENEALACH MHIC DUIBSITHI ANSO[586] GENEALOGY OF MACDUFFY HERE. Domnall agus Niall agus Donald and Niall and Gillacolaim tri mhic Malcolm the three sons of Gillaespic mhic Gillespic son of Gillacrist mhic Gillchrist son of Gillacoluim mhic Malcolm son of Dubgaill mor mhic Dougall mor son of Duibsith mhic Dubshithe (_or Duffy_) son of Murechach mhic Murdoch son of Finlaeic cais mhic Finlaech cas son of Murechach mhic Murdoch son of Ferchair mhic Ferchard son of Cormac mhic Cormac son of Airbeartaigh mhic Airbertach _son of_ Fearadaigh _Feradach_. II. Clans said to be descended from FEARCHAIR ABRARUADH through Cormac mac Airbeartach. DO GENEALACH MHIC AN ABA EGNE[587] THE GENEALOGY OF THE MACNABS. Gillamure mac Gillamure son of Eogain mhic Ewen son of Aengusa mhic Angus son of Macbethad mhic Macbeth son of Aengusa mhic Angus son of Gillamure loganaig mhic Gillemure Loganaig son of Ferchair mhic Ferchard son of Finnlaeic mhic Finnlaech son of Donnchaich mhic Duncan son of Firtired mhic Firtired son of Gillafaelan mhic Gillafaelan son of Gillamartan mhic Gillamartan son of Firtiread mhic Firtired son of Loairn mhic Lorn son of Fearchar mhic Ferchard son of Cormac mhic Cormac son of Airbeartaigh mhic Airbertach _son of_ Erc mhic _Erc son of_ Domnaill duinn mhic _Donald donn son of_ Ferchar abraruadh mhic _Ferchar Abraruadh son of_ Feradaig _Feradach_. III. Clans said to be descended from FEARCHAR FADA through Cormac mac Airbertach. GENEALACH CLANN GRIGAIR[588] GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN GREGOR. Malcolaim Mac Malcolm son of Padruic mhic Patrick son of Eoin mhic John son of Gregair mhic Gregor son of Donnchaich mhic Duncan son of Maeilcolaim mhic Malcolm son of Gillacrist mhic Gillchrist son of Ferchair mhic Ferchard son of Muredaigh mhic Murdoch son of Ainnrias mhic Annrias (_or Andrew_) son of Cormac mhic Cormac son of Airbertaigh mhic Airbertach _son of_ Fearchar oig mhic _Ferchar og son of_ Fearchair fada mhic _Ferchar fada son of_ Fearadach finn _Feradach finn_. IV. Clans said to be descended from FEARCHAR FADA through Macbeth, son of Finlaech, and Cormac mac Airbertach. I. DO GENEALACH CLANN GUAIRE[589] THE GENEALOGY OF THE CLAN QUARRY. Ceallach mac Cellach son of Poil mhic Paul son of Cellach in enig mhic Cellach, the liberal, son of Turcaill mhic Torquill son of Ceallaig mhic Cellach son of Guaire mhic Guaire (_or Quarry_) son of Cormaic mhic Cormac son of Arbertaig mhic Airbertach _son of_ Murechach mhic _Murechach son of_ Fearchair [oig] mhic _Ferchach og son of_ Mic Beathaidh mhic _Macbeth son of_ Finlaeic mhic _Finnlaech son of_ Fearchar fada mhic _Ferchar fada son of_ Fearadaig mhic _Feradach son of_ Fergusa _Fergus_. Turcuill Guaire agus Cormac tri Torquill, Guaire, and Cormac, three meic eile Poil mhic Ceallaig other sons of Paul, son of anoinigh Cellach, the liberal. II. DO GENEALACH MHIC FINGAINE[590] THE GENEALOGY OF THE MACKINNONS. Niall mac Niall son of Gillabrigde mhic Gillebride son of Eogain mhic Ewen son of Gillabrigde mhic Gillebride son of Sean Eogain mhic Old Ewen son of Finlaeic mhic Finlaech son of Fingainne o fuiled Clann Fingaine Fingaine, from whom came the Clan mhic Fingaine (_or Mackinnons_) son of Cormac mhic Cormac son of Airbeartaigh mhic Airbertach _son of_ Murchertaigh mhic _Muirchertach son of_ Fearchair oig etc. _Ferchar og_ _etc_. Fionnguine Ab Hi dearbhrathair do Fingaine Abbot of Iona was Niall mhic Gillebrigde brother-german of Niall son of Gillebride. III. GENEALACH MHICGILLA MAOIL[591] GENEALOGY OF THE MACMILLANS. Gillacoluim og mac Malcolm the young, son of Gillacoluim moir mhic Malcolm mor son of Maolmuire mhic Maolmure son of Cainn mhic Cainn son of Dubgaill mhic Dougall son of Gillacoluim mhic Malcolm son of Gillacrist dar comhaimn an Gillchrist called an Gillamaol (_or Gillamaol agus Clann an Mail mhic the tonsured servant_) from whom are the Clan an Mail (_or MacMillans_) son of Cormaic mhic Cormac son of Airbeartaigh reamraieth Airbertach aforesaid a se an tairbertach sin do aitreabh This Airbertach had twelve tribes da threibh deg i Fionnlochlannach inhabiting the Norwegian .i. Greagraidhe na ngaisgeathach territory, viz. Greagraid of the das comainim Muile agus Tir no Champions, commonly called Mull Tire aodha agus Cruibhinis, no and Tiroda (Tiree) and Cruibhinis Craobhinis or Craobhinis (or _Island of Bushes_).[592] IV. GENEALACH MHIC GILLAAGAMNAN[593] GENEALOGY OF THE MACLENNANS. Amarechach mhic Murdoch son of mhic son of mhic son of Murechach mhic Murdoch son of mhic son of Donnchach mhic Duncan son of Nicail mhic Nicail son of Gillaagamnan o fuil an fine[594] Gillaagamnan, from whom came the mhic clan, son of Cormac mhic Corman son of Airbertaigh Airbertach. ----- Footnote 571: From MS. 1467. Footnote 572: This is the Gilleroth mentioned by Fordun in 1222 as a follower of Gillespic Macohecan in his insurrection, along with whom he witnesses a charter as Gilleroth son of Gillemartan. Footnote 573: There is a sentence here so defaced as to be hardly legible. The words ‘Clann ... Maelanfaig agus rac an sreoin ic Gillanfaigh’ may be made out, and imply that the MacGillonies of Strone were his descendants. Footnote 574: From MS. 1647, MacFirbis and MacVurich, Hector and Lauchlan have charters from the Lord of the Isles of Dowart. Footnote 575: The names Cucatha and Cusidhe mean respectively the dog of war and the dog of peace. Footnote 576: Dofnaldus MacGilhon, Johannes et Nigellus filii Gilhon appear in the Exchequer Rolls in 1326. Footnote 577: From MS. 1467. Footnote 578: The name of this abbot not given, but it must have been Labhran, from whom the clan takes its name. Footnote 579: From MS. 1467. Footnote 580: From MS 1467. The Earl of Ross grants a charter in 1366 to Paul Mactyre of the lands of Gerloch. Footnote 581: From MS. 1467 and MacVurich. Footnote 582: Gilchrist filius Kinedi appears in 1222 as a follower of MacWilliam. Footnote 583: MS. 1467 has Agad by mistake for Cainnig, correctly given by MacVurich. Footnote 584: From MS. 1467 and MacVurich. Footnote 585: Kermac Macmaghan appears in the Exchequer Rolls in 1264. Footnote 586: From MS. 1467. Footnote 587: From MS. 1467. Footnote 588: From MS. 1467. Footnote 589: From MS. 1467 and MacFirbis. Footnote 590: From MS. 1467 and MacFirbis. Footnote 591: From MS. 1467 and MacFirbis. Footnote 592: This is said to be an old name for Iona. Footnote 593: From MS. 1467. Some of the names cannot be read. Footnote 594: The Clan is here called Finé. INDEX. INDEX. Abbacia or Abthanrie, definition of, ii. 343, 393; iii. 261, 283. Abbacy, law of succession to, ii. 66. Aberbuthnot, thanage of, iii. 259. Abercorn (Aebbercurnig), i. 368; monastery, 133, 262, 268; ii. 224. Aberdeen, bishopric of, ii. 378; thanage of, iii. 86, 253. Aberdour (Fifeshire), church of, dedicated to St. Fillan, ii. 33. Aberkerdor, thanage of, iii. 251. Aberlemno (Aberlemenach), thanage of, iii. 262, 264. Abernethy (site of Orrea?), i. 74; church of, said to be founded by Nectan, 135; ii. 32; also by Garnard, i. 305; homage of Malcolm Ceannmor at, 424; church of, dedicated to St. Bridget, ii. 309, 326; round tower of, built by Irish clergy, _temp_. Kenneth MacAlpin, 309-10; primacy transferred to, _ib_. Abers and Invers, on the distribution of, i. 220-222. Aberte. _See_ Dunaverty. Aboyne. _See_ Obeyn. Abravannus, river (the Luce), i. 66. Abthanries, iii. 83, 261, 283. Acca, bishop in Hexham, i. 275; ii. 222. Adamnan, ninth abbot of Hii or Iona, i. 245, 269; his first mission to Northumbria, ii. 170; repairs the monastery of Iona, 171; second mission to Northumbria, 171; is converted to the prevalent manner of keeping Easter, 172; attends the Synod of Tara, 173; his death, 173. Adamnan’s _Life of Columba_, i. 28. Add, river, i. 68, 216; iii. 129. Adhelstan, (legendary) king of the Saxons, i. 297-299. Adrian, St., legend of, i. 320; ii. 311. Aebba, first abbess of Coldingham, ii. 200. Aed, son of Boanta, Dalriada governed by, i. 305, 308. Aed, son of Kenneth, king of the Picts (A.D. 877), i. 328-9. Aed, son of Neill, king of Ireland, i. 330. Aeda Allan, head of the Cinel Eoghan, defeats Flaithbertach, king of Ireland, i. 289-90. Aedh (Aed Finn), son of Eachach, slain in attempting to restore the kingdom of Dalriada, i. 300. Aedh, king of Ailech, gives battle to the fleet of the Gallgaidhel, i. 312. Aedh Finnliath, king of Ireland, i. 313. Aedilbald, king of Mercia, invades Northumbria (A.D. 740), i. 291. Aedilfrid, king of Bernicia and Deira, i. 236, 239, 244; his sons take refuge in Iona, ii. 153. Aeduin (Edwyn), son of Ella, expelled from his kingdom of Deira by Aedilfrid, regains it and also Bernicia, i. 239, 240; his name left in Edwinesburg (Edinburgh), 240; his conversion to Christianity, and baptism at York, ii. 154; slain at Hatfield, i. 243; ii. 155. Aelfred the Great, his struggles with the Danes, i. 349. Aelric, uncle of Aeduin, i. 244. Aethelstan (A.D. 925-40), grandson of Aelfred the Great, attacks Northumbria, i. 351, and invades Alban, 352; league of the northern populations against him, ᚬ v1 352-53ᚬ; victories in the battle of Brunanburg, ᚬv1 353-60ᚬ; his death, 359. Aëtius, his aid asked for by the Britons, i. 144, 148. Agned, Mt. (Edinburgh), i. 153, 238. Agrestes, laws relating to, iii. 244. Agricola, Julius, his arrival in Britain as governor, i. 41; extent of the Roman province at this time, 41, 42; favourable circumstances under which his government commenced, ᚬv1 42ᚬ; characteristics of his administration, 43; defeats the Ordovices, 43; overruns districts on the Solway, 43, 44; ravages the Tay, 45; fortifies as far as isthmus between the Forth and the Clyde, 46, 47; visits Argyll and Kintyre, 47; his three years’ war north of the Forth, ᚬv1 48-52ᚬ; battle of ‘Mons Granpius,’ ᚬv1 52>-56ᚬ; his recall, 57; result of his campaigns, 57; the Caledonian tribes resume their independence, ᚬv1 58-60ᚬ. Agricolæ, rustici, or husbandmen, laws relating to, iii. 244. Aicill, Book of, iii. 176 _seq_. Aidan, son of Gabran, inaugurated king of Dalriada by St. Columba, i. 143, 229, 247, 249; his death, 239. Aidan, first bishop of Lindisfarne, i. 251; ii. 157; death of, i. 253; relics of, 259; dedications to, 260. Aidh, clan, iii. 344-5. Ailbhe, Cummene, fifth abbot of Iona, ii. 163. Ainbhcellaig, son of Fearchar Fada, king of Dalriada, i. 272; slain, 284. Airdross (Aird of Ross), a mountainous region in Ross-shire, iii. 344. Airgialla, Oirgialla, the term explained, i. ᚬv1 286-7ᚬ. Airthrey (Aithrie, Athran), i. 341; iii. 45. Alani, the. _See_ Vandals. Alaster (MacAlasters), clan, iii, 330, 404, 408, 410, 468. Alata Castra (the winged camp), a town of the Vacomagi, position of, i. 74, 75. Alauna, town of, Inchkeith = the Giudi of Bede. _See_ Giudi. Alauna, a town of the Damnonii, i. 74. Alaunus, river (Allan, in Northumberland), i. 66. Alban, history of the men of, iii. 213. Alban, Albania, an early appellation of that part of Britain situated to the north of the Forth and Clyde, i. 1, 2 (_see_ Scotia); near the close of the ninth century the territory designated Pictavia is called the kingdom of Alban, 335; Donald, son of Constantin, and grandson of Kenneth mac Alpin, first king of Alban, ᚬv1 335-9ᚬ; its division into seven provinces as given by Andrew, bishop of Caithness, probably applicable to the time of Constantin, son of Aedh, 340; iii. 44 _seq_.; organisation of the provinces, i. 343; kingdom attacked by Aethelstan, 352; extent of the kingdom of Alban at the time when first designated Scotia, 395, 398; bishops of, ii. 323, 327, ᚬv2 329-331ᚬ _seq_.; Tract entitled _History of the Men of Alban_, i. 230; iii. 213. _Albanic Duan_, the, a poem of the eleventh century, i. 184. Albinus, Clodius, governor of Britain, i. 79; defeated and slain by Severus, at Lyons, 80. Alcluith, fastness of (Dumbarton), i. 130, 139; capital of the Britons of Alclyde, 236. _See_ Alclyde. Alclyde, Britons of, territory of the kingdom of, i. 235, ᚬv1 365ᚬ; its population and capital, its monarchs (called kings of Alcluith), 236; after thirty years’ subjection to the Angles, 256, they recover their independence, 267, 271; subjugated by Eadberct and Angus, ᚬv1 294-6ᚬ; the capital besieged by the Northmen under Amlaiph and Imhair, ᚬv1 324ᚬ; the term Cumbri first applied to the Strathclyde Britons, 326; regain their independence, and elect Donald, son of Aedh, king of Alban, as their ruler, 346; ravaged by the Saxons, and ceded to the Scots, 362. _See_ Cumbria. Alcred, king of Northumbria, i. 300. Aldborough (Ealdburg), i. 359. Aldfrid, king of Northumbria, i. 268. Aldgaitha, half-sister of Ealdred, earl of Northumbria, i. 394, 408, 419. Aldred, son of Eadulf or Athulf, commander of Bamborough, i. 373. Aldred (Ealdred), son of Uchtred, earl of Bernicia, i. 399, ᚬv1 408ᚬ. Aldred, archbishop of York, i. 413. Aldun, Bishop, i. 385. Alexander I., son of Malcolm Ceannmor, reigns seventeen years (A.D. 1107-24), i. 447; founds the monastery of Scone, 447; also a priory on the island of Lochtay, 448; his struggle for the Church’s independence, ᚬv1 448-451ᚬ; founds a monastery on the island of Inchcolm, 451; dies at Stirling, and is buried in Dunfermline, 454. Alexander II., son of William the Lion, crowned at Scone, reigns thirty-five years (A.D. 1214-49), i. 483; an insurrection against, headed by the families of MacWilliam and MacEth subdued by Ferquhard Macintagart of Applecross, 483; subdues Argyll, 484, and Galloway, 487; attempts the reduction of the Western Isles, 489; dies at Kerrera, 490. Alexander III., crowned at Scone, reigns thirty-six years (A.D. 1249-1285), i. 490; ceremony at his coronation, 490; regency during his minority, 492; contests the sovereignty of the Western Isles with king Hakon of Norway, 492, whom he defeats at Largs, 494; annexes said Isles to the kingdom of Scotland, 495; deaths of all his family, 496; summons the Estates of Scotland to regulate the succession, 496; marries his second wife, i. 496; accidentally killed near Kinghorn, 497; Scotland consolidated into one feudal monarchy in his reign, iii. 1; English possessions, 5; physical aspect of Scotland at this time, 9-15; population composed of six races, 15 _seq_.; Estates of the realm in 1283, 39. Allan, river (Stirlingshire), i. 45. Allectus, a usurper, reigns three years in Britain, is defeated and slain by Constantius Chlorus, i. 93, 95, 129. Allelujatic victory, the, i. 150, 151. _Alltudion_, in the Welsh tribe, analogous to the Irish _Fuidhir_, iii. 200. Almond, river (Perthshire), Roman camp at its junction with the Tay, i. 45, 88, 266, 381. _See_ Tula Aman. —— river (Midlothian), i. 249, 381. Alphabets, the Irish and Ogham, ii. 449; Hill Burton’s opinion of the latter, ᚬv2 449-450ᚬ. Alpin (son of Eochaidh), king of the Picts (A.D. 726), i. 286; struggles after his accession, ᚬv1 287-9ᚬ; invades the Pictish province of Galloway, where he was slain, ᚬv1 291-2ᚬ. Alpin, son of Wroid, king of the Picts (A.D. 775-80), called in the _Ulster Annals_ Elpin, king of the Saxons, i. 301. Alpin the Scot (A.D. 832-4), father of Kenneth mac Alpin, attacks the Picts and is slain, i. 306; traditional locality of the battle, ᚬv1 306-7ᚬ. _See_ Picts. Alwynus, bishop of Alban, ii. 336. Alyth, thanage of, iii. 276. Amlaimh (Amlaiph, Olaf), Norwegian king of Dublin, i. 313, 324-326. Amlaiph (Olaf), son of Indulph, king of Alban, slain by Kenneth, i. ᚬv1 370ᚬ. _Amra Choluim Chilli_, ancient tract, quoted, ii. 123, 145; iii. 210. Anchoretical life, its influence on the monastic church, ii. 233; early developed in Ireland and Scotland, 245. Anchorites, called _Deicolæ_, God-worshippers, ii. 238; also the people of God, 239; attempts to bring them under monastic rule, 240; brought under canonical rule, 242; their existence in the Saxon Church, 245; termed in Ireland _Deoraidh De_, 248; also _Ceile De_, 251; characteristics similar to the _Deicolæ_, 252; brought under canonical rule in Ireland, 254; in Scotland termed _Keledei_, 255; adopt the canonical rule, 276. Andres (Rosses), clan, iii. 330, 365, 484. Andrew, St., legends relating to, and the analysis of them, i. ᚬv1 296-99ᚬ; churches dedicated to him, 298; Ceannrighmonaigh, the first name of the place where a church was founded in honour of his relics, which was then called Cellrighmonaid (Chilrymont, Kilrymont), 299; relics of, brought to Hexham church, founded in his honour, ii. ᚬv2 221ᚬ. Andrew, bishop of Caithness, his account of the seven provinces of Albania, i. 340; iii. 44. Angles, the, invade Britain with the Saxons and Jutes, i. 149, ᚬv1 189-192ᚬ; ii. 19; tribes of, and Frisians from the kingdom of Bernicia, i. 155; language of, 193; who they were and whence they came, 227; Osuiu obtains dominion over the Britons, Scots, and Picts, 256 _seq_.; effect of the defeat and death of Ecgfrid, 267; position afterwards of the Picts, 268, Scots and Britons, ᚬv1 271ᚬ; converted to Christianity, ii. 198. Angus, son of Fergus (Ungus, son of Uirguist), his reign as king of the Picts, i. 288, 296, ᚬv1 305-6ᚬ. Angus, son of Somerled, iii. 35, 39, 293, 400. Angus mor, son of Erc, king of Dalriada, iii. 120. _See_ Erc. Angus, Cinel, one of the three tribes of the Dalriadic kingdom, inhabiting Isla and Jura, i. 229. Angus, earldom of, iii. 289. Anlaf (Olaf, Anlaf Cuaran), son of Sitriuc, and son-in-law of Constantin, king of Alban, routed at Brunanburg, i. ᚬv1 352-7ᚬ; becomes king of Northumberland, 361; exercises authority in the Islands, 354; iii. 30; expelled by Eadmund, i. 361; died at Hi-Choluimcille, 364. Anlaf, son of Godfrey, king of the Danes of Dublin, i. 353, ᚬv1 357ᚬ, 361. _Annales Cambriæ_, the, i. 145, 294. _Annals of the Four Masters_, i. 24, 25, 172; iii. ᚬv1 108ᚬ, 113, _et passim_. Antona (the Don?), river, i. 35. Antoninus Pius, emperor, events in Britain in his reign, i. ᚬv1 76-79ᚬ; wall of, _see_ Roman walls. Antoninus Caracalla, emperor, son of Severus, makes peace with the barbarian British tribes, i. 90, 91. Anwoth, i. 136. Aonghus Mor, great-grandson of Somerled, espouses the cause of Baliol, iii. 401; descendants, 401. Aonghus Og (heir of Eoin), killed by his harper, iii. 404. Apostasy of early churches, ii. 39. Applecross (Aporcrosan), church of, founded by Maelrubha, ii. 169, 285; condition of the church of, 411. Aralt, son of Sitriucc, lord of the Danes of Limerick, i. 376. Arbroath, monastery of, ii. 393; chartulary of, 394. Ardargie, Roman fort at, i. 45, 74. Ardchinnechun, i. 297. Ardcorann, battle of, i. 241. Arddanesbi, naval battle at, between Dalriadic tribes, i. 285. Ardderyd, battle of, i. 157. Ardnamurchan, iii. 428. Ardoch, great Roman camps at, i. 46, 54, 74, 88. Argathelia. _See_ Arregaithel. Argyll. _See_ Arregaithel. Aristotle, the British Isles alluded to by, under the names of Albion and Ierne, i. 30. Armagh, Book of, contents of, ii. 423. Arran, island of, i. 493; iii. 213, 439. Arregaithel (Argathelia, Airergaidhel, Earrgaoidheal), a district in the West of Scotland now called Argyll, iii. 48-51; visited by Agricola, i. 47, 48; traditionary accounts of the Scoti from Ireland effecting a settlement in Kintyre, ᚬv1 139-142ᚬ (_see_ Dalriada); becomes one of the seven provinces of the kingdom of Alban, or Scotia, 341; iii. 45; its name, and extent at different times, 46, 48-9, 343; partition of the province, 78; divided into sheriffdoms, 88; formation of the diocese of Argyll or Lismore, ii. 408. Artgha (Arthgal), king of Strathclyde, slain, i. 325. Arthur, the, of Nennius, and his battles with the Saxons, i. 152 _seq_. Arthur’s O’on, i. 217. Asbiorn, Jarl, i. 420. Asclepiodotus, defeats Allectus, a usurper in Britain, i. 93. Athelstaneford, i. 298. Atholl, the name, i. 186, 220, 281; kings of, 281, 341; a Pictish and Albanic province, iii. 43, 46; earldom of, 270, 272; sketch of, 288. Attacotti, the, their territory, i. 101, 129; with Picts, Scots, and Saxons, invade the Roman provinces, 99; iii. 97; formed by Theodosius into Roman cohorts, and stationed in Gaul, i. 101, 106; called Honoriani, 105; Attacots in Spain, 111. Augustine, St., bishop of Hippo, ii. 6. Augustine (Austin), his mission to the Angles (A.D. 596), i. 192. Aulus Didius, a Roman commander in Britain, i. 37. Avendale (in Clydesdale), i. 295. Avienus Festus Rufus, the British Isles mentioned in his _Description of the World_, i. 30. Avon, river. _See_ Antona. Avon (Hæfe), river, western boundary of the district of Lothian, i. ᚬv1 240ᚬ, 241, 270, 291, 424. Ay, clan, iii. 483. Badenoch, the Wolf of, iii. 308-310. Badon Mount, the (Linlithgowshire), i. 145, 149; battle at, 153. Baedan, great-grandson of Loarn, i. 264. _See_ Kinelvadon. Baliol and Bruce, as claimants for the Crown, iii. 72-74. Ballimote, Book of, i. 172; poems from, quoted, iii. 92, 99; cited, 338, 466 _seq_. Balthere, St. (Baldred), church of, at Tyningham, destroyed by Anlaf, son of Godfrey, i. 361; ii. 223. Balthere the anchorite, his monastery at Tyninghame, ii. 223. Bamborough (Bebbanburch, Dinguardi, the Dun Guare), fort erected by Ida in, i. 155; the capital of Bernicia, 237, 332; attacked by Penda, 253; lords of, ᚬv1 373-4ᚬ. Banatia, town of the Vacomagi, i. 75. Banchory-Ternan, ii. 29. Banff, origin of the name, i. 220. Bangor, monastery of, founded by Comgall (A.D. 558), ii. 55. Barbarians, Britons who were hostile to the Romans so called, i. ᚬv1 34ᚬ, 36. Bardi the White, i. 377. Barid, son of Ottir, the jarl, i. 347. Barra, isle of, iii. 387, 430. Barrichbyan, Campbells of, iii. 320. Bartha-firdi (Firth of Tay?) i. 310. Basque or Iberian race, a, preceded the Celts in Britain and Ireland, i. 164 _seq_. Bassas (Bonny?), river, i. 153. Battledykes, a great camp near Forfar, i. 86, 87. Beadulf, last Anglic bishop in Galloway, i. 311; ii. 225. Bean, St. (Beanus), ii. 326. Beath, the name, iii. 63 _n_. Becc, grandson of Dunchada, i. 273. Bede, the Venerable, i. 13; iii. 91; his account of the Picts, i. 123, 130, 133. Belerium, Belerion (Land’s End), promontory of, i. 31, 33. Belhelvie, thanage of, iii. 252. Bellachoir (Bellathor), near Scone, i. 320, 322. Benbecula, isle of, iii. 387. Benefices, hereditary succession in, ii. 338. Berchan, St., _Prophecy_ of, i. 142, 143, 325, 327, 330, ᚬv1 338-9ᚬ, 403. Berct, a general of Ecgfrid’s, sent to ravage Ireland, i. ᚬv1 264-5ᚬ. Berctfrid, prefect of the Northumbrians, defeats the Picts of Manann, i. 270. Beregonium, a misprint of Boece for Rerigonium, i. 72; iii. 129. Bernaeth (Bernith), leader in the Pictish revolt against the Angles of Northumbria (A.D. 672), i. 260, 261, 270. Bernicia, Anglic kingdom of, i. 155, 156; its extension to the Firth of Forth, ᚬv1 236-37ᚬ; iii. 19; united with Deira, i. 252, 331, 372; attacked by the Northmen, ᚬv1 322-23ᚬ, 332; governed by lords of Bamborough, 373; Malcolm II. defeated in Northumbria, 385; cession of Lothian to the Scots, 393. _See_ Osuald, Osuiu. Beruvik (now Portyerrock), i. 390. Bethog, daughter of Somerled, iii. 400. Biceot, son of Moneit, slain, i. 288. Bile (Beli), son of Neithon, and father of Oan and Brude, i. 250, 263. Bile, son of Alpin, king of Alclyde, i. 271, 285. Birrenswark hill, Roman remains on, i. 72. Birse, thanage of, iii. 256, 357. Bishops and Presbyters, relative position of, under the monastic rule, ii. 42. Black mail, i. 417. Blackwater, river (Raasay), i. 183, 319. Blair, hill and muir of, i. 53; battle of, iii. 405. Blairnroar, i. 328. Blathmac, son of Flann, martyrdom of, in Iona, i. 305; ii. ᚬv2 300ᚬ, 305. Boadicea, or Bondiuca, queen of the Iceni, i. 38. Bochastle, Roman camp at, i. 45. Boderia of Ptolemy, and Bodotria of Tacitus = Firth of Forth, i. ᚬv1 64ᚬ, 216. Bodleian MSS. cited, iii. 475-6. Boece, Hector, i. 11, 12, 27 _seq_.; ii. 314; iii. 364. Boete (Bode), son of Kenneth, slain by Malcolm II., i. 399, ᚬv1 406ᚬ. Boethius (Buitte), St., among the Picts, i. 135. Bolgyne, lands of, i. 406. Bonifacius, St. (Kiritinus), legend of, i. 277; ii. 229. Bonnach (Bonnage), a service exacted from tenants, iii. 256. Boroughbridge, i. ᚬv1 358-9ᚬ. Bovates (oxgangs) defined, iii. 224. Bower, cited, iii. 308 _seq_., _et al_. Bowness, i. 61. Boyd, isle of, iii. 430. Boyne, thanage of, iii. 86, 250. Bran, son of Angus, slain, i. 307. Brathwell (Braal) Castle, iii. 453. Breasal, first sole abbot of Iona after the schism (A.D. 772-801), ii. ᚬv2 288-90ᚬ. Brechin, dedication of, by Kenneth, son of Malcolm, i. 369; bishopric of, ii. ᚬv2 395-398ᚬ. Brechtraig, son of Bernith, slain, i. 270. Bredei, son of Wid. _See_ Garnaid. Breg (Bregia), plain of, devastated in A.D. 684 by Ecgfrid, i. ᚬv1 265ᚬ; in A.D. 839, by the Galls, 307. Brehon Laws, excerpts from, iii. 145. Brekauche (Brecacha) Castle, Coll, description of, iii. 436. Bremenium, town of the Otadeni (High Rochester, in Ryddisdale), i. ᚬv1 71ᚬ. Brendan, St., of Clonfert, ii. 76. Brian Boroimhe, leads the native tribes of Ireland against the Danes, i. 386; becomes king of all Ireland, 387; falls in the final conflict at Cluantarbh, when the Danes and their auxiliaries were defeated, 388. Bridei (Bred, Bredei, Brude, Bruidhe). _See_ Brude. Bridget, St., i. 135; _Lives of_, ii. 443. Brigantes, tribes of the, and their territory, i. 35, 71; their internal dissensions and subjugation by the Romans, ᚬv1 36-39ᚬ; overrun one of the provincial tribes, and are subdued by Lollius Urbicus, 76. Britain: Roman province in, _see_ Romans in Britain; obscurity of history after the departure of the Romans, i. 114; settlement of barbaric tribes in, 114, 115; ignorance of, by writers of sixth century, 115, 116; its position at the time as viewed from Rome, ᚬv1 117-9ᚬ; struggle for the dominion among the four races, 119 _seq_.; Professor Huxley on the ethnology of, ᚬv1 164-5ᚬ; Roman troops withdrawn from, ii. 4. Britannia, Prima and Secunda, two of the four Roman provinces of Britain, i. 96, 97, 103. British Isles, early notices of, i. 29 _seq_. Britons, provincial, influence of the Roman dominion on, i. 120; description of the two great classes into which they may be divided, and the territory occupied by them respectively, 121, ᚬv1 123ᚬ; language of, 193; kingdom of the Britons of Alclyde, ᚬv1 235-6ᚬ; fall under the sway of the Angles, ᚬv1 256-7ᚬ; after thirty years they recover their liberty, 267; Strathclyde Britons conform to Rome, ii. 219. Broom, Loch, i. 183, 320, 376. Bruce, Collingwood, his work on the Roman Wall, i. 61, 91, 112. Bruce, Robert. _See_ Baliol. Brude (Bridei), son of Mailcu, a Pictish king (A.D. 556-83) baptized by St. Columba, i. 136, 137, 142; defeats the Scots of Dalriada, ii. 78. Brude (Bredei), son of Bile, king of the Picts (A.D. 672-693), his father, and mother, and grandfather; elected king in place of Drost, i. ᚬv1 262-3ᚬ; called king of Fortrenn, 264, 268; his death, ᚬv1 268-9ᚬ; legend regarding his body, 269. Brude (Bridei), son of Derile, king of Picts (_ob_. 706), i. 270, 295; ii. 258. Brude, son of Angus (A.D. 731-3), i. ᚬv1 289-90ᚬ. Brude, son of Fergus, king of the Picts (A.D. 761-63), i. 299. Brude (Bred), son of Ferat, king of the Picts (_ob_. 844), i. 309. Brude, son of Fotel, king of the Picts, i. 310. Brunanburg (Ætbrunnanmere, Brunnanbyrig, Duinbrunde, Vinheidi, Wendune), battle of (A.D. 937), i. ᚬv1 353-6ᚬ; iii. 30; site of, i. ᚬv1 357-9ᚬ. Brusi, son of Sigurd the Stout, i. 388, 401. _Brut of Tywysogion_, a Welsh Chronicle, i. 197, 294. Brutus (Brittus), the _eponymus_ of the Britons, iii. 94. Brychans, the two, and their families, ii. 36. Buchan, district of, i. 344; fleet of the Sumarlidi cut off there, ᚬv1 365-6ᚬ; Mormaers of, iii. 55; Toisechs of, 56; earldom of, 287. _See_ Mar. Buchanan, George, i. 12. Buchanan, Maurice (Book of Pluscarden), iii. 311 _seq_. Buchanan (W.), on the Highland Clans, iii. 349. Buchanty, Roman station at, i. 75. Burdens on land, iii. 228-36. Burghead, promontory of, i. 74, 75, 336. Burton, John Hill, referred to, i. 11, 22, 27, 52, 140; his _History of Scotland_, 20, 21, 75, 196, ᚬv1 248ᚬ, 495; his opinion of the Ogham character, ii. ᚬv2 449-50ᚬ. Bute, inhabitants of, called Brandanes, from St. Brandan, ii. 77; island of, iii. 89. Buzzard Dykes, the encampment of Galgacus’ forces at the battle of Mons Granpius, i. 53. Cadroë, St., legend from the Life of, i. 319; notice of, 325. Caech, loch da (Waterford), the Danes in, i. 347. Caedwalla (Catguollaun), king of the Britons, i. 243, 244. Cære, river. _See_ Carron. Caeredin (Carriden), a British town on the Forth, i. 238. Caerini, a northern tribe, i. 76. Caerleon (Isca Silurum), i. 81, 107. Caernech, St., legend of, ii. 46. Cailin, clan. _See_ Campbells. Cain and Conveth, dues from Crown lands, iii. 227-32, 262. Cairbre, surnamed Righfhada or Rioda, i. 140. Cairpentaloch, i. 153. Caislen Credi. _See_ Scone. Caithness (Cathanesia, Cathannia), in the Pictish legend the territory of Cait, one of the seven sons of Cruithne, i. 186; one of the seven provinces of the Pictish kingdom, 280; iii. ᚬv2 44ᚬ; original extent of the district, i. 232; attacked by Thorstein the Red, 326; invaded by Sigurd, earl of Orkney, 336, and brought under Norwegian rule, 342, 345, 374; iii. 44, 45; Thorfinn, Sigurd’s son, and grandson of Malcolm II., is made earl of Caithness and Sutherland, i. 389, 401; bishopric of, ii. 382; earldom of, iii. 8, 71; historical account of the earldom and earls of, 448-53. Calathros (Calatrii, Catraeth), battles in, i. 247, 291; district of, 247, 256, 424. Caledones, or Caledonii, a section of the Picts, i. 94, 99, 100, 127, 130; account of, by Tacitus, ᚬv1 58-60ᚬ; their territory, as given by Ptolemy, 75, 76; join with the Mæatæ in hostilities against the Roman province, ᚬv1 80ᚬ; campaign of Severus, ᚬv1 82-89ᚬ; characteristics of these ancient tribes, 83. Caledonia, the term by which that portion of Scotland north of the Forth and Clyde was known to the Romans, i. 1, 40, ᚬv1 41ᚬ. Caledonian Forest, the (Sylvia Caledonia), i. 40, 48. Callender (Kalentyr), on the Carron, thanage of, iii. 277-8. Calps paid by native-men, iii. 318; abolition of, 368. Calphurnius Agricola, sent to Britain, i. 79. Cambuskenneth, chartulary of, i. 424. Cameron clan and its septs, iii. 313, 315, 331, 350, 479. Camlann, battle of, i. 154. Campbells, the first on record (Gillespic), iii. 79; the clan, 330, 350, 458; the Clann Mhic Cailin, 121, 339. Canaul (Conall), son of Tarla (Taidg), king of the Picts, i. 302. Candida Casa, church at, built by St. Ninian, i. 130, 188; ii. 3, ᚬv2 46-49ᚬ, 222, 225. _See_ Whithern. Canna, isle of, iii. 434. Canons-regular (the black canons) of St. Augustine, introduced, ii. ᚬv2 374ᚬ; secular canons instituted, 241. Canteæ or Decantæ, a northern tribe, i. 76. Cantium (Kent), promontory of, i. 31. Caractacus, a British chief, i. 37. Caradoc of Llancarvan, i. 405. Carausius, reign of, in Britain, i. ᚬv1 91-93ᚬ, 95, 129. Carbantorigum (in Kirkcudbright), a town of the Selgovæ, i. 72, 217. Carham, battle of (A.D. 1018), i. 393. Carlisle (Caer Luel), i. 236, 271; iii. 81. Carlowrie, i. 325. Carmichael, Alex., on the townships in the Outer Hebrides, iii. 378-93. Carnones, a tribe of N. Britain, i. 76. Carriber (Cnuicc Coirpri), battle at, i. 291. Carrick, the name, iii. 102; earldom of, 70. Carron (Cære), river, i. ᚬv1 249-50ᚬ, 270, 290, 424. Carstairs, Roman remains at, i. 73. Cartismandua, queen of the Brigantes, i. 37. Carucates (ploughgates), defined, iii. 224, 225. Cassiterides (Tin Islands), name by which the British Islands were known to Herodotus, i. 29; inhabitants of, 165 _seq_., 226. Cat Bregion (Edinburgh), i. 153. Catgabail (Catgublaun, Catguollaun), king of Guenedotia, i. 246. Cathbad, three daughters of, iii. 128. Cathbath, Cinel, a subdivision of the tribe of Loarn, i. 230. Cathbuaidh, the crozier of St. Columba, used as a standard in battle, i. 339, 348. Cathmail, the name, i. ᚬv1 291-2ᚬ. Catlon, king of the Britons, slain, i. 245. Catraeth. _See_ Calathros. Catrail, rampart of the, i. 235. Catscaul (Cad-ys-gual), battle of, near Hexham (A.D. 634) between Osuald and the king of the Britons [Catlon?], i. ᚬv1 245-6ᚬ. Cawdor, thanage of, iii. 248. _Ceile De_. _See_ Anchorites. Ceile or tenants, iii. 144 _seq_. Celidon (Coit), the Caledonian wood, i. 153. Cellach, son of Aillel, abbot of Kildare and Iona (A.D. 865), ii. ᚬv2 291ᚬ, 308, 433. Cellach, first bishop of St. Andrews (_c_. A.D. 906) holds with Constantin, son of Aedh, a solemn assembly on the Mote Hill of Scone: its bearing on the rights and liberties of the Church, i. ᚬv1 340ᚬ; ii. ᚬv2 323-4ᚬ. Celnius, river (Devern), i. 67; (Cullen), 216. Celtic church. _See_ Church, Scottish. Celtic earldoms, break-up of the: Moray, iii. 287; Buchan, 287; Athole, 288; Angus, 289; Menteath and Stratherne, 290; Mar, 291; Ross, 291; Lennox, 300. _See_ Earldoms, Provinces. Celtic language, the two branches of the British and Gadhelic, i. ᚬv1 193ᚬ, 194, 226; comparison of its different dialects, 204 _seq_.; ii. ᚬv2 448-60ᚬ. _See_ Languages, Topography. Celtic population, early traditionary origins of, as given in the ethnic legends, iii. 91-96; linguistic, 96; historical, 97; Cymric, 100; Pictish, 107. _See_ Highlands. Cendaeladh, a Pictish king, i. 137. Cennanus. _See_ Kells. Ceolfrid, abbot of Jarrow, his correspondence with Nectan, king of the Picts, as to the time of celebrating Easter, i. ᚬv1 278-9ᚬ; ii. ᚬv2 172ᚬ. Ceoluulf, king of Northumbria, i. 275, 291. Challow (Coll), Laird of, iii. 434, 436. Chalmers, George, remarks on his _Caledonia_, i. 19, 48, ᚬv1 73ᚬ, 77, 87, 140, 196; error as to the colonisation of Galloway by the Irish Cruithne, ᚬv1 132ᚬ; also as to Girig, son of Dungaile, 330; his objections to the genuineness of certain letters-patent said to be granted to the earl of Mar (A.D. 1171), iii. 442. Chariots used in war by the Caledonians, i. 55, 83. Chattan clan and its septs, sketch of, iii. 313, 315, 330, 478. Chester, i. 81, 107, 382. Cheviot hills, i. 7, 9; iii. 135. Chorischia, a part of Scotland overrun by the Chorischii, i. 182, 183. Christianity: introduced into Scotland through two different channels—Roman and Columban, the Southern Picts and the Strathclyde Britons (through St. Ninian and St. Kentigern) adhering to the first, and the Northern Picts (through Columba) to the second, i. 130, 132, 142; ii. 26 _seq_. (_see also_ Whithorn, Columba, Picts); the churches derived from each different in character and in spirit, i. 258 _seq_., 275; ii. 8, 150 _seq_., ᚬv2 207-225ᚬ, ᚬv2 344-50ᚬ. Church, the, in Britain, during the Roman occupation, ii. 1, ᚬv2 2ᚬ; St. Ninian and his church of Candida Casa, 2, 3 (_see_ Whithorn); the Pelagian heresy, 4; mission of Palladius to Ireland, 5; mission of Columbanus to Gaul, ᚬv2 6-12ᚬ; controversy as to Easter, 7; in the sixth century no question of ecclesiastical supremacy had arisen, 6; three orders of Saints in early Irish Church, ᚬv2 12-14ᚬ: church of St. Patrick, ᚬv2 14-24ᚬ; collegiate churches of Seven Bishops, ᚬv2 24-26ᚬ; life and labours of St. Palladius, 26 _seq_.; confusion of Fordun’s statements regarding him, _ib_.; St. Ternan, ᚬv2 30-32ᚬ; church of the Southern Picts, ᚬv2 26-33ᚬ; early Dalriadic church, ᚬv2 33-35ᚬ; church south of the Forth and Clyde, 35, 36; legend of St. Monenna, 37; relapse into paganism of the churches of Ninian and Patrick, 39, 40. Church, monastic, in Ireland, its constitution, ii. 41; whence was it derived?, ᚬv2 45-50ᚬ; the school of Clonard, 50; St. Patrick and the twelve Apostles of Ireland, 51; Columba one of the twelve (_see_ Columba); influence of the church, 73; learning of the, 419; hagiology, 425; the right of the church from the tribe, and of the tribe from the church, 71, 72. Church, monastic, in Iona,—monastery founded by Columba (A.D. 563), ii. 88; its constitution, 101; affected in opposite ways by the secular clergy and the Culdees, ᚬv2 227ᚬ, 233 _seq_.; its influence as a school of learning, 421; schism in, after Adamnan’s death, 175, ᚬv2 278-288ᚬ; table of rival abbots, 288. _See_ Columba, Coärbs. Church of Cumbria and Lothian, ii. 35, 36, ᚬv2 179-224ᚬ (_see_ Kentigern, Cuthbert); conversion of the Angles, 198; Strathclyde Britons conform to Rome, 219; chapels founded at Hexham, 220; bishopric of Whithern, 224. Church of Northumbria, an offshoot of the Columban Church, i. 258; ii. ᚬv2 154-9ᚬ; points of dispute with the Southern Anglic Church submitted to a council in Whitby, i. ᚬv1 258-9ᚬ; ii. 165; termination of, ᚬv2 164-6ᚬ. Church, the Scottish:—first appearance of this name (A.D. 878), i. ᚬv1 333ᚬ; ii. 320; coincident with the change from ‘kingdom of the Picts’ to ‘kingdom of Alban,’ i. ᚬv1 333-35ᚬ, 384; ii. 323; primacy transferred to St. Andrews, 323; canonical rule of the Culdees introduced, 324; lay abbots of Dunkeld, 337; hereditary succession in benefices, 338; laymen and their heirs hold church offices, 338; Queen Margaret’s reforms in the church, 344; she rebuilds the monastery of Iona, 352; Anchorites at this time, 351; bishops of Alban, ᚬv2 323-44ᚬ; decadence and ultimate extinction of this old Celtic church, ᚬv2 354-65ᚬ; its failure in diocese of Brechin, 400; of Dunblane, 402; of Dunkeld, 405; disappearance of the Celtic community of Iona, 412, and a Benedictine abbey and nunnery founded (A.D. 1203), 415; remains of old Celtic church, 417; its hagiology, 444 _seq_. Cillemuine (St. Davids), i. 388. Cinaeth, king of the Picts, i. 242. Ciniod, son of Wredech, king of the Picts, i. ᚬv1 300-1ᚬ. Circinn (Maghcircin, Magh Gherginn = Mearns), i. 185, 186, 365; battle at, between the Picts themselves, 295; iii. 123. _See_ Moerne. Ciricus, St., day of, i. 330. Clach na Breatan = stone of the Britons, in Glenfalloch, probably the scene of the conflict between the Dalriads and Britons (A.D. 717), i. ᚬv1 273-4ᚬ. Clan, signification of the word, iii. 331; patronymics, personal names, and surnames, 331-4; original importance and position of Clan pedigrees, 334; changes produced by legendary history, 336, and by Irish sennachies, 337; also by Act of 1597, 346-9; modern position of a Clan, as defined in the Supreme Court, 366-67. Clans: localities, possessions, and legendary descent [all in vol. iii.]: Alaster (MacAlasters), 330, 410, 468. Andres (Rosses), 330, 365, 484. Cameron, 331, 350, 479. Chattan, 330, 478. Clanranald (Macdonalds of Kippoch), 330, 430 _seq_., 469. Donnachie (Robertsons), 330, 365, 401. Donald, 330, 430 _seq_., 466. Dubhgal (Macdougalls), 330, 470. Dubhsithe (Macduffie), 331, 363, 486. Eoin Mor (MacConnells), 330, 401, 432, 469. Eoin of Ardnamurchan, 401, 469. Eoin of Glencomhan (Glencoe), 401, 430. Fingaine (MacKinnons), 331, 363, 365, 488. Gillechallam of Raarsa, 433. Gilleoin (Macleans), 331, 480. Gregor (MacGregor), 329, 331, 365. 487. Guaire (Macquarries), 331, 436, 488. Gunn, 330. Hustain (MacDonalds of Slate), 330. Ian (MacIans), 330. Kenneth (Mackenzies), 330, 365, 485. Labhran (Lawren), 329, 363, 365, 483. Lachlan, 331, 473. Ladmann (Lamont), 331, 472. Leod (Macleods), 331, 429, 460. Macduff, 303. Mackinnons, 363, 488. MacNab, 362-3, 365, 486. M‘Thomas, 330. Mathesons, 365, 485. Morgan (Mackays), 330. Neachtan (MacNaughton), 331, 477. Neill (MacNeill), 331, 430. O’Duibhn (Campbells), 330, 458. Pharlane, 329, 365. Vuirich, 364. Clanranald, Book of, quoted, iii. 49, 338; portion of, translated, 397. Clanranald, clan (Macdonalds of Kippoch), iii. 119, 330, 430 _seq_., 469. Claudian, Roman poet, his allusions to events in Britain, i. 100, 105, 106, 139. Claudius, the Emperor, formation of a Roman province in Britain in his reign, i. 33, 34. Cleaven Dyke, Roman vallum in Perthshire so called, i. ᚬv1 52-54ᚬ. Cleveland, i. 369, 421. Clonard, monastic school of, ii. 50. Clonmacnoise, _Annals of_, i. 356, 359. Cloveth (Clova), thanage of, iii. 263. Cluantarbh, battle at (_see_ Brian Boroimhe); auxiliary Galls at, i. ᚬv1 387-8ᚬ. Cluny (Cluanan), Danes advance to, i. 311. Clyde (Clota), estuary of Clyde, i. 66, 216, _et al_. Cnuicc Cairpri. _See_ Carriber. Cnut, king of England, i. 392, 395. Coamatra, isle of, iii. 436. Coärb (Comharba), the term defined, ii. 286; applied to abbots of Columban monasteries, 285, 413; the successors of Columba so termed after the schism in Iona ceased, Breasal being the first Coärb (A.D. 772-801), 288; his successors till St. Columba’s shrine and relics were removed to Ireland, and the primacy transferred to Abernethy, ᚬv2 290-319ᚬ. Cocboy (called by Bede Maserfelth), battle of (A.D. 642), i. 252. Cockburnspath (Colbrandspath), i. 241. Coede, bishop of Iona, ii. 175. Colania, a town of the Damnonii, i. 73. Coldingham, monastery of, founded (A.D. 627), ii. 200; refounded (A.D. 1093), i. 444; ii. 367. Coll (Collow), island of, iii. 30, 36, 436. Colla, race of, iii. 113. Colla Uais, son of Eochaidh Duibhlen, king of Ireland, iii. 340, 397; his descendants, 398. Colla-dha-Chrioch, son of Eochaidh Duibhlen, iii. 397, 398. Colla Meann, son of Eochaidh Duibhlen, iii. 397, 398. Collas, legend of the three, iii. 462. Colly (Cowie), thanage of, iii. 257. Colman, bishop of Lindisfarne, i. ᚬv1 258-9ᚬ; ii. ᚬv2 165-168ᚬ. Colman (Mocholmoc) of Dromore, ii. 32. Colonsay (Collonsa, Koln), island of, i. 379; iii. 438; laird of, 438. Colsmon, isle of, iii. 431. Columba, St., labours (A.D. 565) among the Northern Picts, i. ᚬv1 130-7ᚬ, ᚬv1 142-3ᚬ, 198, 200, 276; his crozier used as a standard in battle, 339, 348; one of the Twelve Apostles of Ireland, ii. 52; descent and early life, 52; founds the monastery of Derry, 53, and many other foundations, ᚬv2 54-55ᚬ; connection of his mission to Britain with the battle of Culdremhne, ᚬv2 78-84ᚬ; crosses from Ireland to Britain with twelve followers, 85; resides with Conall, king of Dalriada, 85, who gives him the island of Iona, 87; on which he founds a monastery, 88; establishes his church there, 93; its characteristics, ᚬv2 93-95ᚬ, and constitution, ᚬv2 101-104ᚬ; site of the original wooden monastery and its surroundings, ᚬv2 95-101ᚬ; influence of Columba on the adjacent districts, 104; conversion of King Brude, ᚬv2 105-107ᚬ; his labours among the Northern Picts, ᚬv2 119-121ᚬ; ordains Aidan king of the Dalriadic territories, 122; attends the Assembly of Drumceatt, near Derry, 123; his purposes thereat, 124; twelve years’ work summed up, 127; monasteries founded by himself and others in the Western Isles, ᚬv2 128-134ᚬ; among the Northern and Southern Picts, ᚬv2 134-138ᚬ; his visit to Ireland, 138; last days of his life, ᚬv2 138-143ᚬ; his character, ᚬv2 143-147ᚬ; his successors in the primacy of Iona, ᚬv2 148-177ᚬ; expulsion of the Columban monks from the kingdom of the Picts (A.D. 717), and close of the influence of the ‘Family of Iona,’ i. ᚬv1 283-4ᚬ, ᚬv1 315-6ᚬ; ii. ᚬv2 177-178ᚬ; legends which seem to be connected with their return, i. ᚬv1 319-20ᚬ; his remains enshrined, ii. 291; a cell or oratory built for their reception, 303; his relics, or part thereof, removed to Dunkeld, 307; shrine and relics removed to Ireland, 317; restored to Iona, 318; transferred to Down, 332; a discourse on his life and character, 467; rule of, 508. _See_ Iona, Coärbs. Columbanus, St., his mission to Gaul (A.D. 590), ii. ᚬv2 6-11ᚬ, ᚬv2 41ᚬ. Comet of the year 1018, i. 393. Comgall, son of Domangart, king of Dalriada, i. 141, 142, ᚬv1 229ᚬ; tribe of, incorporated with the Cinel Gabhran, 230. Comines, Earl Robert de, i. 419, 425. Commodus, Emperor, i. 79. Comrie, Roman camp at Dealgan Ross, i. 45, 50. Comyn (Cumyn), John, of Badenoch, iii. 81, 82. Comyn, Walter, Earl of Menteath, iii. 77, 80. Comyns, Earls of Buchan, iii. 71, 72, 242. Conadh Cerr, king of Dalriada, i. 241. Conaing, son of Aidan, i. 273, 285. Conall, son of Comgall, king of Dalriada, i. 142, 321; ii. 85; iii. 211. Conall, son of Taidg. _See_ Canaul. Conall Crandamna, brother of Domnall Breac, king of Dalriada, i. ᚬv1 272ᚬ. Conall, son of Aedain, slays Conall, son of Taidg, i. 302, ᚬv1 374ᚬ. Conan, river, i. 320. Congal Claen. _See_ Magh Rath. Conmael, abbot of Iona, ii. 175. Conn of the hundred battles, iii. 110. Constantin (789-820), son of Fergus, king of the Picts, i. 302, ᚬv1 307-8ᚬ. Constantin (863-76), son of Kenneth mac Alpin, king of the Picts, i. ᚬv1 323-28ᚬ; ii. ᚬv2 310-13ᚬ. Constantin (900-942), son of Aedh, king of Alban, i. 339 _seq_.; invasion of Northmen, 339; holds, with Cellach bishop of Kilrymont, a solemn assembly on the Mote Hill of Scone, 340; division of Alban at this time into seven provinces, 340 _seq_. (_see_ Provinces); invasion of Aethelstan, 352; takes part in the battle of Brunanburg, 353; resigns the throne, and retires to the monastery of St. Andrews, ᚬv1 360ᚬ; his death, 360. Constantin (995-97), son of Cuilean, king of Alban, slain by Kenneth, son of Malcolm, i. ᚬv1 381-2ᚬ. Constantine, son of Constantius Chlorus, becomes Emperor, i. 95. Constantine, Emperor, account of his usurpation, i. ᚬv1 108-112ᚬ; his son Constans, 110. Constantius Chlorus, Emperor, recovers Britain from the usurpation of Carausius, i. 93; his war against the Caledonians and other Picts, 94; his death at York, 95. Conveth. _See_ Cain. Conveth (Conuath), thanage of, in Banffshire, iii. 252. Coolin hills, iii. 128. Corda, a town of the Selgovæ, i. 72. Coria (Carstairs), a town of the Damnonii, i. 73. _Cormac’s Glossary_, iii. 131 Cornac (Cornar, Curnig), river, i. 368. Cornwall, the tin-workers of, representatives of the Iberians who preceded the Celts in Britain, i. ᚬv1 165-170ᚬ, 226. Corca Laidhe, genealogy of, iii. 211. Coronation stone of Scone, i. ᚬv1 281-3ᚬ. Cowall, district of, visited by Agricola, i. 47, 48; the name derived from Comgall, 229, 230, 321. Cranach, thanage of, iii. 86, 272. Craniology, ethnological evidence furnished by, i. ᚬv1 169-70ᚬ, ᚬv1 226ᚬ. Creic, in Dalriada, burnt by Angus, i. 290. Creones, Croenes, a tribe of North Britain, i. 76. Crimthan Mor mac Fidhaig, iii. 114, 124 Crinan (Cronan), lay abbot of Dunkeld, i. ᚬv1 390-2ᚬ; called Crinan Tein, or the thane, 394; also the Hound Earl, 401; his sons Duncan and Maldred, 392, 394, 408, 419; slain, 407. Crinan, bay of, i. 229. Crofters and cottars, iii. 375 _seq_. _Cromartie, Earls of_, Sir W. Fraser’s, iii. 351 _seq_. Cromdale, thanage of, iii. 249. Crown demesne, species of tenure, iii. 84-88; Crown lands, ranks of society on, 238-44. Cruithintuath, the Irish equivalent of Pictavia, i. 315, 324, 384. Cruithne and his seven sons, i. 185, 186, 231, 295; iii. 97, 107. Cruithnigh, the, a Pictish people in the north of Ireland, i. 131, ᚬv1 142-3ᚬ, 226; Irish traditions regarding, 175; iii. 96.; battles with the Dalriads, i. 241; close connection in the popular tales between them and the Pictish inhabitants of North Britain, iii. 131. Cuddiche (a night’s portion), a land-burden, iii. 233. Cuilean, son of Indulph, king of Alban, defeated at Drumcrub, i. ᚬv1 367ᚬ; slain in Laodonia (Lothian) by Andarch, ᚬv1 367-8ᚬ. Culdees, first appearance of the name, in beginning of the eighth century, ii. 226; conclusions as to their origin, 277. _See_ Anchorites. Culdremhne, battle of, ii. 80. Culrenrigi, island of, plundered, i. ᚬv1 289-90ᚬ. Cumbria, evangelised by Kentigern (A.D. 573), (_see_ Kentigern) and his successors, ii. 179 _seq_., 198; ceded to the Scots by king Eadmund (A.D. 945), i. 362; Malcolm (Ceannmor) put in possession of it by Earl Siward, ᚬv1 408-10ᚬ; name of, restricted, iii. 4. Cumherbes and Cumlawes, iii. 26; meaning of, 223. Cummen the Fair, abbot of Iona, i. 247. Cumuscach, son of Aengus, slain, i. 246. Cupar-Angus (Cubert), Roman camp at, i. 49; iii. 133; thanage of, 133, 275. Curia, town of (Carby Hill, in Liddesdale), i. 71. Curnavii, a northern tribe, i. 76. Cuthbert, St. (Cudberct), Bede’s Life of, ii. 201; Irish Life of, 203; in Melrose monastery, 206; becomes prior there, 208; goes to Lindisfarne, 209; withdraws to Farne island, 211; consecrated bishop of Lindisfarne, 213; retirement to Farne, 214; his death, 214; his relics enshrined, 218. Cymric legends, iii. 100-104. Dacia. _See_ Norwegia. Dalaraidhe (Dalaradia), a district (called also Vladh) in the north of Ireland, inhabited by a Pictish people, i. 131, 198. Dalfin, archbishop of Gaul, i. 259. Dalguise, probably where the battle of Seguise was fought in A.D. 635, i. 246. Dali, district of, i. ᚬv1 375-6ᚬ, 390, 412. _See_ Arregaithel. Dalmonych (Dalmarnoch), thanage of, iii. 274. Dalriada, a district in the north-east of Ireland, i. 140 _seq_.; the name given to the settlement of the Scots in Argyll, 139 _seq_., 248; Dalriadic ethnologic legend, 183, 184; Scottish kingdom of, ᚬv1 229-30ᚬ; battles between the Dalriads and the Cruithnigh, 241, 242; anarchy in, after Domnall Brec’s death, 250, 251, 272; Dalriads fall under the dominion of the Angles for thirty years, ᚬv1 256ᚬ _seq_.; after several unsuccessful attempts to throw off the yoke, 264, Ecgfrid is defeated and slain at Dunnichen, 265, 267; contest between the two chief tribes for the throne, ᚬv1 272-3ᚬ, ᚬv1 284-6ᚬ; conflicts with the Britons, ᚬv1 273-4ᚬ; revolution, and renewed contest, 286, 289; the country laid waste by Angus, king of the Picts, 290; Dalriadic defeat at Carriber, 291; the Dalriads crushed by Angus (A.D. 741), 292, 315: lists of kings for the following century not trustworthy, owing to the perversions of the Chronicles, 292 _seq_.; notices of the Scots of Dalriada till the time of Kenneth mac Alpin, 316 _seq_.; attacked by the Danes, 377; early church of, ii. 33; tribes of, iii. 212. _See_ Drumceat, Picts. Dam Hoctor, settlement of the, in Gwyned, i. 138. Damnonii, tribes of the (the ‘novæ gentes’), and their territory and towns, i. 73, 74, 127, 128, 155, 167, 211, 231. Danes, their first appearance on our coasts, i. 302 _seq_.; ii. 18 (_see_ Galls); naval attack on Ireland, i. 307; the men of Fortrenn defeated by the Danes, ᚬv1 307-308ᚬ; a band under Halfdan lay waste Northumbria, and destroy the Picts of Galloway and the Britons of Strathclyde, ᚬv1 325-6ᚬ; conflict with Norwegians, 327: again attack Northumbria, 332; plunder Ireland, 338; invade Alban, ᚬv1 338-9ᚬ, ᚬv1 347-8ᚬ; final conflict with the native tribes of Ireland, ᚬv1 386-88ᚬ. Darlugdach, abbess of Kildare, i. 135. Dasent’s _Burnt Njal_, i. 379, 388. Dathi, the, iii. 115, 122. Davach, definition of, iii. 224. _See_ Land-measures. Daven, loch, i. 74. David I., youngest son of Malcolm Ceannmor, marries Matilda, heiress of Huntingdon, i. 454; rules the provinces south of the Firths, as Earl, for seventeen years (A.D. 1107-1124), ᚬv1 454-57ᚬ; various foundations, grants, and charters by, 455 _seq_.; reigns over Scotland as first feudal monarch (A.D. 1124-53), ᚬv1 457ᚬ; defeats an insurrection headed by the Earl of Moray, and Malcolm, a natural son of Alexander I., 460; defeats Malcolm mac Eth, ᚬv1 462-464ᚬ; invades England in support of his niece, Matilda, 465; heterogeneous composition of his army, 467; death of his only son, 468; his own death, 468; bishoprics and monasteries founded by, ii. 376; feudalises Celtic earldoms, iii. 63. Davis, Sir John, letter by, relative to Monaghan and Fermanagh (A.D. 1606), iii. 165, 170, 196. Dawstone. _See_ Degsastane. Dawkins, W. Boyd, on the sepulchral remains of Britain, i. ᚬv1 169-70ᚬ. Deabhra, loch, i. 411. Debateable lands, their three divisions: (1) from the Tay to the Forth; (2) between the Forth and the Carron; (3) from the Carron to the Pentlands and the Esk,—the latter being the main battle-field of contending races, and eventually included in the kingdom of the Scots (_see_ Lothian), i. 14, 15, 237. Deer, Book of, ii. 380; contents, 458; iii. 55 _seq_., 212. Deer forests, iii. 371. Degsastane (Dawstone), battle of, i. 162, 163, 239, ᚬv1 267ᚬ. _Deicolæ._ _See_ Anchorites, Culdees. Deira, Anglic kingdom of, i. 156, ᚬv1 236-237ᚬ; united with Bernicia, 252, 331; overrun by the Danes, 325, 351; Sitriuc, its Danish king, meets with Aethelstan, who seizes Deira on his death, 351. Delgon, in Kintyre, i. 142. _Deoraidh De._ _See_ Anchorites. Dervesin (Dairsie), thanage of, iii. 268. Derwent, river, i. 271. _Descent of Men of the North_, quoted from, iii. 102. Deucaledonian Sea of Ptolemy, i. 70. Deva (Chester), i. 81. Deva, river (Dee, Ayrshire), i. 66, 216. Devana, a town of the Taexali, i. 74. Devisesburn, i. ᚬv1 244-5ᚬ. Diarmaid, abbot of Iona (814-31), brings from Ireland the relics of St. Columba, ii. 297, 303; returns thither with them, ᚬv2 305-6ᚬ. Dicalidonæ, a division of the Picts, i. 99, 100, 129. Dinguardi. _See_ Bamborough. Dingwall, thanage of, iii. 247. Diocletian, Emperor, i. ᚬv1 92-94ᚬ. Diodorus Siculus, i. ᚬv1 31-33ᚬ. Doldencha, lake (in Braemar), i. 298. _See_ Kindrochet. Dollar, conflict between the Danes and Scots at, i. 327. Domhnall of Ile (Isla), son of Eoin, sketch of his career, iii. 403-4; death of his son, bishop of Innsigall, 408; his descendants, 408. Domhnall Dubh, son of Aonghus Og (heir of Eoin), his tribe almost exterminated during his minority and imprisonment, iii. 404; unsuccessful attempt to regain his possessions, 406. Domitian, the Emperor, i. 57, 58. Domnall Breac, king of Dalriada, i. 242; defeated at Calathros, 247, and at Glenmairison, 249; slain in Strathcarron, ᚬv1 249-51ᚬ, 271. Domnall Donn, nephew of Domnall Breac, i. 272. Domnall mac Avin, king of Alclyde, i. 271. Don, river. _See_ Antona. Donald mac Alpin, succeeds his brother Kenneth as king of the Picts, i. ᚬv1 322-3ᚬ. Donald, son of Constantin, and grandson of Kenneth mac Alpin, first king of Alban, i. 335; slain at Dunnottar, ᚬv1 338-9ᚬ. Donald, son of Aedh, king of Alban, elected king of the Cumbrian Britons, i. 346. Donald, son of Eimin, mormaer of Mar, slain, i. ᚬv1 387-8ᚬ. Donald (Dunwallaun, Domnall), son of Eugenius, king of the Cumbrians, i. 362; death of his son Malcolm, ᚬv1 381-2ᚬ. Donald Ban, brother of Malcolm Ceannmor, reigns six months (A.D. 1093), i. 436; again, with his nephew, three years, 439; dies at Rescobie, and is buried in Dunfermline, 440. Donald Ban Mac William. _See_ Mac William. Donald (Mac Donald), clan, iii. 119, 330, 430 _seq_., 466. _See_ Hustain. Donnachie (Robertsons), clan, iii. 330, 361, 365, 401. Donnan, St., of Egg, i. 345. Donnchadh, king of Cashel, i. 338. Dorbeni, abbot of Iona, ii. 175. Dornoch Firth, i. 337. Dorsum Britanniæ. _See_ Drumalban. Douglas (Dubglas) river, Arthur’s battles on the, i. 153. Doune. _See_ Glendowachy. Drest, son of Talorgen, king of the Picts, i. 301. Drest, son of Constantin, joint king of the Picts with Talorgan, son of Wthoil, i. 306. Drest, son of Ferat, king of the Picts, i. 309. Droma, loch, i. 319. Drost, son of Domnall, king of the Picts, driven from his kingdom, i. ᚬv1 262-3ᚬ. Drum, the name of, i. 13. Drumalban, a mountain chain, from Dumbartonshire to the Ord of Caithness, i. ᚬv1 10-14ᚬ, 75, 228; errors regarding, 12. Drum Cathmail, battle at, between the Picts of Galloway and the Scots of Dalriada, i. ᚬv1 291-2ᚬ. Drumceat, Council of, at which the independence of Dalriada was recognised (A.D. 575), i. 143, 235, 248; iii. 122. Drumcrub, battle at, i. 367. Drust (Drest), several Pictish kings so called, i. 134 _seq_. Drust (Druxst), king of the Picts after Nectan, i. 284; slain, 289. Dubglas, river. _See_ Douglas. Dubh, son of Malcolm, king of Alban, i. ᚬv1 366-67ᚬ. Dubhgal (Macdougalls), clan, iii. 119, 330, 470. Dubhgall, son of Somerled, iii. 35, 39, 293, 400. Dubhgaill. _See_ Galls. Dubhsithe (Macduffie), clan, iii. 331, 363, 466. Dublin. _See_ Ireland. Dufoter de Calateria, i. 424. Duinbrunde. _See_ Brunanburg. Dull, monastery of, ii. 175, ᚬv2 206-7ᚬ; abthanrie and church of, iii. 271. Dulmonych, thanage of, iii. 274. Dumbarton (Dumbreatan), capital of the kingdom of the Britons of Alclyde, i. 236. Dunadd, a fortified hill in the moss of Crinan, called also Dunmonaidh (the capital of Dalriada), i. 229, 230; siege of, 264; taken possession of by Angus, 290. Dunaverty (Aberte), siege of, i. 273. Dunbar, i. 425; the name, ii. v2; Castle of, iii. 82. Dunbeath (Dunbaitte), siege of, i. 263. Dunblane, burnt by the Britons, i. 310; ravaged by the Danes, 347; bishopric of, ii. ᚬv2 395-398ᚬ; the name, v2 Duncadh, abbot of Iona, ii. 175. Duncan mac Duine, ancestor of the Campbells, iii. 79. Duncan, son of Crinan (Cronan), king of Scotia, i. 392, ᚬv1 399-405ᚬ. _See_ Kali Hundason. Duncan, son of Malcolm Ceannmor, i. 414, 425; his reign (A.D. 1093-4), ᚬv1 437-39ᚬ. Duncan, abbot of Dunkeld, i. 367. Duncan (Dungadr), jarl of Caithness, i. 374. Duncath fort, i. 382. Dunchadh, son of Becc, i. 285. Dunduirn (Dundurn), a fortification on the Earn, besieged, i. 264; Grig slain at, 330. Dunedin. _See_ Edinburgh. Dunfhirbolg, a native fort in St. Kilda, i. 185. Dunfres (Dumfries), the town of the Frisians, iii. 25. Dungal, son of Sealbach, king of Dalriada, i. ᚬv1 284-5ᚬ; driven from the throne, 286; is restored, 289; invades Culrenrigi, incurs the wrath of Angus, and takes refuge in Ireland, ᚬv1 289-90ᚬ; is put in chains, 290. Dungallsbae (Duncansbay), i. 401. Dungayle, in Galloway, i. 292. _See_ Drum Cathmail. Dun Guaire, a name of Bamborough, i. ᚬv1 373-4ᚬ. Dunine (Dunning), thanage of, iii. 87, 269. Dunkeld, church of, founded by Constantin, king of the Picts, i. ᚬv1 305ᚬ, 315; a portion of St. Columba’s relics transferred to, 310, 316; abbot of (Duncan), 367, 392; lay abbots of, ii. 337; bishopric of, 368; position of, 376. _See_ Crinan. Dun Leithfinn, a fort, destroyed by Angus, i. 290. Dunlocho, battle at, i. 264. Dunmore hill, i. 75. Dunolly (Duin Ollaig), stronghold of the Cinel Loarn, burnt by Ecgfrid, i. 266, 272; rebuilt by Sealbach, 273. Dunnagual (Dungaile), son of Teudubr, i. 296, 325. Dunnichen (Dun Nechtan), its connection with Nectan, a Pictish king, i. 135; battle of, in which Ecgfrid was slain (A.D. 686), 265, 266; ii. 213. Dunnottar (Dunfoither), siege of, i. 263; again besieged, 269; Donald, first king of Alban, slain at, ᚬv1 338-9ᚬ; a stronghold of the men of Moerne, 342; Aethelstan’s advance to, 352. Dunsforth, the Devil’s Cross at, i. 359. Dunsinnan, i. 380. Duntroon, iii. 129. Dunwallaun (Domnall), son of Eugenius (Owin, Eaoin), king of the Cumbrians, i. 362, 370. Duny (Downie), thanage of, iii. 267. Durham, besieged by Malcolm II., i. 385. Durris, thanage of, iii. 257. Dyce, what is implied in the territorial name, iii. 282. Dyke and Brodie, thanage of, iii. 248. Eachach, king of Dalriada, i. 289. Eachadh (Eochagh, Eoghan), Cinel, one of the three subdivisions of the tribe of Loarn, i. 230, 264, 289. Eadberct, king of Northumbria (A.D. 737-58), i. 291; extends his dominion over Galloway and all Ayrshire, 294 _seq_., 331; abdicates, 300. Eadberct, bishop of Lindisfarne, ii. 220. Eadfrid, son of Aeduin, i. 243. Eadgar, son of Eadward Aetheling, i. 414 _seq_. Eadgar, son of Malcolm Ceannmor, reigns nine years (A.D. 1097-1107), i. 440; iii. 215; treats with Magnus Barefoot of Norway, i. 442; iii. 9; re-founds the monastery of Coldingham, i. 444; dies in Edinburgh, 444; is buried in Dunfermline, 445. Eadmund the Etheling (A.D. 940-46) takes part with his brother against the Danes at Brunanburg, i. 353; subdues Northumberland, 361; cedes Cumbria to the Scots, 362; death of, 363. Eadmund, son of Malcolm Ceannmor, reigns with his uncle Donald Ban three years, i. 439. Eadred Ætheling, i. 363. Eadulf Cudel, cedes Lothian to the Scots after the battle of Carham, i. ᚬv1 392-4ᚬ, 399, 400. Eadulf (Yvelchild), earl of Northumbria, i. 369 _seq_. Eadward Aetheling, son of king Eadmund, i. 415. Eadward, son of Aelfred the Great, discussion as to whether he advanced beyond the Humber—doubtful statements of the Saxon Chronicle, i. ᚬv1 349ᚬ, 350. Eadward the Confessor, i. 415. Ealdburg. _See_ Aldborough. Ealdhun (Aldun), bishop of Durham, i. 385. Ealdred, son of Ealdulf, lord of Bamborough, makes peace with Aethelstan, i. 351. Ealdred, son of Uchtred. _See_ Aldred. Eanfrid, son of Aedilfrid, i. 240, 244; ii. 153. Earldoms, the old Celtic (_see_ Celtic earldoms); additional earldoms created, iii. 66; policy of feudalising earldoms, inaugurated by David I., carried out by his successor, 67 _seq_.; their character and relation to the law of feudal tenure, 72-77. _See_ Provinces. Earls, first appearance of the title in Scottish history, iii. 58-63; the Seven Earls, 59; six Celtic earls besiege Malcolm IV. in Perth, 65; apparently a constitutional body, 71 _seq_.; merged in the Estates of the kingdom, 82. Earn, river, i. 220, 261. Easter, difference as to the time of celebrating, between the Anglic and Columban churches, i. 275 _seq_.; ii. 8, 150 _seq_. Eata, first abbot of Mailros, ii. 200; afterwards bishop of Lindisfarne, 206. Ebissa. _See_ Octa. Ebudæ (Hebrides), islands of the, i. 40, 47; easter and wester Ebuda (Isla and Jura), 69. _See_ Hebrides, Isles. Ecclesbreac. _See_ Falkirk. Ecclesgreig, parish of, iii. 261. Ecgberct, king of Northumbria (A.D. 867), i. 332. Ecgberct, an Anglic priest, i. 264; his views regarding Easter adopted by the majority in Iona, ii. ᚬv2 176ᚬ. Ecgfrid, king of Northumbria, i. ᚬv1 260-265ᚬ; slain at Dunnichen, 266; effect of his defeat, 267 _seq_. Ectolairg mac Foith (Talore, son of Wid), i. 257. _See_ Garnaid. Edderachylis, iii. 462. Eddi’s _Life of St. Wilfrid_, i. 260. Edevyn (Idvies), thanage of, iii. 265. Ediluald, bishop in Lindisfarne, i. 275. Edinburgh (Etin, Edwinesburg, Mynyd Agned, Dunedin), i. 240; besieged (A.D. 638), 249; surrendered, with the district of which it was the stronghold, to the Scots, in the reign of Indulph (A.D. 954-62), 365, 372. _See_ Aeduin. Education of the people, bearing of the Church on, ii. 444; a period of nearly 100 years before the Reformation one of neglected education, and no learning, in the Highlands, 461. Egelwin, Bishop, i. 422. Egg, island of, i. 345; ii. 152; iii. 433. Eglisgirg (Greg’s church), dedicated to St. Ciricus—a memorial of Grig, i. ᚬv1 333-4ᚬ; iii. 261. Egremont, the Boy of, his claim to the Scottish throne, iii. 66. Eildon (Eldun) hill, near Melrose, contest at, between Ethelwald and one of his generals, i. 300. Einar, earl of Orkney, i. ᚬv1 344-5ᚬ. Einar, son of Sigurd the Stout, i. 388, 401. Ekkialsbakki, burial-place of Sigurd, earl of Orkney, i. 366; identification of, 337. Elder, John, letter from, to Henry VIII., quoted, iii. 331, 337. Eldred, lord of Bamborough, unites with Constantin, king of Alban, to resist the Danes, i. ᚬv1 347-8ᚬ. Elfleda, daughter of Ealdred, Earl of Northumbria, and wife of Siward, i. 408. Ellan na muk, isle of, iii. 434. English possessions of Scottish kings, iii. 5. Eobba, father of Ida, who founds the kingdom of Bernicia, i. 155. Eocha (Eachdach, Eochaidh), grandson of Domnall Breac, i. 272; conflict between his family and Selbach at Ross-Foichen, 286; his death, 287. Eocha (Eochodius), son of Indulf, slain by the Britons, i. 367. Eocha (Eochodius), son of Run, and grandson of Kenneth mac Alpin, king of the Picts, associated with Grig, i. ᚬv1 329-30ᚬ, 373. Eochadh Buidhe, king of the Picts, i. 241, 242. Eochaidh, grandson of Loarn, i. 264. Eoganan, son of Angus, rules in Dalriada, i. 305; becomes king of the southern Picts, ᚬv1 307-8ᚬ. Eoin, son of Aonghus Og, his descendants, iii. 402; gives liberally to the church, his death and burial, 402-3. Eoin Mor (Mac Connells), clan, iii. 330, 401, 409, 432, 469. Eoin of Ardnamurchan, clan, iii. 401, 469. Eoin of Glencomhan (Glencoe), iii. 401, 430. Eoin of Ile, poem composed on, iii. 407 Epidii, a tribe occupying Kintyre and Lorn, i. 76, 206. Epidium, promontory of (Kintyre), i. 68. Epidium, island of (Lismore), i. 69. Erc and his sons, founders of the Scots colony in Dalriada, i. ᚬv1 139ᚬ, 229, 300; ii. 290; iii. 121. Eremitical saints, ii. 248. _See_ Anchorites. Eric Bloody Axe, settled by Aethelstan in Northumberland, i. ᚬv1 359-60ᚬ; is once and again expelled, ᚬv1 363-4ᚬ: his sons go to Orkney, whence they make piratical expeditions, ᚬv1 365-6ᚬ. Eric, a Dane, made Earl of Northumbria by Cnut, i. ᚬv1 392-3ᚬ. Erin, the Three Sorrowful Stories of (an Irish legend), iii. 127. Esk, river (Haddingtonshire), i. 238. Essy, in Strathbolgy, i. 411. Estates of the Realm in 1283, iii. 39. Estuaries of Forth and Clyde, i. 8. Ethelred, king of Northumbria (A.D. 774), i. 301. Ethelred, king of the English, defeats the Scots (A.D. 1006), i. ᚬv1 385ᚬ. Ethelwald, called Moll, king of Northumbria, i. 300. Ethelwulf, king of Wessex, i. 333; ii. 321. Ethnology of Britain, i. 164 _seq_.; British traditions, 171; Irish traditions, 172; Dalriadic legend, 183; Pictish legends, 185; Saxon legends 189. _See_ Legendary Origins, iii. 90-134. Ettrick, forest of, divided the Britons of Alclyde from the Angles of Bernicia, i. 235. Eubonia, settlement of the Firbolg in, i. 138. Eugein. _See_ Oan. Eugenius the Bald (Owen), king of the Strathclyde Britons, i. 393; slain, 394. Evans, Prof. of New York, i. 250. Ewen of Otter, clan, iii. 474. Faelchu mac Dorbeni, the last of Columba’s successors, ii. 177. Failbe, abbot of Iona, i. 245; ii. 168. Falkirk (Fahkirk), church at, called _Ecglis Breacc_, ii. 36. _See_ Brychan. Falkland, thanage of, iii. 268. Fallofaudus, a Roman general in Britain, i. 99. Family of Iona. _See_ Columba. Fandafuith (Fandowie), thanage of, iii. 274. Farne Islands, i. 237. Feacht, or ‘expedition,’ the burden of, ii. 173; iii. 151, 227, 234. _See_ Sluaged. Fearchar Fada, leader of the Cinel Baedan, i. 250, 251, ᚬv1 264ᚬ; iii. 342, 476; death of, i. 272. Fearn, dedication to St. Aidan at, i. 260. Fendoch, Roman camp at, i. 45, 88. Feochan, promontory of (Ross-Foichen, Irrosfoichne), battle at, i. ᚬv1 286ᚬ. _Feodofirma_ (fee-farm), tenure of, what it was in Scotland, iii. 85, 237-8. Feradach, son of Sealbach, is put in chains by Angus, i. 290. Fergus Brit, second abbot of Iona, ii. 151. Fergus Mor mac Erc of Dalriada, i. 140. Fergus Salach, Cinel, a subdivision of the tribe of Loarn, i. 230. Fergusianus, legend of, ii. 232. _Ferleighinn_, lector or man of learning in the monasteries, ii. ᚬv2 342ᚬ, 444 _seq_. Fermartyn, thanage of, iii. 252. Fermoy, Book of, cited, iii. 35, 410. Ferot, son of Finguine, slain, i. 288. Fettercairn (Fotherkern), in the Mearns, i. 380. Fetteresso (Fodresach), Malcolm I. slain at, i. 364. Fiachna mac Deman, king of the Cruithnigh of Dalaradia, i. 241. Fife, taken possession of by Agricola, i. 48; represented in the Pictish legend by Fib (_see_ Cruithne), 185, 186; province of, iii. 43; attacked by the Northmen, i. 327; inhabitants of, called ‘Scoti,’ 328; Saxon barons acquire lands in, iii. 26; no thanes in, 305, 356; demesne of the earls of, 305. _See_ Fothreve. Fillan, St., ii. 33, 175; pastoral staff of, 407. Finan, bishop of Lindisfarne, i. 258. Findhorn, river, i. 336, 338. Finé or sept in Ireland, origin of the term, iii. 171; the _ciné_ or kinsfolk, 171; the _ceile_ or tenants, 172; the _Fuidhir_ or stranger septs, 173; territorial basis of the Finé, 175; the four families or groups of the kinsfolk, 176-9; members of, 179; status of the Geilfiné chief, 180-4; his relation to the Ri Tuath, 184; law of succession, 187; attendance upon the sluaged or hosting, dun-building, 188; fosterage customs, 190; later state of the Finés, 192-7. Finé or clan in Scotland, iii. 284; first appearance of the clans, 302; the Chief and the kinsmen, 318; the native-men, 318; fosterage, 321; the clan and its members, 323; names and position of the clans, 327-9; termination of clanship, 365. _See_ Clan. Fingaine (MacKinnons), clan, iii. 331, 363, 365, 488. Finglen, in Loarn, battle at, i. 284. Fingaill. _See_ Galls. Finguine, leader of the Picts of Manann, slain, i. 270. Finguine, son of Drostan, slain, i. 288. Finlaic (Finleikr), mormaer of Moray and Ross, defeated by Sigurd, i. 375; afterwards restored, 389; slain, 397. Finnian, influence of, ii. 51. Finntuir, son of Thorfinn, i. 409. Fintan Munnu, an Irish saint, iii. 92. Firbolg, the, i. 138, 173 _seq_., 226; iii. 92, 105. Fishing-villages established in the Highlands and Islands, iii. 376. Flaithbertach, king of Ireland, is assisted by the fleet of Dalriada, i. ᚬv1 289-90ᚬ. Flann Mainistrech, _Synchronisms of_, i. 139. Flavia, a Roman province in Britain, i. 96, 97, 103. Fodresach. _See_ Fetteresso. Fordell, thanage of, iii. 268. Fordun’s _Chronicle_ referred to or quoted, i. 12, 18, ᚬv1 20ᚬ, 21; iii. 40, 47, 65, 70, 72, 84, 216, 304, 307, 480. Fordun, church of, dedicated to Palladius, ii. 29. Forest land, iii. 283. Forglen, principal church of Adamnan, ii. 174; banner of Columba preserved in, 175. Forgrund, thanage of, iii. 276. Fortevieth (Forteviot, Perthshire), Regulus brings remains of St. Andrew to, i. 297; Kenneth mac Alpin dies at, 313; thanage of, iii. 269. Forth (Forc), firth of (_see_ Boderia), i. 47 _seq_.; iii. 122, 212; isthmus between it and the Clyde, i. 8; fortified by Agricola, 46, 47; earthen rampart constructed by Lollius Urbicus (Antonine’s Wall), which became the boundary of the Roman province, ᚬv1 77-79ᚬ; its reconstruction by Severus, 81, 89; church south of the Forth and Clyde, ii. 36. _See_ Frisian Sea. Fortingall, Roman camp and station at, i. 88. Fortrenn, province of, comprehending Strathearn and Menteith, i. ᚬv1 207ᚬ, 340, 342; iii. 44, 46; the Britons of, i. 211, 231, 238; siege of Dunduirn, its principal stronghold, 264; after Ecgfrid’s death, Fortrenn used as synonymous with the kingdom of the Picts, 269; the men of, defeated by the Danes, 307, 308, 315, ᚬv1 319ᚬ, 380; iii. 122. Fosterage, in Ireland, iii. 190; in Wales, 207; in Scotland, 321. Fothad, second bishop of Albans, ii 327. Fothad, last bishop of Alban, ii. 344. Fothadh Canann, iii. 121. Fothergill (Fortingall), thanage of, iii. 271. Fotherkern. _See_ Fettercairn. Fothreve (Fothrif), district of (Kinross-shire and west of Fife), i. 231, 341; iii. 43, 46, 61. Franks, first appearance of the, i. 92. Fraser, Sir William,—remarks on his work on _The Lennox_, i. 22; iii. 360; on _Earls of Cromartie_, 351, 353, 355. Freeman’s _Old English History_, i. 150; his _Norman Conquest_, 385. Frisian Sea, name applied to the Firth of Forth by Nennius, i. ᚬv1 191ᚬ. Frisians (Phrissones), the, i. ᚬv1 145-6ᚬ; settlements of, on the shores of the Forth, 191, 192; their influence on the southern Picts, 231. _See_ Dunfres. Fuidhir, or stranger serfs, iii. 173, 318. Gabran, son of Domangart, king of Dalriada, i. ᚬv1 142-144ᚬ; the Cinel Gabran, one the three tribes of the Dalriadic kingdom, ᚬv1 229ᚬ; contest with Cinel Loarn for the throne, ᚬv1 272-3ᚬ, 287. Gadeni, tribe of the, i. 71; their territory, 106. Gadhelic branch of the Celtic race, and its subdivisions, i. 226, 227; its language, 194. Gaedhel Glass, the _eponymus_ of the Gaedhelic race, i. 179; iii. 94. _See_ Gathelus. Gael (Gadheal, Gaedhel, Gaethel), name now applied to all the inhabitants of Scotland who belonged to the Gaelic branch of the Celtic race, i. 343; iii. 101, 365. Gaelic language, and its dialectic varieties, i. 193, 194, ᚬv1 203-4ᚬ; Scotch Gaelic, ii. ᚬv2 453-4ᚬ; termed Albanic, Scotic or Scotch, 460, and later, called Irish or Erse, 462; iii. 40, 41; becomes a written language after the Reformation, ii. 463. _See also_ Irish. Gaelic population, causes affecting, in eighteenth century, iii. 372; state in 1817, 376; in 1847-50, 377. Gaelic race, tribal organisation of the, iii. 136; broken up, 300. Gaius Campus, the name, i. ᚬv1 255-6ᚬ. Gal (= valour) a component part of Gaelic names not to be confounded with “Gall” (= strangers), iii. 28, 333. Gala, river, i. 237. Galgacus, a Caledonian chief, leader of the natives at the battle of Mons Granpius, i. ᚬv1 52-56ᚬ. Gallgaidheal, Irish term for Galloway, i. 239, 311; applied to the Gaelic race there and in the Western Isles as under the rule of Galls; their association with piratical Northmen, 311-12; the term also applied to the inhabitants of the Western Isles and districts under the Norwegian rule, 345; iii. 29-39; finally limited to Galloway, 292; historic sketch of their lords, 292-300; tribe, 365. Galloway (Galweia, Gallovidia, Gallweithia, Gallwydel (Welsh), Gallgaidel (Irish), province of, i. 9; occupied by the Novantæ, 10, 72, 127, who became known as the Picts of Galloway, 131, 132, ᚬv1 238ᚬ; legend relating to, ᚬv1 187-189ᚬ; their isolated position, ᚬv1 202-3ᚬ; subject to the Angles, 271, 311; invaded by the Scots under Alpin, 291; Anglic power wanes about the end of the eighth century, 311 (_see_ Whithern); attacked by the Northmen, ᚬv1 322-3ᚬ; its nominal connection with Bernicia, 373; thrice invaded by Malcolm IV., and its inhabitants brought under subjection, 472; revolt in the following reign, 475; insurrection in, 478; again revolt under Alexander II., but become incorporated into the kingdom in 1235, ᚬv1 487-8ᚬ; Alan, lord of, iii. 75; the tribal system in, 214. Galls, a term applied to the Norwegians and Danes (Finngaill = fair-haired Galls or Norwegians) (Dubhgaill = dark-haired Galls or Danes), i. 304; iii. 28, 292, 233; also to Saxons, i. 311; sometimes = ‘foreign,’ 387. Garnaid, Bredei, and Talore (sons of Wid), successively kings of the Picts, i. 242, ᚬv1 246-7ᚬ, 257. Garnard, son of Donald, king of the Picts, i. 305. Garrioch (Garvyach), earldom of, iii. 69. Gartnaid, son of Donnell, king of the Picts, who remained independent after the others had fallen under the sway of Osuiu, i. 258; voyage of his sons to Ireland, 259. Gathelus, first leader of the Gaethel, i. 343; iii. 494. Gaul, mission of St. Columbanus to (A.D. 590), ii. 6. Genealogies, spurious, of the Grants, iii. 349; the Camerons, 350; Mackenzies, 351; Mathesons, Macleans, and Macleods, 354; MacIntoshes, 356; Campbells, 359; earls of Lennox, 359; Donnachie (Robertsons), M‘Nabs, MacGregors, 362. Geiza, isle of, iii. 439. Gentiles, a term applied to the northern pirates, i. 304. Geoffrey of Monmouth, fabulous history of, 117, 172; iii. 94. Gerontius, one of Constantine’s generals, a native of Britain, i. ᚬv1 109-112ᚬ. Gervadius, St., or Gernadius, ii. 369. Gigha, island of, i. 285. Gilcomgan, mormaer of Moray, and father of Lulach, king of Scotia, i. 411. Gildas, the British historian, his narrative of the Roman occupation, i. 112, 113; note on the Lives of, ᚬv1 116-118ᚬ; his account of the Picts, ᚬv1 121-2ᚬ; of the settlement of the Saxons in Britain, ᚬv1 144-5ᚬ. Gillaeoin, clan. _See_ Macleans. Gillebride, father of Somerled, iii. 33. Gillechallam of Raarsa, clan, iii. 433. Gillechrist, Comes de Menteth, iii. 67. Gillemichel Makduf, Comes de Fif, iii. 63-4. Gilli, earl of Colonsay, i. 379, ᚬv1 389-90ᚬ. Giollaespuig, son of Alasdair of Ile, iii. 407, 409. Giraldus Cambrensis, cited, iii. 48. Giric. _See_ Grig. Giudi, town of (_see_ Alauna), i. 71, 208, 238, ᚬv1 254-5ᚬ. Glammis, i. 398; thanage of, iii. 262, 266. Glasgow, diocese of, re-constituted, ii. 375. Glein, river, Arthur’s first battle on, i. 153. Glendowachy (Doune), thanage of, iii. 251. Glenfalloch, i. 273. _See_ Clach na Breatan. Glenlemnae, valley of the Leven—[Argyll or Dumbarton?] Dalriadic slaughter in, i. ᚬv1 272-3ᚬ. Glenmairison (Glenmureson), in West Lothian, battle of, i. 249. Glenrie, or the king’s glen, i. 411. Glentilt, thanage of, iii. 86, 272. Glenurquhir, Laird of, iii. 435. Godfray mac Aralt. _See_ Godred. Godfrey. _See_ Guthfrith. _Gododin_, a Welsh poem, i. 250. Godred (Gofra, Gofrath), son of Aralt, king of Man, vanquished by the sons of Nial, i. ᚬv1 376-8ᚬ. Godred Crovan, a ruler of the Western Isles, i. 441; iii. 331. _See_ Reginald. Godwine, Earl, i. 410. Gospatrick, a grandson of Crinan, origin of name, i. 394, ᚬv1 419ᚬ. Gothbrith, leader of a band of Danes, i. 347. Gowrie, district of, i. 281, 341; iii. 43, 45, 133; earldom of, 275. Gracaban, a Danish earl slain at Tynemoor, i. ᚬv1 347-8ᚬ. Grampians, the, i. 11, 47, 49, _et al_. Granpius, Mons, battle of, i. 52 _seq_.; conflicting theories as to the position of, 54. Grants, MS. history of the, iii. 349-50. Grassy Walls, Roman camp at, i. 49, 51, 86. Gratian, Emperor, i. 104, 105, 108. Greeks, their early acquaintance with the British Isles, i. 29, 30. Green’s _English People_, i. 150. Gregor (MacGregors), clan, iii. 329, 331, 365, 487. Grelauga, daughter of Duncan, jarl of Caithness, and wife of Thorfinn, i. 374. Grig (Carus, Ciricius, Girg, Giric, Girig), son of Dungaile (_see_ Dunnagual), associated as governor with Eocha, king of the Picts, i. 329; error of Chalmers with regard to him, 330; events of his reign, ᚬv1 331-4ᚬ; he was the first to give liberty to the Scottish Church, ii. ᚬv2 320ᚬ. _See_ Eglisgirg. Gruoch, daughter of Boete (_q.v_.), and wife of Macbeth, i. 406. Guaire (Macquarries), clan, iii. 331, 436, 488. Guaul, the name given by Nennius to the northern wall, i. 153. Guinnion, fastness of, i. 153. Gunn, clan, iii. 330. Guorthigirn, a leader of the Britons, i. 146, 147, 151, 189. Gureit (Gwriad), king of Alclyde, i. 257. Gurth, a name of Skye, i. ᚬv1 395-6ᚬ. Guthferth, son of Sitriuc, i. 351. Guthfrith, Sitriuc’s brother, driven from Deira by Aethelstan, i. ᚬv1 352ᚬ. Guthorm, son of Earl Sigurd, i. 344. Guthred, son of Hardicnut, king of the Northumbrians south of the Tyne, i. 332, 349; after his death Bernicia under lords of Bamborough, 373. Gwenedotia, Gwynedd (North Wales), i. 244, 246, 254; iii. 198. Gwyddyl, in modern Welsh denotes the Irish, i. 197; iii. 101. _See_ Gael. Gwyddyl Ffichti, the Welsh designation of the Picts who settled in Britain, i. 197, 343; iii. 48, 101-104. Hadrian, the Emperor, his arrival in Britain, i. 60; the first Roman wall, between the Tyne and the Solway, constructed by him, 60, 61, 90, 91. Hæfe, river. _See_ Avon. Hafursfiord, battle of, i. 336. Hagiology of the Irish church, ii. ᚬv2 425-43ᚬ; of Scottish church, 444. Hagustald. _See_ Hexham. Hailes, Lord, i. 6; his _Annals of Scotland_, 18; iii. 442. Hakon, Earl, of Norway, i. 379. Halfdan, son of Ragnar Lodbrok, leads a band of Danes against Northumbria, the Galloway Picts, and the Strathclyde Britons, i. ᚬv1 325-6ᚬ; again attacks Northumbria, 332. Hallad, earl of Orkney, i. 344. Hamiltoun, Lord, iii. 439. Harald Harfagr, king of Norway, i. ᚬv1 311-12ᚬ, 335; chronology of his reign, 336, 344. Harald Sigurdson, i. 413. Hardacnut, king of England, i. 408. Hardicnut, i. 332. Harris (Harreik, Herreis, Harrayis), isle of, iii. 429. Hastings, David de, a Norman baron, iii. 75. Hatfield (Haethfeld), battle of, i. ᚬv1 243-4ᚬ. Havard, eldest son of Thorfinn the ‘Skull-cleaver,’ i. 374. Hebrides, estimation of the extent of the, iii. 439; tillers of the ground in the, exempt from war, 439; land tenure after the sixteenth century, 372; townships in the Inner, in 1850, ᚬv1 374-8ᚬ, in the Outer, ᚬv1 378-93ᚬ. _See_ Ebudæ, Long Island. Hefenfelth. _See_ Catscaul. Heligoland, i. 189, 190. Helsker, isle of, iii. 431. Hengist and Horsa, Saxon leaders, land in Britain, i. 146, ᚬv1 149ᚬ, 189. Hennessy, W. M., iii. 35; translation of the tract _Na tri Colla_, 462. Hesperides, a name applied to the Cassiterides, i. ᚬv1 167-169ᚬ. Hexham (Hagustald), i. 245, 262, 275; church of, founded by St. Wilfrid, ii. 210, 213; iii. 81. Highland Clans, comparison between them and the Afghaun Tribes, by Sir Walter Scott, iii. 456; their legendary descent, 458-490. Highland Line, the, traced northwards from Loch Lomond, iii. 285-6. Highlanders, Fordun’s description of, iii. 307; raid into Angus, 308; leaders thereof outlawed, 309. Highlands, state of the, in the sixteenth century, iii. 326; emigration from the, 373. Highlands and Islands, tenure of land in, subsequent to the sixteenth century, iii. 368; abolition of calps, 368; townships, 369-371, 374, 378; deer-forests, 371; fishing-villages, 376; causes affecting the population, 372. Hilef, river (the Isla, or Lyff?), i. ᚬv1 340-1ᚬ. Himilco, traditionary account of his voyage to the British Isles, i. 30. Hoddam, Kentigern’s first see, ii. 191. Holderness, i. 420. Holy Island. _See_ Lindisfarne. Holyrood, foundation charter of, i. 240, 241. Home, D. Milne, account of the wall between Forth and Clyde, i. ᚬv1 78ᚬ. Honor price, the, in the tribe, iii. 152-3, 189, 204, 217. Honorius, Emperor, troubles in the Roman province in Scotland during his reign, i. ᚬv1 105-111ᚬ; termination of the Roman dominion in Britain, 112. Honorius I., Pope, letter from, to King Aeduin, ii. 155. Horesti, the, and their territory, i. 57; some of them enrolled by Severus among the Roman auxiliaries, ᚬv1 89ᚬ. Horsley, John, his _Britannia Romana_, i. 23, 102, 103. Hound Earl, the. _See_ Hundi Jarl. Hoy, isle of, i. 386. Hubba, son of Ragnar Lodbrok, i. 332. Huisdinn, son of Alasdair, Earl of Ross, his descendants, iii. 408. Hundi (Hvelp), son of Sigurd, taken by Olaf from Orkney to Norway as a hostage, i. 386. Hundi Jarl, the (Crinan, lay abbot of Dunkeld), i. 401; ii. ᚬv2 337ᚬ. Hungus, King. _See_ Angus. Hustain (MacDonalds of Slate), clan, iii. 330. Hwnayis, two isles, iii. 436. _Hy Fiachraich_, tracts entitled _The Tribes and Customs of_, quoted, iii. 158, 193; _Hereditary Proprietors of the Clann_, quoted, 159. Hy (Hii). _See_ Iona. _Hy Many, Customs of_, quoted, iii. 160. Hy Neill, the, i. 248, 249; iii. 340. Ian (MacIans), clan, iii. 330. _See_ Eoin. Iberian or Basque race, an, preceded the Celts in Britain and Ireland, i. 164 _seq_., 226; language of, 193. Iceni, the, a powerful British nation, defeated by Ostorius, i. ᚬv1 36ᚬ; insurrection of, under Queen Boadicea, 38. I Columchill. _See_ Iona. Ictis, island of, i. 166. Ida, son of Eobba, forms the kingdom of Bernicia (A.D. 547-559), i. ᚬv1 155ᚬ, 156; iii. 19. Idvies. _See_ Edevyn. Iena estuary (the Cree), i. 66. Ierne. _See_ Ireland. Iernian Isles, a name applied by a Greek poet to the British Isles, i. 29. Ila, river (the Ulie, Helmsdale), i. 67; isle of, iii. 437. Imergi, ancestor of Somerled, Regulus de Herergaidel, i. 397. _See_ Jehmarc. Imhair Ua Imhair, leader of the Norwegians, slain by the Men of Fortrenn, i. 339. Imhar (Imhair, Ivar), king of the Northmen, takes Alclyde, and returns with Amlaiph to Dublin with great booty, i. ᚬv1 324-5ᚬ. Inchaffray, church of, iii. 269. Inchigall (Innsigall) = islands of the Galls, a term applied to the Western Isles when colonised by the Norwegians, i. 345, ᚬv1 376ᚬ; iii. 292. Inchkeith. _See_ Alauna. Inchmahome, church of, dedicated to Colman (Mocholmoc) of Dromore, ii. 32. Indulph, son of Constantin, king of Alban (A.D. 254-262), i. 365; two events in his reign: Edinburgh and the district round it surrendered to the Scots, and the descent of Norwegian pirates on Buchan, 365; different statements as to his death, 366. Ingibiorg, widow of Thorfinn, becomes wife of Malcolm III., i. ᚬv1 414ᚬ. Inguar (Imhair), son of Ragnar Lodbrok, ancestor of the Danish kings of Dublin, i. 332; kings who were descendants of, 376. _Inisfallen, Annals of_, i. 26. Inner Hebrides. _See_ Hebrides. Innermessan, farm of, fortified moat on, i. 72. Innes, Cosmo, his _Scotland in the Middle Ages_, i. 12; on the Marr letters-patent, iii. 442. Innes, Thomas, remarks on his Essay on the ancient inhabitants of Scotland, i. 18; his use of the term ‘Midland Britons,’ 87. Innrechtach, probably a leader of the Picts of Galloway, i. ᚬv1 291-2ᚬ. Innrechtach ua Finachta, abbot of Iona, takes the reliquaries of Collumcille to Ireland, ii. 305; killed on his way to Rome, 309. Inschenycht, isle of, iii. 436. Inscriptions found along the course of the wall of Antoninus, i. ᚬv1 78ᚬ, 79. Inverculen, i. 366. Inverkeillor, thanage of, iii. 265. Inverdovet (Inverdufatha), i. ᚬv1 327-8ᚬ. Inverry. _See_ St. Monans. Invers and Abers, on the distribution of, i. ᚬv1 220-222ᚬ. Iona (Hy, Hii, I Columchill), island of, i. 183, 251; description of it, ii. ᚬv2 89-93ᚬ; monastery of, i. ᚬv1 258-9ᚬ; church plundered, and many slain by the Northmen (A.D. 794), ᚬv1 304ᚬ; ii. 290 _seq_.; Dunkeld afterwards the seat of supremacy for the Columban churches, i. 305; the monastery rebuilt with stone, ii. 297; shrine of Columba deposited therein, 300 (_see_ Diarmaid); again ravaged by the Danes (A.D. 825), 300 (_see_ Blathmac); again in the year 986, i. 377; ii. ᚬv2 332-35ᚬ; in 1203 the monastery rebuilt by Reginald, second son of Somerled, ii. 415; who founds the Benedictine abbey and nunnery of, 415. Ireland (Ierne), originally called Eriu, also Hibernia, and Scotia, the mother country of the Scots, i. 1, 2, 130; the name Scotia, by which Ireland alone was meant prior to the tenth century, transferred to Scotland in the eleventh, 3, 5; fabulous history of, and the commencement of its true history, ᚬv1 25ᚬ, 180; its ancient inhabitants, 178; ethnological legends, ᚬv1 172-183ᚬ; ravaged by Ecgfrid, ᚬv1 264-5ᚬ; final conflict with the Danes, 386 _seq_.; monastic church in, ii. ᚬv2 41-50ᚬ (_see_ Monastery); twelve apostles of, 51; church of the southern Scots of, conforms to Rome, 159; southern and northern districts defined, 161; influence of the last three pagan kings of, in Scotland, iii. 114-120; Erc and his sons (_see_ Erc); provinces in, 42; ancient laws of, 151 _seq_. _See also_ Finé, Tuath. Irish Annals to be used with discrimination, i. 24, 25; Irish early history, artificial character of, iii. 97; manuscripts, 458 _seq_. Irish (Gaelic) language, i. 193; spoken dialects of, ii. 450; peculiarities of, 451; written, 452. _See_ Languages. Irt, isle of, iii. 431. Irvine, river, Roman remains on the, i. 73. Isca Silurum (Caerleon), i. 81. Isla, island of, i. 140; iii. 213, 438. Isla, river, peninsula formed by its junction with the Tay, the probable position of the Roman army before the battle of Mons Granpius, i. ᚬv1 52-54ᚬ; iii. 276. Isles, Norwegian kingdom of the: the Western Isles subdued and colonised (A.D. 793-806), i. ᚬv1 304-5ᚬ, ᚬv1 311-12ᚬ; iii. 28 _seq_.; Thorstein the Red devastates the northern provinces of Scotland (A.D. 875), i. ᚬv1 326-7ᚬ, 336; ii. 317; colonisation of Orkney and Shetland, with Caithness and Sutherland (A.D. 889), i. 335, 342, 344; iii. 47; descent of a Norwegian fleet on Buchan (A.D. 954), i. ᚬv1 365-6ᚬ; the Danes oppose the Norwegians in their possession of the Isles (A.D. 970), ii. 332 _seq_.; Somerled drives the Norwegians out of the mainland, and conquers part of the Isles (A.D. 1154-64), i. ᚬv1 469-73ᚬ; iii. 33-35; decline of the Norwegian rule till the Isles were formally ceded to Alexander III. (A.D. 1266), i. 495; iii. 35-39. _See_ Einar, Sigurd. Isles, Chiefs of the, i. 441; iii. 37; sketch of the Lords of the, 292-300; their extinction, 300; legendary history, 397; an Irish poem (and translation) relative to the kingdom of the, 410-27; bishop of the, 433 _seq_.; description of, with their pertinents and pendicles (written 1577-95), 428-440. _See_ also under names of the various islands. Isthmus between the Forth and Clyde, wall of Antoninus on (_see_ Roman walls): stations on it, i. 78. Ith, race of, iii. 111. Itunæ Æstuarium, the (Solway Firth), i. 64, 66. Itys, river (Carron), i. 69. Ivar. _See_ Imhar. Jarrow (on Tyne), monastery of, i. ᚬv1 278-9ᚬ. Jehmarc (Imergi?) submits to Cnut, i. 395, 397, 405. Jerome, St., his mention of the Attacotts in Gaul, i. 101, ᚬv1 106ᚬ. Jocelyn of Furness, biographer of St. Kentigern, ii. 179 _seq_. John the Lame, clan, iii. 470. Jugantes, a sept of the Brigantes, i. 37. Julian, Emperor, i. 98. Julius Cæsar, invasion of Britain by, i. 31; his account of the inhabitants, 32. Julius Frontinus, a Roman governor in Britain, i. 39. Jura, island of, battle at, i. 264; _see also_ iii. 213, 438. Jutes, the, invade Britain with the Saxons and Angles, i. 149, ᚬv1 189-192ᚬ. Kaffirs, our war with the, illustrative of that between the Romans and the tribes of ancient Britain, i. 85. Kali (or Karl) Hundason, appellation given to Duncan, son of Crinan, i. 400, 401, 404. Kari Solmundson, i. 378. Kathenes (Kettins), thanage of, iii. 266. Kay and Qwhwle, clan, iii. 310. _Keledei_ (_Cele De_), (_see_ Anchorites, Culdees), grant of lands at Lochleven to the, ii. 355; superseded by canons regular, 384; suppression of those of St. Andrews, 384-388; of Lochleven, 338; of Monymusk, 389-392; of Abernethy, 399; regulations for the government of the community of, at St. Andrews, ii. 357; Armagh, 359; Iona, 360; Clonmacnois, 362. Kells, Book of, iii. 170. Kells (Cennanus, in Meath), church of, i. 305; portion of St. Columba’s relics transferred to, 310; ii. ᚬv2 307ᚬ. Kelly, thanage of, iii. 268. Kelp manufacture in the Highlands, iii. 374; failure of, 376. Kelso (Calchvynyd), iii. 102. Kemble’s _Saxons in England_, i. ᚬv1 150-1ᚬ. Kenneth mac Alpin (Kynadius), chronology of his reign (844-60), i. ᚬv1 308ᚬ; becomes king of the Picts, ᚬv1 309-10ᚬ; obscurity of this period, 313; causes and nature of the revolution which placed him on the Pictish throne, ᚬv1 314-16ᚬ; ii. 306, 315; re-establishes the Columban Church, selecting Dunkeld as the Metropolitan see, 307; builds a church there, and removes to it part of the relics of Columba, 307; question as to his paternal descent, i. 321; A.D. 860 the true year of his death, 308, 313; his sons and daughters, 313. Kenneth (971-95), son of Malcolm, king of Alban, i. 368; ravages the territory of the Britons, 368; invades Northumbria, 369; said to have slain Amlaiph, son of Indulph, 370; untrustworthy statements as to the cession of any part of Northumbria to him, ᚬv1 370-74ᚬ; contest as to the sovereignty of Caithness, ᚬv1 374-80ᚬ; slain at Fettercairn, 380; his reign an important one both for the Scottish Church and for Iona, ii. ᚬv2 331-2ᚬ. Kenneth (997-1004), son of Dubh, king of Alban, i. ᚬv1 382-3ᚬ. Kenneth (Mackenzies), clan, iii. 330, 354, 365; legendary descent, 485. Kent. _See_ Cantium. Kentigern, St., i. 117; biographies of, ii. ᚬv2 179-185ᚬ; early notice of, 186; driven to Wales, 187; founds the monastery of Llanelwy (St. Asaph’s), 188; recalled by Rydderch Hael, 190; fixes his first see at Hoddam, 191; missions to Galloway, Albania, and the Orkneys, 192; returns to Glasgow, 193; visited by Columba, 194; his death, 196. Ketill Flatnose (Caittil Finn), i. 311, 312, 326; iii. 29. Kettins. _See_ Kathenes. Kilbride MS., iii. 458, 460. Kildare, church of, dedicated to St. Bridget, ii. 309. Kilmalemnok, thanage of, iii. 249. Kilmun, condition of Columban church of, ii. 410. Kilrymont (Cellrighmonaid). _See_ St. Andrews. Kinat, son of Ferat, king of the Picts, i. 309. Kinclaven, thanage of, iii. 276, 277. Kindeloch, Loch, old name of New Abbey parish in Kirkcudbright, i. ᚬv1 137ᚬ. _See_ Cendaeladh. Kindrochet (Chondrochedalvan), in Aberdeenshire, church of, dedicated to St. Andrew, i. 298. Kinelvadon (Cinel Baedan), a small state in Dalriada, i. 264. Kingaltevy, thanage of, iii. 263. Kinneir, thanage of, iii. 268. Kinross, thanage of, iii. 268. Kintyre (Cindtyre, Pentir), peninsula of: known to the Romans as the ‘Promontorium Caledoniæ,’ i. 40; ii. 85; visited by Agricola, i. 47; settlement of the Irish Scots in, 140 _seq_.; possessed by the Cinel Gabran, 229, 273; mentioned in the _Gododin_, 250; Norwegians in, 387; sheriffdom of, and boundaries, iii. 89. Kiritinus (Curitan), bishop and abbot of Rossmeinn, i. ᚬv1 277-8ᚬ. Kirkbuddo, its connection with St. Boethius, i. 135. Kirkcaldy, ii. 226. Kirkintulloch, i. 161. Kirriemuir (Westermore), Aethelstan advances to, in his invasion of Alban, i. 352. Knaresborough, i. 359. Kyle and adjacent regions subdued, (A.D. 750) by Eadberct of Northumbria, i. ᚬv1 294-5ᚬ. Kyncarden, thanage of, iii. 258. Kynlos, bridge of, i. 367. Kynnaber, thanage of, iii. 265. Kyntor (Kintore), thanage of, iii. 253. Kyrkness, lands of, iii. 61, 361. Labhran (Lawren), or MacLarens, clan, iii. 329, 343, 344, 363, 365, 483. Lachlan, clan, iii. 331, 340, 341, 473. Laight Alpin (a stone pillar so called), incorrectly identified by Chalmers with Laight Castle, i. 292. Laisren, Columba’s successor in Iona, ii. 150. Lammermoor hills, i. 9, 240, 241; the scene of the early life of St. Cuthbert, ii. 201. Lamont (Ladmann), clan, iii. 331, 340, 341, 432. Land-measures, iii. 153-157, 200-203, 223-227. Land-tenure, iii. 83; in the Highlands and Islands subsequent to the sixteenth century, 368 _seq_. Languages of Britain, and their relation to each other, i. 192 _seq_., 226, 227; the three dialects of British (Welsh, Cornish, and Breton) not mutually intelligible, 199; topographic evidence as to character of, ᚬv1 212-225ᚬ; ii. ᚬv2 453-457ᚬ; a written language introduced by Scottish monks, 457; Lowland Scotch termed English, 460, 462; subsequently the term Scotch passes into Lowland Scotch, 462. _See_ Manx. Laws of King William the Lion, referred to, iii. 217. Laws attributed to David I., iii. 217 _seq_. _Leabhar Gabhala_, the, and its ethnologic legends, i. 172 _seq_. Leader, river, ii. 201. Lecan, Book of, ii. 26; iii. 338, 446 _seq_. Lector (_Ferleiginn_), first appearance of the, ii. 444. Leeds, i. 255. _See_ Loidis. Legendary origins, iii. 90-120; extent of their historic basis, 120-24; paralleled suspiciously in events during the Roman occupation of Britain, 124. _See also_ Celtic population, Highland clans. Legion, city of the, i. 153. Leinster, Book of, i. 172; iii. 476. Leinster, kings of, i. 403. Lemannonius Sinus (Loch Long), i. 67, 75. Lennox (Levenach), district of, iii. 135; the earldom of, 69; its extinction, 300, and legendary descent, 341, 359, 416; remarks on Sir W. Fraser’s _Lennox_, 360. Leva, river (North Esk), i. 67. Leven, origin of the name, i. 221; rivers in Argyllshire and Dumbartonshire, ᚬv1 272-73ᚬ. _See_ Muredach Albanach. Lewis (Lodus), island of, i. 387, 396; iii. 429. Liaccmaelain, battle at, i. 264. _Libere tenentes_, definition of, iii. 240. _Liberi firmarii_, free farmers, iii. 243. Liffey, kings of, i. 403. Lindisfarne, island of (Ynys Medcaud), i. 237, 413; episcopal seat of Bishop Aidan, 251; ii. 158; removal of the see to York, i. 260; the island attacked by Norwegian and Danish pirates, ᚬv1 302-3ᚬ. Lindum, a town of the Damnonii, i. 73. Lingaran (Duin Nechtain), battle of (in parish of Dunnichen, Forfarshire), i. 265; ii. 213. Linnhe loch, i. 264. Lintrose, Roman camp at, i. 49, 50; plan of, in Roy’s _Military Antiquities_, 51. Liotr, son of Thorfinn, earl of Orkney, i. ᚬv1 374-5ᚬ. Lismore, Book of, iii. 117, 130, 137; isle of, 435. _See_ Argyll, Epidium. Literature and learning, influence of the Church on, ii. 448. Loarn, Cinel, one of the three tribes of the Dalriadic kingdom, inhabiting the district of Lorn, i. 229; its three subdivisions, 230, 264; contest for the Dalriadic throne with Cinel Gabran, ᚬv1 272-3ᚬ, ᚬv1 287ᚬ; driven to extremity by Angus, they attack the Picts in Manann, and are defeated by Talorgan, Angus’s brother, ᚬv1 290-91ᚬ. Lochene, son of Nechtan Cennfota, slain, i. 246. Lochlannach (people of Lochlann), a term applied to the Norwegians, i. 304. Lochleven, Culdees of, i. 406. Lochow, district of, the original seat of the clan O’Duibhn or Campbells, iii. 330, 331, 343. Logierait (Loginmahedd), church of, iii. 274. Loidis: confusion in Bede’s use of the word, i. ᚬv1 254-5ᚬ. _See_ Lothian. Loirgeclat (Loch Arklet), conflict between the Dalriads and Britons at, i. 273. Lollius Urbicus, sent to Britain, i. 76; constructs wall of Antoninus, ᚬv1 76-79ᚬ. Long Island (Outer Hebrides), present condition of population of townships in, iii. 378; methods of cultivation, 379-381; reclamation of moorland, 381; grazing, 382; hill-grazing, 385-87; shealings, 387; rents, 388; seaweed gathering, 389; fines and reparation for trespass by cattle, etc., 385, 390; laws and customs, 390-91; houses, 392; friendliness, 393; gradual disappearance of the system, 394. _See_ Highlands. Longus, river (the Add), i. 68, 216. Loogdeae (Loch Inch), battle near, i. 288. Lords of the Isles. _See_ Isles. Lorn, district of, i. 229; subdivisions of, 230; sheriffdom of, and boundaries, iii. 88. Lothian (Lothene, Loidis, Lodonea), districts comprised under this term, i. 131, 240, 241, 255; invaded six times by Kenneth Mac Alpin, 310, 374; surrendered to the Scots, 365; its cession by king Edgar to Kenneth son of Malcolm, not correct, ᚬv1 370-74ᚬ; ceded to Malcolm ii., 393, 394; monasteries in, ii. 200; churches founded in Lothian only after the extinction of the Celtic church, 366. Loudon Hill, Roman remains on, i. 73. Lowthers, the, a group of hills, i. 9. Loxa, river (Lossie), i. 67, 216. Loyng, isle of, iii. 438. Luaire (Carlowrie?), battle at, i. 325. Lucopibia, a town of the Novantæ, i. 72, 132. Lucullus, a Roman governor in Britain, successor of Agricola, i. ᚬv1 58ᚬ. Lugi, a northern tribe, i. 76, 206. Lulach, son of Gilcomgan, king of Scotia, i. 411. Lumphanan, i. 410, 413. Lupicinus, sent to Britain to oppose the Picts and Scots, i. 98. Lupus, Vivius, governor of Britain, i. 80. Macbeth (Maelbaethe), son of Finnlaec, his submission to king Cnut, i. 395, 397; mormaer of Moray, ᚬv1 403-4ᚬ; iii. 53; king of Scotia, i. 405; kingdom invaded by Siward, earl of Northumbria, ᚬv1 408-9ᚬ; slain by Malcolm Ceannmor, at Lumphanan, 410. M‘Clane, Dowart (Great M‘Lane), iii. 434 _seq_. M‘Clane of Lochbuy, iii. 434, 435, 439. M‘Cloyd, Lewis, iii. 429, 431, 432. M‘Cloyd, Harreis, iii. 429, 431, 433. M‘Cowle of Lorne, iii. 435. Maccus (Magnus), son of Aralt, i. 376; iii. 30. Macdonald, Alexander, Gaelic scholar and poet, ii. 464. Macdonalds, the. _See_ Clanranald, Donald. Macdougalls, the. _See_ Dubhgal. Macduff, the fictitious, iii. 64. Macduff, clan, and its privileges, iii. 303-6. _See_ Gillemichel. MacDuffy (Makasie), Laird, iii. 438. MacEth, Malcolm, mystery of his antecedents, i. 462; raises a rebellion, 462; checked in Galloway, 464; finally defeated, taken prisoner, and confined, 464; liberated, 469; deprived of his eyesight, 470; retires to a monastery, 470. MacEth, Donald, eldest son of Malcolm, defeated and taken prisoner at Whithern, i. 469. MacEth, Kenneth, heads an insurrection, is taken prisoner and beheaded, i. 483. MacEwens of Otter, iii. 340-41. M‘Firbis, sennachie, iii. 119, 458 _seq_. Macgregor, Dean, of Lismore, ii. 461. _See_ Lismore, Book of. MacGregors, clan. _See_ Gregor. MacIntosh, clan, iii. 356-8, 478. _See_ Chattan. MacIntyre, Duncan Ban, ii. 464. Mackay, clan. _See_ Morgan. Mackenzie, clan. _See_ Kenneth. MacKinnons, clan, iii. 363, 488. _See_ Fingaine. M‘Kynvin, Laird, iii. 432, 434. MacLarens, clan, iii. 343-4. MacLeans, clan, iii. 331, 343, 354, 480. MacLennans, clan, iii. 489. MacLeods, clan, iii. 331, 339, 354, 429, 460. MacMillans, clan, iii. 489. MacNabs, clan, iii. 362, 365, 486. MacNaughtons, the, iii. 342. M‘Neill, Barra, iii. 430. MacQuarries, clan. _See_ Guaire. MacRory, clan, iii. 471. M‘Thomas, clan, iii. 330. MacVurich, historian and sennachie, iii. 33 _seq_., 397 _seq_. Mac William, Donald Ban, aspires to the throne (A.D. 1181), i. ᚬv1 476ᚬ; killed at Mamgarvia Moor, 479. MacWilliam, Guthred, son of Donald Ban, incites to rebellion (A.D. 1211), and is beheaded, i. 482. MacWilliam, Donald Ban, heads an insurrection (A.D. 1215), is taken prisoner, and beheaded, i. 483. Madderty, abthanry of, iii. 87. Mæatæ, nation of the, i. 80, 81, 90, 99, 128; etymology of the name, 83, 87. Maelbaethe. _See_ Macbeth. Maelbrigde, bishop of Alban, ii. 330. Maelduin, bishop of Alban, ii. 343. Maelrubha, St., founds church of Applecross, ii. 169. Maelsechnaill, king of Ireland, death of, i. 323. Maerleswegen (Marleswein), i. 414, 415, 420. Magbiodr (Maelbrigdi), a Scottish earl, i. ᚬv1 374-5ᚬ, 397. Magedauc, Mocetauc. _See_ Mugdoch. Magh Fortren. _See_ Fortrenn. Magh Girgin. _See_ Circinn. Magh Lena, poem on battle of, iii. 154. Magh Rath, battle of, i. 198, 248. Magnus Barefoot, king of Norway, his first invasion of the Isles (A.D. 1093), i. 437; his second expedition (1098), 441; third (1103), in which he was slain, ᚬv1 442-3ᚬ; iii. 32, 47. Maid of Norway, i. ᚬv1 496-7ᚬ. _See_ Margaret. Maighline, in Ulster, mistaken by Chalmers for Mauchlin, in Ayrshire, i. 132. Mailcu, a Dalaradian king, i. 136. Maine, Sir Henry, his _Early Institutions_, iii. 137, 146 _seq_. Major, John, cited, iii. 317. Malcolm I. son of Donald, king of Alban (A.D. 942-54), i. 360; invades Moreb or Moray and slays Cellach, ᚬv1 360-1ᚬ; Cumbria ceded to the Scots, 362, 382; penetrates into England as far as the Tees, 363; said by some to have been slain at Fetteresso by the men of Moerne, by others at Ulurn by the men of Moray, ᚬv1 364-5ᚬ. Malcolm II., son of Kenneth, king of Scotia (A.D. 1005-34), slays his predecessor Kenneth, son of Dubh, at Monzievaird, i. ᚬv1 382-3ᚬ; defeated in attempting to extend his territories beyond the Forth, ᚬv1 385-6ᚬ; state of the districts north of the Spey at this time, 386, _seq_.; gives one of his daughters in marriage to Sigurd the Stout, 386, 401; and another to Crinan, abbot of Dunkeld, 390, 392; second attempt on Northumbria, battle of Carham, cession of Lothian to the Scots, ᚬv1 392-94ᚬ; his submission to Cnut the Dane, 395; his death, ᚬv1 397-8ᚬ; description of Britain at this period, 395; the name Scotia transferred from Ireland to Scotland, 398. Malcolm III. (Ceannmor), son of Duncan, king of Scotia (A.D. 1057-93), i. 408; is put in possession of the throne of Cumbria by Earl Siward, ᚬv1 408-410ᚬ; slays Macbeth, king of Scotia, 410; date of his accession, 410; marries first, Ingibiorg, widow of Thorfinn, 414, and second, Margaret, sister of Eadgar Aetheling, 415, ᚬv1 422ᚬ; iii. 215; advantages accruing to him from these relationships, i. ᚬv1 415-16ᚬ; his invasions of Northumbria, ᚬv1 417-22ᚬ; his relations with William the Conqueror, 423 _seq_.; his death, 430; state of Scotland at this time, ᚬv1 432-3ᚬ; his family, 434. Malcolm IV., grandson of David I., reigns twelve years (A.D. 1153-65), i. 469; first king crowned at Scone, 469; attacked by Somerled and the sons of Malcolm mac Eth, 469; temporary peace agreed to, 470; quells the revolt of six of the seven earls of Scotland, 471; iii. 65; subdues Galloway, i. 472; represses the rebellious spirit in the district of Moray, 473; defeats Somerled at Renfrew, 473; his death, 474. Malcolm, son of Donald, king of the Cumbrians, death of, i. ᚬv1 381-2ᚬ. Maldred, son of Crinan, i. 392, 394, 408, 419. Maleus, island (Mull), i. 68, 216. Malisius, bishop of Alban, ii. 329. Mamgarvia moor in Moray, i. 479. Mamore, district of, i. 411. Man, Isle of, subjected to Norwegian rule, i. 345; the Danes in, 347; the island a bone of contention between the two, 376 _seq_.; some time in possession of the Scots, finally passes to the English crown, iii. 9; office of the Toshiagh Jioarey, 279. Manau (Manann), boundaries of the district in Scotland so called, i. 131, 238, 254; battle of, 161; Picts of, rise against their Saxon rulers, but are defeated, ᚬv1 270ᚬ; attacked by Muredach of Dalriada, who is defeated by Angus’s brother at Carriber, ᚬv1 290-91ᚬ. Manx tongue, the, i. 193; not understood by the Irish, 199. Maor (Mair) of fee, iii. 279, 280. Mar, district of, i. 281, 341; Donald, mormaer of, slain, ᚬv1 387-8ᚬ; Mar and Buchan, one of the seven provinces, iii. 43, 46; earldom of, 68; historic sketch of, 291. Mar, earl of, authenticity of the letters-patent said to have been granted to him in 1171, examined, iii. 441. Marcellus Ulpius, i. 79. Marcus, Emperor, slain by Gratian, i. 108. Margaret, daughter of Alexander III., and her daughter the Maid of Norway, i. ᚬv1 496-7ᚬ. Margaret, St., wife of Malcolm III. (Ceannmor), i. ᚬv1 414-16ᚬ, ᚬv1 432ᚬ; her death, 433; character of, ii. 344; her reforms in the church, ᚬv2 346-50ᚬ; her demeanour to the Anchorites, 351; rebuilds the monastery of Iona, 352; her relics enshrined at Dunfermline, 491; iii. 81. Marianus Scotus, _Chronicle of_, i. 398, 403, 407. Martin, St., of Tours, church of Candida Casa dedicated to, ii. 3, 49. Maserfelth. _See_ Cocboy. Mathesons, clan, iii. 354, 365, 485. Maxima Cæsariensis, a Roman province in Britain, i. 96, 97, 103. Maximian, Galerius, associated with Diocletian in the empire, i. ᚬv1 92ᚬ, 93. Maximus, Clemens, proclaimed Emperor in Britain, i. 104; Gratian slain by him in Gaul, and he himself defeated and slain by the emperor Theodosius, at Aquileia, 105. May, Isle of, St. Adrian and those who accompanied him, slain there by the Danes, i. 321; ii. 312. Mearns. _See_ Moerne. Medraud, son of Llew of Lothian, i. 154. Meicen. _See_ Hatfield. Melbrigda Tönn, a Scottish jarl, slain by Sigurd, i. ᚬv1 336-7ᚬ. Melrose (Mailros), monastery at, i. 133; ii. 200; _Chronicle of_, quoted, iii. 65. Menmuir, dedication to St. Aidan at, i. 260; thanage of, iii. 265. Menteith and Stratherne, province of, i. 211, 340, 342; iii. 43, 46; historic sketch of the earldom of, 290. _See_ Fortrenn. Mercia, kingdom of, i. 239, 243. Mertæ, a northern tribe, i. 76, 206. Miathi (? = Mæatæ), the, battle of, by Aidan, i. 161; locality of, v1. Miledh (Milesius), legend of the sons of, i. 174 _seq_.; iii. 108; the Milesians a variety of the Gadhelic branch of the Celtic race, and known as Scots after fourth century, i. 227. _Milites_, knights, status of, in the tribe, iii. 239-40. Minvircc (stone so called), Britons defeated by the Dalriads at, i. ᚬv1 273ᚬ. _See_ Clach na Breatan. Modan, St., notice of, ii. 282. Moddan, nominated earl of Caithness by King Duncan, slain by Thorkell Fostri, i. 401, 402. Moerne, Men of, i. 342, 380, 383; province of, iii. 42, 46, 122. Moinenn, St. (Monenna, Monanus), notice of, ii. 37, ᚬv2 311-314ᚬ. Molaga, St., bed of, ii. 304. Molaise, the monastic order of, founded by Ragnall, son of Somerled, iii. 400. Mona (Anglesea), i. 32, 43. Monarchy, the idea of, a legacy of Rome to Britain, i. 121. Monarina, island of (Arran), i. 68, 69. Monastery, the primitive Irish, ii. 57; monastic element introduced into the organisation of the church, ᚬv2 41ᚬ; derived from Gaul, 45; reached the Irish Church through two different channels, 45; monastic family described, 61; island monasteries, 62; monasteries, Christian colonies, 63; privilege of sanctuary, 65; seminaries of instruction, 75; monastic church affected by two opposite influences—secular clergy, 227, and anchoretical life, ᚬv2 233-39ᚬ; literature of, 422; monastic orders of church of Rome introduced in the native church, 392; and monasteries founded by feudal kings, iii. 12. Moncrieffe (_Monaigh Craebi_), in Perthshire, battle at, i. 288. Monifieth (Monyfoth), thanage of, iii. 263, 267. Monikie (_Monichi_, _Moneclatu_), church of, dedicated to St. Andrew, i. ᚬv1 297-8ᚬ. Montrose (Old Monros), thanage of, iii. 265. Monzievaird (_Moeghavard_), in Stratherne, i. ᚬv1 383-4ᚬ; iii. 270. Moray (_Moravia_, _Myrhaevi_, _Moreb_), district of, i. 241, ᚬv1 381ᚬ, 396, 402; invaded by Malcolm, son of Donald, 360; Finlaic, mormaer of, 375, 389; bishopric of, ii. ᚬv2 368-370ᚬ; historical sketch of the thanage of, iii. 249; earldom of, 287; chartulary of, 312; men of, 365; legendary descent of, 476. Morgan (Mackays), clan, iii. 330. Morkere, Earl, i. 418. Mormaers, rulers of provinces in the eleventh century, iii. 49, 303; termed Jarls by the Norwegians, 54. Morphie, thanage of, iii. 261. Mortuath. _See_ Tribe. Mount, St. Michael’s, i. 166. Mountain chains (_see_ Cheviots, Drumalban, Lowthers, Mounth), their importance as landmarks, i. 13. Mounth, the, a mountain chain from near Aberdeen to Fort-William, i. ᚬv1 10-14ᚬ, 230 _seq_.; iii. 133. Moylinny. _See_ Maighline. Moyness, thanage of, iii. 248. Mugdoch (_Mocetauc_, _Magedauc_), battle at, between the Picts of Manann and the Britons, i. 295. Mugint, St., i. 136. Mull (Mule), isle of, iii. 434; townships in, 371. Munbre, thanage of, iii. 86, 251. Munch, Professor, i. 400, 412. Municipal government, a legacy of Rome to Britain, i. 121. Muredach Albanach, his address to the river Leven, iii. 117 _seq_.; the original of the poem, 454-5. Muredach, son of Ainbhceallach, chief of the Cinel Loarn, i. 289. Mureif, district of, = Reged, i. 153; iii. 102. Mureston Water, i. 249. Mynyd Agned (Dineiddyn, Dunedin = Edinburgh), i. 153, 238. Myrcforth (Myrcford), Norse term for the Firth of Forth, i. 369. Myrhaevi. _See_ Moray. Nabarus, river (the Naver), i. 69. Naiton, Naitan, king of the Picts. _See_ Nectan. Nash, D. W., remarks on his paper on the site of the battle in which Penda was slain, i. 255. Native-men, iii. 318-321. Neachtan (MacNaughton), clan, iii. 331, 499. Nechtan’s mere, i. 266. Nectan, a Pictish king, restored to life by St. Boethius, i. 135. Nectan (Naiton), son of Dereli, king of the Picts, i. 270, ᚬv1 277-280ᚬ; conforms to the Anglican Roman Church, and expels the Columban clergy from his kingdom, ᚬv1 283-4ᚬ; becomes a cleric, 284; bound by Drust, ᚬv1 285-6ᚬ; endeavours to regain his crown, 288; his death, 289. Nectarides, a Count of the maritime tract in Britain, slain by the Saxons, i. 99. Neill (MacNeill), clan, iii. 331, 430. Newburgh (Niwanbyrig), i. 295. Niall of Iceland and his sons, i. ᚬv1 377-9ᚬ. Niall Mor, iii. 115. Nicholas, Pope, i. 413. Nicolsons, clan, iii. 461. Niduari, the, of Bede = Ptolemy’s Novantæ, i. 133, 238; ii. 208, 209. Nieder Biebr, inscriptions found at, i. 89. Niger, C. Pescennius, Emperor, put to death by Severus, i. 80. Ninian, St., life and labours of, i. 130; ii. ᚬv2 2-6ᚬ; church of, known as Candida Casa, i. 188; ii. 2, ᚬv2 45-49ᚬ. _See_ Church, Whithorn. Nith, river (the Novius of Ptolemy), i. 66, 133. Nordereys (Northern Islands—Orkney and Shetland) and Sudreys (the Western Islands), iii. 28, 29; Hill Burton’s mistake as to these, i. 495. Norman Castles first built in David the First’s reign, i. 465; iii. 12. Normandykes, on the Dee, camp at, i. 87. Norris, Mr., on the mutual intelligibility of Breton and Cornish, i. 199. Northumbria, kingdom of (_see_ Ida, Aedilfrid, Aeduin, Osuald, Osuiu, Ecgfrid, Eadberct, Osulf); invasions of, by kings of Alban, i. 372; invaded by the Danes, 332; attacked by Aethelstan, 351 _seq_.; vicissitudes under Eadmund and Eadred, ᚬv1 363-4ᚬ; the kingdom becomes an earldom, 364; is divided into two earldoms, 369; is invaded five times by Malcolm Ceannmor, 417 _seq_.; Scottish church of, 258; ii. ᚬv2 154-166ᚬ. Norway, Maid of, i. 497. Norwegia and Dacia, districts occupied by Norwegians and Danes, i. ᚬv1 395-6ᚬ. Norwegians (_see also_ Danes), first irruptions of, on the British coasts (A.D. 793) i. 302 _seq_.; iii. 18; association with the Gallwegians, i. 311 (_see_ Gallgaidhel); conflict with Danes, 327; their invasions of Alban in Constantin’s reign, 339, 347. _See_ Imhair Ua Imhair, Regnwald. Novantæ, promontory of the (Mull of Galloway), i. 66; tribe of the, and their towns, 72, 127. Nrurim, Aed, king of the Picts, slain at, by his own people, i. ᚬv1 328ᚬ. Oan (Eugein), king of the Britons, i. 250, 271. Obeyn (Aboyne), thanage of, iii. 86, 256. Ocha, battle of, i. 25, 139, 180; ii. 46; iii. 120. Octa and Ebissa’s colony, i. 147; war with, 152 _seq_. O’Curry, Professor, i. 2. O’Donovan, Dr., i. 2, 199. O’Duibhn (Campbells), iii. 330, 458. Oestrymnides, a name applied to the Cassiterides, i. 168. Oikell, river, i. 337. Olaf. _See_ Anlaf, Amlaiph. Olaf Ketilson, i. 377. Olaf the White. _See_ Amlaimh. Olaf Tryggvesson, the first Christian king of Norway, i. 386. Olave, son of Godred Crovan, rules Western Isles forty years, i. ᚬv1 443ᚬ. O’Neill, thanage of, iii. 256. Oransay, isle of, iii. 438. Orcades, the (Orkney Islands), i. 35; taken possession of by the Roman fleet, 57. Orcas, promontory of (Dunnet Head), i. 31, 68. Ordas, a name of Lewis, i. ᚬv1 395-6ᚬ. Ordovices, a British tribe, i. 35; defeated by Agricola, 43. _Orkneyinga Saga_, i. ᚬv1 336-7ᚬ, 375, 389, 390; quoted, iii. 54; cited, 448. Orkneys, the, Saxons form their headquarters there in A.D. 369, i. ᚬv1 101ᚬ, 130; laid waste in 682 by Bruidhe, 263; Norwegian earldom of Orkney founded, ᚬv1 335-7ᚬ; the earls and their exploits, 374 _seq_., 386, 388, 401; iii. 8. _See_ Caithness, Orcades. Orr, loch, Roman remains on, i. 74. Orrea, a town of the Vernicomes, i. 74. Osbryht, king of Northumbria, slain, i. 332. Osfrid, son of Aeduin, i. 243. Oshern, son of Siward, i. 408. Osirsdaill, Ottersdaill, forest of, iii. 429, 430. Oslac, an earl of Northumbria, i. 368. Osred, son of Aldfrid of Northumbria, i. 270. Osric, son of Aelric, i. 244; his son, Osuini, 253. Ostorius (Publius), appointed Roman governor of Britain, i. 36, 37. Osuald, son of Aedilfrid, king of Northumbria (A.D. 634-42), i. ᚬv1 244-6ᚬ; ii. 159; his reign, i. ᚬv1 251-2ᚬ; ii. 155 _seq_.; slain by Penda, i. 252. Osuald the Patrician, i. 304. Osuiu (Oswy), his reign as king of Northumbria (A.D. 642-70), i. ᚬv1 252-260ᚬ; ii. 163, 200, 207; his death, i. 260. Osulf, king of Northumbria (A.D. 758), i. 300; disorganisation of the kingdom at his death, 331. Osulf, name of different earls of Northumbria, i. 368, 418. Oswestry (Oswaldstree), battle of Cocboy fought at, in which Osuald was slain by Penda, i. 252. Oswine, one of Ethelwald’s generals, i. 300. Otadeni (Otalini), tribe of the, i. 71; their territory, 106, 218, 237. Othlyn (Gethlyn, Getling), the plains of, mentioned as the scene of the battle of Brunanburg, i. 359. Ottir, a Danish earl, slain at Tynemoor, i. ᚬv1 347-8ᚬ. Outer Hebrides. _See_ Long Island. Ovania, probably Strathaven, i. 295. Owen (Eugenius the Bald), son of Domnall, sub-king of Cumbria, slain, i. ᚬv1 393-4ᚬ. Owin (Eugenius, Eaoin), king of the Cumbrians, put to flight by Aethelstan, i. 352. Pabba, isle of, iii. 431. Palgrave, Sir Francis, his work on Scottish Affairs quoted, iii. 444. Palladius, St., notices of his life and labours, ii. 26 _seq_. Patrick, St., mentioned, i. 121, 136, 140; analysis of the ‘Lives’ of, ii. ᚬv2 14-17ᚬ, ᚬv2 427-443ᚬ; sketch of his life and labours, ᚬv2 17-25ᚬ. Paulinus, missionary among the Angles of Northumbria, i. 240, ᚬv1 244ᚬ; ii. 154. Pecthelm, bishop in Candida Casa, i. 275; ii. 222. Pedigrees, Book of, iii. 163. Pedigrees in the Irish MSS., analysis of, iii. 338; of the Campbells, 339; the Macleods, 340; descendants of Colla Uais and Somerled, 340; of Hy Neill, 340; of the earls of Lennox and Mar, 341; of the clans among the Dalriadic Scots, 341; of the descendants of Cormac mac Airbertach, 344; artificial character of these pedigrees, 346; compilation of spurious pedigrees, 349; result of analysis, 364. _See_ Clans, Genealogies. Pelagian heresy, breaking out of the, i. 149. Penda, king of Mercia, joins Caedwalla in attacking Northumbria, i. ᚬv1 243ᚬ; slays Osuald at Cocboy, 252; and thereafter ravages Northumbria, ᚬv1 253-54ᚬ; slain by Osuiu, 254. Penny lands defined, iii. 226. Pentir. _See_ Kintyre. Pentland, a corruption of Petland or Pictland, i. 131, 223; the Pentland hills the southern boundary of the debateable lands, ᚬv1 238ᚬ, 247, 249; iii. 277. Pentland Firth, i. 402. Perth, combat of two clans on North Inch of, iii. 310. Peter, St., church of, at Wearmouth, i. 421; churches dedicated to, amongst the Picts, ii. 233. Peterborough, monastery of, ii. 244. Petilius Cerealis, a Roman governor in Britain, i. 39. Pharlane, clan, iii. 329, 365. Phoceans, the, of Marseilles, i. 29, 30. Phœnicians: their intercourse with the British Isles, i. 29, ᚬv1 30ᚬ. Phrissones. _See_ Frisians. _Pictish Chronicle_, a work of the tenth century, i. 133, ᚬv1 134ᚬ, 185; its first application of the term ‘Scotti’ to the Picts, 328. Pictish language, remains of, i. 501. Pictish legend of Cruithe and his seven sons, i. 281. Pictish and Cumbrian territories, foreign elements introduced among population of, iii. 20; spread of Teutonic element over, 21. Picts: first appearance of the independent British tribes under this name, i. 94, 97; twofold division of, the Dicalidonæ and the Vecturiones, 99, ᚬv1 129ᚬ; origin of the name from the practice of painting their bodies, ᚬv1 128ᚬ, 129; their Welsh name Gwyddyl Ffichti, 197, 343; their incursions, along with Scots and Saxons, into the Roman province, 105 _seq_.; their history traced, ᚬv1 123-137ᚬ; division into Northern and Southern Picts, and the districts occupied by them respectively, 130, 230 _seq_.; mission of St. Ninian to the Southern Picts (_c_. A.D. 397), ᚬv1 130ᚬ; ii. 3; Pictish legends, i. ᚬv1 185-189ᚬ; ii. 113; iii. 124-134; did they belong either to the Welsh or the Gaelic race? i. ᚬv1 197-8ᚬ, 226; analysis of lists of Pictish kings, and its philological results, ᚬv1 207-12ᚬ; topography of the districts occupied by them, 223, 224; differences between the two divisions as to race and language, ᚬv1 231ᚬ; their seat of government, 232; peculiarity in the order of succession among their kings, ᚬv1 232-235ᚬ; church of the Southern Picts, ii. 26 _seq_.; arrival of St. Columba among the Northern Picts (A.D. 565), _see_ Columba; the Southern Picts subjugated (_c_. A.D. 660) by Osuiu, i. 256 _seq_.; ii. 207; their revolt, i. 260; their kingdom invaded by Ecgfrid (A.D. 685), ᚬv1 265-266ᚬ; ii. ᚬv2 213ᚬ (_see_ Ecgfrid); recovery of their independence, i. 267; their relations with the Scots of Dalriada at this juncture, ᚬv1 276-7ᚬ; the Picts of Manann (_see_ Manau, Mugdoch), 270, 271, ᚬv1 295ᚬ; legend of St. Bonifacius, 277; ii. 229; establishment of Scone as the capital (A.D. 710), i. 280; iii. 132; the seven provinces in the eighth century, i. 280; \ iii. 42-44; expulsion of the Columban clergy (A.D. 717), i. ᚬv1 283-84ᚬ, ᚬv1 315-16ᚬ; ii. ᚬv2 177-78ᚬ; revolution, and struggle for supremacy, i. 286; battles at Moncrieffe, Scone, Monitcarno, Dromaderg, ᚬv1 288-9ᚬ; battle at Circinn in the Mearns (A.D. 752), 295; iii. 123; Alpin the Scot attacks the Picts (A.D. 834), and is slain at Pitelpie, near Dundee, i. ᚬv1 306-7ᚬ; his son Kenneth invades Pictavia five years later, and in another five years becomes king of the Picts, i. 308-9, ii. 307; discussion of the question as to where the Scots came from who accompanied Kenneth, i. ᚬv1 316-322ᚬ. _See_ Kenneth Mac Alpin. Pinkerton, John, i. 12, 22, 140; remarks on his _Enquiry_, 19, 196. Pitalpin (Pitelpie), Alpin, father of Kenneth, slain there, i. ᚬv1 306-7ᚬ. Pitmain, on the Spey, Roman remains at, i. 89. Pliny, i. 31. Pluscarden, Book of, iii. 311 _seq_. Polybius, his reference to the British Isles, i. 30. Potato culture in the Highlands and Islands, iii. 374. Presbyter-abbot, status and jurisdiction, ii. 44. Price, Rev. T., on the mutual intelligibility of Welsh and Breton, i. 199. _Principes_, status of, in the tribe, iii. 239. Procopius, historian of sixth century—his ignorance of Britain, i. ᚬv1 115ᚬ, 145. Provinces of Scotland under the Picts in the kingdom of Scone, i. ᚬv1 280ᚬ; iii. 42-44; a second list of seven, excluding Caithness and including Argyll, in the kingdom of Alban, in the tenth century, i. 340 _seq_.; iii. 44-49; provincial rulers termed Mormaers in the eleventh century, ᚬv1 49-56ᚬ; Toisechs of Buchan, 56; first appearance of seven earls, 58; David I.'s feudalising policy, ᚬv1 63-66ᚬ; additional earldoms created by subsequent kings of Feudal Scotland, 66; earldom of Mar, 68; of Garrioch and Lennox, 69; of Ross and Carrick, 70; of Caithness, 71; the seven earls of Alexander II., 71, 79; and of Alexander III., ᚬv1 80-83ᚬ. Ptolemy: his description of North Britain, i. ᚬv1 62-70ᚬ; and of the tribes and their towns, 70 _seq_.; comparative value of the Greek and Latin versions of his _Geography_, 63, 64. Pygmies Kirk, Isle of Lewis, iii. 429. Pytheas, a Massilian, his expedition to Britain, i. 30. Quarry, clan, legendary descent of, iii. 488. _See_ Guaire. Qwhewyl, clan, iii. 310, 314. Raarsa, isle of, iii. 433. Raasay (Rosis), river (now Blackwater), a Scots colony reaches, i. ᚬv1 183ᚬ, 320. Raedykes, near Stonehaven, Roman camp at, i. 87. Raedykes, on the Ythan, Roman camp at, i. 87. Ragnall (Reginald), second son of Somerled, descendants of, iii. 401; espouse the cause of Bruce, 401. Ragnall, son of Eoin, his religious gifts, extent of his territories, and death, iii. 403. Ragnar Lodbrog and his sons, i. 332. _Rath_ (homestead) lands, iii. 243. Rathelpie (Rathalpin), connected with Alpin, father of Kenneth, i. ᚬv1 307ᚬ. Rathinveramon (near Scone), Donald mac Alpin said to have died at, i. 322; Constantin, son of Cuilean, slain at, 381. Rauchlynne, isle of, iii. 439. Ravenna, the geographer of, on the Saxons in Britain, i. 148; his list of local names, 216, 217. Reginald, son of Somerled, iii. 35, 39, 293, 400. Reginald, son of Godred Crovan, iii. 35; sometimes confounded with Somerled’s son, as both bore the title of King of the Isles, 35, 36. Regnwald, leader of the last invasion of Alban by the Northmen, i. ᚬv1 347-349ᚬ, 373. Regulus, St., legend of, and the relics of St. Andrew, i. ᚬv1 297-8ᚬ. Rerigonium, a town of the Novantæ, on Loch Ryan—its fortified moat, i. 72, 132. Rerigonius Bay (Loch Ryan), i. 66. Retaliation and fine, in the tribe, iii. 152, 204, 217. Restennet (Restinoth), church of, i. 278; iii. 262. Reuda, leader of the Scots who came from Ireland, i. 138, ᚬv1 139ᚬ. Richard of Cirencester, the work attributed to him, _De situ Britanniæ_, entirely spurious, i. 22, 74, 76, ᚬv1 102ᚬ, 103. Ricsig, king of Northumbria, i. 332. Rigmonath (St. Andrews), i. 183. Robertson, E. W., i. 12; his _Scotland under her Early Kings_, 19; iii. 62. Robertson, Dr. Joseph, i. 333; on the Mar letters-patent, iii. 443. Rognwald, earl of Maeri, i. 335, 344. Roland, lord of Galloway, i. 345. Romans in Britain: Julius Cæsar’s invasion, i. 31; formation of a province, called Britannia Romana, in the reign of Claudius, 33, 34; progress of the Roman arms, 34; extent of the province at the time of Agricola’s arrival, 41, 42; his campaigns (_see_ Agricola); arrival of the Emperor Hadrian, 60; first wall between the Forth and Clyde—the province established, ᚬv1 76ᚬ; irruptions on the province by the northern tribes in A.D. 162 and 182, 79; the province divided by Severus into two, Upper and Lower Britain, 81; campaign of Severus, 82 _seq_.; peace made with the barbarian tribes by his son Antoninus, 90, 91; history silent for seventy years, 92; ten years’ independence under Carausius and Allectus, ᚬv1 92-95ᚬ; war of Constantius Chlorus, 94, 95; commencement of systematic inroads of the barbarian tribes into the province, 95; rapid development of wealth and civilisation, 96; division into four provinces, 96, 97; invasion of the province by Picts and Scots, 97, who were afterwards joined by the Saxons and the Attacotti, ᚬv1 98-100ᚬ; restoration of the province by Theodosius, ᚬv1 100-104ᚬ; usurpation of Maximus, 104; his withdrawal of the Roman troops, and renewed incursions of the Picts and Scots, 105; a legion sent by Stilicho to garrison the northern wall, 105, 106; the legion withdrawn, and the province again devastated, 106; the invaders again repelled by Stilicho, and the army restored, ᚬv1 107ᚬ; troubled state of the empire till the abandonment (A.D. 410) of the imperial authority over Britain, ᚬv1 107-112ᚬ. Roman remains in Scotland, i. 44 _seq_., 49, 71 _seq_., ᚬv1 86-88ᚬ. Roman roads in Scotland, i. ᚬv1 86-89ᚬ. Roman walls in Britain: that of Hadrian, between the Tyne and the Solway, i. 60, 61; that of Antoninus, between the Forth and the Clyde, ᚬv1 77-79ᚬ; its reconstruction by Severus, 81, 89; examination of differing opinions on the walls, ᚬv1 89-91ᚬ. Romb, isle of, iii. 434. Romwrche, Ness of (Point of Ardnamurchan), iii. 428. Rona, isle of, iii. 431. Ronan, St., notice of, ii. 282. Root-words peculiar to the topography of the Pictish districts, i. ᚬv1 223-4ᚬ. _See_ Topography. Rosemarkie, a Columban foundation, i. 320. Rosnat, monastery of, ii. 48. Ross, province of, i. 319; bishopric of, ii. 377; earldom of, iii. 70; historic sketch of, 290, 364; Mairi, countess of, 408. Rosses of Balnagown, MS. history of, quoted, iii. 355. Rosses, clan. _See_ Andres. Ross-Foichen. _See_ Feochan. Roth, battle of, i. ᚬv1 247-8ᚬ. Roy’s (General) _Military Antiquities_, i. 22, 51. Run, king of the Strathclyde Britons, a son-in-law of Kenneth mac Alpin, i. 313, 325. Runrig defined, iii. 380. _Rustici_, class in the tribe so called, iii. 218, 219, 244. Rutupiæ (Richborough), i. 100. Ryan, loch, i. 72, 108, 292. Rydderch Hael, king of Strathclyde, ii. 179. Sabrina (Severn) river, i. 35. Saddle, Cistercian monks established at, ii. 415; Ragnall, son of Somerled, establishes a monastery of grey friars at, iii. 400. St. Abb’s Head, ii. 201. St. Andrews, foundation of, i. 296; legends relating to, ᚬv1 296-298ᚬ; ii. ᚬv2 261-275ᚬ; church of, becomes the national church of the Picts, i. 299; is the chief seat of the Scottish Church in the time of Constantin, son of Aedh, and its bishops become known as bishops of Alban, ᚬv1 340ᚬ; ii. 324; primacy transferred to, 323; rights of the Keledei pass to the bishopric of, 372. _See also_ Andrew, St. St. Cyrus, i. 334. _See_ Grig, Eglisgirg. St. Fillans, parish of, ii. 33. St. Kilda, native fort in, i. 185. St. Michael’s Mount, i. 166. St. Monans (Inverry), churches of, founded in honour of St. Moinenn, bishop of Clonfert, ii. ᚬv2 314-16ᚬ. Sanctuary, privilege of, claimed by monasteries, ii. 65. _Saxon Chronicle_ quoted, iii. 58. Saxon shore, the, i. 150, 151. Saxonia, name given to the northern part of Northumbria, i. 346, 369, 372, 385. Saxons, first appearance of the, i. 92; join with the Picts, Scots, and Attacotts in ravaging the Roman province, 99; in Orkney, 101; their settlement in Britain, as given by Gildas, 144, 145, Procopius, 145, Nennius, 146, and Bede, ᚬv1 148-150ᚬ; testimony of Prosper Aquitanus, 152; the twelve battles of Arthur, ᚬv1 152-154ᚬ; legends regarding the original home of those who settled in Britain, ᚬv1 189-192ᚬ, 227. Scapa, isle of, iii. 434. Scarba, isle of, i. 69; iii. 438. Scilly Islands. _See_ Cassiterides. Scolocs, functions of, ii. 446; iii. 260. Scone (Caislen or Castellum Credi), establishment of, as the Pictish capital, i. 280; iii. 132; battle at, i. 288; Kenneth Mac Alpin, the first king who gave the kingdom of Scone to the Gaidheal, 313 _seq_.; priory of, founded, ii. 374; thanage of, iii. 275, 276. Scotch language. _See_ Languages. Scoti, originally used to designate the inhabitants of Ireland, i. ᚬv1 137ᚬ _seq_.; their first historical appearance in Britain (A.D. 360), 97; iii. 124-5; the districts occupied by them, i. ᚬv1 98-100ᚬ; join with Picts, Saxons, and Attacotti in attacking the Roman province, but are at last driven back, ᚬv1 100-110ᚬ, 139; iii. 124-5; establish a colony in Argyll (A.D. 498), i. ᚬv1 139-144ᚬ, 248; [in iii. 125, _l_. 20, _for_ sixth _read_ fifth] (_see_ Dalriada, Erc); legendary history, 97 _seq_.; notices of, by Nennius and Bede, i. 138, and by the Roman writers, 139; their language, 193; notices of the Scots till the reign of Kenneth Mac Alpin, ᚬv1 291-2ᚬ, 316; they rule as kings of the Picts, ᚬv1 322-334ᚬ, and eventually became, as kings of Alban and of Scotia, kings of the whole territory of Scotland, ᚬv1 335-433ᚬ. _See_ Miledh, Picts. Scotia: the name not applied to any part of the present Scotland before the tenth century, i. 1, 398; applied first to Ireland (A.D. 580) by Isidore of Seville, ᚬv1 2-4ᚬ, 115; by ‘Scottia’ Bede invariably means Ireland, v1; Scotland then included in the term Britannia or Britain, 1; the country north of the Forth and Clyde known to the Romans as Caledonia, called also Alban and Albania, 1, 2; as applied to Scotland, Scotia a name superinduced on the older one of Alban, 3, 4; boundaries of the district in Scotland to which the name Scotia was applied from the tenth to the twelfth or thirteenth century, ᚬv1 2ᚬ, 3, 5, 6; extension of the application of the term, 2, 3; light thrown by the changes in its application on the changes in the race and position of the inhabitants, ᚬv1 5-7ᚬ; physical features of the country, ᚬv1 7-9ᚬ; mountain chains and rivers, ᚬv1 9-14ᚬ; the debateable lands, ᚬv1 14-16ᚬ; five distinct periods in its early history, 16, during three of which Scotland was purely Celtic, 17; changes during the two last periods, 17; critical examination of authorities on its early history, ᚬv1 18-22ᚬ; questionable or spurious authorities, ᚬv1 22-26ᚬ; plan of the present work, ᚬv1 26-28ᚬ. Scotland: campaigns of Agricola in, ᚬv1 43-60ᚬ (_see_ Agricola); the Roman province, ᚬv1 62-111ᚬ (_see_ Romans); early connection between Ireland and, iii. 125; true commencement of Feudal Scotland under David I., i. 459; consolidation of the provinces completed under Alexander III., iii. 1; southern frontier of, 3; northern boundary of, 7; physical aspect of, 9; old descriptions of, 11-14; population of, at this time, 15, 135 _seq_.; indigenous races of, and their possessions, 16; colonising races, 17; intruding races, 18; influence of foreign races, 18; foreign elements introduced, 20; spread of Teutonic element and influence, 21-27; Religious Houses in (A.D. 1272), ii. 509; _communitas_, or estates of, in 1283, iii. 39; population distinguished as Lowlanders and Highlanders, 40; the seven provinces of, in the eighth century, 42; in the tenth century, 44; districts ruled by kings and afterwards by Mormaers, 49; petty kings of Argyll and Galloway, 51; sources of information as to the early social state of the population, 136; description of the Isles, with their pertinents and pendicles (written 1577-95), 428-40. Scots and Picts, character of the paganism of the, ii. ᚬv2 108-118ᚬ; no affinity with the Druidism of Gaul, 118; twofold division of the Scots in Ireland, paralleled in the establishment of the Pictish kingdom at Scone, iii. 132. Scottish Church. _See_ Church. Scott, Sir Walter, on the Culloden Papers, iii. 327; on the Highland Clans, 456. Scribes, first appearance of, in the monasteries, ii. 423. Sealbach, son of Fearchar Fada, i. ᚬv1 272-3ᚬ; slays his brother Ainbhceallach, 284; becomes a cleric, 285. Secular clergy, influence of, in the monastic church, ii. ᚬv2 227-33ᚬ; order of secular canons instituted, 241. Segine, third abbot of Iona, i. 245; two important events under his presidency, ii. 154 _seq_. Seguise, battle of, between Garnaid and the family of Nechtan, i. ᚬv1 246-7ᚬ. Seill, isle of, iii. 438. Selden, John, antiquary, iii. 441, 442. Selgovæ (Elgovæ), a Brigantian tribe, i. 44; towns of, 72. Senchus Mor, iii. 177 _seq_. Sennachies, Irish, iii. 337. Sept, the, in Wales, iii. 205; territorial lords, 205; law of succession, 205; special parties liable for the crimes of its members, 206; fosterage, 207. Sepulchral remains in Britain: ethnological evidence furnished by, i. ᚬv1 169-70ᚬ. Serf, St., or Servanus, notice of, ii. 31; anachronism in connecting him with St. Kentigern, 184, ᚬv2 255-258ᚬ; he founds an establishment of Keledei, who are hermits, about A.D. 704, ᚬv2 258-9ᚬ. Severus, L. Septimus,—circumstances in which he was proclaimed Emperor, i. 79; his campaign in Britain, 82 _seq_.; wall of, ᚬv1 89-91ᚬ; his death at York, 90. Sgathaig (Dunscaich), Skye, site of a military school, iii. 128. Shetland Islands, colonised by the Norwegians, i. 344; iii. 8, 29. Sidlaw hills, i. 266, 382. Sigurd made jarl of Orkney, i. 335; his burial-place, 337; his successors, 344. Sigurd ‘the Stout,’ son of Hlodver, Norwegian earl of Orkney, i. ᚬv1 374ᚬ; his possessions on the mainland, 375; narrative of his war expeditions, ᚬv1 376-9ᚬ; slain at Cluantarbh, in Ireland’s final conflict with the Danes, ᚬv1 386ᚬ, 388; his sons, 401. Silura, island of,—Cornwall so called by Strabo, i. 167. Silures, a British tribe, i. 35, 167, 226. Simal, son of Drust, i. ᚬv1 285-6ᚬ. Simeon of Durham, i. 294; account of the attack of the Northmen on the Northumbrian coast (A.D. 793-94), 303; on the battle in A.D. 1006 between the men of Alban and Saxonia, ᚬv1 385ᚬ. Sitriuc, son of Imhair, leader of a Danish invasion of Alban, i. ᚬv1 338ᚬ; king of Deira, 351. Siward, earl of Northumbria, i. 407; invades Scotland, 408; death of, 410, 418. Skidamyre, in Caithness, battle at, i. 375. Skene, Sir John, his _De Verborum Significatione_, iii. 240 _n_.; on the privilege pertaining to the cross of the clan Macduff, 304. Skuli, son of Thorfinn, earl of Orkney, i. ᚬv1 374-5ᚬ. Skye (Scetis, Scith, Sgithidh), i. 69, 216, 259, ᚬv1 260ᚬ, 387, 390, 396; sheriffdom of, and boundaries, iii. 88, 432. Slait, isle of, iii. 432. Slaughter, fines for, in the tribal system, iii. 151, 204, 217. Sluaged, or ‘hosting,’ the burden of, iii. 151, 172, 188, 234. Solway Firth: tribes on its northern shore subjugated by Agricola, i. 43. _See_ Galloway. Somerled, ‘Regulus’ of Arregaithel, invades Scotland with the sons of Malcolm mac Eth, i. 469; treats with Malcolm IV., 471; drives the Norwegians out of the mainland, and conquers part of the Isles, iii. 33-35; again attacks Malcolm, but is defeated, and killed at Renfrew (A.D. 1164), i. 473; iii. 35; his three sons and their possessions, 35, 39, 293, 400. Sorley, clan, iii. 474. Spey river, i. 336, ᚬv1 341-2ᚬ; anciently the boundary between Scotia and Moravia, 13, 14; battle on, 288. Stamford bridge, battle of, i. 413. Standard, battle of the, iii. 5. Stanmore, i. 369. Steelbow tenancy, iii. 243, 283, 370. Stewart, John, of Appin, iii. 436. Stilicho, a Roman general, repels on different occasions the Picts and Scots, i. 105 _seq_. Stone altars, i. 283, 370. Stone coffins found at the Mire of Dunnichen, i. 266. Strabo: notices of the British Isles and their inhabitants in his _Geography_, i. ᚬv1 31-33ᚬ, ᚬv1 166-7ᚬ. Stræcled Wealas, the Cumbri-Britons of Strathclyde, i. 326; iii. 197. _See_ Alclyde. Strageath, Roman camp at, i. 50. Strath, battle of, iii. 123. Strathardell, iii. 133-4; thanage of, 276. Strathaven, i. 295. Strathcarron, i. ᚬv1 249-50ᚬ. Stratherne, district of, i. 211. _See_ Fortrenn, Menteith. Strenaeshhalc (Whitby), council held at (A.D. 664), i. 259; ii. 165. Struin (Strowan), thanage of, iii. 87, 270. Stuart, Dr. John, ii. 310, 317, 448; iii. 58. Stuart’s (R.) _Caledonia Romana_, i. 23. Succession, law of, among the Picts, i. ᚬv1 232-4ᚬ, 315, 323. Suibhne, fourth abbot of Iona, ii. 163. Sudreys, iii. 29. _See_ Western Islands. Suetonius Paulinus, a Roman commander in Britain, i. 38. Suevi, the. _See_ Vandals. Sumarlidi = Summer Wanderers, defeat of their fleet in Buchan, i. ᚬv1 365ᚬ. Sumarlidi, son of Sigurd the Stout, i. 388, 401. Sutherlandshire, with Caithness, overrun by the Northmen, i. 326, 336, 345, 375; iii. 18. Swein, king of Denmark, i. 420. Sweno’s stone, account of, i. 337-8. Tacitus as an historian, i. 27; his works referred to, 39, ᚬv1 43-58ᚬ. Taexali, promontory of (Kinnaird’s Head), i. 67, 74; tribe of the, 74, 206. Taliessin, Book of, quoted, iii. 100. Talorcan, son of Ainfrit, and nephew of Osuiu of Northumbria, king of the Picts, i. 257. Talorcan (Talorg), son of Congus, defeated by Brude, son of Angus, i. 289; drowned, 290. Talore. _See_ Garnaid. Talorgan, son of Drostan, king of Atholl, i. 281; bound by Angus, 290. Talorgan, son of Fergus, defeats the Dalriads at Carriber, i. 291; slain at Mugdoch, 295. Talorgan, son of Wthoil, joint king of the Picts with Drest, son of Constantin, i. 306. Talorgen, son of Angus, king of the Picts, i. 301. Tamea, a town of the Vacomagi, i. 75. Tamworth taken by storm, i. 361. Tanistry, law of, i. 323. Tannadyce, thanage of, iii. 262, 264. Taran, son of Entefidich, king of the Picts, i. ᚬv1 269-70ᚬ. Tarbet, in Easter Ross, St. Aidan patron saint of, i. 260. Tarvedrum (the Orcas promontory—Dunnet Head), i. 68. Tatooing, practice of, among the Caledonians, i. 83, 106, ᚬv1 128ᚬ. Tava (Tavaus) estuary (Firth of Tay), i. 66, 216. Tay (Toe) river, a formidable barrier to the Romans and Angles, i. ᚬv1 14ᚬ; estuary of, reached by Agricola, probably by way of Stirling and Perth, 45; his fleet afterwards in the Firth, 49. Taylor, Rev. Isaac, on _Words and Places_, i. 220 _seq_. _Taymouth, Black Book of_, iii. 319 _seq_. Tees, river, i. 236, 369, 420. Teith, river, i. 261. Tenures of land, old Celtic, gradually give way before feudal forms, iii. 236. _See_ Land-tenure. Termon lands, ii. 321; iii. 168-9. Ternan, St., notice of, 29-32. Teudubr, son of Bile, king of Alclyde, i. 295. Teutones, the, i. ᚬv1 192-194ᚬ; make settlements in Britain, 227; iii. 21. Thanage, the, iii. 85-87; definition of, 245; status of thanes, 239; thanages converted into baronies, 246; historical sketch of the, 247-277; they replace the Tuath, 281; general extent, 282-3. Thanet, isle of, Saxons in, i. 146, 150. Theodosius the elder sent to Britain, his restoration of the province, i. ᚬv1 99-103ᚬ, 141. Theodosius the younger becomes Emperor, i. 104. Thorfinn ‘the Skull-cleaver,’ son of Einar, Norwegian earl of Orkney,—his wife Grelauga and their sons, i. ᚬv1 374-5ᚬ. Thorfinn, son of Sigurd the Stout, by the daughter of Malcolm II., i. 386, 389; war between him and his cousin Duncan, king of Scotia, 401 _seq_.; iii. 31, 52, 54. _See_ Caithness, Ingibiorg. Thorkell Fostri, leader of the Orkneymen in the war between Thorfinn and Duncan, i. ᚬv1 401-2ᚬ. _See_ Thorfinn, son of Sigurd. Thorkell, Jarl, i. 420. Thorstein the Red (Ostin), attacks the northern provinces of Scotland, i. ᚬv1 326-7ᚬ, 336. Thule, the name, i. 41; Roman fleet in sight of the island, 57; applied by Claudian to Caledonia, 101, 130. Thurnam, Dr., i. ᚬv1 169-70ᚬ. Tighernac, i. 26 _et passim_. Tin mines of Britain, i. 29, 165 _seq_. Tina, river (Eden), i. 66, 216. Tiree (Tierhie), isle of, iii. 345, 437; monasteries in, ii. ᚬv2 128-30ᚬ. Toe (the Tay), battle on, between the men of Alban, i. 381. Topography, evidence furnished by, as to the languages of the tribes, i. ᚬv1 212-225ᚬ; and as to the divisions of land, iii. 225. Toragh (Tory Island, off coast of Donegal), plundered, i. ᚬv1 289-90ᚬ. Torfnes, Norse name of Burghead, i. 336, 403. Toshach or Toisech, a leader in the ancient Celtic Tuath, iii. 156 _seq_.; the Toschachdor and Toschachdera, officers at a later period in the Highlands and Islands, 278-281; description of their offices, which were called Toschachdoracht and Toschachderacht, 279, 300-302. Toshiagh Jioarey (Manx), definition, iii. 279, 280. Tostig, son of Earl Godwine, appointed earl of Northumbria by king Edward, i. 410, 418; his earldom ravaged by Malcolm Ceannmor, ᚬv1 413-4ᚬ. Townships in the Highlands and Islands subsequent to the sixteenth century, described, iii. 369; mode of occupation, 370; in the central Highlands, 370; in the Islands, 371; enlargement of, 373; in Inner Hebrides, 347; in Outer Hebrides, 378; townlands, 379; mode of division, 380. _See_ Long Island. Train, Joseph, iii. 279-80. Transmarine Scotland, application of the term, iii. 42, 104. Tribe, the, in Scotland, iii. 209; early notices of, in Greek and Roman writers, 209-10; the tribe among the Picts, 210; in Dalriada, 212; in Galloway, 214; modified by external influences, 214; transition of the mortuath into the earldom, and the tribe into the thanage, 215; distinction of the people into free and servile classes, 216; fines exigible from freeman class, 217; different ranks of bondmen, 220-3; land measures, variously denominated, 223; burdens on land, 228-234; gradual assimilation to feudal forms, 236; Crown lands held in feu-farm, 237; ranks of society on crown-lands, 238. _See_ Cain, Feacht, Sluaged, Waytinga. Tribe, the, in Wales, iii. 197; division of land, 198, 200; indications of an earlier tribal system, 198; land measurement, 200; the _Alltudion_ analogous to the Irish _Fuidhir_, 200; rights of the free members, 203; burdens on land and its possessors, 203; fines for slaughter or injuries, 204. _See_ Sept. Tribruit, river, i. 153. Trimontium, a town of the Selgovæ, i. 72. Trouternes, isle of, iii. 432. Trumuin, bishop of the Picts who were subject to the Angles, i. ᚬv1 262ᚬ; his flight from Abercorn, 133, 268; ii. 214. Trusty’s Hill, in Galloway, remains of a vitrified wall on, i. 136. Tuath or Tribe in Ireland, iii. 135; definition of the term, 136; influences affecting the tribe, 137; effect of Christianity upon, 138; land originally held in common, 139; distinction of ranks, 139; the _Ri_ or king, his authority and privileges, 140-2; distinctions arising from possession of cattle, 142-44; origin and growth of private property, and creation of territorial chiefs, 144-5; the ceile or tenants of a chief, 145-7; condition of the territory, 147; the dun or fort, 148; the mortuath or great tribe, 149; the cuicidh or province, 149; law of tanistry, 150; tie between superior and dependants, 150; fines for injuries, 151; honor price or fixed value, 152; land measures, 153-157; later state of the tribes, 157-70; process of internal change, 300. _See also_ Finé in Ireland. Tuatha de Danaan, the, i. 173 _seq_., 226; iii. 105, 131. Tuathal mac Artguso, abbot of Dunkeld and first bishop of Fortrenn, head of the Columban Church, ii. 308. Tuessis, river (Spey), i. 67; a town of the Vacomagi, 74. Tuirrin palace, Rescobie, iii. 123. Tula Aman, burnt by Ecgfrid, i. 266. Tunberct, bishop of the church of Hagustald, i. 262. Turner’s _Anglo-Saxons_, i. 151. Tuthald, bishop of Alban, ii. 344. Tweed, river, i. 241. Tyne, river, i. 332. Tynemoor, in East Lothian, battle with the Danes at, ᚬv1 347-8ᚬ. Tyninghame, monastery of, founded, ii. 223. Tytler, Patrick Fraser, his _History of Scotland_, i. 19. Uchtred, son of Waltheof, earl of Northumbria in 1006, inflicts a disastrous defeat on the Scots under Malcolm, i. 385; slain in 1016 by Cnut, 392; his daughter Aldgetha and her son Earl Gospatrick, 394, ᚬv1 419ᚬ. Uisneach, sons of, extent of their possessions, iii. 129. Uist, island, iii. 387, 393, 430; bestowed on the church (A.D. 1440), 408. Ulloway, isle of, iii. 436. Ulster (Uladh), a district in the north of Ireland inhabited by a Pictish people, i. 131, 140. _Ulster, Annals of_, i. 26 _et passim_. Umphraville, Gilbert de, iii. 80. Ungus, son of Uirguist. _See_ Angus, son of Fergus. Urien (Urbgen = Cityborn), kingdom of (? Dumbarton), i. 153, ᚬv1 156ᚬ, 159. Urr, moat of, Roman remains on, i. 72. Uven, son of Unuist. _See_ Eoganan, son of Angus. Uxellum, a town of the Selgovæ, i. 72. Vacomagi, a tribe whose territory lay along the Highland Line, i. ᚬv1 74ᚬ, 75, 127, 206. Valentia, a British province, i. 100; different opinions as to its position, 102; author’s opinion that Wales is meant, 103. Vandals, the, with the Alani and Suevi, make irruptions into the Roman empire, i, 107, 108. Vandogara (Vanduara), a town of the Damnonii, i. 73. Varar estuary (Firth of Beauly), i. 67, 75. Vecturiones, a division of the Picts, i. 99, 129. Vedra, river (the Wear), i. 64. Venusio, town of the Brigantes, i. 37. Venusius, a British leader, i. 37, 71. Veranius, a Roman commander in Britain, i. 38. Vernicomes, tribe of the, and its territory, i. 74, 206. Veruvium (Noss Head), i. 67. Vervedrum (Duncansbay Head), i. 67. Vettius Bolanus, a Roman governor in Britain, i. ᚬv1 38-40ᚬ. Victoria, a town in Fothreve, i. 74; inhabitants of, enrolled by Severus among the Roman auxiliaries, ᚬv1 89ᚬ. _See_ Fothreve. Villages, fishing, established in the Highlands and Islands, in 1788, iii. 376. Vindogara (Ayr) Bay, i. 66, 73. Virides, a term applied by Cæsar to the Britons, i. 32. Visibsolian, battle at, i. 338. Volsas Bay (Loch Broom), i. 69. Vuirich, clan, iii. 364. Wales, descent of the Scots (from Ireland) on (A.D. 360), i. 97 _seq_. _See_ Tribe in Wales. Wallingford, John, his narrative of the cession of Lothian to Kenneth, spurious, i. ᚬv1 371-2ᚬ. Walls, Roman, in Britain. _See_ Roman walls. Wallsend, i. 61. Waltheof, a Northumbrian earl, i. 385, 425. Wardlaw hill, Roman remains on, i. 72. Wardykes, Roman camp at, i. 87. Waterford, the Danes in, i. 347. Watling Street, a Roman road, i. 86. Waytinga, a yearly tax, paid by thanes, iii. 232. Wearmouth, i. 421. Welsh _Historical Triads_, undoubtedly spurious, i. 23, 24, 172, 197; codes of laws, iii. 197. Wendune. _See_ Brunanburg. Werid, British name of the Forth, iii. 45. Wessex, kings of, their increasing power in the ninth century, i. ᚬv1 349ᚬ. Western Isles (Sudreys) ravaged by Northmen, i. ᚬv1 304-5ᚬ, ᚬv1 311-12ᚬ; colonised by the Norwegians, 345, 376; attacked and for a time occupied by the Danes, ᚬv1 378-9ᚬ; war between the kings of Norway and Scotland for the possession of them (A.D. 1263), 492; early churches founded in the, ii. 76; the islands finally ceded to the Scottish kings, i. 495; iii. 9; Norwegian kingdom of the, 28; dynasty of Godred Crovan, 31; Somerled drives the Norwegians from the mainland, and conquers part of the Isles, 31-35; summary of their history, ᚬv1 36-39ᚬ. Whitby, church council at (A.D. 664), i. 259; ii. 165. Whithorn (Whithern, Candida Casa), Roman remains at, i. 72; church at, dedicated to St. Martin of Tours, built by St. Ninian, ᚬv1 130ᚬ, 132; principal seat of the Picts of Galloway, 271; Pecthelm, first bishop in, 275; ii. 222; bishopric of, founded, 224; comes to a close, 225. Wid (Uid, Foith), i. 242. Wight, Isle of, i. 166. Wilfrid, St., bishop of York (A.D. 669-678), i. ᚬv1 258-260ᚬ, 275; ii. 210; dissension with Ecgfrid, i. 262; founds the church of Hexham, in honour of St. Andrew, ii. 210; temporarily bishop of Lindisfarne, 220; expelled from his see of York, 220; favoured by the Pope, 220; illness in Gaul, 220; returns to Britain, 221; founds the churches of St. Mary and St. Michael, 221; his death, 221. William the Conqueror, his conquest of England, i. ᚬv1 417-23ᚬ; penetrates into Scotland, and receives homage from Malcolm III. for land held in England, 424, 429; his son Robert sent by him to Scotland, but forced to retreat, ᚬv1 427ᚬ; William’s death, 428. William Fitz Duncan, i. 438. William the Lion, crowned at Scone, A.D. 1165, reigns forty-eight years, i. 474; taken prisoner by the English, 474; is liberated, 475; arrests an insurrection in Galloway, 475; subdues the district of Ross, 475; defeats an insurrection headed by Donald Ban Mac William, ᚬv1 476-79ᚬ; subdues Caithness, ᚬv1 479-482ᚬ; suppresses an insurrection in Rossshire, 482; his death, 483; grants by, ii. 393 _seq_.; text of the alleged letters-patent granted by him to the Earl of Mar, iii. 446. Winuaed, river (probably the Avon), where Penda was slain, i. ᚬv1 254-6ᚬ. Wist (Uist), isle of, iii. 430. Wrad, son of Bargoit, king of the Picts, i. 309. Wrath, Cape, headland of, not mentioned by Ptolemy, i. 70. Writing, art of, introduced, ii. 448. Wyntoun, prior of Lochleven, quoted, ii. 312, 314, 316; iii. 66, 78, 304, 308, _et al_. Yarrock, Port (Beruvick), i. v1. York, the capital of Deira, i. 237; taken possession of by the Danes, 332. 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By SIR GEORGE WEBB DASENT, D.C.L. 2 vols. demy 8vo, with Maps and Plans, 28s. =Circuit Journeys from 1837 to 1854.= By the late LORD COCKBURN. 1 vol. crown 8vo. Second Edition. 6s. ---------------------------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ ARCHITECTURAL ARCHÆOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL WORKS RECENTLY PUBLISHED BY DAVID DOUGLAS _Five Volumes, Royal 8vo, 42s. net each volume, with about 500 Illustrations in each volume_. THE CASTELLATED AND DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE OF SCOTLAND FROM THE TWELFTH TO THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY BY DAVID MACGIBBON AND THOMAS ROSS ARCHITECTS [Illustration] “One of the most important and complete books on Scottish architecture that has ever been compiled. Its value to the architect, the archæologist, and the student of styles is at once apparent. 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II.—Celtic Medal-Work and Sculptured Monuments, their Art and Symbolism—Inscribed Monuments in Runics and Oghams—Bilingual Inscriptions, etc. ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS _One Volume 8vo, fully Illustrated, 12s_. SCOTLAND IN PAGAN TIMES =The Iron Age= _THE RHIND LECTURES IN ARCHÆOLOGY FOR 1881_ BY JOSEPH ANDERSON, LL.D. KEEPER OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE ANTIQUARIES OF SCOTLAND [Illustration] CONTENTS.—_The Iron Age_.—Viking Burials and Hoards of Silver and Ornaments—Arms, Dress, etc., of the Viking Time—Celtic Art of the Pagan Period—Decorated Mirrors—Enamelled Armlets—Architecture and Contents of the Brochs—Lake-Dwellings—Earth Houses, etc. ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS _One Volume 8vo, fully Illustrated, 12s_. SCOTLAND IN PAGAN TIMES =The Bronze and Stone Ages= _THE RHIND LECTURES IN ARCHÆOLOGY FOR 1882_ BY JOSEPH ANDERSON, LL.D. KEEPER OF THE NATIONAL MUSEUM OF THE ANTIQUARIES OF SCOTLAND [Illustration] CONTENTS OF VOL. II. _The Bronze and Stone Ages_.—Cairn Burial of the Bronze Age and Cremation Cemeteries—Urns of Bronze Age Types—Stone Circles—Stone Settings—Gold Ornaments—Implements and Weapons of Bronze—Cairn Burial of the Stone Age—Chambered Cairns—Urns of Stone Age Types—Implements and Weapons of Stone. ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS _One Volume 8vo, fully Illustrated, 15s_. THE PAST IN THE PRESENT: WHAT IS CIVILISATION? BY SIR ARTHUR MITCHELL, M.D., LL.D. [Illustration] CONTENTS. I. The Spindle and Whorl. │ IV. Cave Life. II. Craggans and Querns, etc. │ V. Stone, Bronze, and Iron Ages. III. Beehive Houses, etc. │ VI. Superstitions. ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS =William F. Skene.= Celtic Scotland. A History of Ancient Alban. By WILLIAM F. SKENE, D.C.L., LL.D., Historiographer-Royal for Scotland. Second Edition, carefully Revised by the Author, with a new Index to the entire work. 3 vols. demy 8vo, 45s. Vol. I. HISTORY AND ETHNOLOGY. 15s. Vol. II. CHURCH AND CULTURE. 15s. Vol. III. LAND AND PEOPLE. 15s. “Forty years ago Mr Skene published a small historical work on the Scottish Highlands which has ever since been appealed to as an authority, but which has long been out of print. The promise of this youthful effort is amply fulfilled in the three weighty volumes of his maturer years. As a work of historical research it ought, in our opinion, to take a very high rank.”—_Times._ =E. W. Robertson.= Scotland under her Early Kings. A History of the Kingdom to the close of the Thirteenth Century. By E. WILLIAM ROBERTSON. 2 vols. demy 8vo, cloth, 36s. Historical Essays, in connection with the Land and the Church, etc. By E. WILLIAM ROBERTSON, Author of “Scotland under her Early Kings.” 1 vol. demy 8vo, 10s. 6d. =Rev. James B. Johnston.= The Place-Names of Scotland. By the Rev. JAMES B. JOHNSTON, B.D., Falkirk. 1 vol. crown 8vo, 7s. 6d. This book, for which the author has been collecting materials during the last five years, contains an introduction, general and philological, followed by a list of the important place-names in Scotland, with explanations of their meaning, and with their old spellings, each dated so far as known. =Lord Cockburn.= Circuit Journeys. By the late LORD COCKBURN, one of the Judges of the Court of Session. Second Edition, 1 vol. crown 8vo, 6s. “One of the best books of reminiscences that have appeared.”—_Morning Post._ “Delightful alike for its pleasant landscapes; its sound criticisms on men, law, and books; for its sharp things said in a good-natured way.”—_Academy._ “Valuable for their topographical descriptions; and they form an indirect contribution to the social history of Scotland.”—_Scotsman._ =Sir Daniel Wilson.= The Lost Atlantis and other Ethnographic Studies. By Sir DANIEL WILSON, LL.D., F.R.S.E. 1 vol. demy 8vo, 15s. _Contents_.—The Lost Atlantis—The Vinland of the Northmen—Trade and Commerce in the Stone Age—Pre-Aryan American Man—The Æsthetic Faculty in Aboriginal Races—The Huron-Iroquois: a Typical Race—Hybridity and Heredity—Relative Racial Brain-Weight and Size. ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS. _Two Volumes, Demy 8vo, Illustrated, 25s_. THE HEREDITARY SHERIFFS OF GALLOWAY THEIR “FORBEARS” AND FRIENDS THEIR COURTS, AND CUSTOMS OF THEIR TIMES WITH NOTES OF THE EARLY HISTORY, ECCLESIASTICAL LEGENDS, THE BARONAGE AND PLACE NAMES OF THE PROVINCE BY THE LATE SIR ANDREW AGNEW, BART. OF LOCHNAW [Illustration] EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS, 10 CASTLE STREET 1893 =ICELANDIC SAGAS, Translated by Sir GEORGE DASENT= -------------- _Two Volumes, Demy 8vo, with Maps and Plans, 28s_. THE NJALA SAGA BURNT NJAL FROM THE ICELANDIC OF THE NJAL’S SAGA BY SIR GEORGE WEBBE DASENT, D.C.L. [Illustration: Graysteel] -------------- _Small 4to, with Illustrations, 7s. 6d_. _THE GISLI SAGA_ GISLI THE OUTLAW FROM THE ICELANDIC BY SIR GEORGE WEBBE DASENT, D.C.L. ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS _Demy 4to, Illustrated, 42s. and 84s_. THE HISTORY OF LIDDESDALE ESKDALE, EWESDALE, WAUCHOPEDALE AND THE DEBATEABLE LAND =Part E. from the Twelfth Century to 1530= BY ROBERT BRUCE ARMSTRONG [Illustration: CRUKILTON CASTLE] ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS _One Volume 8vo, Illustrated, 7s. 6d_. SCOTLAND AS IT WAS AND AS IT IS BY THE DUKE OF ARGYLL [Illustration: ROB ROY’S HOUSE, GLENSHIRA] A HISTORY OF RACES, OF MILITARY EVENTS, AND OF THE RISE OF COMMERCE ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS _Two Volumes 4to, 21s_. ARCHÆOLOGICAL ESSAYS BY THE LATE SIR JAMES Y. SIMPSON, BART. EDITED BY THE LATE JOHN STUART, LL.D. AUTHOR OF THE “SCULPTURED STONES OF SCOTLAND” [Illustration: ANCIENT ORATORY IN THE ISLAND OF INCHCOLM] CONTENTS. 1. Archæology. │6. Leprosy and Leper Hospitals. 2. Inchcolm. │7. Greek Medical Vases. 3. The Cat Stane. │8. Was the Roman Army provided 4. The Magical Charm-Stones. │ with Medical Officers 5. Pyramid of Gizeh. │9. Roman Medicine Stamps, etc., │ etc. ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS _Two Volumes, Demy 8vo, 19s. 6d_. SOCIAL LIFE IN FORMER DAYS CHIEFLY IN THE PROVINCE OF MORAY =Illustrated by Letters and Family Papers= BY E. DUNBAR DUNBAR LATE CAPTAIN 21ST FUSILIERS [Illustration: THUNDERTON HOUSE.] ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS _One Volume, Demy 8vo, price 14s_. EARLY TRAVELLERS IN SCOTLAND 1295-1689 EDITED BY P. HUME BROWN AUTHOR OF ‘THE LIFE OF GEORGE BUCHANAN’ [Illustration] ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS, 10 CASTLE STREET. =P. Hume Brown.= George Buchanan, Humanist and Reformer: a Biography. By P. HUME BROWN. Demy 8vo, 12s. “There is, perhaps, no eminent Scotsman who has stood in better need of an impartial and scholarly biography than George Buchanan; and Mr Hume Brown is to be congratulated on having in the present volume produced a model of its kind.”—_Scotsman._ Tours in Scotland, 1677 and 1681. By THOMAS KIRK and RALPH THORESBY. Edited by P. HUME BROWN. Demy 8vo, 5s. A lucky accident having brought these two interesting narratives to light since the “Early Travellers in Scotland” was published, it was thought desirable to reprint them uniform with that book. Scotland Before 1700. From Contemporary Documents. Forming a Companion Volume to “Early Travellers in Scotland.” By P. HUME BROWN, Author of “The Life of George Buchanan,” &c. Demy 8vo, 14s. =Bishop Forbes.= Kalendars of Scottish Saints. With Personal Notices of those of Alba, etc. By ALEXANDER PENROSE FORBES, D.C.L., Bishop of Brechin. 4to, price £3, 3s. A few copies for sale on large paper, £5, 15s. 6d. “A truly valuable contribution to the archæology of Scotland.”—_Guardian._ =Thomas S. Muir.= Ecclesiological Notes on some of the Islands of Scotland, with other Papers relating to Ecclesiological Remains on the Scottish Mainland and Islands. By THOMAS S. MUIR, Author of “Characteristics of Church Architecture,” etc. Demy 8vo, with numerous Illustrations, 21s. =Sir Samuel Ferguson.= Ogham Inscriptions in Ireland, Wales, and Scotland. By the late SIR SAMUEL FERGUSON, President of the Royal Irish Academy, Deputy Keeper of the Public Records of Ireland, LL.D., Queen’s Counsel, etc. (Being the Rhind Lectures in Archæology for 1884.) 1 vol. demy 8vo, 12s. =Miss Maclagan.= The Hill Forts, Stone Circles, and other Structural Remains of Ancient Scotland. By C. MACLAGAN, Lady Associate of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland. With Plans and Illustrations. Folio, 31s. 6d. “We need not enlarge on the few inconsequential speculations which rigid archæologists may find in the present volume. We desire rather to commend it to their careful study, fully assured that not only they, but also the general reader, will be edified by its perusal.”—_Scotsman._ =Prof. Baldwin Brown.= From Schola to Cathedral. A Study of Early Christian Architecture in its relation to the life of the Church. By G. BALDWIN BROWN, Professor of Fine Art in the University of Edinburgh. Demy 8vo, Illustrated, 7s. 6d. The book treats of the beginnings of Christian Architecture, from the point of view of recent discoveries and theories, with a special reference to the outward resemblance of early Christian communities to other religious associations of the time. =Patrick Dudgeon.= A Short Introduction to the Origin of Surnames. By PATRICK DUDGEON, Cargen. Small 4to, 3s. 6d. ---------- EDINBURGH: DAVID DOUGLAS ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Transcriber’s Note 39.21: The date 1315 referred to in “...when Edward the First placed the whole of Scotland under four justiciaries in 1315.” was hand-corrected in our source text, and is obviously incorrect. Edward I died in 1307. In 1305, Edward I re-organized the administration of Scotland under English rule, promulgating the order in September, 1305 (_Edward I in Scotland: 1296-1305_, Fiona Jane Watson, 1999, University of Glasgow, Ph.D. Thesis..) 298.8: The chronology given regarding the Earl of Ross, on p. 298 (“He appears, however, to have entered into a league with the earls of Douglas and Crawford, in 1455, for the dethronement of that monarch, but died in 1449...”) is suspect. The year 1445, most likely, would have been intended. Douglas and Crawford were indeed opposed to James II at that time. Names frequently appear with some variation of spelling, and given the fluidity of vowels in Gaelic, Anglic, and Latin, these have usually been retained. Errors deemed most likely to be the printer’s have been corrected, and are noted here. The references in the table below are to the page and line in the original. There are a number of instances of quotations being unopened, unclosed or otherwise mispunctuated. Closure is sometimes not obvious, and where possible the original sources were consulted. Skene often begins with quotation and continues in paraphrase without clearly marking such. Where it is not clear, these have been corrected and noted as ‘Probable.’ x.17 E[a]rldoms of Ross and Carrick, Inserted. 14.28 in sea, river, and lake.[’] Added. 64.30 his co[m/n]firmation of the grants Replaced. 65.1 monastery of Du[m/n]fermline Replaced. 91.20 fa[s/n]tastic creations of the popular mind Replaced. 101.2 above the mead vessels[”] Removed. 101.22 adorned with the purple;[’] Added. 116.24 dashed out his brains.[’] Added. 117.14 people of the Levenach or Lennox.[’] Probable. 127.15 and two of his succes[s]ors Inserted. 150.34 _Battle of Maghra[l/t]h_ Replaced. 158.19 [(]the town of the Chlinnes) Added. 161.13 and O’Docomhlan over [Rinnna] h-Eignide _sic_ 165.24 the _Tuogh_ of Braden [Iland] _sic_ 168.15 Tirkennedy, Knockrinie[./,] and Lough Lurgh. Replaced. 182.8 whole number of seventeen was comp[ /l]eted Restored. 194.24 He is said to have had [‘]twenty-four sons Probable. 205.31 there is no propriate share of land;[’] Added. 228.5 free of [‘]_Can_ et _Cuneveth_ Added. 235.20 of our lord the king;[’] Added. 243.24 grants to the monks of Arbroath [‘]two bovates Probable. of land 246.11 their respective partisans which Transposed. accompa[in/ni]ed it 253.17 while in [1]358 one-half of the thanage Almost certainly. 301.14 to Neill mac[ ]Neill Inserted. 309.25 The second group of the Mowats and Cowt[t]s Removed. 366.11 to the late John Lachlan Mac[g]illivray Inserted. 378.7 upon this farm the[ir/re] were besides Replaced. 398.35 Giolla Og[h]amhnan was begotten of Solomh Inserted. 450.36 [‘]Caterina Comitissa Orcadiae et Cathanesiae Added. ’ 482.5 Niall more[o]ver had two sons Inserted. 494.3 Manuis oig[./ ]mic Period removed. 512.21 Fothad, second bishop of [Alban, ii. ]Alban, Removed. ii. 517.46 heads an insurrection[rection] Removed. 523.21 and in [a]nother five years Added. 528.3 give way before fe[n/u]dal forms Inverted. *** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CELTIC SCOTLAND *** Updated editions will replace the previous one—the old editions will be renamed. 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