Battle of the Shirts
Battle of the Shirts (Blàr na Léine, Kinloch-Lochy) | |||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Part of the Scottish clan wars | |||||||
Loch Lochy | |||||||
| |||||||
Belligerents | |||||||
Clan Fraser of Lovat Assisted by Clan Grant |
Clan Macdonald of Clanranald Assisted by Clan Cameron | ||||||
Commanders and leaders | |||||||
Hugh Fraser, 3rd Lord Lovat | John of Moidart (Iain Muideartach) | ||||||
Strength | |||||||
300 | 500 | ||||||
Casualties and losses | |||||||
5 survivors (295 killed) |
8 survivors (492 killed) |
The Battle of the Shirts (Template:Lang-gd, also the Battle of Kinloch-Lochy) was a Scottish clan battle that took place in 1544 in the Great Glen, at the northern end of Loch Lochy. The Clan Macdonald of Clanranald and their allies the Clan Cameron fought the Clan Fraser and men from Clan Grant.[2] The battlefield has been included and protected by Historic Scotland in their Inventory of Historic Battlefields in Scotland.[3]
Clan tradition of the clans involved and all histories written since the period have stated that the name was derived from the fact that the day was so hot that both sides threw off their chainmail hauberks, fighting in their shirts. However, some have postulated in recent times that Blàr na Léine is a corruption of Blàr na Lèana 'the Field of the Swampy Meadow'.[1]
Background
The chiefship of the Clan Macdonald of Clanranald was in dispute.[4] Hugh Fraser, 3rd Lord Lovat, chief of Clan Fraser of Lovat, was the uncle of one of the warring claimants, Ranald Galda (the stranger), whose cause he supported.[4] Lovat with over four hundred of his best men joined up with the Earl of Huntly, chief of Clan Gordon, who was the Lieutenant of the North.[4] They intended to crush the MacDonalds and make Ranald the chief.[4] The combined Fraser and Gordon force marched to Inverlochy, in Lochaber and they successfully established Ranald's control over Moidart by taking Castle Tioram.[4]
The battle
The Earl of Huntly decided to split his forces from the Frasers and returned to his own territory.[4] The expedition being cut short, Fraser, Lord Lovat led his men up the Great Glen towards Glenmoriston.[4] This decision to divide their forces for their return journey might indicate that Lovat and Huntly thought that the MacDonalds were no longer a threat.[4]
The MacDonalds had been stalking the invaders but had held back because they were numerically inferior.[4] However, with Huntly's men gone, the MacDonalds moved swiftly to outflank Lovat, falling upon the unsuspecting Frasers on an area of wild marshland to the north of Loch Lochy.[4] The battle became known as Blar-ne-leine which means the field of the shirts because the heat of the day caused the Highlanders to take off their heavy plaids and fight in their shirts.[4] (This translation is however disputed by modern scholars who assert that it really refers to the marshy ground).[4]
Lovat and his Frasers were outnumbered but he could have fought a rearguard action to cover his escape.[4] Instead Lovat led his men into a pitched battle.[4] Lovat was killed along with his son and heir, and hundreds of men with the victory falling to the MacDonalds.[4]
Aftermath
Lovat and his son were later buried at Beauly Priory.[4] For the most part the Earl of Huntly focused his attention in other parts of Scotland thereafter, as a result of which John MacDonald, Cameron of Lochiel, and the chiefs of Glengarry, Keppoch and Glencoe were free to spend the month of April 1545 sacking the regions near Urquhart Castle, destroying what they did not take. Parliament attempted to summon John to answer accusations of treason several times beginning in September, but John did not respond. No records suggest that Parliament ever successfully called to account the Captain of Clanranald, who finally died unrepentant in 1584.[5]
Notes and references
- ^ a b "Site Record for Blàr Leine". Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland.
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(help) - ^ Blar Na Leine
- ^ "Inventory battlefields (see "Blar na Léine")". Historic Scotland. Retrieved 12 April 2012.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Way, George and Squire, Romily. (1994). Collins Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia. (Foreword by The Rt Hon. The Earl of Elgin KT, Convenor, The Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs). pp. 144 - 145.
- ^ Paterson, Raymond Campbell (30 April 2001). The Lords of the Isles. Birlinn Ltd. pp. 74–79. ISBN 1-84158-097-X.
Bibliography
- The Book of Clanranald, in Reliquae Celticae, vol. II ed. A. MacBain and J. Kennedy, 1894.
- Fraser, James, The Chronicles of the Frasers. The Wardlaw Manuscript, ed. W. Mackay, 1905.
- Grant, N., Scottish Clans and Tartans.Crescent Books, New York, 1987 ISBN 0-517-49901-0.
- Gregory, D., History of the Western Highlands and Islands of Scotland, 1975 reprint.
- Hill, J. M., The Distinctiveness of Gaelic Warfare, 1400–1750, in The European History Quarterly, vol. 22, 1992.T
- Lesley, Bishop John, The History of Scotland from the Death of King James I, 1830.
- MacDonald C., Moidart, or among the Clanranalds, 1889.
- Mackay, D. N., Clan warfare in the Scottish Highlands, 1922.
- Alexander MacGregor, 'The Feuds of the Clans.