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Alasdair Crotach MacLeod

Alasdair Crotach MacLeod (Scottish Gaelic: Alasdair Crotach MacLeòid) (1450 – 1547) is considered to be the 8th Chief of Clan MacLeod. He was the son of the 7th Chief of Clan MacLeod, William Dubh, and succeeded his father in 1480, following William Dubh's death at the Battle of Bloody Bay. He was the first MacLeod chief not to be buried on the island of Iona.

Alasdair Crotach MacLeod
Alasdair Crotach's effigy in the Church of St Clement, on Harris
Born1450
Died1547 (aged 96–97)
Resting placeChurch of St Clement, Rodel, Harris
TitleThe 8th Chief of Clan MacLeod
PredecessorWilliam Dubh (father)
SuccessorWilliam (son)
Children1 son; 1 natural son; 2 daughters

The Scottish Gaelic word crotach means "humpbacked" and the nickname refers to wounds he received during battle which crippled him the rest of his life. Alasdair Crotach's tomb is one of the most magnificently carved tombs of its era in Scotland. He was succeeded by his son, William.

Life edit

Alasdair the Humpbacked edit

Alasdair Crotach was the son of William Dubh, 7th Chief of Clan MacLeod. The Scottish Gaelic word crotach means "humpbacked".[1] According to MacLeod tradition, Alasdair earned this nickname during a pitched battle in which he was severely wounded. In the late 15th century, Angus Og MacDonald, bastard son of John MacDonald, Earl of Ross, Lord of the Isles, attempted to depose his father. Angus was supported by all the branches of Clan Donald, as well as the MacLeods of Lewis. However, other island clans, such as the MacLeods of Harris and Dunvegan, the MacLeans, and the MacNeils, supported John. The Bannatyne manuscript states that the opposing clans fought skirmishes throughout the Hebrides. One such skirmish took place on Skye between the MacDonalds and MacLeods when a large force of MacDonalds, led by "Evan MacKail", son of the chief of Clanranald, landed at Aird Bay with the intention of laying waste to MacLeod territory. At this particular time, William Dubh was away and his only son, Alasdair, rallied the clan's forces and marched them towards the MacDonalds who were encamped near their galleys. The opposing forces clashed with each other and Alasdair was wounded in the back by Evan MacKail, who wielded a battle axe. As the wounded Alasdair fell, he grabbed hold of Evan MacKail and brought him to the ground as well. Alasdair then killed MacKail with his dirk and cut off the dead man's head as a trophy. The battle ended with the defeat of the MacDonalds, who lost most of their men and ten galleys. The writer of the manuscript states that at the time of writing (about the 1830s), there were heaps of skulls and bones which could still be seen where the battle was said to have taken place.[2]

Chief of the clan edit

MacLeod tradition preserved within the 19th century Bannatyne manuscript written by Bannatyne William MacLeod 10th of Glendale (1790-1856) states that Alasdair Crotach succeeded to the chiefship following his father's death at the Battle of Bloody Bay in 1480. Angus later followed up on this victory and had a force invade the MacLeod lands of Trotternish. In consequence, Duntulm Castle was taken from the MacLeods by surprise and the clan never repossessed the fortress. According to the Bannatyne manuscript, in about the year 1490, the MacDonalds attacked the MacLeods again—in what is known as the Battle of Glendale.[3] However, the historian J. L. Roberts considered it likely that several battles were confused in MacLeod tradition; and that the battle fought at Glendale was fought at a much later date than which MacLeod tradition records. Roberts proposed that the MacDonalds could have landed on the north-west coast of Skye, following Alasdair's seizure of Dunscaith Castle after the year 1513; and that the opposing forces could have met and done battle at Glendale. Roberts noted that Alasdair later received a lease to the lands of Trotternish, from the Crown. These lands had been held at various times by Torquil MacLeod of Lewis and Ranald Ban MacDonald of Clanranald.[4] For example, A. and A. Macdonald stated that in June 1498, the king granted Alasdair many lands on Skye, among them were two unciates of the barony of Trotternish along with the office of bailiary for these lands. In October of the same year, the king then granted the same office of bailiary of Trotternish, to Torquil MacLeod of Lewis.[5] Roberts stated that in 1528, Donald Gruamach joined forces with his half-brother, John MacLeod, eldest son of Torquil MacLeod of Lewis; together the half-brothers drove Alasdair out of Trotternish.[4] According to R. C. MacLeod, Alasdair was recorded as a tenant of the Crown in Troternish; and in 1542, received a Crown charter of Trotternish, Sleat, and North Uist. MacLeod, however, stated that he did not believe that Alasdair ever really possessed these lands (except the two unce-lands of Trotternish, which his grandson exchanged for Waternish in 1610). MacLeod noted that during the 15th century, the MacLeods lost about half of their ancient lands: the part of North Uist was ceded by chief Iain Borb in 1406; Sleat was lost in about 1435; and as noted above, during the tenure of Alasdair, Trotternish was lost in about 1482.[3]

Hebridean anarchy; massacre on Eigg edit

 
Entrance to Massacre Cave on Eigg. The entire population of the island was massacred in cold blood by the MacLeods.[6] Almost 400 MacDonalds were said to have been smothered to death within.[3]

The Bannatyne manuscript states that while the Western Isles were now nominally under the direct rule of the Scottish Crown, that the chiefs took the law into their own hands and in consequence anarchy descended across the West Highlands and Isles. The manuscript states that the most vicious acts were carried out between the MacLeods and MacDonalds of Clanranald. The manuscript gives several examples of feuding between the clans. One such example is a story of a birlinn which was driven ashore on the island of Eigg. The crew were refused provisions and in consequence they slaughtered some local livestock to sustain themselves. The locals then put the majority of the crew to death and set three others to sea, where they miraculously washed ashore on Skye. When Alasdair Crotach heard of the treatment of the crew he swore he would not change his clothes until every soul on the islands of Eigg, Rum, and Canna was put to death. The chief ordered six large galleys to be made ready, and together with his son, William, and several hundred armed men, sailed for the Small Isles. The inhabitants of the islands knew the intentions of the MacLeods and attempted to escape their fury by hiding themselves in a large cave on Eigg. When the MacLeods reached the island they waited for three days before discovering the cave and the inhabitants within.[3]

The manuscript states that Alasdair Crotach was a religious man; so before the massacre of all the local inhabitants, he prayed for six hours incessantly. Before his prayers, he declared that if the wind was blowing off mouth of the cave at the end of the six hours, then the people should be spared; however, if the wind was blowing on the mouth of the cave, they should be put to death. While Alasdair Crotach prayed, the wind blew sideways across the mouth of the cave, but at the last moment it shifted to blowing hard upon the mouth of the cave. Alasdair Crotach took this as a sign from heaven and ordered the massacre. The manuscript claims that he then sailed to Skye and left actual killing to his son, William, who collected all the combustible material he could find and set it alight and smothered everyone within the cave. The manuscript states that 395 MacDonalds died within and that their remains were still there (in about the 1830s). For his part in the massacre, William was afterwards known as 'William of the Cave'.[3] The massacre was reported to James VI, to have taken place in the year 1577, but this would put the event years after Alasdair Crotach's death. Roberts noted that MacLeod tradition dates the massacre to about the year 1510.[7] MacLeod considered that this event may date to the years between 1502 and 1520.[3] Roberts thought it dated to the reign of James V, or to the time just after his death.[7]

The cave is known in English as the Massacre Cave, it is called in Scottish Gaelic Uamh Fhraing ("Frances's Cave"). It is located at grid reference NM47498352. Sir Walter Scott is said to have visited the site and discovered bones there in 1814, taking away a souvenir with him.[8] A human skull, found within by a boy on holiday, was handed over to Birmingham Museum in 1979. The skull was verified to be human by the coroner; it was stated to be quite old and that of a child, aged about five or six years old.[9]

Later life edit

 
Rory Mor's claymore.

Years before his death, Alasdair Crotach gave up the leadership of the clan to his son, William. He then retired to the monastery of Rodel, on Harris. He endowed the monastery with lands and restored the church. He also built two churches, one at Nic Caperrall close to Toe Head, and one in Scarpa, an island off Loch Resort on the west side of North Harris. MacLeod stated that both were now in ruins. Alasdair Crotach also had work done on Dunvegan Castle, where he built a tower which is known by his name.[3]

The Bannatyne manuscript states that Alasdair Crotach formed a college of pipers on Skye. He was a man of culture, and employed a number of harpers, bards and shenachies. The manuscript claims that few could wield his claymore and MacLeod proposed that the claymore kept at Dunvegan Castle, which is called 'Rory Mor's claymore', may actually be that of Alasdair Crotach.[note 1] MacLeod stated that the sword had been dated to the about the year 1460—which is roughly the time when Alasdair Crotach would have been a young man.[3]

MacLeod stated that Alasdair Crotach died in 1547.[3] He was buried within a tomb inside St Clement's Church, Rodel, on Harris. The tomb is one of the most richly carved tombs in Scotland of its period. The tomb dates to 1528, about two decades before Alasdair Crotach's death. He was the first MacLeod chief to be buried on Harris, his predecessors are all said to have been buried on the island of Iona.[11]

Family and issue edit

 
Effigy of Alasdair Crotach

Alasdair Crotach married a daughter of Cameron of Lochiel. The manuscript relates of how Alasdair Crotach was still unmarried even though he was no longer a young man. Cameron of Lochiel had ten daughters and offered him one any of them as a wife. Alasdair Crotach married the youngest of them and she lived to an old age and was buried beside her husband. Alasdair Crotach and his wife had three sons and two daughters; MacLeod considered that their family were likely born between the years 1500 and 1520. The Bannatyne manuscript states that one of the daughters married firstly James MacDonald, second son of Donald of Sleat; she married secondly Allan MacIan of Clanranald; and her third husband was MacDonald of Keppoch.[3] However, while the manuscript states her first marriage was to James, the early 20th-century clan historians A. Macdonald and A. Macdonald stated that a daughter of Alasdair Crotach married not James, but his brother John Og. The two historians state that her second husband, Allan MacDonald, 9th of Clan Ranald repudiated her, and that she afterwards married Ranald MacDonald of Keppoch.[12][13] The Bannatyne manuscript states that Alasdair Crotach's second daughter married Hector MacLean of Lochbuie.[3][14]

The Bannatyne manuscript states that Alasdair Crotach had a natural son, Donald Glass. The manuscript relates how this son was on board a birlinn which was seized by a party of MacDonalds, where it was taken to North Uist. Donald Glass was put in irons, and had a heavy weight wrapped around his neck; he was held for six years and never recovered from the ill-treatment he received at the hands of the MacDonalds. Donald Glass's crew fared much worse, however; they were imprisoned in a dungeon, where they starved to death. The manuscript states that it was said that they ate each other till not one remained alive.[3]

Heraldry edit

The earliest seal attributed to a MacLeod dates to the tenure of Alasdair Crotach's chiefship. This seal dates to the year 1542 and contains a stag's head cabossed with a chequy base.[15][note 2]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Rory Mor was Alasdair Crotach's grandson and one of the most distinguished chiefs of his time.[10]
  2. ^ The Scottish officer of arms William Rae Macdonald described the seal as "A stag head erased, the base a chequy". Macdonald stated that it dated to 29 June 1542.[16] Earlier, Henry Laing noted the seal stating, "Appended to Charter by Alexander M'Leod de Dunvegan of the lands of Ballalraid to John M'Aue M'Leod, natural son of John M'Leod in Megnes, 29th June 1542. — Lovat Charters".[17]

References edit

  1. ^ Mark, Colin (2003). The Gaelic-English Dictionary. London: Routledge. p. 182.
  2. ^ MacLeod, Roderick Charles (1927). The MacLeods of Dunvegan. Edinburgh: Privately printed for the Clan MacLeod Society. pp. 70–71.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l MacLeod, Roderick Charles (1927). The MacLeods of Dunvegan. Edinburgh: Privately printed for the Clan MacLeod Society. pp. 72–89.
  4. ^ a b Roberts, John Leonard (1999). Feuds, Forays and Rebellions: History of the Highland Clans 1475-1625 (Illustrated ed.). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 37–38. ISBN 978-0-7486-6244-9.
  5. ^ Macdonald, Angus; Macdonald, Archibald (1900). The Clan Donald. Vol. 3. Inverness: The Northern Counties Publishing Company, Ltd. p. 7.
  6. ^ Kiernan, Ben (2007). Blood and soil: a world history of genocide and extermination from Sparta to Darfur (Illustrated ed.). Yale University Press. p. 14. ISBN 978-0-300-10098-3.
  7. ^ a b Roberts, John Leonard (1999). Feuds, Forays and Rebellions: History of the Highland Clans 1475-1625 (Illustrated ed.). Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. p. 51. ISBN 978-0-7486-6244-9.
  8. ^ Miers, Richenda (2006). Scotland's Highlands & Islands (5th, illustrated ed.). London: New Holland Publishers. p. 235. ISBN 978-1-86011-340-6.
  9. ^ "Eigg, Uamh Fhraing". www.canmore.rcahms.gov.uk. Retrieved 28 January 2010.
  10. ^ "Sir Roderick Ruairidh Mor Macleod (XV Chief)". www.macleodgenealogy.org. Retrieved 24 January 2010.
  11. ^ "Harris, Rodel, St Clement's Church". www.canmore.rcahms.org.uk. Archived from the original on 24 December 2012. Retrieved 23 January 2010.
  12. ^ Macdonald, Angus; Macdonald, Archibald (1900). The Clan Donald. Vol. 3. Inverness: The Northern Counties Publishing Company, Ltd. pp. 231, 469.
  13. ^ "[Daughter] Macleod". www.macleodgenealogy.org. Retrieved 23 January 2010.
  14. ^ "Alexander Alisdair Crotach Macleod (VIII Chief)". www.macleodgenealogy.org. Retrieved 23 January 2010.
  15. ^ Campbell of Airds, Alastair. "A Closer Look at West Highland Heraldry". www.heraldry-scotland.co.uk. Retrieved 29 January 2010.
  16. ^ Macdonald, William Rae (1904). Scottish armorial seals. Edinburgh: William Green and Sons. p. 234.
  17. ^ Laing, Henry (1866), Supplemental descriptive catalogue of ancient Scottish seals, royal, baronial, ecclesiastical, and municipal, embracing the period from A.D. 1150 to the eighteenth century. Taken from original charters, and other deeds preserved in public and private archives, Edinburgh: Edmonston and Douglas, p. 114

alasdair, crotach, macleod, scottish, gaelic, alasdair, crotach, macleòid, 1450, 1547, considered, chief, clan, macleod, chief, clan, macleod, william, dubh, succeeded, father, 1480, following, william, dubh, death, battle, bloody, first, macleod, chief, burie. Alasdair Crotach MacLeod Scottish Gaelic Alasdair Crotach MacLeoid 1450 1547 is considered to be the 8th Chief of Clan MacLeod He was the son of the 7th Chief of Clan MacLeod William Dubh and succeeded his father in 1480 following William Dubh s death at the Battle of Bloody Bay He was the first MacLeod chief not to be buried on the island of Iona Alasdair Crotach MacLeodAlasdair Crotach s effigy in the Church of St Clement on HarrisBorn1450Died1547 aged 96 97 Resting placeChurch of St Clement Rodel HarrisTitleThe 8th Chief of Clan MacLeodPredecessorWilliam Dubh father SuccessorWilliam son Children1 son 1 natural son 2 daughtersThe Scottish Gaelic word crotach means humpbacked and the nickname refers to wounds he received during battle which crippled him the rest of his life Alasdair Crotach s tomb is one of the most magnificently carved tombs of its era in Scotland He was succeeded by his son William Contents 1 Life 1 1 Alasdair the Humpbacked 1 2 Chief of the clan 1 3 Hebridean anarchy massacre on Eigg 1 4 Later life 2 Family and issue 3 Heraldry 4 Notes 5 ReferencesLife editAlasdair the Humpbacked edit Alasdair Crotach was the son of William Dubh 7th Chief of Clan MacLeod The Scottish Gaelic word crotach means humpbacked 1 According to MacLeod tradition Alasdair earned this nickname during a pitched battle in which he was severely wounded In the late 15th century Angus Og MacDonald bastard son of John MacDonald Earl of Ross Lord of the Isles attempted to depose his father Angus was supported by all the branches of Clan Donald as well as the MacLeods of Lewis However other island clans such as the MacLeods of Harris and Dunvegan the MacLeans and the MacNeils supported John The Bannatyne manuscript states that the opposing clans fought skirmishes throughout the Hebrides One such skirmish took place on Skye between the MacDonalds and MacLeods when a large force of MacDonalds led by Evan MacKail son of the chief of Clanranald landed at Aird Bay with the intention of laying waste to MacLeod territory At this particular time William Dubh was away and his only son Alasdair rallied the clan s forces and marched them towards the MacDonalds who were encamped near their galleys The opposing forces clashed with each other and Alasdair was wounded in the back by Evan MacKail who wielded a battle axe As the wounded Alasdair fell he grabbed hold of Evan MacKail and brought him to the ground as well Alasdair then killed MacKail with his dirk and cut off the dead man s head as a trophy The battle ended with the defeat of the MacDonalds who lost most of their men and ten galleys The writer of the manuscript states that at the time of writing about the 1830s there were heaps of skulls and bones which could still be seen where the battle was said to have taken place 2 Chief of the clan edit MacLeod tradition preserved within the 19th century Bannatyne manuscript written by Bannatyne William MacLeod 10th of Glendale 1790 1856 states that Alasdair Crotach succeeded to the chiefship following his father s death at the Battle of Bloody Bay in 1480 Angus later followed up on this victory and had a force invade the MacLeod lands of Trotternish In consequence Duntulm Castle was taken from the MacLeods by surprise and the clan never repossessed the fortress According to the Bannatyne manuscript in about the year 1490 the MacDonalds attacked the MacLeods again in what is known as the Battle of Glendale 3 However the historian J L Roberts considered it likely that several battles were confused in MacLeod tradition and that the battle fought at Glendale was fought at a much later date than which MacLeod tradition records Roberts proposed that the MacDonalds could have landed on the north west coast of Skye following Alasdair s seizure of Dunscaith Castle after the year 1513 and that the opposing forces could have met and done battle at Glendale Roberts noted that Alasdair later received a lease to the lands of Trotternish from the Crown These lands had been held at various times by Torquil MacLeod of Lewis and Ranald Ban MacDonald of Clanranald 4 For example A and A Macdonald stated that in June 1498 the king granted Alasdair many lands on Skye among them were two unciates of the barony of Trotternish along with the office of bailiary for these lands In October of the same year the king then granted the same office of bailiary of Trotternish to Torquil MacLeod of Lewis 5 Roberts stated that in 1528 Donald Gruamach joined forces with his half brother John MacLeod eldest son of Torquil MacLeod of Lewis together the half brothers drove Alasdair out of Trotternish 4 According to R C MacLeod Alasdair was recorded as a tenant of the Crown in Troternish and in 1542 received a Crown charter of Trotternish Sleat and North Uist MacLeod however stated that he did not believe that Alasdair ever really possessed these lands except the two unce lands of Trotternish which his grandson exchanged for Waternish in 1610 MacLeod noted that during the 15th century the MacLeods lost about half of their ancient lands the part of North Uist was ceded by chief Iain Borb in 1406 Sleat was lost in about 1435 and as noted above during the tenure of Alasdair Trotternish was lost in about 1482 3 Hebridean anarchy massacre on Eigg edit nbsp Entrance to Massacre Cave on Eigg The entire population of the island was massacred in cold blood by the MacLeods 6 Almost 400 MacDonalds were said to have been smothered to death within 3 The Bannatyne manuscript states that while the Western Isles were now nominally under the direct rule of the Scottish Crown that the chiefs took the law into their own hands and in consequence anarchy descended across the West Highlands and Isles The manuscript states that the most vicious acts were carried out between the MacLeods and MacDonalds of Clanranald The manuscript gives several examples of feuding between the clans One such example is a story of a birlinn which was driven ashore on the island of Eigg The crew were refused provisions and in consequence they slaughtered some local livestock to sustain themselves The locals then put the majority of the crew to death and set three others to sea where they miraculously washed ashore on Skye When Alasdair Crotach heard of the treatment of the crew he swore he would not change his clothes until every soul on the islands of Eigg Rum and Canna was put to death The chief ordered six large galleys to be made ready and together with his son William and several hundred armed men sailed for the Small Isles The inhabitants of the islands knew the intentions of the MacLeods and attempted to escape their fury by hiding themselves in a large cave on Eigg When the MacLeods reached the island they waited for three days before discovering the cave and the inhabitants within 3 The manuscript states that Alasdair Crotach was a religious man so before the massacre of all the local inhabitants he prayed for six hours incessantly Before his prayers he declared that if the wind was blowing off mouth of the cave at the end of the six hours then the people should be spared however if the wind was blowing on the mouth of the cave they should be put to death While Alasdair Crotach prayed the wind blew sideways across the mouth of the cave but at the last moment it shifted to blowing hard upon the mouth of the cave Alasdair Crotach took this as a sign from heaven and ordered the massacre The manuscript claims that he then sailed to Skye and left actual killing to his son William who collected all the combustible material he could find and set it alight and smothered everyone within the cave The manuscript states that 395 MacDonalds died within and that their remains were still there in about the 1830s For his part in the massacre William was afterwards known as William of the Cave 3 The massacre was reported to James VI to have taken place in the year 1577 but this would put the event years after Alasdair Crotach s death Roberts noted that MacLeod tradition dates the massacre to about the year 1510 7 MacLeod considered that this event may date to the years between 1502 and 1520 3 Roberts thought it dated to the reign of James V or to the time just after his death 7 The cave is known in English as the Massacre Cave it is called in Scottish Gaelic Uamh Fhraing Frances s Cave It is located at grid reference NM47498352 Sir Walter Scott is said to have visited the site and discovered bones there in 1814 taking away a souvenir with him 8 A human skull found within by a boy on holiday was handed over to Birmingham Museum in 1979 The skull was verified to be human by the coroner it was stated to be quite old and that of a child aged about five or six years old 9 Later life edit nbsp Rory Mor s claymore Years before his death Alasdair Crotach gave up the leadership of the clan to his son William He then retired to the monastery of Rodel on Harris He endowed the monastery with lands and restored the church He also built two churches one at Nic Caperrall close to Toe Head and one in Scarpa an island off Loch Resort on the west side of North Harris MacLeod stated that both were now in ruins Alasdair Crotach also had work done on Dunvegan Castle where he built a tower which is known by his name 3 The Bannatyne manuscript states that Alasdair Crotach formed a college of pipers on Skye He was a man of culture and employed a number of harpers bards and shenachies The manuscript claims that few could wield his claymore and MacLeod proposed that the claymore kept at Dunvegan Castle which is called Rory Mor s claymore may actually be that of Alasdair Crotach note 1 MacLeod stated that the sword had been dated to the about the year 1460 which is roughly the time when Alasdair Crotach would have been a young man 3 MacLeod stated that Alasdair Crotach died in 1547 3 He was buried within a tomb inside St Clement s Church Rodel on Harris The tomb is one of the most richly carved tombs in Scotland of its period The tomb dates to 1528 about two decades before Alasdair Crotach s death He was the first MacLeod chief to be buried on Harris his predecessors are all said to have been buried on the island of Iona 11 Family and issue edit nbsp Effigy of Alasdair CrotachAlasdair Crotach married a daughter of Cameron of Lochiel The manuscript relates of how Alasdair Crotach was still unmarried even though he was no longer a young man Cameron of Lochiel had ten daughters and offered him one any of them as a wife Alasdair Crotach married the youngest of them and she lived to an old age and was buried beside her husband Alasdair Crotach and his wife had three sons and two daughters MacLeod considered that their family were likely born between the years 1500 and 1520 The Bannatyne manuscript states that one of the daughters married firstly James MacDonald second son of Donald of Sleat she married secondly Allan MacIan of Clanranald and her third husband was MacDonald of Keppoch 3 However while the manuscript states her first marriage was to James the early 20th century clan historians A Macdonald and A Macdonald stated that a daughter of Alasdair Crotach married not James but his brother John Og The two historians state that her second husband Allan MacDonald 9th of Clan Ranald repudiated her and that she afterwards married Ranald MacDonald of Keppoch 12 13 The Bannatyne manuscript states that Alasdair Crotach s second daughter married Hector MacLean of Lochbuie 3 14 The Bannatyne manuscript states that Alasdair Crotach had a natural son Donald Glass The manuscript relates how this son was on board a birlinn which was seized by a party of MacDonalds where it was taken to North Uist Donald Glass was put in irons and had a heavy weight wrapped around his neck he was held for six years and never recovered from the ill treatment he received at the hands of the MacDonalds Donald Glass s crew fared much worse however they were imprisoned in a dungeon where they starved to death The manuscript states that it was said that they ate each other till not one remained alive 3 Heraldry editThe earliest seal attributed to a MacLeod dates to the tenure of Alasdair Crotach s chiefship This seal dates to the year 1542 and contains a stag s head cabossed with a chequy base 15 note 2 Notes edit Rory Mor was Alasdair Crotach s grandson and one of the most distinguished chiefs of his time 10 The Scottish officer of arms William Rae Macdonald described the seal as A stag head erased the base a chequy Macdonald stated that it dated to 29 June 1542 16 Earlier Henry Laing noted the seal stating Appended to Charter by Alexander M Leod de Dunvegan of the lands of Ballalraid to John M Aue M Leod natural son of John M Leod in Megnes 29th June 1542 Lovat Charters 17 References edit Mark Colin 2003 The Gaelic English Dictionary London Routledge p 182 MacLeod Roderick Charles 1927 The MacLeods of Dunvegan Edinburgh Privately printed for the Clan MacLeod Society pp 70 71 a b c d e f g h i j k l MacLeod Roderick Charles 1927 The MacLeods of Dunvegan Edinburgh Privately printed for the Clan MacLeod Society pp 72 89 a b Roberts John Leonard 1999 Feuds Forays and Rebellions History of the Highland Clans 1475 1625 Illustrated ed Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 37 38 ISBN 978 0 7486 6244 9 Macdonald Angus Macdonald Archibald 1900 The Clan Donald Vol 3 Inverness The Northern Counties Publishing Company Ltd p 7 Kiernan Ben 2007 Blood and soil a world history of genocide and extermination from Sparta to Darfur Illustrated ed Yale University Press p 14 ISBN 978 0 300 10098 3 a b Roberts John Leonard 1999 Feuds Forays and Rebellions History of the Highland Clans 1475 1625 Illustrated ed Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press p 51 ISBN 978 0 7486 6244 9 Miers Richenda 2006 Scotland s Highlands amp Islands 5th illustrated ed London New Holland Publishers p 235 ISBN 978 1 86011 340 6 Eigg Uamh Fhraing www canmore rcahms gov uk Retrieved 28 January 2010 Sir Roderick Ruairidh Mor Macleod XV Chief www macleodgenealogy org Retrieved 24 January 2010 Harris Rodel St Clement s Church www canmore rcahms org uk Archived from the original on 24 December 2012 Retrieved 23 January 2010 Macdonald Angus Macdonald Archibald 1900 The Clan Donald Vol 3 Inverness The Northern Counties Publishing Company Ltd pp 231 469 Daughter Macleod www macleodgenealogy org Retrieved 23 January 2010 Alexander Alisdair Crotach Macleod VIII Chief www macleodgenealogy org Retrieved 23 January 2010 Campbell of Airds Alastair A Closer Look at West Highland Heraldry www heraldry scotland co uk Retrieved 29 January 2010 Macdonald William Rae 1904 Scottish armorial seals Edinburgh William Green and Sons p 234 Laing Henry 1866 Supplemental descriptive catalogue of ancient Scottish seals royal baronial ecclesiastical and municipal embracing the period from A D 1150 to the eighteenth century Taken from original charters and other deeds preserved in public and private archives Edinburgh Edmonston and Douglas p 114 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Alasdair Crotach MacLeod amp oldid 1182093472, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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