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Battle of Largs

The Battle of Largs (2 October 1263) was a battle between the kingdoms of Norway and Scotland, on the Firth of Clyde near Largs, Scotland. The conflict formed part of the Norwegian expedition against Scotland in 1263, in which Haakon Haakonsson, King of Norway attempted to reassert Norwegian sovereignty over the western seaboard of Scotland.[1] Victory was achieved by the Scots with a crafty three-tiered strategy on the part of the young Scottish king, Alexander III: plodding diplomacy forced the campaign to bad weather months and a ferocious storm ravaged the Norwegian fleet, stripping it of many vessels and supplies and making the forces on the Scottish coast vulnerable to an attack that forced the Norwegians into a hasty retreat that was to end their 500-year history of invasion, and leaving Scotland to consolidate its resources into building the nation.

Battle of Largs
Part of the Scottish–Norwegian War

Detail from William Hole's mural of the Battle of Largs, in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery
Date2 October 1263
Location55°47′33″N 4°52′04″W / 55.7926°N 4.8679°W / 55.7926; -4.8679
Result

Inconclusive

  • Favourable outcome for Scotland
Belligerents
Kingdom of Scotland Kingdom of Norway
Commanders and leaders
Alexander of Dundonald King Haakon IV
class=notpageimage|
Location within Scotland
Battle of Largs (Northern and Central Europe)

Since the beginning of the 12th century, the Largs/Ayrshire region of Scotland had lain at the periphery of the Norwegian realm, ruled by magnates who recognised the overlordship of the kings of Norway. In the mid-13th century, two Scottish kings, Alexander II and his son Alexander III, attempted to incorporate the region into their own realm. Following Alexander III's early, failed attempts to purchase the islands from the Norwegian king, the Scots launched military operations to end the issue altogether by asserting royal sovereignty over all of western Scotland. Haakon responded to the Scottish aggression by leading a massive Norwegian fleet, thought to number in the thousands of vessels, that reached the Hebrides in the summer of 1263. Realizing that the Scots were tremendously outnumbered by an experienced and mobile enemy, Alexander III sought a protracted diplomatic intervention that would buy time to acquire more troops and possibly force the Norwegians into the stormy autumn and winter months where an invasion could be stalled due to weather. By late September, Haakon's fleet occupied the Firth of Clyde and the temperate days — such as they are on the western coast of Scotland — was almost at an end. When negotiations between the kingdoms broke down, Haakon brought the bulk of his fleet to anchor off the Cumbraes, poised to invade Scotland at a site of his choosing.

On the night of 1 October, during a bout of stormy weather, several Norwegian vessels were driven aground on the Ayrshire coast, near present-day Largs. On 2 October, while the Norwegians were salvaging their vessels, the main Scottish army arrived on the scene. Composed of infantry and cavalry, the Scottish force was commanded by Alexander of Dundonald, Steward of Scotland. The Norwegians were gathered in two groups: the larger main force on the beach and a small contingent atop a nearby mound. The advance of the Scots threatened to divide the Norwegian forces, so the contingent on the mound ran to rejoin their comrades on the beach below. Seeing them running from the mound, the Norwegians on the beach believed they were retreating and fled back towards the ships. There was fierce fighting on the beach, and the Scots took up a position on the mound formerly held by the Norwegians. Late in the day, the Norwegians recaptured the mound after several hours of skirmishing. The Scots withdrew from the scene and the Norwegians reboarded their ships. They returned the next morning to collect their dead. With the weather deteriorating, Haakon's fleet sailed to Orkney to overwinter.

As a result of the battle, Scotland achieved the end of 500 years of Norse Viking depredations and invasions despite being tremendously outnumbered, without a one-sided military victory in the ensuing battle. The victory caused the complete retreat of Norwegian forces from western Scotland and the realm entered a period of prosperity for almost 40 years.[2] The tactical decision at Largs thus led to a sweeping strategic victory that ended in Scotland purchasing the Hebrides Islands and the Isle of Man in the Treaty of Perth, 1266.

The battle is commemorated in Largs by an early 20th-century monument, and festivities held there annually since the 1980s.

Context edit

 
The Norwegian realm in 1263, at about the time of the Battle of Largs

Viking depredations have been recorded in the British Isles since the late 8th century,[3] and Scandinavian settlement on Scotland's western-seaboard may have begun before the turn of the 9th century.[4] Claims to this region by Norwegian kings date to the turn of the 12th century, when Magnus Olafsson, King of Norway (d. 1103) established himself in the Hebrides and the Isle of Man (Mann). Direct Norwegian control ended with Magnus' death, after which the Hebrides and Mann,[5] known to the Norwegians as the "Southern Isles",[6] were controlled by local dynasties for over a century and a half.[5] In the first half of the 13th century, the seaboard was controlled by two main power blocks: one consisting of the Mann, Lewis and Harris, and Skye—controlled by the patrilineal descendants of Godred Crovan (d. 1095); the other consisting of mainland territories in Argyll, and the islands of Islay, Jura, Mull, and possibly Uist—controlled by the descendants of Somerled (d. 1164).[7] As part of the far-flung, early 13th century Norwegian realm, these island rulers recognised the overlordship of Haakon Haakonarson, King of Norway (d. 1263).[8]

The first half of the 13th century was a period of consolidation for both Scottish and Norwegian kings.[9] The Norwegians, under Haakon, overcame a period of internal strife, from 1161 to 1208,[10] and oversaw the submission of the Faroe Islands, the Greenland settlements, and Iceland, in the mid 13th century.[11] The Scots, under Alexander II, King of Scots (d. 1249), extended royal authority into the northern Highlands, Argyll, and Galloway.[12] The king also wanted to incorporate the western seaboard into the Scottish realm.[13] In 1230, Scottish aggression against the Isles and interference forced the Norwegian king to pacify the region. In 1249, after attempting to purchase the Isles from Haakon, Alexander II launched a campaign of his own, deep into Argyll and into the Hebrides. Unfortunately for the Scots, their king died suddenly on the verge of conquest.[14] Since his son and successor, Alexander III (d. 1286), was only a boy at the time, the Scottish realm suffered through a lengthy and troubled minority.[15] In consequence, it wasn't until the 1260s that the king looked west and attempted to finish what his father had so nearly accomplished.[12]

In 1262, a year after another unsuccessful attempt to purchase the Isles, Scottish forces launched an attack upon Skye. Haakon's response to the invasion was to mastermind a massive military expedition of his own.[16] Described by the Icelandic Annals as the largest force to have ever set sail from Norway,[17] the fleet reached the Isles in the summer of 1263.[7] After receiving only a lukewarm reception from his vassals in the region, Haakon's forces reached the Firth of Clyde, after his men had secured several castles, and undertook raids into the surrounding mainland. With the Norwegian fleet anchored off Arran, the Norwegians and Scottish embassies fiercely debated the sovereignty of the Islands of the Clyde. When talks broke down, Haakon dispatched a fleet of Islesmen to raid into Loch Lomond, and to ravage Lennox. Meanwhile, the main Norwegian fleet repositioned itself between the Cumbraes and the Ayrshire coast.[18]

Actions edit

 
Haakon's ships depicted on William Hole's mural in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery
 
 
Left: a 14th-century folio containing part of Hákonar saga Hákonarsonar. Right: a folio from the earliest manuscript form of the Chronicle of Melrose.

The main Norwegian source for the battle is Hakonar saga Hakonarsonar,[7] a contemporary account of the life of Hakon Haakonarson, King of Norway (d. 1263), composed by the Icelandic historian Sturla Thordarson (d. 1284).[19] Although the saga describes the events purely from the Norwegian perspective, its narrative of the battle appears to have been drawn from eyewitness accounts, and it is the most detailed source available for the Scottish–Norwegian conflict, given that many contemporary Scottish archival holdings are lost to history.[7] A contemporary Scottish perspective of the events is preserved in a brief entry in the Chronicle of Melrose. First penned at Melrose Abbey in the last quarter of the 12th century, the chronicle was further extended and supplemented from time to time into the late 13th century. It is an important historical source for the mediaeval Scottish realm. Clan and remaining royal records of property and titles subsequent to the event are also informative.[20]

While lying off the Cumbraes, on the night of 30 September, Haakon's fleet was battered by stormy weather. During the night, the saga records that a merchantman dragged its anchor and was driven aground. The following morning, it and four other vessels were floated off by the rising tide but carried by the current towards the Scottish mainland where they ran aground again. The crews of the beached vessels were soon harassed by a small force of Scots armed with bows. After the Norwegians had suffered some casualties, Haakon sent reinforcements ashore, and the Scots fled the area. Haakon's reinforcements remained ashore for the night, and the Norwegian king himself came ashore to oversee the salvage operation the next morning.[21]

According to the saga, the main Scottish force, consisting of heavily armoured cavalry and infantry, arrived on 2 October. The saga numbers the mounted troops at about 500 and states that they rode high-quality horses protected by mail.[22] The use of a substantial force of mounted knights or sergeants appears to be corroborated in contemporary records of payments made to troops.[23] For example, Walter Stewart, Earl of Menteith had to maintain 120 sergeants—which could include knights, mounted men-at-arms, archers, or other footsoldiers—at Ayr Castle for three weeks.[24] Although surviving records fail to mention the number of knights assembled at Ayr, the record of wages suggests that it was "more than a mere handful".[23] According to the saga, the Scottish infantry were armed with bows and "Irish axes",[22] and since at one point the Scots are said to have thrown stones at the Norwegians,[25] the Scottish army must have also included slingers. The Latin Chronicle of Melrose simply describes the Scottish infantry as pedisequi patrie (the "foot-sloggers of the locality").[26] If this description refers to the men of the surrounding countryside, the Scottish infantry would have been made up of men from the 'common army', drawn only from Strathgryffe, Cunninghame and Kyle. These levies would have been mustered by the Sheriff of Ayr, the Sheriff of Lanark, and the local magnates.[27] At the time of Largs, the Scottish king thus had at his disposal men from the 'common army' (lesser men who owed service to their king), the feudal host (greater men who owed military service for their lands), and also paid troops.[28]

 
Area of conflict

The evidence suggests that the main Scottish force arrived from the south, rather than from the east or the north. For example, Alexander III is recorded to have been south at Ayr in September,[29] and the power centre of Alexander of Dundonald, Steward of Scotland (d. 1282), who is thought to have commanded the Scottish forces at the battle,[30] was also located to the south. Furthermore, at the time of the battle, the Sheriff of Ayr was probably a member of the steward's family[29]—probably his younger brother, the Earl of Menteith.[31][note 1] If the Scots had indeed arrived from the south, then they would have also assembled at a mustering site to the south, possibly somewhere near Ayr.[29] The saga indicates that the Norwegians were divided into two groups. The smaller force numbered 200 men, was stationed on a mound, somewhat inland from the beach, under the command of a Norwegian nobleman Ogmund Crouchdance. The main Norwegian force, numbering about 700 to 800 men (including Haakon himself), was stationed on the beach below.[33] These two detachments were likely only a fraction of the total number of forces at Haakon's disposal. The numbers that the saga allows for either side may be exaggerated. A more likely number may be only about one hundred or several hundred men per side with the number of knights present may have been closer to 50 than the saga's 500.[34] The forces which Haakon had mustered in Norway formed part of his realm's leidang,[35] a naval levy in which districts contributed men, ships, and provisions for military service.[36]

 
Alexander III's seal illustrates the armament of a contemporary mounted knight.

As the Scots advanced towards the Norwegians, the saga indicates that Ogmund withdrew his troops from the mound to avoid being cut off from his comrades on the beach below.[37] If the Scots had indeed marched northwards, their advance would have threatened to drive a wedge between the Norwegians on the mound and those on the beach.[38] Once the Scottish vanguard came into contact with Ogmund's men, the saga indicates that his orderly withdrawal disintegrated into a chaotic scramble. On the beach below, Haakon followed the advice of his men and retired to the safety of his ships. To the men on the beach, the rapid descent of Ogmund's men towards them looked like an all-out retreat; they turned and fled. The Norwegian army was thus routed, and in the mad dash back to their ships they suffered substantial casualties.[37] Some of the Norwegians may have used the beached vessels as makeshift fortifications,[38] since the saga notes that a group of them made a bold stand by their ships, out-numbered ten to one, in a fierce engagement in which a particularly valiant Scottish knight was slain.[39][note 2] This entry confirms that at least some of the Scottish knights present were able to engage their foes on horseback.[40] The supplies and usable ships lost on the beach were consequential in Haakom's decision to retreat from the area.

According to the saga, the Scots then withdrew from the beach and consolidated atop the mound abandoned by Ogmund's men, who had been beaten back by a detachment of men under Sir Robert Boyd (father of William Wallace's second in command). Minor skirmishing followed in which both sides attacked each other with arrows and stones. Before nightfall, the saga maintains that the Norwegians made one last determined assault, and forced the Scots from the mound, before making an orderly withdrawal to their ships. On the morning of 3 October, the Norwegians returned ashore to collect their dead and burn their beached vessels.[42] For several days, Haakon's forces laid off the coast of Arran. After rendezvousing with the returning fleet that had plundered Lennox, Haakon's entire forces made for the Hebrides. At Mull he rewarded a number of his Norse-Gaelic vassals with grants of lands. By the end of October, the Norwegian fleet reached Orkney.[43] In mid December, the Norwegian king fell ill and died at the Bishop's Palace, and was temporarily buried in nearby St Magnus Cathedral.[44]

Aftermath edit

 
This Neolithic chambered cairn near Largs is sometimes known as "Haco's Tomb".[45] Local tombs, such as this, were once believed to have been erected as grave markers for warriors slain during the battle.[46]

The saga described the Norwegian campaign as a triumph. In reality, it had not achieved anything,[47] though the expedition was not lost at Largs. Haakon simply sailed to Orkney to overwinter with his forces. He unexpectedly fell ill and died there before he had the chance to resume operations. The campaign had started too late, and the Scottish king had successfully prolonged negotiations to his own advantage. As the summer turned to autumn, and the royal envoys parleyed back and forth, Alexander III had further strengthened his forces in the defence of his realm and left Haakon's fleet to the mercy of the deteriorating weather.[48] In the end, the Scottish realm had successfully defended itself from Norwegian might, and many of Haakon's Norse-Gaelic vassals had been reluctant to support the Norwegian cause.[49] Within months of the abortive campaign, embassies were sent from Norway to discuss terms of peace. Meanwhile, Alexander III seized the initiative and made ready to punish the magnates who had supported Haakon. By the end of the year the Hebrideans and Manx were forced to submit to the Scots.[50] In 1266, almost three years after the battle, terms of peace were finally agreed upon between the Scottish and Norwegian kings. On 2 July 1266, with the conclusion of the Treaty of Perth, the Hebrides and Mann were leased to the King of Scots, in return for an annual payment. As it happened, Norwegian rule over the Hebrides would never return, with the Kingdom of Scotland eventually discontinuing their payments to the Norwegian crown.[51] The treaty also entailed Scottish acceptance of Norwegian rule over Orkney and Shetland.[52]

Ramifications edit

The battle of Largs has been characterized by later historians as a great Scottish victory, but its strategic ramifications far outstripped its tactical cost as it involved only a small part of the Norwegian fleet. With his fleet and forces strewn about the Hebrides, Haakon fully intended to continue to campaign after spending the winter in Orkney and reconcentrating his forces, but he was taken ill in the dismal climate and died there. His illness is thought to have been caused in part by the stresses he endured in the long campaign and the difficult, damp environment of the Orkney Islands. The protracted diplomacy that had slowed his invasion had ultimately helped seal his own fate as well. With Haakon's death, his successor, Magnus Haakonarson, King of Norway, signed the Treaty of Perth three years after the battle, leasing Scotland's western seaboard to Alexander III in return for a yearly payment. This lease became permanent, but the Kingdom of Scotland eventually stopped paying the Norwegian crown for the islands when Norway became distracted by civil wars.

Although the Battle of Largs' contemporary records were largely lost to history with the loss of the Scottish archives in the wars of independence, it is for historians today to judge it by its ultimate, easily understood consequence: the end of a multi-century era of Norse invasion. The Battle greatly influenced clan history, especially that of the Boyds, Cunninghams, and Muirs, all of which point directly to participation in this battle as key to the grant of lands in Ayrshire. In the case of the Boyd family, its motto "Confido" (I Trust) was a direct quote from Alexander III at Largs.[53] Alexander III depended on Boyd's detachment to keep the Norwegians off Gold Berry Hill and enveloped on the beach. The name "Gold Berry" was placed under their early heraldic devices.

Historiography edit

The significance of the Battle was understood in Scotland at the time as it led to years of consolidation of royal authority. Unfortunately, many original sources and manuscripts were lost during the many years of fighting with the English, especially Edward I (see Jonathan Donald: 2019, Scotland, LE School of History, University of St Andrews, Alexander III, 1249–1286: First Among Equals). See also Acts of Alexander III King of Scots 1249 -1286 See also: [54] The Chronicle of Melrose offers only a brief description, and does not record its location. It ascribes the campaign's failure more to the power of God than to that of the Scots.[55] The battle is not recorded at all within the Chronicle of Mann,[56] or any Irish source, and English sources show a similar lack of interest. But by the 14th and 15th centuries, the battle was being portrayed as part of an epic struggle between an invading force of Norwegians and an idealised Scottish king defending his realm.[57][note 3] By the 17th century, the battle had lost its attributed significance, but in the 19th century it was rediscovered by antiquarians and historians who transformed it into a conflict of international importance.[57] Although the battle's upsurge in popularity at this time may be due to the tapping of Largs' tourism potential, it was also influenced by the general heightening of interest in Scotland's history and culture. The battle became associated with Scotland's proud military past and linked to the great mediaeval victories of national heroes such as Wallace and Bruce.[61] Most modern academics do not subscribe to such a view, though they regard the battle as a significant part of the failed Norwegian campaign.[57] But even today, to the locals of Largs, the battle represents a glorious Scottish victory over invading Vikings.[62]

Commemoration edit

 
The Pencil stands about 1 mile (1.6 km) south of Largs, along a shoreline footpath.[63]

On 12 July 1912, the battle was commemorated at Largs with the unveiling of a newly built stone tower.[64] Popularly known as "The Pencil",[65] this 70 feet (21 m) tall,[66] pencil-shaped, conical-roofed tower is built out of ashlar blocks of whinstone.[67] Constructed by architect James Sandyford Kay[68] at the cost of nearly £300,[64] the tower was modelled after mediaeval round towers at Abernethy and Brechin,[69] which were thought (erroneously) to have been built as redoubts against Viking marauders.[64][note 4] The Pencil has been protected as a listed building since 1971,[67] and stands about 1 mile (1.6 km) south of Largs,[63] at grid reference NS 20762 57679,[70] overlooking the local marina.[64]

Although the monument marks the traditional battle site, it stands nowhere near the probable battle site. Its erroneous placement appears to be due to the discovery of prehistoric burials, consisting of both chambered tombs and cist burials. Nearby Bronze Age standing stones may have been interpreted as memorials to slain warriors, as was a nearby Neolithic tomb. The location of this tomb has led to the erroneous association between the battle and the two parks situated at grid reference NS 209587 and grid reference NS 207587. The Ordnance Survey also locates the battle too far south, at grid reference NS 207587.[7][note 5]

The probable site of the mound upon which the Norwegians and Scots fought is not commemorated at all.[7] Located at grid reference NS 2073 5932.,[72] and surrounded by a housing development, the mound is crowned by a 19th-century monument known as "The Three Sisters", which may have been erected by astronomer Thomas Brisbane.[73] In recent years the battle site has been one of fifty battlefields researched by the Centre for Battlefield Archaeology and Historic Scotland for inclusion in the Inventory of Scottish Battlefields. The inventory, established in 2009, is intended to protect, preserve, and promote Scotland's most significant battlefields under the Scottish Historical Environment Policy. The site of the Battle of Largs was one of eleven investigated sites that did not meet the criteria for inclusion.[74]

Each autumn since 1981, the village of Largs has hosted the Largs Viking Festival, founded to celebrate the battle and to encourage tourism.[75] A re-enactment of the battle, held onsite at The Pencil, forms part of the festivities.[76] The battle is the subject of John Galt's (d. 1839) The Battle of Largs: a Gothic Poem, written about 1804. Not regarded as one of Galt's better literary works,[77] this poem was almost certainly based on James Johnstone's (d. 1798) The Norwegian Account of Haco's Expedition Against Scotland A.D. MCCLXIII, published in 1782.[78][note 6] The battle is also commemorated within one of William Hole's (d. 1917) massive murals, which can be viewed in the foyer of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery.[82]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Walter was certainly sheriff by 1264, and probably held the position earlier.[32]
  2. ^ The saga identifies the knight as Perus. Although it is possible that this name could refer to Fergus, a name borne by the family of Ardrossan, it is more likely that it refers to Peter or Piers,[40] perhaps Piers de Curry.[41] The 15th-century Scottish chronicler Walter Bower identified the slain knight as such, and adding credibility to Bower's account is the fact that a like-named early 13th-century man, possibly an ancestor of the slain knight, is known to have been a vassal and tenant of the Steward of Scotland in the parish of Mauchline.[40]
  3. ^ John of Fordun briefly described the storm which drove the Norwegians ashore as an act of God.[58] About half a century later, Andrew of Wyntoun depicted the battle as a hard-fought and well-earned Scottish victory.[59] Walter Bower declared that Saint Margaret miraculously intervened to defend the Scots against the Norwegians.[60]
  4. ^ The door of the monument is a replica of that on the tower at Brechin.[67] Not long after The Pencil was built, it was locally supposed that Viking warriors had once used the Largs tower to store their weapons.[64]
  5. ^ In the mid 19th century, a standing stone at Craigenmour, on Great Cumbrae, was said to have been a memorial raised for Norwegians killed at the battle. Today the stone is locally known as the "Druid's stone".[71]
  6. ^ Johnstone's work is one of the first (albeit partial) English translations of an Icelandic saga.[79] Galt, himself, stated that his poem was inspired by John Pinkerton's (d. 1826) controversial A Dissertation on the Origin and Progress of the Scythians or Goths, published in 1787,[80] as well as Thomas Percy's (d. 1811) translation of Paul-Henri Mallet's Introduction à l'histoire du Dannemarc, published in 1770.[81]

References edit

  1. ^ 2012: Edinburgh University Press, Acts of Alexander III King of Scots 1249 –1286 (Regesta Regnum Scottorum IV), Grant and Cynthia Neville
  2. ^ Jonathan Donald: 2019, Scotland, LE School of History, University of St Andrews, Alexander III, 1249–1286: First Among Equals
  3. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 25.
  4. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 27.
  5. ^ a b Woolf 2004: p. 101. See also: Crawford 2001: pp. 556–558.
  6. ^ Williams 2007: pp. 130–132 fn 8.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22.
  8. ^ Beuermann 2007: pp. 99–123.
  9. ^ Cowan 1990: p. 124.
  10. ^ Barrow 1981: p. 101.
  11. ^ Power 2005: p. 50.
  12. ^ a b Stringer 2004.
  13. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 253–254. See also: Stringer 2004. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22.
  14. ^ Stringer 2004.
  15. ^ Reid 2004. See also: Stringer 2004.
  16. ^ Reid 2004. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22.
  17. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 107. See also: Anderson 1922: p. 607.
  18. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 257–258. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22.
  19. ^ Cowan 1990: pp. 103–104, 106.
  20. ^ Doherty 2011: p. 101.
  21. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 258–259. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 626–628.
  22. ^ a b Barrow 1990: p. 139. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 628–630.
  23. ^ a b Barrow 1990: pp. 139, 141–142.
  24. ^ Brown 2004: p. 57. See also: Barrow 1990: pp. 139, 141–142.
  25. ^ Barrow 1990: p. 139. See also: See also: Anderson 1922: p. 630.
  26. ^ Duncan 1996: pp. 379, 579–580. See also: Barrow 1990: p. 139. See also: Stevenson 1835: p. 190.
  27. ^ Barrow 1990: p. 138.
  28. ^ Brown 2004: p. 57.
  29. ^ a b c Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 259–260. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22.
  30. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 259–260. See also: Barrow 2004. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22. See also: Young 1990: p. 15.
  31. ^ Brown 2004: pp. 56–57. See also: Barrow 1990: p. 138. See also: Cowan 1990: p. 121.
  32. ^ Young 1990: pp. 10, 15.
  33. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: p. 259. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22.
  34. ^ Duncan 1996: pp. 579–580, 580 fn 20.
  35. ^ Derry 2000: p. 49.
  36. ^ Derry 2000: p. 25.
  37. ^ a b Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: p. 260. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 630–632.
  38. ^ a b Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: p. 260. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22.
  39. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: p. 260. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22. See also: Barrow 1990: p. 139. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 630–632.
  40. ^ a b c Barrow 1990: p. 139.
  41. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: p. 260. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22. See also: Barrow 1990: p. 139. See also: Barrow 1981: p. 118.
  42. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: p. 260. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 633–634.
  43. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 114. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 634–639.
  44. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 261, 262 caption. See also: McDonald 1997: p. 114. See also: Anderson 1922: pp. 639–642.
  45. ^ Margaret's Law, Haco's Tomb, Haylie, CANMORE, retrieved 16 May 2012
  46. ^ Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 19 caption, 21.
  47. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 260–261. See also: McDonald 1997: p. 115. See also: Cowan 1990: pp. 104, 122. See also: Barrow 1981: pp. 118–119. See also: Anderson 1922: p. 635.
  48. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 115.
  49. ^ McDonald 1997: p. 115. See also: Barrow 1981: pp. 118–119.
  50. ^ McDonald 1997: pp. 115–116. See also: Duncan 1996: pp. 580–581.
  51. ^ McDonald 1997: pp. 120–121.
  52. ^ "The last battle of the Vikings". BBC News Scotland. 14 December 2012. Retrieved 4 March 2013.
  53. ^ James MacKay, William Wallace, Brave Heart, Mainstream Publishing: Edinburgh 1995
  54. ^ Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22.
  55. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 263–264. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22. See also: Barrow 1990: p. 138. See also: Stevenson 1835: p. 190.
  56. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 263–264. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22. See also: Anderson 1922: p. 608.
  57. ^ a b c Forte; Oram; Pedersen 2005: pp. 263–264. See also: Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22.
  58. ^ Reid 1990: p. 188. See also: Skene 1872a: pp. 299–230. See also: Skene 1872b: p. 295.
  59. ^ Reid 1990: p. 191. See also: Laing 1872: pp. 255–257.
  60. ^ Boardman 2002: p. 66. See also: Reid 1990: p. 192.
  61. ^ Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–18.
  62. ^ Magnusson 2003: p. 100. See also: "Largs Viking Festival 29th August to 5th September 2009", LargsOnline.co.uk, retrieved 24 May 2012, The Largs Viking Festival takes place every August/September in Largs, to commemorate the 1263 Battle of Largs when the Vikings were defeated for the final time on the shore of Largs. See also: "Largs Viking Festival", Largs Viking Festival 2013, retrieved 1 February 2013, Our Festival takes place every year and draws crowds from near and far to celebrate the Viking heritage in Largs, notably the Battle of Largs of 1263 which was the scene of the last Viking invasion in the UK and led to the Treaty of Perth in 1266 when Norway ceded all claim to the Western Isles.
  63. ^ a b Raiders of the Norse Largs, The Scotsman, 31 August 2005, retrieved 20 March 2012
  64. ^ a b c d e Magnusson 2003: pp. 99–100.
  65. ^ Magnusson 2003: pp. 99–100. See also: Largs, Battle of Largs Monument, Canmore, retrieved 20 March 2012
  66. ^ Magnusson 2003: pp. 99–100. See also: Raiders of the Norse Largs, The Scotsman, 31 August 2005, retrieved 20 March 2012
  67. ^ a b c (Historic Environment Scotland & LB37177)
  68. ^ Close 1992: p. 82. See also: (Historic Environment Scotland & LB37177)
  69. ^ Magnusson 2003: pp. 99–100. See also: (Historic Environment Scotland & LB37177)
  70. ^ Largs, Battle of Largs Monument, Canmore, retrieved 20 March 2012
  71. ^ Great Cumbrae Island, Craigenmour, Canmore, retrieved 23 June 2012
  72. ^ Largs, Green Hill, Canmore, retrieved 26 March 2012
  73. ^ Alexander; Neighbour; Oram 2000: pp. 17–22. See also: Largs, Green Hill, Canmore, retrieved 20 March 2012
  74. ^ Scotland's Battlefields Inventory completed, Historic Scotland, 20 December 2012, retrieved 1 February 2013.
  75. ^ Ritchie 1993: p. 130.
  76. ^ , largsvikingfestival.com, archived from the original on 5 March 2012, retrieved 26 March 2012
  77. ^ Crawford 2009: p. 436. See also: Cowan 1990: pp. 103, 126–127 fn 3.
  78. ^ Cowan 1990: pp. 126–127 fn 3.
  79. ^ Clunies Ross; Collins 2004. See also: Cowan 1990: pp. 126–127 fn 3.
  80. ^ Couper 2004. See also: Cowan 1990: pp. 126–127 fn 3.
  81. ^ Palmer 2004. See also: Cowan 1990: pp. 126–127 fn 3.
  82. ^ Cumming 2004. See also: Murphy 2001: p. 107.

Bibliography edit

Primary edit

  • Anderson, Alan Orr, ed. (1922), Early Sources of Scottish History: a.d. 500 to 1286, vol. 2, Oliver and Boyd.
  • Laing, David, ed. (1872), The Orygynale Cronykil of Scotland, vol. 2, Edmonston and Douglas.
  • Skene, William Forbes, ed. (1872a), John of Fordun's Chronicle of the Scottish Nation, vol. 1, Edmonston and Douglas.
  • Skene, William Forbes, ed. (1872b), John of Fordun's Chronicle of the Scottish Nation, vol. 2, Edmonston and Douglas.
  • Stevenson, Joseph, ed. (1835), Chronica de Mailros, Typis Societatis Edinburgensis.
  • Neville, Grant and Cynthia, ed. (2012), Acts of Alexander III King of Scots 1249–1286 (Regesta Regnum Scottorum IV), Edinburgh University Press.

Secondary edit

battle, largs, this, article, lead, section, long, please, read, length, guidelines, help, move, details, into, article, body, march, 2023, october, 1263, battle, between, kingdoms, norway, scotland, firth, clyde, near, largs, scotland, conflict, formed, part,. This article s lead section may be too long Please read the length guidelines and help move details into the article s body March 2023 The Battle of Largs 2 October 1263 was a battle between the kingdoms of Norway and Scotland on the Firth of Clyde near Largs Scotland The conflict formed part of the Norwegian expedition against Scotland in 1263 in which Haakon Haakonsson King of Norway attempted to reassert Norwegian sovereignty over the western seaboard of Scotland 1 Victory was achieved by the Scots with a crafty three tiered strategy on the part of the young Scottish king Alexander III plodding diplomacy forced the campaign to bad weather months and a ferocious storm ravaged the Norwegian fleet stripping it of many vessels and supplies and making the forces on the Scottish coast vulnerable to an attack that forced the Norwegians into a hasty retreat that was to end their 500 year history of invasion and leaving Scotland to consolidate its resources into building the nation Battle of LargsPart of the Scottish Norwegian WarDetail from William Hole s mural of the Battle of Largs in the Scottish National Portrait GalleryDate2 October 1263LocationLargs North Ayrshire Scotland55 47 33 N 4 52 04 W 55 7926 N 4 8679 W 55 7926 4 8679ResultInconclusive Favourable outcome for ScotlandBelligerentsKingdom of ScotlandKingdom of NorwayCommanders and leadersAlexander of DundonaldKing Haakon IVclass notpageimage Location within ScotlandShow map of ScotlandBattle of Largs Northern and Central Europe Show map of Northern and Central EuropeSince the beginning of the 12th century the Largs Ayrshire region of Scotland had lain at the periphery of the Norwegian realm ruled by magnates who recognised the overlordship of the kings of Norway In the mid 13th century two Scottish kings Alexander II and his son Alexander III attempted to incorporate the region into their own realm Following Alexander III s early failed attempts to purchase the islands from the Norwegian king the Scots launched military operations to end the issue altogether by asserting royal sovereignty over all of western Scotland Haakon responded to the Scottish aggression by leading a massive Norwegian fleet thought to number in the thousands of vessels that reached the Hebrides in the summer of 1263 Realizing that the Scots were tremendously outnumbered by an experienced and mobile enemy Alexander III sought a protracted diplomatic intervention that would buy time to acquire more troops and possibly force the Norwegians into the stormy autumn and winter months where an invasion could be stalled due to weather By late September Haakon s fleet occupied the Firth of Clyde and the temperate days such as they are on the western coast of Scotland was almost at an end When negotiations between the kingdoms broke down Haakon brought the bulk of his fleet to anchor off the Cumbraes poised to invade Scotland at a site of his choosing On the night of 1 October during a bout of stormy weather several Norwegian vessels were driven aground on the Ayrshire coast near present day Largs On 2 October while the Norwegians were salvaging their vessels the main Scottish army arrived on the scene Composed of infantry and cavalry the Scottish force was commanded by Alexander of Dundonald Steward of Scotland The Norwegians were gathered in two groups the larger main force on the beach and a small contingent atop a nearby mound The advance of the Scots threatened to divide the Norwegian forces so the contingent on the mound ran to rejoin their comrades on the beach below Seeing them running from the mound the Norwegians on the beach believed they were retreating and fled back towards the ships There was fierce fighting on the beach and the Scots took up a position on the mound formerly held by the Norwegians Late in the day the Norwegians recaptured the mound after several hours of skirmishing The Scots withdrew from the scene and the Norwegians reboarded their ships They returned the next morning to collect their dead With the weather deteriorating Haakon s fleet sailed to Orkney to overwinter As a result of the battle Scotland achieved the end of 500 years of Norse Viking depredations and invasions despite being tremendously outnumbered without a one sided military victory in the ensuing battle The victory caused the complete retreat of Norwegian forces from western Scotland and the realm entered a period of prosperity for almost 40 years 2 The tactical decision at Largs thus led to a sweeping strategic victory that ended in Scotland purchasing the Hebrides Islands and the Isle of Man in the Treaty of Perth 1266 The battle is commemorated in Largs by an early 20th century monument and festivities held there annually since the 1980s Contents 1 Context 2 Actions 3 Aftermath 4 Ramifications 5 Historiography 6 Commemoration 7 Notes 8 References 9 Bibliography 9 1 Primary 9 2 SecondaryContext edit nbsp The Norwegian realm in 1263 at about the time of the Battle of LargsFurther information Scandinavian Scotland Kingdom of the Isles and Scottish Norwegian War Viking depredations have been recorded in the British Isles since the late 8th century 3 and Scandinavian settlement on Scotland s western seaboard may have begun before the turn of the 9th century 4 Claims to this region by Norwegian kings date to the turn of the 12th century when Magnus Olafsson King of Norway d 1103 established himself in the Hebrides and the Isle of Man Mann Direct Norwegian control ended with Magnus death after which the Hebrides and Mann 5 known to the Norwegians as the Southern Isles 6 were controlled by local dynasties for over a century and a half 5 In the first half of the 13th century the seaboard was controlled by two main power blocks one consisting of the Mann Lewis and Harris and Skye controlled by the patrilineal descendants of Godred Crovan d 1095 the other consisting of mainland territories in Argyll and the islands of Islay Jura Mull and possibly Uist controlled by the descendants of Somerled d 1164 7 As part of the far flung early 13th century Norwegian realm these island rulers recognised the overlordship of Haakon Haakonarson King of Norway d 1263 8 The first half of the 13th century was a period of consolidation for both Scottish and Norwegian kings 9 The Norwegians under Haakon overcame a period of internal strife from 1161 to 1208 10 and oversaw the submission of the Faroe Islands the Greenland settlements and Iceland in the mid 13th century 11 The Scots under Alexander II King of Scots d 1249 extended royal authority into the northern Highlands Argyll and Galloway 12 The king also wanted to incorporate the western seaboard into the Scottish realm 13 In 1230 Scottish aggression against the Isles and interference forced the Norwegian king to pacify the region In 1249 after attempting to purchase the Isles from Haakon Alexander II launched a campaign of his own deep into Argyll and into the Hebrides Unfortunately for the Scots their king died suddenly on the verge of conquest 14 Since his son and successor Alexander III d 1286 was only a boy at the time the Scottish realm suffered through a lengthy and troubled minority 15 In consequence it wasn t until the 1260s that the king looked west and attempted to finish what his father had so nearly accomplished 12 In 1262 a year after another unsuccessful attempt to purchase the Isles Scottish forces launched an attack upon Skye Haakon s response to the invasion was to mastermind a massive military expedition of his own 16 Described by the Icelandic Annals as the largest force to have ever set sail from Norway 17 the fleet reached the Isles in the summer of 1263 7 After receiving only a lukewarm reception from his vassals in the region Haakon s forces reached the Firth of Clyde after his men had secured several castles and undertook raids into the surrounding mainland With the Norwegian fleet anchored off Arran the Norwegians and Scottish embassies fiercely debated the sovereignty of the Islands of the Clyde When talks broke down Haakon dispatched a fleet of Islesmen to raid into Loch Lomond and to ravage Lennox Meanwhile the main Norwegian fleet repositioned itself between the Cumbraes and the Ayrshire coast 18 Actions edit nbsp Haakon s ships depicted on William Hole s mural in the Scottish National Portrait Gallery nbsp nbsp Left a 14th century folio containing part of Hakonar saga Hakonarsonar Right a folio from the earliest manuscript form of the Chronicle of Melrose The main Norwegian source for the battle is Hakonar saga Hakonarsonar 7 a contemporary account of the life of Hakon Haakonarson King of Norway d 1263 composed by the Icelandic historian Sturla Thordarson d 1284 19 Although the saga describes the events purely from the Norwegian perspective its narrative of the battle appears to have been drawn from eyewitness accounts and it is the most detailed source available for the Scottish Norwegian conflict given that many contemporary Scottish archival holdings are lost to history 7 A contemporary Scottish perspective of the events is preserved in a brief entry in the Chronicle of Melrose First penned at Melrose Abbey in the last quarter of the 12th century the chronicle was further extended and supplemented from time to time into the late 13th century It is an important historical source for the mediaeval Scottish realm Clan and remaining royal records of property and titles subsequent to the event are also informative 20 While lying off the Cumbraes on the night of 30 September Haakon s fleet was battered by stormy weather During the night the saga records that a merchantman dragged its anchor and was driven aground The following morning it and four other vessels were floated off by the rising tide but carried by the current towards the Scottish mainland where they ran aground again The crews of the beached vessels were soon harassed by a small force of Scots armed with bows After the Norwegians had suffered some casualties Haakon sent reinforcements ashore and the Scots fled the area Haakon s reinforcements remained ashore for the night and the Norwegian king himself came ashore to oversee the salvage operation the next morning 21 According to the saga the main Scottish force consisting of heavily armoured cavalry and infantry arrived on 2 October The saga numbers the mounted troops at about 500 and states that they rode high quality horses protected by mail 22 The use of a substantial force of mounted knights or sergeants appears to be corroborated in contemporary records of payments made to troops 23 For example Walter Stewart Earl of Menteith had to maintain 120 sergeants which could include knights mounted men at arms archers or other footsoldiers at Ayr Castle for three weeks 24 Although surviving records fail to mention the number of knights assembled at Ayr the record of wages suggests that it was more than a mere handful 23 According to the saga the Scottish infantry were armed with bows and Irish axes 22 and since at one point the Scots are said to have thrown stones at the Norwegians 25 the Scottish army must have also included slingers The Latin Chronicle of Melrose simply describes the Scottish infantry as pedisequi patrie the foot sloggers of the locality 26 If this description refers to the men of the surrounding countryside the Scottish infantry would have been made up of men from the common army drawn only from Strathgryffe Cunninghame and Kyle These levies would have been mustered by the Sheriff of Ayr the Sheriff of Lanark and the local magnates 27 At the time of Largs the Scottish king thus had at his disposal men from the common army lesser men who owed service to their king the feudal host greater men who owed military service for their lands and also paid troops 28 nbsp Area of conflictThe evidence suggests that the main Scottish force arrived from the south rather than from the east or the north For example Alexander III is recorded to have been south at Ayr in September 29 and the power centre of Alexander of Dundonald Steward of Scotland d 1282 who is thought to have commanded the Scottish forces at the battle 30 was also located to the south Furthermore at the time of the battle the Sheriff of Ayr was probably a member of the steward s family 29 probably his younger brother the Earl of Menteith 31 note 1 If the Scots had indeed arrived from the south then they would have also assembled at a mustering site to the south possibly somewhere near Ayr 29 The saga indicates that the Norwegians were divided into two groups The smaller force numbered 200 men was stationed on a mound somewhat inland from the beach under the command of a Norwegian nobleman Ogmund Crouchdance The main Norwegian force numbering about 700 to 800 men including Haakon himself was stationed on the beach below 33 These two detachments were likely only a fraction of the total number of forces at Haakon s disposal The numbers that the saga allows for either side may be exaggerated A more likely number may be only about one hundred or several hundred men per side with the number of knights present may have been closer to 50 than the saga s 500 34 The forces which Haakon had mustered in Norway formed part of his realm s leidang 35 a naval levy in which districts contributed men ships and provisions for military service 36 nbsp Alexander III s seal illustrates the armament of a contemporary mounted knight As the Scots advanced towards the Norwegians the saga indicates that Ogmund withdrew his troops from the mound to avoid being cut off from his comrades on the beach below 37 If the Scots had indeed marched northwards their advance would have threatened to drive a wedge between the Norwegians on the mound and those on the beach 38 Once the Scottish vanguard came into contact with Ogmund s men the saga indicates that his orderly withdrawal disintegrated into a chaotic scramble On the beach below Haakon followed the advice of his men and retired to the safety of his ships To the men on the beach the rapid descent of Ogmund s men towards them looked like an all out retreat they turned and fled The Norwegian army was thus routed and in the mad dash back to their ships they suffered substantial casualties 37 Some of the Norwegians may have used the beached vessels as makeshift fortifications 38 since the saga notes that a group of them made a bold stand by their ships out numbered ten to one in a fierce engagement in which a particularly valiant Scottish knight was slain 39 note 2 This entry confirms that at least some of the Scottish knights present were able to engage their foes on horseback 40 The supplies and usable ships lost on the beach were consequential in Haakom s decision to retreat from the area According to the saga the Scots then withdrew from the beach and consolidated atop the mound abandoned by Ogmund s men who had been beaten back by a detachment of men under Sir Robert Boyd father of William Wallace s second in command Minor skirmishing followed in which both sides attacked each other with arrows and stones Before nightfall the saga maintains that the Norwegians made one last determined assault and forced the Scots from the mound before making an orderly withdrawal to their ships On the morning of 3 October the Norwegians returned ashore to collect their dead and burn their beached vessels 42 For several days Haakon s forces laid off the coast of Arran After rendezvousing with the returning fleet that had plundered Lennox Haakon s entire forces made for the Hebrides At Mull he rewarded a number of his Norse Gaelic vassals with grants of lands By the end of October the Norwegian fleet reached Orkney 43 In mid December the Norwegian king fell ill and died at the Bishop s Palace and was temporarily buried in nearby St Magnus Cathedral 44 Aftermath edit nbsp This Neolithic chambered cairn near Largs is sometimes known as Haco s Tomb 45 Local tombs such as this were once believed to have been erected as grave markers for warriors slain during the battle 46 The saga described the Norwegian campaign as a triumph In reality it had not achieved anything 47 though the expedition was not lost at Largs Haakon simply sailed to Orkney to overwinter with his forces He unexpectedly fell ill and died there before he had the chance to resume operations The campaign had started too late and the Scottish king had successfully prolonged negotiations to his own advantage As the summer turned to autumn and the royal envoys parleyed back and forth Alexander III had further strengthened his forces in the defence of his realm and left Haakon s fleet to the mercy of the deteriorating weather 48 In the end the Scottish realm had successfully defended itself from Norwegian might and many of Haakon s Norse Gaelic vassals had been reluctant to support the Norwegian cause 49 Within months of the abortive campaign embassies were sent from Norway to discuss terms of peace Meanwhile Alexander III seized the initiative and made ready to punish the magnates who had supported Haakon By the end of the year the Hebrideans and Manx were forced to submit to the Scots 50 In 1266 almost three years after the battle terms of peace were finally agreed upon between the Scottish and Norwegian kings On 2 July 1266 with the conclusion of the Treaty of Perth the Hebrides and Mann were leased to the King of Scots in return for an annual payment As it happened Norwegian rule over the Hebrides would never return with the Kingdom of Scotland eventually discontinuing their payments to the Norwegian crown 51 The treaty also entailed Scottish acceptance of Norwegian rule over Orkney and Shetland 52 Ramifications editThe battle of Largs has been characterized by later historians as a great Scottish victory but its strategic ramifications far outstripped its tactical cost as it involved only a small part of the Norwegian fleet With his fleet and forces strewn about the Hebrides Haakon fully intended to continue to campaign after spending the winter in Orkney and reconcentrating his forces but he was taken ill in the dismal climate and died there His illness is thought to have been caused in part by the stresses he endured in the long campaign and the difficult damp environment of the Orkney Islands The protracted diplomacy that had slowed his invasion had ultimately helped seal his own fate as well With Haakon s death his successor Magnus Haakonarson King of Norway signed the Treaty of Perth three years after the battle leasing Scotland s western seaboard to Alexander III in return for a yearly payment This lease became permanent but the Kingdom of Scotland eventually stopped paying the Norwegian crown for the islands when Norway became distracted by civil wars Although the Battle of Largs contemporary records were largely lost to history with the loss of the Scottish archives in the wars of independence it is for historians today to judge it by its ultimate easily understood consequence the end of a multi century era of Norse invasion The Battle greatly influenced clan history especially that of the Boyds Cunninghams and Muirs all of which point directly to participation in this battle as key to the grant of lands in Ayrshire In the case of the Boyd family its motto Confido I Trust was a direct quote from Alexander III at Largs 53 Alexander III depended on Boyd s detachment to keep the Norwegians off Gold Berry Hill and enveloped on the beach The name Gold Berry was placed under their early heraldic devices Historiography editThe significance of the Battle was understood in Scotland at the time as it led to years of consolidation of royal authority Unfortunately many original sources and manuscripts were lost during the many years of fighting with the English especially Edward I see Jonathan Donald 2019 Scotland LE School of History University of St Andrews Alexander III 1249 1286 First Among Equals See also Acts of Alexander III King of Scots 1249 1286 See also 54 The Chronicle of Melrose offers only a brief description and does not record its location It ascribes the campaign s failure more to the power of God than to that of the Scots 55 The battle is not recorded at all within the Chronicle of Mann 56 or any Irish source and English sources show a similar lack of interest But by the 14th and 15th centuries the battle was being portrayed as part of an epic struggle between an invading force of Norwegians and an idealised Scottish king defending his realm 57 note 3 By the 17th century the battle had lost its attributed significance but in the 19th century it was rediscovered by antiquarians and historians who transformed it into a conflict of international importance 57 Although the battle s upsurge in popularity at this time may be due to the tapping of Largs tourism potential it was also influenced by the general heightening of interest in Scotland s history and culture The battle became associated with Scotland s proud military past and linked to the great mediaeval victories of national heroes such as Wallace and Bruce 61 Most modern academics do not subscribe to such a view though they regard the battle as a significant part of the failed Norwegian campaign 57 But even today to the locals of Largs the battle represents a glorious Scottish victory over invading Vikings 62 Commemoration edit nbsp The Pencil stands about 1 mile 1 6 km south of Largs along a shoreline footpath 63 On 12 July 1912 the battle was commemorated at Largs with the unveiling of a newly built stone tower 64 Popularly known as The Pencil 65 this 70 feet 21 m tall 66 pencil shaped conical roofed tower is built out of ashlar blocks of whinstone 67 Constructed by architect James Sandyford Kay 68 at the cost of nearly 300 64 the tower was modelled after mediaeval round towers at Abernethy and Brechin 69 which were thought erroneously to have been built as redoubts against Viking marauders 64 note 4 The Pencil has been protected as a listed building since 1971 67 and stands about 1 mile 1 6 km south of Largs 63 at grid reference NS 20762 57679 70 overlooking the local marina 64 Although the monument marks the traditional battle site it stands nowhere near the probable battle site Its erroneous placement appears to be due to the discovery of prehistoric burials consisting of both chambered tombs and cist burials Nearby Bronze Age standing stones may have been interpreted as memorials to slain warriors as was a nearby Neolithic tomb The location of this tomb has led to the erroneous association between the battle and the two parks situated at grid reference NS 209587 and grid reference NS 207587 The Ordnance Survey also locates the battle too far south at grid reference NS 207587 7 note 5 The probable site of the mound upon which the Norwegians and Scots fought is not commemorated at all 7 Located at grid reference NS 2073 5932 72 and surrounded by a housing development the mound is crowned by a 19th century monument known as The Three Sisters which may have been erected by astronomer Thomas Brisbane 73 In recent years the battle site has been one of fifty battlefields researched by the Centre for Battlefield Archaeology and Historic Scotland for inclusion in the Inventory of Scottish Battlefields The inventory established in 2009 is intended to protect preserve and promote Scotland s most significant battlefields under the Scottish Historical Environment Policy The site of the Battle of Largs was one of eleven investigated sites that did not meet the criteria for inclusion 74 Each autumn since 1981 the village of Largs has hosted the Largs Viking Festival founded to celebrate the battle and to encourage tourism 75 A re enactment of the battle held onsite at The Pencil forms part of the festivities 76 The battle is the subject of John Galt s d 1839 The Battle of Largs a Gothic Poem written about 1804 Not regarded as one of Galt s better literary works 77 this poem was almost certainly based on James Johnstone s d 1798 The Norwegian Account of Haco s Expedition Against Scotland A D MCCLXIII published in 1782 78 note 6 The battle is also commemorated within one of William Hole s d 1917 massive murals which can be viewed in the foyer of the Scottish National Portrait Gallery 82 Notes edit Walter was certainly sheriff by 1264 and probably held the position earlier 32 The saga identifies the knight as Perus Although it is possible that this name could refer to Fergus a name borne by the family of Ardrossan it is more likely that it refers to Peter or Piers 40 perhaps Piers de Curry 41 The 15th century Scottish chronicler Walter Bower identified the slain knight as such and adding credibility to Bower s account is the fact that a like named early 13th century man possibly an ancestor of the slain knight is known to have been a vassal and tenant of the Steward of Scotland in the parish of Mauchline 40 John of Fordun briefly described the storm which drove the Norwegians ashore as an act of God 58 About half a century later Andrew of Wyntoun depicted the battle as a hard fought and well earned Scottish victory 59 Walter Bower declared that Saint Margaret miraculously intervened to defend the Scots against the Norwegians 60 The door of the monument is a replica of that on the tower at Brechin 67 Not long after The Pencil was built it was locally supposed that Viking warriors had once used the Largs tower to store their weapons 64 In the mid 19th century a standing stone at Craigenmour on Great Cumbrae was said to have been a memorial raised for Norwegians killed at the battle Today the stone is locally known as the Druid s stone 71 Johnstone s work is one of the first albeit partial English translations of an Icelandic saga 79 Galt himself stated that his poem was inspired by John Pinkerton s d 1826 controversial A Dissertation on the Origin and Progress of the Scythians or Goths published in 1787 80 as well as Thomas Percy s d 1811 translation of Paul Henri Mallet s Introduction a l histoire du Dannemarc published in 1770 81 References edit 2012 Edinburgh University Press Acts of Alexander III King of Scots 1249 1286 Regesta Regnum Scottorum IV Grant and Cynthia Neville Jonathan Donald 2019 Scotland LE School of History University of St Andrews Alexander III 1249 1286 First Among Equals McDonald 1997 p 25 McDonald 1997 p 27 a b Woolf 2004 p 101 See also Crawford 2001 pp 556 558 Williams 2007 pp 130 132 fn 8 a b c d e f Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 Beuermann 2007 pp 99 123 Cowan 1990 p 124 Barrow 1981 p 101 Power 2005 p 50 a b Stringer 2004 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 253 254 See also Stringer 2004 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 Stringer 2004 Reid 2004 See also Stringer 2004 Reid 2004 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 McDonald 1997 p 107 See also Anderson 1922 p 607 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 257 258 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 Cowan 1990 pp 103 104 106 Doherty 2011 p 101 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 258 259 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 See also Anderson 1922 pp 626 628 a b Barrow 1990 p 139 See also Anderson 1922 pp 628 630 a b Barrow 1990 pp 139 141 142 Brown 2004 p 57 See also Barrow 1990 pp 139 141 142 Barrow 1990 p 139 See also See also Anderson 1922 p 630 Duncan 1996 pp 379 579 580 See also Barrow 1990 p 139 See also Stevenson 1835 p 190 Barrow 1990 p 138 Brown 2004 p 57 a b c Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 259 260 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 259 260 See also Barrow 2004 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 See also Young 1990 p 15 Brown 2004 pp 56 57 See also Barrow 1990 p 138 See also Cowan 1990 p 121 Young 1990 pp 10 15 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 p 259 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 Duncan 1996 pp 579 580 580 fn 20 Derry 2000 p 49 Derry 2000 p 25 a b Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 p 260 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 See also Anderson 1922 pp 630 632 a b Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 p 260 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 p 260 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 See also Barrow 1990 p 139 See also Anderson 1922 pp 630 632 a b c Barrow 1990 p 139 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 p 260 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 See also Barrow 1990 p 139 See also Barrow 1981 p 118 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 p 260 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 See also Anderson 1922 pp 633 634 McDonald 1997 p 114 See also Anderson 1922 pp 634 639 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 261 262 caption See also McDonald 1997 p 114 See also Anderson 1922 pp 639 642 Margaret s Law Haco s Tomb Haylie CANMORE retrieved 16 May 2012 Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 19 caption 21 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 260 261 See also McDonald 1997 p 115 See also Cowan 1990 pp 104 122 See also Barrow 1981 pp 118 119 See also Anderson 1922 p 635 McDonald 1997 p 115 McDonald 1997 p 115 See also Barrow 1981 pp 118 119 McDonald 1997 pp 115 116 See also Duncan 1996 pp 580 581 McDonald 1997 pp 120 121 The last battle of the Vikings BBC News Scotland 14 December 2012 Retrieved 4 March 2013 James MacKay William Wallace Brave Heart Mainstream Publishing Edinburgh 1995 Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 263 264 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 See also Barrow 1990 p 138 See also Stevenson 1835 p 190 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 263 264 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 See also Anderson 1922 p 608 a b c Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 263 264 See also Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 Reid 1990 p 188 See also Skene 1872a pp 299 230 See also Skene 1872b p 295 Reid 1990 p 191 See also Laing 1872 pp 255 257 Boardman 2002 p 66 See also Reid 1990 p 192 Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 18 Magnusson 2003 p 100 See also Largs Viking Festival 29th August to 5th September 2009 LargsOnline co uk retrieved 24 May 2012 The Largs Viking Festival takes place every August September in Largs to commemorate the 1263 Battle of Largs when the Vikings were defeated for the final time on the shore of Largs See also Largs Viking Festival Largs Viking Festival 2013 retrieved 1 February 2013 Our Festival takes place every year and draws crowds from near and far to celebrate the Viking heritage in Largs notably the Battle of Largs of 1263 which was the scene of the last Viking invasion in the UK and led to the Treaty of Perth in 1266 when Norway ceded all claim to the Western Isles a b Raiders of the Norse Largs The Scotsman 31 August 2005 retrieved 20 March 2012 a b c d e Magnusson 2003 pp 99 100 Magnusson 2003 pp 99 100 See also Largs Battle of Largs Monument Canmore retrieved 20 March 2012 Magnusson 2003 pp 99 100 See also Raiders of the Norse Largs The Scotsman 31 August 2005 retrieved 20 March 2012 a b c Historic Environment Scotland amp LB37177 Close 1992 p 82 See also Historic Environment Scotland amp LB37177 Magnusson 2003 pp 99 100 See also Historic Environment Scotland amp LB37177 Largs Battle of Largs Monument Canmore retrieved 20 March 2012 Great Cumbrae Island Craigenmour Canmore retrieved 23 June 2012 Largs Green Hill Canmore retrieved 26 March 2012 Alexander Neighbour Oram 2000 pp 17 22 See also Largs Green Hill Canmore retrieved 20 March 2012 Scotland s Battlefields Inventory completed Historic Scotland 20 December 2012 retrieved 1 February 2013 Ritchie 1993 p 130 Largs Viking Festival History largsvikingfestival com archived from the original on 5 March 2012 retrieved 26 March 2012 Crawford 2009 p 436 See also Cowan 1990 pp 103 126 127 fn 3 Cowan 1990 pp 126 127 fn 3 Clunies Ross Collins 2004 See also Cowan 1990 pp 126 127 fn 3 Couper 2004 See also Cowan 1990 pp 126 127 fn 3 Palmer 2004 See also Cowan 1990 pp 126 127 fn 3 Cumming 2004 See also Murphy 2001 p 107 Bibliography editPrimary edit Anderson Alan Orr ed 1922 Early Sources of Scottish History a d 500 to 1286 vol 2 Oliver and Boyd Laing David ed 1872 The Orygynale Cronykil of Scotland vol 2 Edmonston and Douglas Skene William Forbes ed 1872a John of Fordun s Chronicle of the Scottish Nation vol 1 Edmonston and Douglas Skene William Forbes ed 1872b John of Fordun s Chronicle of the Scottish Nation vol 2 Edmonston and Douglas Stevenson Joseph ed 1835 Chronica de Mailros Typis Societatis Edinburgensis Neville Grant and Cynthia ed 2012 Acts of Alexander III King of Scots 1249 1286 Regesta Regnum Scottorum IV Edinburgh University Press Secondary edit Alexander Derek Neighbour Tim Oram Richard D 2000 Glorious victory The battle of Largs 2 October 1263 History Scotland vol 2 pp 17 22 Barrow Geoffrey Wallis Steuart 1981 Kingship and Unity Scotland 1000 1306 University of Toronto Press ISBN 0 8020 6448 5 Barrow Geoffrey Wallis Steuart 1990 The army of Alexander III s Scotland in Reid Norman H ed Scotland in the Reign of Alexander III 1249 1286 John Donald pp 132 147 ISBN 0 85976218 1 Barrow Geoffrey Wallis Steuart 2004 Stewart family per c 1110 c 1350 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 49411 Retrieved 5 July 2011 Subscription or UK public library membership required Beuermann Ian 2010 Norgesveldet south of Cape Wrath in Imsen Steinar ed The Norwegian Domination and the Norse World c 1100 c 1400 Norgesveldt occasional papers Trondheim studies in history Tapir Academic Press pp 99 123 ISBN 978 82 519 2563 1 Boardman Steve 2002 Late medieval Scotland and the matter of Britain in Cowan Edward J Finlay Richard J eds Scottish History the Power of the Past Edinburgh University Press pp 47 72 ISBN 978 0 7486 1420 2 Brown Michael 2004 The Wars of Scotland 1214 1371 The new Edinburgh history of Scotland Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0748612383 Close Rob 1992 Ayrshire amp Arran an Illustrated Architectural Guide Royal Incorporation of Architects in Scotland ISBN 978 1873190067 Clunies Ross Margaret Collins Amanda J 2004 Johnstone James d 1798 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online January 2008 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 14962 Retrieved 31 March 2012 Subscription or UK public library membership required Couper Sarah 2004 Pinkerton John 1758 1826 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online May 2008 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 22301 Retrieved 31 March 2012 Subscription or UK public library membership required Cowan Edward J 1990 Norwegian Sunset Scottish Dawn Haakon IV and Alexander III in Reid Norman H ed Scotland in the Reign of Alexander III 1249 1286 John Donald pp 103 131 ISBN 0 85976218 1 Crawford Barbara Elizabeth 2001 Scandinavia 1 to 1312 in Lynch Michael ed The Oxford Companion the Scottish History Oxford University Press pp 556 558 ISBN 978 0 19 211696 3 Crawford Robert 2009 Scotland s Books a History of Scottish Literature Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199888979 Cumming Elizabeth S 2004 Hole William Fergusson Brassey 1846 1917 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography October 2009 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 100749 Retrieved 4 April 2012 Subscription or UK public library membership required Derry T K 2000 History of Scandinavia Norway Sweden Denmark Finland and Iceland University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 3799 7 Doherty H F 2011 2007 Broun Dauvit Harrison Julian eds The Chronicle of Melrose Abbey A stratigraphic edition vol i introduction and facsimile edition The Innes Review Woodbridge Scottish History Society 62 101 107 doi 10 3366 inr 2011 0008 ISBN 978 0 906245 29 3 ISSN 0020 157X Duncan Archibald Alexander McBeth 1996 Scotland the Making of the Kingdom The Edinburgh History of Scotland Mercat Press ISBN 0 901824 83 6 Forte Angelo Oram Richard D Pedersen Frederik 2005 Viking Empires Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82992 2 Historic Environment Scotland LARGS BATTLE MONUMENT THE PENCIL Category B Listed Building LB37177 Retrieved 13 March 2019 Magnusson Magnus 2003 Scotland the Story of a Nation Grove Press ISBN 978 0802139320 McDonald Russell Andrew 1997 The Kingdom of the Isles Scotland s Western Seaboard c 1100 c 1336 Scottish Historical Monographs Tuckwell Press ISBN 1 898410 85 2 Murphy Alan 2001 Edinburgh Handbook the Travel Guide Footprint Handbooks ISBN 978 1900949972 Palmer Roy 2004 Percy Thomas 1729 1811 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 online May 2006 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 21959 Retrieved 31 March 2012 Subscription or UK public library membership required Power Rosemary 2005 Meeting in Norway Norse Gaelic relations in the kingdom of Man and the Isles 1090 1270 PDF Saga Book 29 5 66 ISSN 0305 9219 archived from the original PDF on 12 April 2013 Reid Norman H 1990 Alexander III the historiography of a myth in Reid Norman H ed Scotland in the Reign of Alexander III 1249 1286 John Donald pp 183 213 ISBN 0 85976218 1 Reid Norman H 2004 Alexander III 1241 1286 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Vol 1 online May 2011 ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 323 Retrieved 5 July 2011 Subscription or UK public library membership required Ritchie Anna 1993 Viking Scotland B T Batsford ISBN 978 0713472257 Stringer Keith John 2004 Alexander II 1198 1249 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 322 Retrieved 5 July 2011 Subscription or UK public library membership required Young Alan 1990 Noble families and political factions in the reign of Alexander III in Reid Norman H ed Scotland in the Reign of Alexander III 1249 1286 John Donald pp 1 30 ISBN 0 85976218 1 Williams Gareth 2007 These people were high born and thought a lot of themselves a family of Moddan of Dale in Smith Beverley Ballin Taylor Simon Williams Gareth eds West Over the Sea Studies in Scandinavian Sea Borne Expansion and Settlement before 1300 The Northern World North Europe and the Baltic c 400 1700 a d Peoples Economics and Cultures vol 31 Brill pp 129 152 ISBN 978 90 04 15893 1 ISSN 1569 1462 Woolf Alex 2004 The age of sea kings 900 1300 in Omand Donald ed The Argyll Book Birlinn pp 94 109 ISBN 978 1 84158 253 5 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Battle of Largs amp oldid 1193050562, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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