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Murder of Hugh Montgomerie

The Murder of Hugh Montgomerie, 4th Earl of Eglinton at the Annick Ford in Stewarton, East Ayrshire, Scotland, took place in 1586 as a consequence of a long running feud between the Montgomeries, Earls of Eglinton and the Cunninghames, Earls of Glencairn, families who were competing for power and influence locally and nationally.[2] The significant repercussions of this act were felt throughout the county of Ayrshire and beyond. The spelling 'Montgomerie' is used throughout for both the family and Montgomery for the clan and clan and district names 'Cunninghame' in the same fashion.

Murder of Hugh Montgomerie, 4th Earl of Eglinton
Lainshaw Castle in the 17th century
Born1563
Died1586 (aged 22–23)
Cause of deathBlood loss due to bullet wound and multiple stabbings
Resting placeKilwinning Abbey
NationalityScottish
CitizenshipBritish
Occupation(s)Landowner and Scottish peer
Parent(s)Hugh Montgomerie, 3rd Earl of Eglinton and Agnes Drummond of Inchpeffrey[1]
Eglinton Castle

Historical background edit

The Baillieship of Cunninghame had long been in the hands of the Cunninghames, Earls of Glencairn, however at around the date 1448 the Crown conferred the Baillieship on the head of the House of Montgomerie (de Mon' Gubri), Earls of Eglinton. This act inevitably caused resentment and resulted in a bloody feud that ran on for centuries. At one point Kerelaw Castle was burned and the Earl of Glencairn retaliated by burning Eglinton Castle although the Earl of Eglinton had escaped to Ardrossan Castle, an impressive fortress until comparatively recent times when Oliver Cromwell had much of its stonework removed and shipped to Ayr to build his new fort. Edward Cunninghame of Auchenharvie was slain in 1526 and Archibald Cunninghame of Waterstoun in 1528.[2]

The murder edit

 
The 1764 coat of arms of the Montgomeries, Earls of Eglinton.

On 18 April 1586, Hugh Montgomerie, 4th Earl of Eglinton, aged twenty-four, was travelling to Stirling to join the court having been commanded to attend by the King, accompanied only by a few domestic servants. He stopped at Lainshaw Castle to dine with his close relative, Neil Montgomerie, who was Lord of Lainshaw and whose Lady was an Elizabeth Cunninghame of Aiket, with sisters married to John Cunninghame of Corsehill and David Cunninghame of Robertland.[2] It seems that a plot to kill the Earl as an act of revenge had been organised and the Lady, or some say a servant girl who was also a Cunninghame,[3] climbed to the battlements after the meal to hang out a white table napkin and thereby spring the plot. Thirty Cunninghames attacked the Earl at the Bridgend Ford and cut his servants to pieces with swords and other weapons, the Earl himself being finally dispatched with a single shot from the pistol of John Cunninghame of Clonbeith Castle. His horse carried his dead body along the side of the river, still known as the 'Weeping', 'Mourning' or 'Widows' path. Kerr,[4] with local knowledge, states that the site of the crime was recently (1936) built over by a factory, so the site of the ford in question could not have been at the entrance to the Lainshaw Estate at David Dale Avenue, but at the Bridgend Ford instead.[5]

Upon the death of the 5th Earl of Eglinton the title passed to a cousin, Sir Alexander Seton. The main representation of the Montgomerie line therefore passed to the Lainshaw line and then to the Cockilbie branch.[5]

Aftermath edit

The murdered Earl was eventually taken to Lainshaw Castle, but in the meantime a wave of bloody revenge swept over the district of Cunninghame and elsewhere. Cunninghame friends, relatives and adherents were killed with little or no restraint.

 
The front entrance of Clonbeith Castle with the date 1617 carved above.

The Earl of Glencairn showed his lack of involvement by taking no action against the Montgomeries and by leaving his kinsmen to the full weight of the law. Aiket was killed near his home; Robertland and Corsehill escaped to Denmark. Clonbeith was traced to a house in Hamilton, possibly Hamilton Palace[6] and hacked to pieces by Robert Montgomerie and John Pollock of that Ilk. Clonbeith had hid within a chimney[7] Both Robertland and Corsehill were pardoned on the insistence of Queen Anne of Denmark upon her marriage to King James VI of Scotland, despite his earlier vow to bring them to justice. Robertland was employed as one of her Majesty's master stablers.[7] The properties of the guilty parties had been confiscated and given to the Montgomeries, however the estates were eventually returned in ruinous condition.

Lady Elizabeth Montgomerie was said to have fled to Ireland, however it seems that she remained close by,[7] living with an estate tenant, one Robert Barr and family at Pearce Bank (Peacockbank) farm, now High Peacockbank. She was eventually permitted to return to her husband and home, however she never again left the grounds of Lainshaw Castle and she avoided any contact with the Montgomerie family for the remainder of her days.

Alexander Cunninghame, the Commendator of Kilwinning Abbey, was shot and killed at his gate at Montgreenan by Sir Robert Montgomerie of Skelmorlie (better known for building the Skelmorlie Aisle as his burial place) on 1 August 1591, as a direct result of the assassination of the Fourth Earl of Eglinton at Stewarton in April of that year.[8]

Lady Elizabeth Montgomerie's ghost is said to haunt Lainshaw Castle, wandering the corridors wearing a green dress and carrying a candle.[2]

Other versions of the murder edit

 
Aiket Castle, home to Lady Montgomerie of Lainshaw.
 
A map of Robertland

William Robertson relates a very different tale, taken from the chronicle known as the Historie of King James the Sext,[9] that Cunninghame of Robertland spent two years developing a friendship with Hugh and despite warnings from Hugo, third Earl, eventually Hugh held Robertland in high esteem and close friendship, giving the opportunity for him to be caught off guard and cut down when attacked by sixty Cunninghame horseman. His servants had all left him to his fate. The site of this action is not recorded. Blair gives this version as well, stating that Cunninghame of Robertland was 'a very dear friend' and loved Earl Hugh 'as his own bedfellow'.

Chambers has Cunninghame of Robertland as the leading person in the affair, recording that "The Cunninghams, being grieved hereat, made presently a vow that they should be avenged upon the fattest of the Montgomeries for that fact."' The perpetrators all escaped unharmed 'beyond sea', but their lands and castles were awarded to the Earl's brother 'either to be demolished or otherwise'. Robertland himself fled to Denmark and was eventually pardoned by the King and returned to Scotland as her majesty's master stabler. The Earl was on no special journey and the Lady of Lainshaw is not mentioned in this version.[10]

George Robertson[11] gives yet another, 'traditional' version, in which Cunninghame of Clonbeith is stated as being at best an accessory, although he is still caught and killed in Hamilton. Here the Earl is on his way to a visit to the laird of Robertland Castle, but stops first for a meal at Lainshaw. The Laird of Lainshaw tries to dissuade him from continuing his journey, but to no avail and on his way back from Robertland he is met and murdered by Cunninghame of Aiket at a place called the Windy-path in Stewarton. He was shot and although dying he was able to stay in the saddle until he reached the Annick Ford where he fell from his horse and expired immediately. The Windy-path has been called the Mourning-path since that day. The date of this event is given as 12-05-1589, a date that does not fit with the 1586 date of the first version given.

 
The bridge and weir on the Annick Water below Lainshaw House.

Steven[12] states that "The ruins, nearly levelled by the hand of time, of the Castle of Robertland formerly stronghold of the Cunninghames, Baronets of Robertland, are situated behind the modern mansion of Alexander Kerr, esq. of Robertland. this stronghold, it is say, was destroyed by fire in a feud between the Montgomeries of Eglinton and the Cunninghames; in revenge for which, one of the Cunninghames shot the chief of the Eglintons, while riding home, near to Bridgend, at the east end of the town of Stewarton, where a path is still shown, called the " Weeping Path,"along which he rode, until he came to the ford of the Annock, at Bridgend in Stewarton, where he fell dead off his horse. This took place on 12 April 1586. in the person of Hugh, fourth Earl of Eglinton."

MacGachen (1844)[13] gives a confused version in the second collection of prose and verse named the 'Ayrshire Wreath'. The action in this version takes place at the 'Bridge of Annock', erroneously located over the Carmel Burn that is actually located in the Kilmaurs area. The Earl's manservant is wittily named as 'Archie Mucledrouth' and Cunninghame of Aiket is stated to have fired the fatal shot and as having been hunted down and 'cut to pieces' in Hamilton. Many of the Earl's retainers are said to have been killed, the 'stream' running red with their blood, giving a fisherman, a maiden and some children a nasty shock. Otherwise the story is much the same as the Robertson[14] version.

The authors Reilly and Metcalfe have a very different version and state that the earl was on his way from Polnone (Polnoon near Eaglesham) to tryst at Stirling, having travelled about six miles before being attacked and shot by the lairds of Robertland and Aiket, as well as other Cunninghames; no mention is made of the Montgomerie's of Lainshaw.[15][16]

 
The front entrance of Clonbeith Castle with the date 1617 carved above.
 
Montgreenan Castle or the Bishop's Palace.

Fullarton states that the murder was planned by the Earl of Glencairn and that Hugh was most cruelly, shamefully, and unmercifully murdered and slain by John Cunninghame of Reis (brother to the Earl of Glencairn); Alexander Cunninghame (brother of Cunninghame of Polquharne); John Cunninghame (servant to John Cunninghame); David Cunninghame of Robertland; Andrew Arnot of Lochrig; Robert Cunninghame of Kirkland; Alexander Cunninghame of Aiket; William Cunninghame of Aiket; Patrick Cunninghame of Bordland; Abraham Cunninghame (bastard son of Alexander of Clonbeith); John Reyburn of that Ilk; Patrick Cunninghame of Corsehill; John Cunninghame of Clonbeith; Mungo Mure of Rowallan; Alan Foulis in Fulshaw; David Maxwell of Kilmacolm; John Maxwell of Kilmacolm; John Brown in Gateside; David Fulton in Robertland; John Henry in Little Cutstraw; Robert Dick in Crockford; Robert Henry in Robertland; John Hart (servant to David of Robertland); Hugh White (servant to John of Clonbeith); Gilbert Dunlop (servant of Patrick of Baidland); Alexander Speir in Brome; and John Wylie in Roughside.[17]

McNaught records that a John Cunninghame, son of Patrick Cunninghame of Kirkland was a party to the murder.[18]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Robertson (1908), Page 58
  2. ^ a b c d Dobie
  3. ^ Robertson, William (1889). "Historical Tales of Ayrshire". Pub. Glasgow & London.
  4. ^ Kerr, T. Macfie (1936). The Bonnet Toun.
  5. ^ a b Montgomery, pages 18 - 19
  6. ^ Ker, Page 153.
  7. ^ a b c Paterson, V. IV, Page 37
  8. ^ Kilwinning Past & Present, Section 3.19
  9. ^ Thomas Thomson, Historie of King James the Sext (Edinburgh, 1825), pp. 238-40
  10. ^ Chambers, Pages 100 - 102.
  11. ^ Robertson, Page 329.
  12. ^ Steven
  13. ^ MacGachen, Pages 116 - 125.
  14. ^ Robertson (1889), Pages 295 - 305.
  15. ^ Reilly, Page 20
  16. ^ Metcalfe, Page 89
  17. ^ Fullarton, Page 157
  18. ^ McNaught, Page 21

Sources edit

  1. Adamson, Archibald R. (1875). Rambles Round Kilmarnock. Pub. Kilmarnock.
  2. Ainslie, John (1779), Lainshaw Estate Map.
  3. Aitken, John (1829). Survey of the Parishes of Cunningham. Pub. Beith.
  4. Barclay, Alistair. The Bonnet Toun.
  5. Blair, Anna (1983). Tales of Ayrshire. Pub. Shepheard-Walwyn. ISBN 0-85683-068-2.
  6. Campbell, Thorbjørn (2003). Ayrshire. A Historical Guide. Edinburgh : Birlinn. ISBN 1-84158-267-0
  7. Chambers, Robert (1885). Domestic Annals of Scotland. Edinburgh : Chambers.
  8. Cuthbertson, David Cuningham (1945). Autumn in Kyle and the Charm of Cunninghame. London : Jenkins.
  9. Dobie, James D. (ed Dobie, J.S.) (1876). Cunninghame, Topographized by Timothy Pont 1604–1608, with continuations and illustrative notices. Glasgow: John Tweed.
  10. Dunlop Parish. A History of Church, Parish and Nobility. Pub. Edinburgh.
  11. Fraser, William (1859). Memorials of the Montgomeries. Edinburgh.
  12. Fullarton, John (1864). Historical Memoir of the family of Eglinton and Winton. Ardrossan : Arthur Guthrie.
  13. Gillespie, James H. (1939). Dundonald. A Contribution to Parochial History. Glasgow : John Wylie & Co.
  14. Glasgow Journal (1770). Thursday, 29 Nov.. & 6 Dec..
  15. Glenfield Ramblers of Kilmarnock, Journal.
  16. Grose, F. (1789–91). The antiquities of Scotland, 2v, London.
  17. Hall, Derek (2006). Scottish Monastic Landscapes. Tempus Publishing. ISBN 0-7524-4012-8.
  18. Hill, D.O. (1840). The Land of Burns. Pub. Glasgow.
  19. House, Jack (1970), Stewarton. Pub. Stewarton Bonnet Guild.
  20. Ker, Rev. William Lee (1900) Kilwinnning. Kilwinning : A.W.Cross.
  21. Kerr, T. Macfie (1936). The Bonnet Toun.
  22. Lainshaw Estate map of 1779. Scottish National Archives.
  23. Love, Dane (2009). Legendary Ayrshire. Custom : Folklore : Tradition. Auchinleck : Carn Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9518128-6-0
  24. MacGachen Esq., N. Howard (1844). "The Bridge of Annock" in The Ayrshire Wreath MDCCCXLV. Pub. Kilmarnock..
  25. MacKenzie, Ross (1990). A Scottish Renaissance Household. Sir William Hamilton and Newton Castle. Ayr Arch Nat HistSoc. Monograph.
  26. McNaught, Duncan (1912). Kilmaurs Parish and Burgh. Pub. A. Gardner.
  27. Metcalfe, William M. (1905). A History of the County of Renfrew from the Earliest Times. Paisley : Alexander Gardner.
  28. Millar, A. H. (1885). The Castles and Mansions of Ayrshire. Glasgow : Grimsay Press. ISBN 1-84530-019-X
  29. Montgomery, D. B. (1903). The Montgomerys and their Descendants. Owensville : J. P. Cox.
  30. Paterson, James (1863–66). History of the Counties of Ayr and Wigton. Vol. IV. Part I. Cunningham. Edinburgh: J. Stillie.
  31. Paterson, James (1863–66). History of the Counties of Ayr and Wigton. Vol. V. Part II. Cunningham. Edinburgh: J. Stillie.
  32. Paterson, James (1871). Autobiographical Reminiscences. Glasgow : Maurice Ogle & Co.
  33. Reilly, Emilia Georgiana Susanna (1842). A Genealogical History of the family of Montgomery, comprising the lines of Eglinton and Braidstane in Scotland and Mount-Alexander and Grey-Abbey in Ireland. Privately published.
  34. Robertson, George (1820). A Topographical Description of Ayrshire; more particularly of Cunninghame. Irvine : Cunninghame Press.
  35. Robertson, William (1905). Old Ayrshire Days. Pub. Stephen & Pollock. Ayr.
  36. Robertson, William (1908). Ayrshire. Its History and Historic Families. Vol.1. Pub. Dunlop & Dreenan. Kilmarnock.
  37. Sanderson, Margaret H. B. (1997). Ayrshire and the Reformation. People and Change 1490 - 1600. East Linton : Tuckwell Place. ISBN 1-898410-91-7.
  38. Steven, Rev. Charles Bannatyne (Revised 1842). Parish of Stewarton. Presbytery Of Irvine, Synod of Glasgow and Ayr

External links edit

  • The Cunninghams of Aiket and the Murder of the 4th Earl. on YouTube
  • The Murder of the 4th Earl of Eglinton. on YouTube
  • General Roy's Military map of Scotland.
  • Details of the De Soulis, De Morville and other Cunninghame families.

murder, hugh, montgomerie, earl, eglinton, annick, ford, stewarton, east, ayrshire, scotland, took, place, 1586, consequence, long, running, feud, between, montgomeries, earls, eglinton, cunninghames, earls, glencairn, families, were, competing, power, influen. The Murder of Hugh Montgomerie 4th Earl of Eglinton at the Annick Ford in Stewarton East Ayrshire Scotland took place in 1586 as a consequence of a long running feud between the Montgomeries Earls of Eglinton and the Cunninghames Earls of Glencairn families who were competing for power and influence locally and nationally 2 The significant repercussions of this act were felt throughout the county of Ayrshire and beyond The spelling Montgomerie is used throughout for both the family and Montgomery for the clan and clan and district names Cunninghame in the same fashion Murder of Hugh Montgomerie 4th Earl of EglintonLainshaw Castle in the 17th centuryBorn1563Died1586 aged 22 23 Annick Ford StewartonCause of deathBlood loss due to bullet wound and multiple stabbingsResting placeKilwinning AbbeyNationalityScottishCitizenshipBritishOccupation s Landowner and Scottish peerParent s Hugh Montgomerie 3rd Earl of Eglinton and Agnes Drummond of Inchpeffrey 1 Eglinton Castle Contents 1 Historical background 2 The murder 3 Aftermath 4 Other versions of the murder 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Sources 7 External linksHistorical background editThe Baillieship of Cunninghame had long been in the hands of the Cunninghames Earls of Glencairn however at around the date 1448 the Crown conferred the Baillieship on the head of the House of Montgomerie de Mon Gubri Earls of Eglinton This act inevitably caused resentment and resulted in a bloody feud that ran on for centuries At one point Kerelaw Castle was burned and the Earl of Glencairn retaliated by burning Eglinton Castle although the Earl of Eglinton had escaped to Ardrossan Castle an impressive fortress until comparatively recent times when Oliver Cromwell had much of its stonework removed and shipped to Ayr to build his new fort Edward Cunninghame of Auchenharvie was slain in 1526 and Archibald Cunninghame of Waterstoun in 1528 2 The murder edit nbsp The 1764 coat of arms of the Montgomeries Earls of Eglinton On 18 April 1586 Hugh Montgomerie 4th Earl of Eglinton aged twenty four was travelling to Stirling to join the court having been commanded to attend by the King accompanied only by a few domestic servants He stopped at Lainshaw Castle to dine with his close relative Neil Montgomerie who was Lord of Lainshaw and whose Lady was an Elizabeth Cunninghame of Aiket with sisters married to John Cunninghame of Corsehill and David Cunninghame of Robertland 2 It seems that a plot to kill the Earl as an act of revenge had been organised and the Lady or some say a servant girl who was also a Cunninghame 3 climbed to the battlements after the meal to hang out a white table napkin and thereby spring the plot Thirty Cunninghames attacked the Earl at the Bridgend Ford and cut his servants to pieces with swords and other weapons the Earl himself being finally dispatched with a single shot from the pistol of John Cunninghame of Clonbeith Castle His horse carried his dead body along the side of the river still known as the Weeping Mourning or Widows path Kerr 4 with local knowledge states that the site of the crime was recently 1936 built over by a factory so the site of the ford in question could not have been at the entrance to the Lainshaw Estate at David Dale Avenue but at the Bridgend Ford instead 5 Upon the death of the 5th Earl of Eglinton the title passed to a cousin Sir Alexander Seton The main representation of the Montgomerie line therefore passed to the Lainshaw line and then to the Cockilbie branch 5 Aftermath editThe murdered Earl was eventually taken to Lainshaw Castle but in the meantime a wave of bloody revenge swept over the district of Cunninghame and elsewhere Cunninghame friends relatives and adherents were killed with little or no restraint nbsp The front entrance of Clonbeith Castle with the date 1617 carved above The Earl of Glencairn showed his lack of involvement by taking no action against the Montgomeries and by leaving his kinsmen to the full weight of the law Aiket was killed near his home Robertland and Corsehill escaped to Denmark Clonbeith was traced to a house in Hamilton possibly Hamilton Palace 6 and hacked to pieces by Robert Montgomerie and John Pollock of that Ilk Clonbeith had hid within a chimney 7 Both Robertland and Corsehill were pardoned on the insistence of Queen Anne of Denmark upon her marriage to King James VI of Scotland despite his earlier vow to bring them to justice Robertland was employed as one of her Majesty s master stablers 7 The properties of the guilty parties had been confiscated and given to the Montgomeries however the estates were eventually returned in ruinous condition Lady Elizabeth Montgomerie was said to have fled to Ireland however it seems that she remained close by 7 living with an estate tenant one Robert Barr and family at Pearce Bank Peacockbank farm now High Peacockbank She was eventually permitted to return to her husband and home however she never again left the grounds of Lainshaw Castle and she avoided any contact with the Montgomerie family for the remainder of her days Alexander Cunninghame the Commendator of Kilwinning Abbey was shot and killed at his gate at Montgreenan by Sir Robert Montgomerie of Skelmorlie better known for building the Skelmorlie Aisle as his burial place on 1 August 1591 as a direct result of the assassination of the Fourth Earl of Eglinton at Stewarton in April of that year 8 Lady Elizabeth Montgomerie s ghost is said to haunt Lainshaw Castle wandering the corridors wearing a green dress and carrying a candle 2 Other versions of the murder edit nbsp Aiket Castle home to Lady Montgomerie of Lainshaw nbsp A map of RobertlandWilliam Robertson relates a very different tale taken from the chronicle known as the Historie of King James the Sext 9 that Cunninghame of Robertland spent two years developing a friendship with Hugh and despite warnings from Hugo third Earl eventually Hugh held Robertland in high esteem and close friendship giving the opportunity for him to be caught off guard and cut down when attacked by sixty Cunninghame horseman His servants had all left him to his fate The site of this action is not recorded Blair gives this version as well stating that Cunninghame of Robertland was a very dear friend and loved Earl Hugh as his own bedfellow Chambers has Cunninghame of Robertland as the leading person in the affair recording that The Cunninghams being grieved hereat made presently a vow that they should be avenged upon the fattest of the Montgomeries for that fact The perpetrators all escaped unharmed beyond sea but their lands and castles were awarded to the Earl s brother either to be demolished or otherwise Robertland himself fled to Denmark and was eventually pardoned by the King and returned to Scotland as her majesty s master stabler The Earl was on no special journey and the Lady of Lainshaw is not mentioned in this version 10 George Robertson 11 gives yet another traditional version in which Cunninghame of Clonbeith is stated as being at best an accessory although he is still caught and killed in Hamilton Here the Earl is on his way to a visit to the laird of Robertland Castle but stops first for a meal at Lainshaw The Laird of Lainshaw tries to dissuade him from continuing his journey but to no avail and on his way back from Robertland he is met and murdered by Cunninghame of Aiket at a place called the Windy path in Stewarton He was shot and although dying he was able to stay in the saddle until he reached the Annick Ford where he fell from his horse and expired immediately The Windy path has been called the Mourning path since that day The date of this event is given as 12 05 1589 a date that does not fit with the 1586 date of the first version given nbsp The bridge and weir on the Annick Water below Lainshaw House Steven 12 states that The ruins nearly levelled by the hand of time of the Castle of Robertland formerly stronghold of the Cunninghames Baronets of Robertland are situated behind the modern mansion of Alexander Kerr esq of Robertland this stronghold it is say was destroyed by fire in a feud between the Montgomeries of Eglinton and the Cunninghames in revenge for which one of the Cunninghames shot the chief of the Eglintons while riding home near to Bridgend at the east end of the town of Stewarton where a path is still shown called the Weeping Path along which he rode until he came to the ford of the Annock at Bridgend in Stewarton where he fell dead off his horse This took place on 12 April 1586 in the person of Hugh fourth Earl of Eglinton MacGachen 1844 13 gives a confused version in the second collection of prose and verse named the Ayrshire Wreath The action in this version takes place at the Bridge of Annock erroneously located over the Carmel Burn that is actually located in the Kilmaurs area The Earl s manservant is wittily named as Archie Mucledrouth and Cunninghame of Aiket is stated to have fired the fatal shot and as having been hunted down and cut to pieces in Hamilton Many of the Earl s retainers are said to have been killed the stream running red with their blood giving a fisherman a maiden and some children a nasty shock Otherwise the story is much the same as the Robertson 14 version The authors Reilly and Metcalfe have a very different version and state that the earl was on his way from Polnone Polnoon near Eaglesham to tryst at Stirling having travelled about six miles before being attacked and shot by the lairds of Robertland and Aiket as well as other Cunninghames no mention is made of the Montgomerie s of Lainshaw 15 16 nbsp The front entrance of Clonbeith Castle with the date 1617 carved above nbsp Montgreenan Castle or the Bishop s Palace Fullarton states that the murder was planned by the Earl of Glencairn and that Hugh was most cruelly shamefully and unmercifully murdered and slain by John Cunninghame of Reis brother to the Earl of Glencairn Alexander Cunninghame brother of Cunninghame of Polquharne John Cunninghame servant to John Cunninghame David Cunninghame of Robertland Andrew Arnot of Lochrig Robert Cunninghame of Kirkland Alexander Cunninghame of Aiket William Cunninghame of Aiket Patrick Cunninghame of Bordland Abraham Cunninghame bastard son of Alexander of Clonbeith John Reyburn of that Ilk Patrick Cunninghame of Corsehill John Cunninghame of Clonbeith Mungo Mure of Rowallan Alan Foulis in Fulshaw David Maxwell of Kilmacolm John Maxwell of Kilmacolm John Brown in Gateside David Fulton in Robertland John Henry in Little Cutstraw Robert Dick in Crockford Robert Henry in Robertland John Hart servant to David of Robertland Hugh White servant to John of Clonbeith Gilbert Dunlop servant of Patrick of Baidland Alexander Speir in Brome and John Wylie in Roughside 17 McNaught records that a John Cunninghame son of Patrick Cunninghame of Kirkland was a party to the murder 18 See also editAiket Castle Clonbeith Castle Lainshaw Castle Castle and Barony of Robertland Skelmorlie CastleReferences edit Robertson 1908 Page 58 a b c d Dobie Robertson William 1889 Historical Tales of Ayrshire Pub Glasgow amp London Kerr T Macfie 1936 The Bonnet Toun a b Montgomery pages 18 19 Ker Page 153 a b c Paterson V IV Page 37 Kilwinning Past amp Present Section 3 19 Thomas Thomson Historie of King James the Sext Edinburgh 1825 pp 238 40 Chambers Pages 100 102 Robertson Page 329 Steven MacGachen Pages 116 125 Robertson 1889 Pages 295 305 Reilly Page 20 Metcalfe Page 89 Fullarton Page 157 McNaught Page 21 Sources edit Adamson Archibald R 1875 Rambles Round Kilmarnock Pub Kilmarnock Ainslie John 1779 Lainshaw Estate Map Aitken John 1829 Survey of the Parishes of Cunningham Pub Beith Barclay Alistair The Bonnet Toun Blair Anna 1983 Tales of Ayrshire Pub Shepheard Walwyn ISBN 0 85683 068 2 Campbell Thorbjorn 2003 Ayrshire A Historical Guide Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 1 84158 267 0 Chambers Robert 1885 Domestic Annals of Scotland Edinburgh Chambers Cuthbertson David Cuningham 1945 Autumn in Kyle and the Charm of Cunninghame London Jenkins Dobie James D ed Dobie J S 1876 Cunninghame Topographized by Timothy Pont 1604 1608 with continuations and illustrative notices Glasgow John Tweed Dunlop Parish A History of Church Parish and Nobility Pub Edinburgh Fraser William 1859 Memorials of the Montgomeries Edinburgh Fullarton John 1864 Historical Memoir of the family of Eglinton and Winton Ardrossan Arthur Guthrie Gillespie James H 1939 Dundonald A Contribution to Parochial History Glasgow John Wylie amp Co Glasgow Journal 1770 Thursday 29 Nov amp 6 Dec Glenfield Ramblers of Kilmarnock Journal Grose F 1789 91 The antiquities of Scotland 2v London Hall Derek 2006 Scottish Monastic Landscapes Tempus Publishing ISBN 0 7524 4012 8 Hill D O 1840 The Land of Burns Pub Glasgow House Jack 1970 Stewarton Pub Stewarton Bonnet Guild Ker Rev William Lee 1900 Kilwinnning Kilwinning A W Cross Kerr T Macfie 1936 The Bonnet Toun Lainshaw Estate map of 1779 Scottish National Archives Love Dane 2009 Legendary Ayrshire Custom Folklore Tradition Auchinleck Carn Publishing ISBN 978 0 9518128 6 0 MacGachen Esq N Howard 1844 The Bridge of Annock in The Ayrshire Wreath MDCCCXLV Pub Kilmarnock MacKenzie Ross 1990 A Scottish Renaissance Household Sir William Hamilton and Newton Castle Ayr Arch Nat HistSoc Monograph McNaught Duncan 1912 Kilmaurs Parish and Burgh Pub A Gardner Metcalfe William M 1905 A History of the County of Renfrew from the Earliest Times Paisley Alexander Gardner Millar A H 1885 The Castles and Mansions of Ayrshire Glasgow Grimsay Press ISBN 1 84530 019 X Montgomery D B 1903 The Montgomerys and their Descendants Owensville J P Cox Paterson James 1863 66 History of the Counties of Ayr and Wigton Vol IV Part I Cunningham Edinburgh J Stillie Paterson James 1863 66 History of the Counties of Ayr and Wigton Vol V Part II Cunningham Edinburgh J Stillie Paterson James 1871 Autobiographical Reminiscences Glasgow Maurice Ogle amp Co Reilly Emilia Georgiana Susanna 1842 A Genealogical History of the family of Montgomery comprising the lines of Eglinton and Braidstane in Scotland and Mount Alexander and Grey Abbey in Ireland Privately published Robertson George 1820 A Topographical Description of Ayrshire more particularly of Cunninghame Irvine Cunninghame Press Robertson William 1905 Old Ayrshire Days Pub Stephen amp Pollock Ayr Robertson William 1908 Ayrshire Its History and Historic Families Vol 1 Pub Dunlop amp Dreenan Kilmarnock Sanderson Margaret H B 1997 Ayrshire and the Reformation People and Change 1490 1600 East Linton Tuckwell Place ISBN 1 898410 91 7 Steven Rev Charles Bannatyne Revised 1842 Parish of Stewarton Presbytery Of Irvine Synod of Glasgow and AyrExternal links editThe Cunninghams of Aiket and the Murder of the 4th Earl on YouTube The Murder of the 4th Earl of Eglinton on YouTube General Roy s Military map of Scotland Details of the De Soulis De Morville and other Cunninghame families nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lainshaw Estate Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Murder of Hugh Montgomerie amp oldid 1144544763, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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