THE BATTLE OF THE STONES
The Brandanes followed Robert Bruce to Tarbert, and were with
the Steward in his raids into England at Byland and at York,
where the English Queen came so near to being captured. They
were also with him at the desperate siege of Berwick in 1319 ;
but the greatest of their services to his house was at the
"Battle of the Stones."
When Robert Bruce died
in 1329, at only fifty years of age, his son David was a boy of
only six years, and Scotland was again plunged into trouble by
the ambition of Edward in. of England, who at once commenced his
grandfather's old tactics, disregarding the treaty of perpetual
peace between the two countries which had been signed in 1328.
The treaty had been full of promise for little Scotland as a
nation, though it meant bad times for Border reiver and Highland
cateran, who had enriched themselves so often by the national
pastime of a raid into England, during Bruce's reign.
Edward quietly put up Edward Baliol as king, and bribed the
easily purchased nobles of Scotland to lend him their aid when
he sent Baliol with an army to invade Scotland. Baliol was
crowned at Scone, but the Scottish people were roused, and
gathering an army they invaded England. At the famous battle of
Halidon Hill they got well beaten, for there they forgot
"Bruce's Testament," in which he told them always to avoid the
tented field, the formal pitched battle, and to adopt always the
tactics of what we would to-day call the guerilla chief. At
Halidon Hill the Brandanes were almost annihilated.
The King of England then again invaded Scotland on the rejection
of Baliol by the Scots, and reached Glasgow with a large army.
He sent his fleet into the Firth of Forth, and made the Earl of
Athol Guardian and Governor of the kingdom. Athol then summoned
the freeholders of the Stewart-lands—that is, in the south, in
Renfrew, Ayr, Carrick, Galloway, Selkirk, and so on, and, having
made them swear fealty to Baliol, he marched into the Highlands,
and "there was no one who durst gainsay him or proclaim himself
Bruce's man."
THE STEWARD'S ESCAPE FROM
ROTHESAY CASTLE
About the same time the young
Robert Stewart, heir to the throne, who was then fifteen years
old, was still, for fear of the enemy, lurking in concealment in
Rothesay Castle, and was deriving great comfort from, and having
frequent conversations with, "two lovers of peace, friends of
King David," John MacGilbride, Captain of Bute, and William
Heriot, then sojourning in the barony; and they found means to
take him over to Dunbarton Castle, bringing with them the
charters of Stewartland. Stewart, finding his position still
dangerous, and resenting the conduct of Athol in laying claim to
the Stewart patrimony, took action, sent for his friend the Lord
of Lochawe, and soon captured Dunoon Castle. Holinshead (1585)
thus describes the famous Battle of the Stones, which was one of
the greatest of all the services of the Brandani to the house of
Stewart.
"Incontinently, therefore, Robert
Steward assembled his friends by the help of Dungall Campbell of
Lochquhow, and suddenly took the Castell of Dunoon, sleaing all
the Englishmen and others who were found therein. ... The
commons of Bute and Arran, glad of this prosperous beginning,
assembled together to the number of 400 persons, and set
forward, that they might come to support Robert Steward in such
his late begun enterprizes: and being incountered by the way by
Alane Lile, shiriff of Bute, they laid so lustilie about them,
that they slue the shiriffe (taking prisoner John Gilbert,
captaine of the Castell of Bute) there in the field, and
discomfited all his people, which they did after this
manner. These people of Bute (called the servants of Bawdanus),
seeing such sturs to be made by Alan Lile, ran to a heap of
stones not far from them, and with great force pelting the
sheriffe, they in the end killed him with stones, and put the
rest to flight. Divers of them, taken prisoners, were brought
away, and presented to Robert Steward."
The
Book of Pluscarden gives a few further particulars of this
interesting fight. It says that when the natives of the county
heard that their lord Robert Stewart had thus entered their
country, "there flocked to him . . . a people called the
Brandans, who came to his assistance of their own accord."
"The sheriff of the county of Bute, Alan Lisle, then tried to
hem the Brandans in on all sides in a narrow pass, and commenced
to kill them without mercy. They, seeing themselves unarmed and
surrounded by armed men, posted themselves in a strong place,
and, waiting the attack, commenced to shower stones upon the
sheriff and his men, till they had killed Lyle and many others,
and the rest of his army took to flight. They then cut the
sheriff's head off and presented it to the Stewart, and also
took prisoner John Gilbert-son, the captain of Bute."
This appears to be the same Gilbertson or MacGilbride who had
secretly, with Heriot, rowed the Steward to Dunbarton Castle. He
had evidently been made to swear allegiance to Baliol, like many
more, against his will. Gilbertson, weare told, surrendered the
Castle of Bute and did homage to the Steward as "his natural
lord," which, with his local name, certainly means that he was a
native.
From him branches of the MacBride and
Bannatyne families claim descent. Thus genial Robert was able to
make a stand in the West, and was there joined by many friends,
including Thomas Bruce and the-men of Kyle.
For this most notable service of the Brandanes, Holinshead adds
that Stewart, "in recompense of this service, granted sundrie
privileges unto the inhabitants of Bute and Arran: as, among
other things, to be free from paying tribute for their corn and
grain. Such; felicities succeeding one another, caused many of
the Scots to join themselves with Robert Steward, in hope to
recover the realm out of the Englishmen's hands."
Save Halidon Hill, the Scots had been successful in all their
raids, and Edward got little from his invasions till at
Neville's Cross, , where the Brandani were also present, David
II., then a youth of eighteen, refusing the advice of
experienced men, suffered utter defeat. The Scots army, gathered
from Highlands and Lowlands, made a hasty retreat to the
fortresses of the Border country, and King David was carried
captive into England by one Sir John Copeland, an English
knight.
THE KING'S BODYGUARD
Robert II. did not forget the Brandani, and he made them his
bodyguard and gave them charters for their lands, one of which,
dated in the second year of his reign, is still possessd by the
head of the ancient family of MacLoy or MacLouie of Kilmichael
and Whitefarland, who took the name of Fullarton probably from
the Ayrshire estate of that name.
THE BATTLES
OF WILLIAM THE LYON AND THE DISASTER AT PINKIE
The men of the South Isles were probably amongst the Highland
Scots and Galloway men who followed William the Lyon in his two
attempts to recover Northumberland and Cumberland, which had
been won for Scotland by David i. and foolishly made over to
Henry, the English king, by treaty of Malcolm the Maiden, a mere
boy. William was taken prisoner when jousting with a small party
of knights. Immediately the Gaelic people of Scotland, indignant
at the encroachments of feudalism and the fondness of the
Scottish monarchs for foreign knights and nobles, massacred the
Normans and English, and made what Fordun calls "a most woeful
and exceeding great persecution of the English, both in Scotia
and Galloway." The island of Arran had reverted to the Stewarts,
and the sheriffship of Arran and Bute was given by Robert II. to
his natural son, the ancestor of the present Sir Hugh Shaw
Stewart of Ardgowan and Blackhall. Stewart's second son was
keeper of Brodick Castle in 1445-50, and received for the office
the sum of .£20 anually, with the revenues of some crown lands
in the island. A little later the chiefs of Kintyre and their
men paid Arran a number of visits, in which they took away with
them many unconsidered trifles, quite in the old spirit of the
Gall Gael. The castles of the island, Lochranza, Brodick, and
Kildonan were fortified and garrisoned, and a number of galleys
were held in readiness by the Arran lairds. In 1455 the famous
Donald Balloch sacked and dismantled Brodick, and in 1462 came
the invasion of the Earl of Ross and the Lord of the Isles,
their object, according to Gregory, being to upset the Scottish
monarchy.
The island of Arran was always an
important place, the prop of thrones, the refuge of kings, the
cradle of fighting men, the prize of the liberator; but of
course the seat of government was not entirely situated in
Brodick Castle, and it is difficult to see how these gentlemen,
with all their expert knowledge of raids and rebellions, could
expect to win the Scottish crown by capturing even that mainstay
of royalty ! Their navy was composed of the enormous number of
five hundred galleys belonging to the Lord of the Isles. As Mr.
MacArthur puts it with unconscious humour: " Though the
expedition failed to disturb the independence of Scotland, it
was most disastrous in its results on the islets of the Clyde."
The islanders and west Highlanders generally were present to the
number of four thousand at the disastrous battle of Pinkie in
1547. Beague, a Frenchman, who was an eye-witness, says: "The
Highlanders, who show courage on all occasions, gave proof of
their conduct at this time, for they kept together in one body,
and made a very handsome and orderly retreat. They are armed
with broadswords, large bows, and targets."
Only the year previous the islands of Bute and Arran had been
burnt by the English, assisted by MacNeill of Barra, and at this
time the position of the Hamiltons was rendered precarious and
unpleasant from these raids, as is shown by the various bonds
they made with the Arran lairds, the MacAllisters, MacCooks,
MacDavids, Mac-Brides, MacKinnons, MacKilgirs.MacCairlies,
MacDonalds, and others, for mutual defence in the sixteenth
century, not many years after their acquisition of the island.
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