With respect to the history of Caithness for the
first five or six hundred years of the Christian era, nothing with
certainty is known. Tradition as well as history is silent on the
matter, and the whole subject is involved in impenetrable darkness. It
is probable that for a great part of that time the county was a mere
desert, uninhabited except by wild beasts. The aboriginal inhabitants
would appear to have been the Picts, a people, from the best antiquarian
authority, not of Scandinavian, but of Celtic descent. There are still
to be seen here and there in the county the remains of what are called
Picts' houses. These, however, were not the ordinary dwellings of that
people, but strongholds or places of defence. "Their houses," says
Scott, "were constructed of wattles; or in more dangerous times they
burrowed under ground in long, narrow, tortuous excavations, which still
exist, and the idea of which seems to have been suggested by a rabbit
warren." About the year 920, Caithness would appear to have been
partially peopled, for at that period it was subdued by Sigurd, [He
conquered also Ross, Sutherland, and Moray; and from Helgy, his
principal officer, the name of Elgin is supposed to be derived.] Earl of
Orkney, uncle of the famous Rollo, the invader of Normandy, and paternal
ancestor of William the Conqueror. Caithness continued subject to
Norwegian rule for nearly four hundred years. After this event, numerous
bands of Norsemen came over to Caithness, and driving the natives into
the interior, gradually established themselves around the whole
sea-coast. On the Latheron side, they extended their settlements as far
as Berriedale. This, however, was not effected without some severe
struggles with the inhabitants, who felt grievously annoyed at being
thus expelled from their usual abodes, and winced not a little under the
Scandinavian yoke. Most of the names of places, and not a few of the
surnames in the lowland parts of the county, are Norwegian. It is a
remarkable circumstance, however, that the Norsemen never succeeded in
establishing their language, or any of their peculiar laws or usages, in
Caithness. All that we can trace to them are a few superstitions which
still linger in some parts of the county, but are soon destined to
disappear before the increasing light of knowledge. The case was very
different in Orkney. Some of their udal institutions exist there even to
this day, or at all events were but very recently abolished. The
language spoken by the natives of that county, while under the sway of
the sea-kings, was the old Icelandic, or Norse; and it continued in
general use till near the end of the sixteenth century. Their language
is now the English, with a peculiar " singing accent." Orkney, while it
was the chief seat of the earldom, formed, with its fine natural
harbours, the great rendezvous of' the war galleys of the Norsemen,
whence they issued out on their various piratical expeditions. These
vessels, from their peculiar construction and equipment, were admirably
adapted for the service in which they were employed. They were generally
long, narrow, and low in the water. They were protected with a parapet
or breastwork of shields, and many of them were of great size,
containing from twenty to thirty banks of oars. The largest of them
carried a crew of from 80 to 100 fighting men, whose arms consisted of
swords, bows, arrows, and pikes, besides which they had on board a
quantity of stones to throw into the vessels of the enemy. On their
prows were usually carved figure-heads of dragons, which added not a
little to their formidable appearance. This most probably suggested to
the picturesque fancy of Scott the striking figure which he uses when
describing the Scandinavian rovers and their ships in the " Lay of the
Last Minstrel:"—
"Kings of the main, their leaders brave,
Their barks the dragons of the wave."
Sigurd, the first Norwegian Earl of Orkney and
Caithness, died and was buried at Burghead, in Morayshire. The
circumstances connected with his death are not a little extraordinary.
"He gained," says Mr Worsaae, "the victory in a foray over the Scotch
jarl Melbrigd, and cut off his head, which, in the overweening pride of
his triumph, he hung at his saddle; but a sharp tooth that projected
from the head chafed his leg, and caused a wound which proved his
death." Sigurd having left no issue, the earldom reverted to the family
of his brother Ronald. About the middle of the tenth century, two
brothers, Liot and Skuli, lineal descendants of that family, contended
for the earldom. The former was supported in his claim by the King of
Norway, and the latter, so far as Caithness was concerned, by the King
of Scotland. Arms, the usual mode of deciding disputes at the time, were
resorted to. Skuli was assisted by a Sutherland chieftain, to whom
Torfaeus gives the high-sounding title of "Comes Magbragdus." In a
battle which was fought at Dale, in the parish of Halkirk, Skuli was
defeated and slain, on which Liot seized the whole of Caithness, and
kept forcible possession of it. Not long after, the Sutherland chief,
burning with a desire to be revenged for the affair at Dale, collected
as many followers as he could, and invaded the county. Liot, with a
nearly equal force, met him at Toftingall, near the hill of Spittal,
where a desperate engagement took place. Victory at length declared for
Liot, but he received a severe wound, of which in the course of a few
days he died.
It is supposed that the tall-standing stone near
Brabster-dorran, in the parish of Bower, was erected in memory of Liot,
and that it indicates the spot where he was buried. This supposition
derives some confirmation from the circumstance that the stone was
anciently called "stone Lud," which would seem to be a corruption of
stone Liot or Liot's stone. There can be no doubt, however, that it is a
sepulchral monument commemorative of some great man. The doctrine of
Odin commanded it as a sacred duty to erect stones of this description
in memory of the brave. "The large stones," says the late Mr Pope, of
Reay, "erected at Rangag and along the burn of Latheron, are all
sepulchral monuments." This is confirmed by the testimony of Mr Worsaae.
"Tall bauta stones," says that writer, "are to be seen in several places
in Caithness, to which some legend about the Danes is generally
attached; they now stand in a leaning posture, as if mourning over the
departed times of the heroic age. A monument of a Danish princess who,
according to tradition, suffered shipwreck on the coast, was formerly to
be found in a churchyard at Ulbster."
Ragnhilde, the widow of Liot, and daughter of the
famous Erik, King of Norway, surnamed the bloody, lived for some time at
Murkle. [Murkle was a place of great note in ancient times. It was the
seat of a famous nunnery; and here, John, one of the old Earls of
Caithness, signed a document binding himself and his followers to
support Edward I. of England in his war with Scotland.] She was a woman
of a most infamous character, and had been thrice married. She caused
her two former husbands, who were brothers of Liot, to be murdered —the
one at Murkle, and the other at Stennis, in Orkney; and yet, with
incredible effrontery, affecting entire innocence of the heavy crimes
laid to her charge, she offered Liot her hand, and being a beautiful
woman, and of an insinuating address, he was induced to marry her.
In the year 1014, Sigurd, the second of that name,
Earl of Orkney and Caithness, embarked with a large body of troops for
Ireland to assist one of the Norwegian chiefs in a war with the Irish
King Brian. A celebrated battle took place at Clontarf,
[In the old traditional
records of Ireland, the battle of Clontarf holds a prominent place, and
the issue is described as the greatest and most decisive victory which
the Irish ever had over the Danes. During the famous repeal agitation,
O'Connell, with consummate tact and knowledge of the Irish character,
turned the circumstance to account in arousing the so-called patriotism
of his countrymen. King Brian, from whom he gave out that he was
descended, was extolled to the skies as a martyr for the deliverance of
his country from the yoke of the oppressors. Fancied prints of the
battle and of Brian were largely distributed among the deluded
peasantry; and the battle was further celebrated in songs and speeches
as having completely annihilated the Danish power in Ireland, and saved
her independence and freedom. In this matter, however, O'Connell and his
partisans did not adhere to strict historical truth; for the battle of
Clontarf did not annihilate the Danish power in Ireland, and the
northern adventurers, under their respective chiefs, maintained their
sway, in some parts of that country, for a long time afterwards. But
agitation and not veracity was the object of O'Connell. At length, when
he had sufficiently raised the excitable feelings of his followers, he
concluded one of his seditious harangues with a notice that he would
hold a great repeal meeting on the celebrated plain of Clontarf. "Every
body knew beforehand," says an able writer, "that the real meaning of
this was, that just as the Irish, with Brian at their head, had formerly
defeated the Danes on that very place, so should they now, in like
manner, follow O'Connell, and make every sacrifice to wrest back their
lost independence from English or Saxon ascendancy. But Government
forbade the meeting, and indicted O'Connell."]
about three miles to the north-east of Dublin, in
which both Brian and the Earl were slain. The Norwegian annalists, like
most ancient writers, appear to have been fond of the marvellous, and in
some cases without any nice discrimination or sifting of materials, to
have mingled fact and fable together. A short time before setting out on
his expedition to Ireland, Sigurd's mother presented him with a standard
made by her own hand, in which was woven, with exquisite art, the image
of the raven, a bird sacred to Odin, the Scandinavian god of war. The
raven was represented with outspread wings, and in the act of soaring
upwards. On receiving the banner the Earl was assured by his mother that
it had this remarkable property, that whoever had it carried before him
would be victorious, but that the standard-bearer himself was doomed to
fall. In the battle of Clontarf, accordingly, two of Sigurd's
standard-bearers were killed. After this, none of his officers would
take up the fatal colours, on which the Earl wrapped them round his
body, and gallantly fought until he fell, pierced with innumerable
wounds. It was only after a long and desperate struggle that the Irish
obtained the victory. Torfaeus gives an account of a remarkable prodigy
which was seen at the time in Caithness. On Christmas-day (the day of
the battle) a man, named Daraddus, saw a number of persons on horseback
ride at full speed towards a small hill, near which he dwelt, and
seemingly enter into it. He was led by curiosity to approach the spot,
when, looking through an opening in the side of the hillock, he observed
twelve gigantic figures, resembling women, employed in weaving a web. As
they wove, they sang a mournful song or dirge descriptive of the battle
in Ireland, in which they foretold the death of King Brian, and that of
the Earl of Orkney. When they had finished their task, they tore the web
into twelve pieces. Each took her own portion, and once more mounting
their horses, six galloped to the south, and six to the north. This
singular legend derives a peculiar interest from the circumstance that
it forms the subject of Gray's celebrated ode, the "Fatal Sisters." The
sisters mentioned by the poet were the Valkyries, or choosers of the
slain in the Gothic mythology, and the special ministers of Odin. They
were mounted on swift horses, with drawn swords in their hands; and, in
the throng of battle, selected such as were destined to slaughter, and
conducted them to Valhalla, (the hall of Odin, or paradise of the
brave,) where they attended the banquet, and served the departed heroes
with horns of mead and ale. Gray's ode purports to be the song sung by
the unearthly ladies. The following are some of its more striking
stanzas:—
"Now the storm begins to lower,
(Haste the loom of hell prepare,)
Iron sleet of arrowy shower
Hurtles in the darkened air.
See! the grisly texture grow—
'Tis of human entrails made;
And the weights that play below,
Each a gasping warrior's head.
Shafts for shuttles, dipt in gore,
Shoot the trembling chords along;
Sword, that once a monarch bore,
Keep the tissue close and strong.
* *
* * *
Low the dauntless Earl is laid,
Gor'd with many a gaping wound;
Fate demands a nobler head,
Soon a King shall bite the ground.
* * * * *
Horror covers all the heath,
Clouds of carnage blot the sun;
Sisters! weave the web of death,
Sisters! cease—the work is done.
Mortal! thou that hear'st the tale,
Learn the tenor of our song;
Scotland! through each winding vale
Far and wide the notes prolong.
Sisters! hence with spurs of speed
Each her thundering falchion wield,
Each bestride her sable steed,
Hurry, hurry to the field."
The scene of this extraordinary legend is supposed to
be a knoll or hillock, in the parish of Olrig, called Sysa, which has
been particularly celebrated, from time immemorial, as a favourite haunt
of witches and fairies. Of late years its appearance has been somewhat
altered by the agricultural improvements which have taken place in the
common in which it is situated. Sysa, originally, notwithstanding its
bad name, possessed some features of interest. On gaining the top from
the north, you saw the side fronting the south shaped into a beautiful
green hollow, having a gentle slope downwards. This hollow contained a
spring of delicious water, clear as crystal; and, in the summer season,
the sward around it was of the richest green, thickly sprinkled with
wild-flowers, and contrasting strongly with the brown and stunted
herbage of the surrounding moor. It was, on the whole, a rather pretty
spot, and, situated as it was, it came upon the eye like an oasis in the
desert.
Among the local legends of a supernatural kind
connected with Sysa, is the following, which may, not inappropriately,
be appended to that from Torfaeus.
THE PIPER OF THE WINDY HA'.
Many years ago a young man, named Peter Waters, after
driving his cattle to the then undivided common, halted about noon, on
his way home, at the well of Sysa, in order to quench his thirst with a
draught from that refreshing spring. It was a warm and beautiful day in
the "leafy month of June"—one of nature's holidays—and the sun shone out
with unclouded brilliancy. The spot had a peculiarly sweet and tranquil
air about it that invited to repose. Not a living thing seemed to
intrude within the fairy hollow, save the golden honey-bee that came
humming along, lighted for a moment on a flower to sip its nectared
sweets, and then flew away with its glad murmuring note as before.
Having quenched his thirst, Peter resolved, before proceeding farther,
to indulge himself with half an hour's rest; and, accordingly, he lay
down and stretched himself at full length on his back. For a minute or
two he continued to follow with his eye a lark that rose a few yards
from him, and carolled like "a musical cherub" as it mounted higher and
higher in the air; but an irresistible drowsiness, like that produced by
mesmerism, stole over him, and he finally fell fast asleep. He slept
till near sunset, when he was awakened by a gentle shake on the
shoulder. Starting in a moment from his recumbent position, and rubbing
his eyes, our hero beheld, to his astonishment, a most beautiful young
lady, dressed in green, with golden ringlets, blue eyes, and the
sweetest countenance in the world, standing beside him. Though a great
admirer of the sex, Peter had not been accustomed to the society of
ladies, and he, therefore, very naturally, felt not a little nervous and
confused in the presence of his fair visitant. A blush overspread his
countenance, and his heart throbbed violently. His first impulse was to
take to his heels; but the lady bestowed on him such a bewitching smile,
that he became rivetted to the spot, and could not move a single step.
By degrees his timidity wore away, and he recovered his self-possession
so far as to be able, without much stammering, to converse with the
beautiful stranger.
"Don't be afraid of me, Peter," said the lady, with
one of her most captivating smiles, and in a voice soft and clear as a
silver bell. "I feel a great interest in you, and I am come to make a
man of you."
"I am much obliged to you, indeed," stammered Peter;
"the greatest nobleman in the kingdom might be proud of your fair hand,
but I have no desire as yet to enter into the silken cord; and, besides,
I would require to be better acquainted with you before I took such a
step. People commonly court a little before they marry."
"You mistake me altogether, Peter," said the lady,
giving way to a hearty laugh. "Though you appear a very nice young man,
I make you no offer of my hand; what I mean is, that I will put you in
the way of rising in the world and making your fortune. Here are two
things, a book and a pipe. Make your choice of the one or the other. If
you take the book, you will become the most popular preacher in the
North; and if you take the pipe, you will be the best performer on that
martial instrument in Scotland. I shall give you five minutes to
consider," added she, drawing from her bosom a small golden time-piece
about the size of a sovereign.
The book was a splendidly-bound copy of the Bible,
richly embossed with gold, with a golden clasp; the pipe a most
beautiful instrument of its kind, with a green silken bag of gold and
silver tissue, and superbly furnished with a number of silver keys.
Peter gazed with admiration on the two articles, and was greatly puzzled
which of the two to choose. It would be a grand thing, he thought with
himself, to be a. popular preacher, to have a good glebe and manse, to
be company for the laird and his lady, and to be cried up as a "fine
man," and worshipped by the crowd. On the other hand, he was a great
enthusiast for music, and he should like, above all things, to be able
to play the bagpipe. Should he once become famed as the best piper in
Scotland, he had no doubt that he would get plenty of employment, and
the money would flow like shells into his pocket. After thus considering
the matter in his own mind, Peter at length came to a determination, and
said to the lady,—"Since you are so kind, I think I will choose the
pipe; but as I never fingered a chanter in my life, I fear it will be a
long time before I learn to play on such a difficult instrument."
"No fear of that," rejoined the lady, "blow up, and
you'll find that the pipe of its own accord will discourse the most
eloquent music."
Peter did as he was desired, and to his great
surprise and delight he played "Maggie Lauder" in a style that Rob the
Ranter himself could not have surpassed. Some cattle that were grazing
hard by lifted their heads from the ground the moment they heard the
first notes of the tune, and kept flinging and capering about in the
most extraordinary manner.
"This is perfectly wonderful," exclaimed Peter,
delighted beyond measure with his own performance; "there must surely be
some glamour about this instrument."
Then thanking the lady for the invaluable present, he
was about to take his departure, when she said—
"Stop a moment, there is one condition attached to
the gift; this day seven years, at the very same hour of the evening,
you will have to meet me by moonlight at the well of Sysa. Swear by its
enchanted spring that you will do so."
Peter rashly swore by the fairy well, and promised,
if alive, to keep the appointment; then thanking the fair donor for her
gift, he retraced his way over the hill of Olrig to his paternal
residence, which was called the "Windy Ha'."
On reaching home, Peter, with an air of triumph,
produced his pipe, which excited much curiosity and wonder, and was
greatly admired; but when he related how he came by it, the old people
were not a little staggered, and began to regard the gift with
suspicion.
"It's no canny," said his father, shaking his head;
"and I would advise you, Peter, to have nothing to do with it."
"The Best protect us!" exclaimed his mother; "my
bairn is lost. He must have got it from none other than the queen of the
fairies."
"Nonsense," said Peter, "it was not the queen of the
fairies, but a real lady—and a kind and beautiful lady she was—that gave
me the pipe."
"But of what use can it be to you," said his father,
"when ye canna play on it?"
"Can I not?" returned Peter; "I'll let you see that
directly;" and putting the wind-pipe to his mouth, and inflating the
bag, he struck up the "Fairy Dance" in a style that electrified the
household. The whole family, including the grandmother— ninety years of
age—started at once to their feet and danced heartily, overturning
stools, and scattering the fire which was in the middle of the floor,
with their fantastic movements. The piper continued to play as if he
would never stop.
At length his father, panting for breath, and with
the perspiration trickling down his cheeks, cried out, "For mercy's
sake, Peter, gie owre, or you'll be the death of me and yir mither, as
well as poor old grannie."
"I think," said Peter, laying aside his pipe out of
compassion for their limbs, "I think you'll no longer say that I cannot
play."
From this time our hero's fame as a musician spread
rapidly over the country; and as he was sent for to perform at every
wedding and merry-making that took place for miles around, he began to
realise a little fortune. But "no man can tether time or tide." The
seven years soon rolled away, and the day big with destiny arrived, when
he must keep his appointment with the strange lady. He accordingly set
off with rather uneasy feelings, for he did not know what might be the
result, whether for good or evil, of this interview. Rover, the
housedog, attempted to follow him, but when he was chid back, the
affectionate animal gazed after his master as long as he could see him,
then raised his head and howled long and pitifully. The evening was just
such another as that on which he first met the mysterious stranger. The
sun—near his setting —poured a flood of yellow radiance over the brown
moor; and in the succeeding moonlight, Sysa seemed to glow with more
than earthly lustre. The lark had ceased to sing, and the plover's note
alone was heard wailing like the voice of a spirit over the desert
waste. As to what happened at this second and final interview, the
legend is silent; but poor Peter never returned again to the Windy Ha',
and the general belief was, that he was carried away to Fairyland.
To resume the thread of our narrative. Sigurd, who
was killed in Ireland, left four sons, Summorlid, Brusi, Einar, and
Thorfin. He was twice married. His second wife was a daughter of King
Malcolm, the second of Scotland. Thorfin was the son of this lady. The
three eldest sons divided the sovereignty of Orkney and Shetland between
them, and Thorfin was, by his maternal grandfather, created Earl of
Caithness. Having refused to pay tribute to his successor on the
Scottish throne, he was supplanted in the earldom of Caithness by one
Moddan, who, with a body of troops, had fixed his headquarters in Thurso.
Highly resenting the indignity, Thorfin was determined to maintain his
rights by either fair means or foul. With this view he came to the town,
and surprising his rival in the night-time, he set fire to his house,
and slew him as he attempted to escape by a window from the flames. For
a number of years Thorfin pursued the profession of a regular Viking,
and in that capacity performed many daring achievements along the coasts
of Scotland and Ireland. He made an incursion even into England, fought
three successive pitched battles with the bravest troops of Hardicanute,
[Abercrombie, Mar, Ach, Scots Nation.] and returned home laden with
plunder. When in Caithness, he frequently resided at Duncansbay, from
the advantage of its proximity to Orkney. Some years before his death,
he was seized with remorse for the many crimes and outrages of which he
had been guilty; and, as was customary at the period, he set out on a
pious pilgrimage to Borne, and was there absolved by the Pope of all his
sins. On his return home, he retired to Birsa, in the mainland of
Orkney, where he founded and dedicated a church to Christ, and lived
afterwards a devout life. He died about the year 1064, and was buried in
the church which himself had built. "Thorfm," says Mr Worsaae, "was the
last of the Earls in whom the old Scandinavian Viking's spirit lived and
stirred. His power was greater than that of any of his predecessors;
for, according to the Sagas, he ruled over no fewer than eleven earldoms
in Scotland, over all the Hebrides, and a large kingdom in Ireland."
This statement of the Sagas in regard to Thorfin's ruling over eleven
counties in Scotland is very questionable. That he may have plundered
and devastated eleven counties is highly probable; but that he held them
under his sway, there is no ground whatever for believing. There is not
the least hint of such a thing in any of our Scotch or English annals.