I have in the following pages adopted the old
name of the islanders, as it is quite impossible in many cases
to distinguish between deeds done by the Arran or Butemen singly
and those done collectively. Arnold Blair, chaplain to
Wallace, from whose MS. Blind Harry got his material, writing
shortly after the death of Wallace, in 1305, says: "In this
unfortunate battle (Falkirk) were slain, on the Scottish side,
John Stewart of Bute, with his Brandans; for so they name them
that are taken up to serve in the wars forth of the Stewart's
lands." Both the islands had, it will be remembered, been
acquired by the Stewarts a century earlier by the marriage with
Jane, granddaughter of Angus MacSomhairle. Hector Boece, writing
in 1527, says: "Brandani—ita enim ea setate incolae Arain et
Boitae insularum vulgo vocabantur." "The term," says Fullarton,
"has been understood as denoting the military tenants holding of
the Great Steward "; and this explanation seems to fit in best
with all the facts, especially with the evidences of their
independent action on many occasions,—an independence worthy of
the old Gall Gael of whom they were the descendants. D.
Macpherson says: "The people of Bute, and I believe also of
Arran, perhaps so called in honour of St. Brendan." St. Brendan,
who died in a.d. 577, was a companion of St. Colum or Col-umba.
Camden states that the saint lived and laboured in Bute; but
there seems to be no direct evidence of this.
The Rev. Neil MacBride of Lamlash again suggests that the word
Brandani means the bold water or spray men; and, of course, it
is quite possible that it may mean simply the men of the sea of
Brandan. The Book of Arran goes, I think, far afield when it
follows Captain White, who assumes that the name Kilbrannan
refers to a kil or cell of St. Brendan of Clonfert, and tries to
find in a small church on the coast of Kintyre the actual cell
of this saint. Mr. Balfour, is, I think, equally mistaken in
believing that in the site at Kilpatrick they have discovered
the real St. Brendan's church. The site, he says, is "on the
northern shoulder of Leac Bhreac." The name of the hill that
guards it isTorr an Daimh, which he translates "the hill of the
church." This is, he says, "the only known memorial save the
record furnished by the cashel itself, that this was one of the
first outposts of Christianity in Scotland." This site, first
discovered by the Arran Society, may, of course, be
ecclesiastical, but it does not follow that it was founded by
Brendan.
Mr. Balfour asks where, failing this,
is the church which gives its name to Kilbrandon Sound?
St. Brendan does not seem to have figured largely in the West
Highlands. There is a small parish church in Argyll called
Kilbrandon, and my suggestion is that the name of the Sound
contains no reference to a church; that the word is not Kil but
"Kyle," a narrow sea, passage, or strait of water, which is
familiar in the "Kyles" of Bute, the "Kyle" of Lochalsh, "Kulri"
in Skye. I suggest that this name was given long before
Brendan's time, and is taken from the name Bran or Branan MacLir,
a brother of Man-nanan, who beyond doubt gave his name to the
neighbour isle of Man. They were sons of Ler the sea-god, made
famous by Shakespeare, and in the Keltic story, The Fate of the
Children of Lir. The old name of the islanders, assuming that it
contains the same root, the Brandani or Brannani, would be thus
the followers of the war-god, a name that would fit their
character when history first introduces us to them. By that time
Bran had undergone the change which so many of his brother gods
underwent when the Christian monks had the shrewdness to
appropriate them for their own Church; he was by them credited
with having introduced Christianity into Britain, and became
Bran the Blessed!
The fact that the name of
the saint, though common in Ireland, does not occur amongst the
men either of Arran or Kintyre, who are all men of the Sound of
Kilbrandon, seems to support my contention, or at any rate to
suggest that the saint's and their name have no connection with
each other, save that they are probably borrowed from the same
source.
It is to be regretted that the Rev. J.
K. Hewison in his Bute in the Olden Time, unlike any other
writer on the subject, has written as though all the deeds of
the Brandani had been performed by the Bute men alone, which is
as unreasonable as it would be to suppose that Wallace's remark
given by Blind Harry—"Good westland men of Arran and Rauchle, if
they be warned they will all come to me," did not include in
Wallace's mind the men of Bute itself, who with their Arran
kinsmen and the men of Fife had fought so splendidly at Falkirk.
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