The Northern Picts
called themselves Gael, spoke the Gaelic Language, and were the real
Ancestors of the modern Highlanders.
IN the preceding
chapter it has been shewn that the revolution in 843, generally termed
the Scottish conquest, made no alteration whatever in the state of the
inhabitants of the northern or mountainous part of Scotland, but that
its effects were confined exclusively to the southern and lowland
districts. This important point being established, we come now more
immediately to the question of the origin of the modern Highlanders, or
that Gaelic race at present inhabiting these mountains. From the remarks
which have been previously made on the early history of Scotland, it is
plain the Highlanders must have been either the descendants of the
northern Picts, or of the Scots of Dalriada who conquered the southern
Picts, or else we must suppose them to have been a different people from
either of these nations, and to have entered the country subsequently to
the Scottish conquest; for these three suppositions manifestly exhaust
all the theories which can be formed on the subject of their origin. The
second of these theories is the one which has generally been maintained
by historians, and the traditions at present current among the
Highlanders themselves would rather support the latter. In another part
of this work, the descent of the modern Highland clans from the Gaelic
race which inhabited the Highlands of Scotland in the eleventh and
twelfth centuries, will be fully shewn. But the present chapter will be
devoted to the proof of the simple fact, that the Gaelic race were the
descendants of the inhabitants of the same district in the ninth
century, and consequently of the northern Picts. It would be
inconsistent with the limits of this work to enter into any examination
of the other two hypotheses, and it would also be unnecessary, for it is
evident that if I am successful in establishing this great fact, the
reputed origin of the Highlanders from the Scots, whether of Dalriada or
of Ireland, as well as all the other systems which have been maintained,
must be equally false.
The descent of
the Highlanders of the eleventh and twelfth centuries from the northern
Picts of the ninth, may be proved in two ways: – First, by shewing that
the northern Picts spoke the same language and bore the same national
appellation as the Highlanders, and when we add to this the fact, that
they inhabited the same territories at no very great distance of time,
the presumption will be very strong that they must have been the same
people. Secondly, by tracing the Highlanders up to the northern Picts,
and by shewing such a connexion between these two nations as to render
it impossible that any foreign people could have settled in the
Highlands between these periods.
In the
first place, they spoke the same language, and were known among
themselves by the same national name. It is well known that the language
spoken by the Highlanders of Scotland is a dialect of that great branch
of the Celtic languages termed the “Gaelic,” and that the people using
that language have always termed themselves Gael, while the Highlanders
as belonging to that branch of the Celtic race designate themselves
sometimes ad Gael and sometimes Albaniach or Gael Albanaich. These facts
are admitted by every one.
The first
proof which I shall bring that the Picts were a Gaelic race, and spoke a
dialect of the Gaelic language, is from the Welsh Triads The Triads
appear distinctly to have been written previous to the Scottish conquest
in the ninth century, and they mention among the three usurping tribes
of Britain the “Gwyddyl Ffichti,” and add immediately afterwards,
“and these Gwyddyl Ffichti are in Alban, along the shore of the sea of
Llychlyn.” In another place, among the treacherous tribes of Britain,
the same Triads mention the “Gwyddyl coch o’r Werddon a ddaethant in
Alban,” that is “the Red Gwyddyl from Ireland, who came into Alban,”
plainly alluding to the Dalriads, who were an Irish colony, and who have
been acknowledged by all to have been a Gaelic race. It will be observed
from these passages that the Welsh Triads, certainly the oldest and most
unexceptionable authority on the subject, apply the same term of Gwyddyl
to the Picts and to the Dalriads, and consequently they must have been
of the same race, and the Picts a Gaelic people. Farther, the Welsh word
“Gwyddyl,” by which they distinguish that race, has been declared by all
the best authorities to be exactly synonymous with the word Gael, the
name by which the Highlanders have at all times been distinguished, and
the Welsh words “Gwyddyl Ffichti” cannot be interpreted to mean anything
else than “ the “GAELIC PICTS,” or “PICTISH GAEL.” [It may be
mentioned that these passages are taken from the originals in Welch, as
published in that invaluable work the Welsh Archaeology.]
Besides the
passage above quoted, the Triads frequently mention the Picts, and at
all times with the word “Gwyddyl” prefixed. Caradoc of Nantgarvan, a
Welsh writer of the twelfth century, also frequently mentions the Picts
by this title of “Gwyddyl Ffichti,” or Gaelic Picts.
But the Welsh
writers are not the only authorities who prove the Picts to have spoken
Gaelic, for a native writer of the seventh century, and one who from his
residence in the north of Scotland must have been well acquainted with
their language, furnishes the most incontrovertible evidence that that
language was a dialect of the Gaelic. Adomnan, it is well known, wrote
the Life of Saint Columba in the seventh century, at a time when the
Picts were at the height of their power. On one occasion he mentions
that when Columba was in Skye, a Gentile old man, as he always
terms the Picts, came to him, and having been converted, was baptized in
that island. He then adds this passage: “qui holieque in ora certitur
maritima fluviusque ejusdem loci in quo idem baptisma acceperat ex
nomine ejus DOBUR Artbranani usque in holiernum nominatus diem ab
accolis vocitatus.” [Adomnan, b. 1, c. 33] It so happens, however,
that “Dobur” in Gaelic means “a well,” and that it is a word
altogether peculiar to that language, and not to be found in any other.
It has been fully proved in a preceding chapter, in discussing the
extent of the Pictish territories, that the inhabitants of Skye must at
that time have been Picts, and consequently it will follow of necessity
from this passage that they used the Gaelic language.
It may be
proper here to notice an argument which has been frequently drawn from
Adomnan, that the Picts and Scots must have spoken languages very
different from each other. It has been urged as a conclusive argument by
those who assert the language of the Picts to have been a Teutonic
dialect, that on several occasions when Columba, who was an Irish Scot,
addressed the Picts, he is described by Adomnan as using an
interpreter. Now, although Columba is very frequently mentioned as
conversing with the Picts, there are but two occasions on which any such
expression is used, [Adomnan, b. 2, c. 33, 12.] and in both
passages the expression of Adomnan is exactly the same, viz.: – “
Verbo Dei per
interpretatorem recepto.” It will be remarked, that Adomnan does not say
that Columba used an interpreter in conversing with the Picts, but
merely that he interpreted or explained the word of God, that is, the
bible, which being written in Latin, would doubtless require to be
interpreted to them; and the very distinction which is made by Adomnan,
who never uses this expression when Columba addresses the Picts, but
only when he reads the word of God to them, proves clearly that they
must have understood each other without difficulty, and that there could
have been but little difference of language between the two nations of
Picts and Scots.
The third
proof which I shall adduce to show that the Picts spoke a Gaelic
dialect, and perhaps the strongest of all, is derived from the
topography of the country. The territories of the Picts, as we have
shewn in a preceding chapter, consisted of the whole of Scotland north
of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, with the exception of the southern
parts of Argyll. It has never been disputed that the names of the places
in general throughout this territory can admit of being derived from
some Celtic dialect only, and that those in the Highlands are
exclusively Gaelic; even Pinkerton has confessedly failed altogether in
his attempt to discover Teutonic etymologies for the topography of the
country. It would therefore be but a waste of time to prove an assertion
which has been so generally admitted; and it will only be necessary here
to notice two objections which have been made to the conclusion to which
we are naturally led by this fact, viz.: – that the Picts, who at all
times inhabited the greater part of the north of Scotland, must have
been a Gaelic people.
In the first
place, it has been said that there is a clear distinction perceptible
between the names of places in the Highlands and those in the eastern or
Lowland part of the country, and that while the former are
unquestionably Gaelic, the latter can be traced to the Cymric or Welsh
dialect only. From this supposed distinction, one author [Pinkerton.]
concludes that the country must have been inhabited by British tribes
before the arrival of the Caledonian or Picts, who are considered by jim
as of Teutonic origin; and another author [Chalmers.] infers,
from the same fact, that the Picts themselves were of Cymric or British
descent. Nothing, however, can be more erroneous than the premises from
which these conclusions are drawn; for an attentive examination of the
topography of the two divisions of the country will shew that there is
no difference whatever between the elements which compose the names of
the natural features in both, and that those in the Lowlands are as
purely Gaelic as those in the Highlands.
The words
which are principally dwelt upon as affording proof of a Welsh
derivation are those syllables, Aber, For, Pit, Lan, Strath, & c., which
so frequently enter into the composition of the names of places in
Scotland. Now, nothing more will be requisite than to refer to the best
Gaelic dictionaries, in order to shew that all these words are as purely
Gaelic as they are Welsh; and a map of the Highland will prove
distinctly that they are to be found as constantly occurring in the one
part of the country as in the other. [The first of these words is the
one which has been principally made use of in this argument, and it has
been always assumed that Aber is a Welsh word corresponding exactly with
the Gaelic word Inver, and that they are used synonymously in the
different parts of Scotland. The best mode of ascertaining to what
language a word properly belongs is by reducing that word to its
primitives, and in whatever language the primitives are formed. It is
from that dialect that the word must be held to have sprung. Now the
Gaelic word inver is well known to be composed of the preposition ann
and the primitive word bior, signifying water; but it is quite plain
that that word bior also enters into the composition of the word aber,
which is formed by the addition of the Gaelic word ath, signifying a
ford, and consequently, according to the rules of philology, we must
consider aber to be a Gaelic word; a fact which is asserted in the
latest and best Gaelic dictionaries. With regard to all these disputed
words, reference is made to the excellent Gaelic Dictionary published by
the Highland Society of Scotland.]
The second
objection which has been made to the conclusion is a more serious one,
for it has been asserted by one writer with great confidence, that the
topography of Scotland has changed, and that the Gaelic names so
universal over the country were introduced by the Scottish conquest in
the ninth century. Of such a change of nomenclature he has, after much
research, produced one solitary example. To this it might be a
sufficient answer to remark, that history shews us that a change of
population rarely if ever produces any change in the topography of the
country, and that in particular no change is perceptible in Scotland
during the last eight centuries, although the Lowlanders, a Teutonic
race, have been in possession of the country which was previously
inhabited by a Celtic race. But a still stronger answer will be found in
the fact that a considerable number of the names of places in the
Pictish territories previous to the Scottish conquest, have come
down to us in the ancient chronicles, and that these names are
invariably retained in the present day, and are of pure Gaelic origin. A
remarkable instance of this occurs in the Pictish Chronicle. That
ancient chronicle, in mentioning the foundation of the Church of
Abernethy, describes the boundaries of the territory ceded to the
Culdees by the Pictish king as having been “a lapide in Apurfeirt
usque ad lapidem juxta Cairfuil, id est Lethfoss, et inde in
altum usque ad Athan.” It is plain from the style of this passage
that these names were used at that very time. and it is a remarkable
fact that the same places are still known by these names, although
slightly corrupted into those of Apurfarg, Carpow, and Ayton, and that
the words are unquestionably Gaelic. It may also be remarked that the
“Cairfuil id est Lethfoss” is exactly parallel to the instance so
triumphantly adduced by the author above alluded to, [Inverin qui
fuit Aberin.” – Chalmers.] and shews that a place may from various
circumstances have two names, both of which can be traced to the same
language. It will be unnecessary to produce other instances in proof of
the fact that the names of places have almost universally remained
unaltered to the present day from a very early period. A perusal of
Adomnan’s life of St. Columba will of itself be sufficient to establish
the fact in respect of Scottish topography, and numerous examples will
be found in other sources. These three proofs then which we have brought
forward suffice to shew that the Picts must have spoken a Gaelic
dialect, and form a body of evidence much stronger than any which can
generally be adduced regarding the language of a nation of which no
written memorial has come down to us.
With regard to
their national appellation, it may be remarked that besides the evidence
of the Welsh Triads, the Pictish Chronicle shows that they were known in
the ninth century by the name of Gael. That chronicle mentions, in the
reign of Donald, the brother and successor of Kenneth Mac Alpin, the
following circumstance: – “In hujus tempore jura ac leges regni Edi
filii Eadachi fecerunt Goedeli cum rege suo in Fothuirtabaict.”
The kingdom of Edus or Edfin was, it is well known, the Scottish kingdom
of Dalriada prior to the conquest. Now, if by the word Goedeli the Scots
are meant, it is impossible to conceive how they could come to enact
laws which were already the laws of their kingdom. The manner in which
the passage is expressed plainly indicates that the Goedeli were
different altogether from the regnum Edi, and that the Goedeli were
enacting the laws of a kingdom different from their own. The transaction
has also plainly the appearance of a species of treaty or compact
between the Goedeli on the one hand and the king of the other. We know
that the regnum Edi was the Scottish kingdom, and that Donald, at that
time king, was of Scottish lineage, and a descendant of Edfin. The only
mode by which an intelligible construction can be put upon his passage,
is to suppose that the Goedeli here refers to the Picts, and that the
Pictish Chronicle is describing a solemn agreement between the Picts and
the Scottish king, by which they submitted themselves to him, and
adopted many of the laws of the Scottish kingdom. Besides the general
name of Gael, the Picts also, as well as the Highlanders, used the name
of Albani or Albanaich; and an instance of this will be found in the
descriptions given by the ancient Saxon writers of the Battle of the
Standard in the year 1136, where the Picts of Galloway, who were placed
in the front of the army, are mentioned, in charging the enemy, to have
shouted as their war-cry, “Albanich, Albanich!”
When we
consider that the northern Picts have been proved to have inhabited the
whole of the Highlands, with the exception of southern Argyll, even as
late as the end of the ninth century, and that the Scottish conquest did
not produce any change either in their situation or in their
territories; and that it has also been proved that these northern Picts
spoke the Gaelic language, and bore the appellation of Gael and Albanich
as well as the Highlanders, the presumption is very strong indeed that
they must have been the same people, and one which it would require
evidence of no ordinary force to overturn. But in the second place,
there is still another proof which remains to be adduced in order to
show that the Highlanders were the descendants of the northern Picts,
and that is, to trace the Highlanders as in possession of the Highlands
as far back as we can, until we arrive at a period in which we had
previously found the northern Picts inhabiting the same country; and
thus the impossibility of the Highland clans having been descended from
any other nation, would be evident.
During the
eleventh and twelfth centuries, the north of Scotland, which at that
time was unquestionably inhabited by a Gaelic race, was divided into
several great districts; the principal of which were the districts of
Athol, Moray, Ross, Garmoran, Mar, and Buchan. During this period also,
we find, in the ancient chronicles, and in the Irish Annalists, very
frequent mention made of certain persons bearing the title of Maormors,
and generally acting an important part in the various events of Scottish
history. It is of the greatest consequence for the due understanding of
the history of this period, as will appear in the sequel, to ascertain
exactly the nature of that title, and of the territorial divisions of
Scotland at the time; and fortunately these ancient authorities have
left us sufficient materials for that purpose. A comparison of the
different facts recorded regarding that office, will lead to the
following results.
First. – The
office of Maormor appears to have been next in dignity and power to that
of the king; thus, the Annals of Ulster, in describing one of the
numerous battles which took place between the Scots and the Danes in the
tenth century, add “that many of the Scot were killed, but that neither
king n or Maormor of them were lost in the conflict. [An. Ult.
ad an. 917.] Besides this, the Pictish Chronicle frequently records
the death of some of the Maormors as well as that of the king.
Second. – We
always find the title of Maormor associated and connected with one or
other of the great districts into which Scotland was at that time
divided; thus, the Annals of Ulster mention the Maormor of Moray, – the
Pictish Chronicle, the Maormors of Angus, Atholl, &c. – the Annals of
Innisfallen, the Maormor of Mar; and that connexion was apparently so
close and intimate, as to enable them at times to wage independent war
with the king of Scotland himself.
Third. – Every
notice regarding the succession of the Maormors which has reached us,
proves that they observed a rule of succession strictly hereditary. Of
this many examples might be given, but perhaps the strongest will be
found in the succession of the Maormors of Moray.
In 1032, the
Annals of Ulster mention the death of Gilcomgain Mac Maolbride, Maormor
of Mureve. Here we see that although one of the Maormors of Moray had
obtained possession of the throne of Scotland, yet on his being driven
from that prominent station, his son appears as Maormor of Moray. The
history of the same family also shews very clearly that the succession
to the dignity of Maormor was strictly a male succession, for in the
beginning of the eleventh century, we find Malcolm Mac Maolbride, the
Maormor of Moray, in possession of the throne of Scotland; and although
it appears from the Sagas, that Sigurd, earl of Orkney, married
Malcolm’s daughter, and that on Malcolm’s death. Thorfinn, earl of
Orkney, his grandson, was his nearest heir according to feudal
principals, yet we find that he was succeeded in Moray by his brother
Gilcomgan Mac Maolbride, to whose posterity also his claim to the throne
of Scotland descended.
Fourth. – Not
only were the Maormors so intimately connected with the great districts
of Scotland as to shew that they must have possessed in them
considerable power and extent of territory, but they also appear as the
hereditary leaders of great tribes, as well as the hereditary governors
of these districts. For in the year 1020, Tighernac mentions the death
of Finlay Mac Ruairi, Maormor of the Clan Croeb, or sons of
Croeb, by the children of his brother Maolbride. This id a very
important fact, for it shews that the Gaelic population of the north of
Scotland was divided into great tribes, corresponding to the great
territorial division of the country; and that over each of these tribes,
the Maormor of the district was hereditary lord, and consequently it
follows from this fact, that the Maormors were of the same race with the
people whom they governed.
Fifth. –
Further, this title of Maormor was quite peculiar to the Gaelic people,
who at this period inhabited Scotland. It is impossible, on examining
the history of this early period, to avoid being struck with this fact,
and the remark has accordingly been very generally made by the later
historians. It was altogether unknown among the Irish, although they
were also a Gaelic people; for although Tighernac frequently mentions
Maormors of Alban as being engaged in many of the feuds in Ireland, yet
we never find that title given by any of the Annalists to an Irish
chief. In Britain the title was confined to the north of Scotland, and
although many of the Saxon and Norman barons and other foreigners
obtained extensive territories in Scotland, and even at an early period
not infrequently succeeded by marriage to the possessions and powers of
some of the Maormors, yet we never find them appearing under that title.
From this it is plain, that whenever we find a person bearing the title
of Maormor, we may conclude that that person was chief of some tribe of
the Gaelic race which inhabited the northern districts of Scotland at
this period.
Sixth. – The
great territorial divisions of Scotland, the chiefs of which were termed
Maormors, appear in the Norse Sagas under two names, Riki and Iarldom,
of which the former was more peculiarly and exclusively applied to them.
Thus, on one occasion it is said, that Sigurd had these Rikis in
Scotland, Ros, Sutherland, Moray, and Dala. But Sigurd was also in
possession of Caithness, which having belonged to the Norwegians for a
long time, was not governed by a Maormor, and as that district is not
included under the term Riki, it is plain that that term was applied
only to the Maormorships, if I may so call them. With regard to the
other term, Iarldom, the Orkney-inga Saga mentions, that Thorfinn,
Earl of Orkney, died possessed of the Hebrides, a great extent of
territory in Ireland, and nine Iarldoms in Scotland; by these Iarldoms,
the Maormorships only can be meant, and it will be observed, that in
narrating the possessions of Thorfinn, that term is applied to the
districts on the mainland of Scotland only. The Maormors themselves
appear in the Norse Sagas under one name only, that of Scotajarl,
and there is good reason for thinking that that title was applied to
them exclusively.
From the
preceding observations upon the nature of the title of Maormor, and of
the territorial divisions of Scotland in the eleventh century, we see
that at that period the Gaelic inhabitant of the north of Scotland were
divided into several great tribes, which corresponded exactly with the
great territorial divisions of the country. We also see, that the
Maormors of the different districts were the hereditary and native
chiefs of these great tribes, and that that title was altogether
peculiar to the Gaelic inhabitants of Scotland. The history of these
Maormors, then, becomes a very important medium for ascertaining the
earlier history of the Highlanders; for, whenever we find any of the
northern chiefs mentioned in the history of Scotland as having this
title, we may conclude with certainly, that the northern districts were
at that time inhabited by the same Gaelic race whom we find in
possession of them in the eleventh century. Independently of this, the
particular history of some of the Maormors affords distinct evidence
that the Highlanders inhabited the north of Scotland as far back as the
middle of the tenth century, for the line of the Maormors of Moray can
be distinctly traced as in possession of that district from the end of
the eleventh century up to that period. The Maormors of Atholl also can
be traced as far back, though not by such strong evidence as those of
Moray, and likewise those of Mar.
In the
preceding chapter, it has been seen that there is distinct evidence of
the possession of the Highlands by the northern Picts as late as the
conquest of Thorstein, in the year 894; there is consequently a period
of but fifty-six years between the last notice of the northern Picts and
the earliest period to which the line of the particular Maormors can be
traced, and any revolution by which the Highlanders, if they were a
foreign race, could have obtained possession of the north of Scotland,
must have taken place during that short period of fifty-six years. But
we find mention made of the Maormors of Scotland at a much earlier
period than even this; for the annals of Ulster mention them as holding
the rank next to the king in the year 917. It is quite impossible to
suppose, that during the short space of twenty-three years so very great
a change could have taken place in the population of the northern
districts, and that the northern Picts, who are found in almost
independent possession of that part of Scotland, could have, during so
short a time, been driven out of their territories, and a new race have
come in their place; or that such an event, if it could have happened,
would have escaped the notice of every historian. And this conclusion is
also very strongly corroborated by the circumstance, that the Norse
Sagas and the Irish Annals, which at all times mutually corroborate each
other, and which together form the only authentic history of Scotland
from the conquest of Thorstein in 894 down to the eleventh century,
contain no hint whatever of any change in the population of the north of
Scotland; and a perusal of the Sagas, which commence to narrate events
in the north of Scotland in the very year in which we find the last
mention of the northern Picts, will be sufficient to shew that no event
of so very formidable a nature could have occurred without its having
been mentioned by them.
The history of
the Maormors of Scotland then, forms a clue by which the Highlanders of
the eleventh century can be distinctly traced up to the northern Picts
of the ninth century, and when we add to this the facts that the
northern Picts spoke the same language, bore the same national
appellation, and inhabited the same territories as the Highlanders did,
it is impossible that we can come to any other conclusion than that they
were the same people.
Having now
concluded the chain of argument by which the true origin of the
Highlanders of Scotland has been demonstrated it will be improper here
to recapitulate shortly the different leading facts which have been
established, and by which that origin has been determined.
In the
first place. – It has been shewn, that from the earliest period down
to the end of the first century, that part of Scotland which extends to
the north of the Firths of Forth and Clyde, was at all times inhabited
by a single nation, termed by the Romans at first Caledonians, and
afterwards Picts.
In the
second place. – It has been proved, that in the beginning of the
sixth century, an Irish colony arrived in Scotland, and obtained
possession of the southern part of Argyll, and that during a period of
340 years, the territorities [sic] and relative situation of the two
nations of the Picts and Dalriads remained unaltered.
In the
third place. – It has been proved, that during this period the Picts
were divided into two great nations, the Dicaledones, Cruithne, or
northern Picts, and the Vecturiones, Piccardach, or southern Picts; that
the northern Picts inhabited the whole of the mountainous part of the
country, with the exception of the Dalriadic territories, consisting of
southern Argyll alone, while the southern Picts occupied the plains;
that in the year 843, the Dialradic Scots conquered the Piccardach or
southern Picts, but that their conquest was confined to that branch
of the Pictish nation alone; and that while the northern Picts
probably assisted th Dalriadic Scots in that conquest, their situation
was, at all events, not in any respect altered by it, but on the
contrary, that they remained in full possession of the north of
Scotland.
In the
fourth place. – We have proved that the northern Picts occupied
the whole of the Highlands as late as the end of the ninth century;
– we have shewn that they spoke the same language, and bore the same
national name as the Highlanders did; – and lastly, we have traced the
Highlanders as in possession of the Highland districts, up to the very
period in which we had previously found these districts inhabited by the
northern Picts.
These facts
then, supported as they are by evidence of no ordinary description, lead
us to this simple result, that the Highlands of Scotland have been
inhabited by the same nation from the earliest period to the present
day. And that while the tribes composing that nation have uniformly
styled themselves Gael or Albanich, they have been known to the numerous
invaders of the country under the various appellations of Albiones,
Caledonii, Picti, Dicaledones, Cruithne, Northern Picts, Reddschankes,
Wild Scottis, and Highlanders.