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The Ogilvies
are one of the most distinguished families in Scotland and take their name from
Gillibride, second son of Ghillechriost, Earl of Angus. He bestowed the lands of Ogilvie
and Easter Powrie on his younger son Gilbert in 1177 having been granted a Barony of the
lands by William the Lion around 1163. Patrick de Ogilvy appears on the Ragman Rolls
swearing fealty to Edward I in 1296 but his two sons both supported King Robert the Bruce.
Patrick obtained the lands of Kettins in Angus and his descendant Sir Walter, having wed
the heiress of the Ramsays of Auchterhouse, obtained her barony. The Ogilvies were also
appointed the first Hereditary Sheriffs of Angus. On the death of his son Alexander, the
chiefship passed to his brother, Sir Walter, Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, who married
the heiress of Lintrathen and built the tower of Airlie. His grandson Sir James Ogilvy
became Lord Ogilvy of Airlie in 1491 and James, 8th Lord Ogilvy was created Earl of Airlie
in 1639, and became the recognised chief of all the Ogilvies. The Ogilvies of Airlie
adhered loyally to the Stuart cause throughout the troubled times from 1639 to 1745.
James, 2nd Earl of Airlie was captured at the Battle of Philiphaugh in 1648 which put an
end to Montrose's campaign, he was imprisoned in St Andrew's Castle but escaped the night
before his execution disguised in his sister's clothes. The Ogilvies were also
"out" in 1715 and 1745. At Culloden, an Angus Regiment was lead by Lord Ogilvie,
son of the 5th Earl of Airlie who had barely reached the age of 20 years. He escaped to
France but was pardoned and the Earldom was restored in 1826. Like other clans the
Ogilvies also had their feuds with their neighbouring clans; against the Lindsays and
later the Campbells who in 1640 attempted to destroy the "Bonnie House of
Airlie". The Ogilvies later had their revenge for this act, by setting fire to Castle
Campbell near Dollar. Other cadet branches of the Ogilvies became Earls of Findlater in
1638 and Seafield in 1701. Today the Ogilvie seat is at Cortachy although they still hold
Airlie Castle which was rebuilt after the Campbell destruction.
Another Account of the Clan
BADGE: Seorsa luibh (anchusa) evergreen
alkanet.
THE
Siol Gillichriosd, or Gilchrist—the Race of Gilchrist, claims descent
from a Maormor of Angus of that name, one of the seven great hereditary
chiefs of Scottish districts who bore this designation. When the title of
Maormor came to be replaced by that of Earl in the time of David I.,
Gillibride, son of Gilchrist, became Earl of Angus. While the Earl’s
eldest son succeeded to his father’s title, and the second, Magnus,
inherited, through his mother, the Earldom of Caithness, the third son,
Gilbert, became ancestor of the Ogilvies. By Gaelic enthusiasts the name
is taken to mean a fair or yellow-haired young man—Gille-Bhuidhe, but it
is more likely to be derived from lands so called, of which Gilbert
received a charter in 1172. There is a Glen Ogilvie in the parish of
Glamis, the Ogilvie country at the present day.
Gilbert’s descendant, Sir
Patrick de Ogilvie of Western Powrie, was a steady adherent of King Robert
the Bruce, and received from him a charter of the lands of Kettins in
Forfarshire. From his elder son Alexander descended the Ogilvies of that
ilk, now long extinct. The younger son, Patrick, obtained from his nephew,
Sir Patrick of Ogilvie, the family estate of Western Powrie, and by
marriage with Marjory, heiress of Ramsay of Auchterhouse, added that
estate to his possessions. His son, Walter Ogilvy, on the death of his
uncle, Sir Malcolm Ramsay, in 1365, succeeded to the hereditary Sheriffdom
of Forfar. He is said also to have acquired the barony of Cortachy in
1369, and it was his second son and heir, Sir Walter Ogilvy of
Auchterhouse, Sheriff of Forfar, in whose person the family first made its
way into the limelight of history.
The incident took place in
1391. King Robert II. had only succeeded to the throne in the previous
August, and the rule of Scotland was practically in the hands of his
unscrupulous brother, Robert, Earl of Fife, better known by his later
title of Duke of Albany. Another of the King’s brothers, Alexander, Earl
of Buchan, himself better known as the Wolf of Badenoch, had already shown
his contempt for all authority by plundering the lands of the Bishop of
Moray, and burning the Bishop’s Cathedral and town of Elgin. Forthwith,
following his father’s example, the "Wolf’s" natural son,
Duncan Stewart, at the head of a raiding host of the Robertson clan and
others, suddenly burst out of the Grampians and proceeded to plunder,
burn, and slay in the shire of Angus. Ogilvy of Auchterhouse, as Sheriff,
promptly gathered his people, and with Sir Patrick Gray and Sir David
Lindsay of Glenesk, came up with the raiders at Glen Brierachan, eleven
miles north of Gasklune. Though much inferior in numbers, he did not
hesitate to attack. But, though clad in steel, he and his little party
were no match for the fierce caterans. And while Ogilvy and his
half-brother, with other lairds and some sixty followers were slain, Gray
and Lindsay were grievously wounded, and only with difficulty carried from
the field.
The gallant Sheriff’s
eldest son, Sir Alexander Ogilvy of Auchterhouse, was "the gracious
gude Lord Ogilvy of the Ballad of Harlaw:
For faith and magnanimity
He had few fellows in the field,
Yet fell by fatal destiny,
For he nae ways wad grant to yield.
In that tremendous conflict north of
Aberdeen against Donald of the Isles in 1411, Sir Alexander and his eldest
son, George Ogilvy, were among the slain.
The line of Sir Alexander's
next son, Sir Patrick, ended with his granddaughter, who married James
Stewart, Earl of Buchan, half-brother of King James II. His next son, Sir
Andrew of Inchmartin, was ancestor of the second Earl of Findlater
(son-in-law of the first Earl), who in strict line of blood carried on the
Chieftainship of the Clan. His descendant, the fourth Earl, was the
distinguished Scottish statesman of the days of William and Mary, and
Queen Anne, and on his own merits was created Earl of Seafield. That line
ended, however, at the death of the seventh Earl of Findlater and fourth
Earl of Seafield, when the latter title passed to the son of his aunt, who
had married the Chief of the Grants.
Meanwhile,
Sir Walter, younger brother of the "gracious gude Lord Ogilvy,"
had acquired the estate of Lintrathen by marriage with an heiress, it is
believed, of the Durward family, and had become High Treasurer of Scotland
under James I. Among his transactions he conveyed to his youngest brother
John the estate of Inverquharity. John’s son, Alexander Ogilvy of
Inverquharity, by marriage and purchase acquired many valuable estates,
and was an excellent man of affairs. In the end this ability was his
undoing, and the tragic event in which he was concerned came within
measurable distance of effecting the complete ruin of the Ogilvies. It was
in 1445, when the House of Stewart was still fighting for its sovereignty
against an array of turbulent nobles, and the lawlessness of the latter
had not yet been brought to an end by the decisive action of James II. It
happened that the wealthy monastery of Arbroath had appointed Alexander
Lindsay, afterwards to be known as the Tiger Earl of Crawford, or Earl
Beardie, to be their Justiciar. Finding that ferocious personage a
somewhat expensive and troublesome protector, they deposed him and
appointed Ogilvy of Inverquharity Justiciar in his place. To avenge the
insult and repossess himself of the lucrative office, Lindsay mustered his
vassals, and, reinforced by a large party of the Douglases, appeared
before Arbroath. Ogilvy also gathered his friends and followers, and was
helped by Sir Alexander Seton of Gordon, afterwards Earl of Huntly, who
happened at the moment to be a guest at his house, and obliged by an
ancient Scottish custom to fight for his host so long as the food he had
eaten under his roof remained in his stomach. As the two forces faced each
other, Lindsay’s father, the old Earl of Crawford, anxious to prevent
bloodshed, came galloping between the lines. A common soldier, unaware of
his rank, and annoyed at his interference, shot him dead. This greatly
infuriated the Lindsays, who, rushing fiercely to the attack, cut the
Ogilvies to pieces. The latter made such a gallant resistance that nearly
every man fell, including Inverquharity himself, and Seton only narrowly
escaped. Lindsay then proceeded to lay waste the Ogilvy country, burning,
slaying, and plundering throughout the district. The house of
Inverquharity, however, survived the disaster, and in 1626 was raised to
the rank of baronetcy, which it still enjoys, though its original
patrimony was disposed of in the eighteenth century, and its seat is now
Baldovan, near Dundee.
At the same time the elder
line of Lintrathen was also advancing in possessions and power. The son of
the Treasurer acquired the lands and castle of Eroly or Airlie in 1459,
and his son, Sir James Ogilvie of Airlie, who was sent as Ambassador to
Denmark in 1491, was made a Lord of Parliament as Lord Ogilvy in that
year. The second Lord Ogilvie of Airlie married a sister of the first Earl
of Montrose, and the third married Margaret, daughter of David, eight Earl
of Crawford. The fourth Lord’s eldest son fell at Pinkie in 1547, and
the seventh Lord was made Earl of Airlie by Charles I. in 1639.
A year earlier Lord Ogilvy
of Deskford, representative of the second son of the High Treasurer of
James I.’s time, had been made Earl of Findlater, so that the Ogilvies
had now two Earldoms to their name.
The Earl of Airlie was a
devoted Royalist, who, joining the little army of the Marquess of
Montrose, distinguished himself highly at that leader’s crowning
victory, the battle of Kilsyth. He and his family suffered severely for
their adherence to the cause of Charles I. In 1640 the Earl of Argyll,
head of the Covenanting Party, procured a commission from the Committee of
Estates to proceed with fire and sword against those who had not signed
the Covenant, and who were therefore termed "enemies to
religion." This commission he proceeded to turn to account for the
destruction of families whom he considered unfriendly to his own. Among
them were the Ogilvies. The Earl of Airlie was in England at the time, but
his house was in the keeping of his eldest son, Lord Ogilvy, when it and
Forthar, another seat of the family, were taken, pillaged, and burned by
Argyll. Lady Ogilvy, it is said, was near confinement at the time
and begged for delay upon that account, but Argyll refused, and turned her
out remorselessly. The incident is commemorated in the well-known ballad,
"The Bonnie House o’ Airlie." By way of reprisal, when
Montrose took the field, with the Earl of Airlie in his company, they
crossed the Ochils and burned Argyll’s own stronghold of Castle
Campbell, above Dollar, which still remains as they left it, a ruin.
Airlie’s second son, Sir Thomas Ogilvy, raised a regiment for the Royal
cause, and fell at the battle of Inverlochy, where Argyll, taking refuge
in his galley, saw his forces cut to pieces by Montrose. In the autumn of
the same year, when Montrose suffered his first and last defeat at Philiphaugh,
below Selkirk, Airlie’s eldest son James was taken prisoner. While the
Covenanters were butchering and hanging at Newark and elsewhere the
captives they had taken, Ogilvy was sentenced to execution at St. Andrews,
but on the night before the sentence was to be carried out he made a
romantic escape in the attire which his sister managed to exchange with
him.
A member of the clan took
part in another romantic event of that time. George Ogilvy of Barras was
governor of Dunnottar Castle when that stronghold was besieged by Cromwell’s
troops, and it was by his connivance that the wife of the neighbouring
minister of Kinneff saved the Scottish regalia by carrying it through the
English army in a bundle of flax.
In 1715, when the Earl of
Mar took arms for Queen Anne’s brother as "James VIII. and
III.," he was joined by James, Lord Ogilvy, elder son of the third
Earl, and after the collapse of the rebellion at Sheriffmuir he was
attainted. He received a pardon from the Crown in 1725, but was not
enabled to assume the family honours. On his death without issue, however,
in 1731, his younger brother John assumed the title as fourth Earl, Lord
Ogilvie having been attainted before the death of his father, the third
Earl, in 1717. The family and clan, nevertheless, remained strongly
Jacobite; and after the landing of Prince Charles Edward in 1745 the Earl’s
eldest son, David, Lord Ogilvy, joined the Prince at Edinburgh with a
following of 600 men, chiefly of his own name. After the final overthrow
of the cause at Culloden he escaped through Norway and Sweden to France,
where he commanded a regiment known as "Ogilvy’s," and rose to
the rank of lieutenant-general. His wife was imprisoned after Culloden,
but also escaped to France. Meanwhile, also in his father’s lifetime, he
had been attainted, and though he received a pardon in 1778, and a
Parliamentary removal of his disabilities in 1783, he was not empowered to
assume the honours of his house. His son, titular Earl of Airlie, died
unmarried in 1812. Thereupon the Earldom was claimed by Walter Ogilvie,
younger son of the fourth Earl, but the English judges who were consulted
by the House of Lords were of opinion that the attainders of his brother
and uncle, though both of them had taken place before they could inherit
the titles and estates, operated against him. It was not till 1826 that
Parliament confirmed and restored the family honours to his eldest
surviving son, who was then acknowledged as David, sixth Earl of Airlie.
The seventh Earl was a
Knight of the Thistle, a representative peer, and Lord High Commissioner
to the Church of Scotland from 1872 to 1878. The eighth Earl, who was
lieutenant-colonel of the 12th Lancers, took part in the Egyptian war, and
was killed in action in the South African War, at Diamond Hill, near
Pretoria, in 1900, after gallantly leading his regiment in a successful
charge which saved the guns. The present Earl is his eldest son. The
family estates comprise most of the old Ogilvy country, and extend far up
the Grampian glens, while the chief seat is Cortachy Castle, overlooking
the lovely and fertile valley of Strathmore.
Septs of Clan Ogilvie: Airlie, Gilchrist,
MacGilchrist
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Another account of the clan...
Ogilvy
is a surname derived from a barony in the parish of Glammis, Forfarshire, which, about
1163, was bestowed by William the Lion on Gilbert, ancestor of the noble family of Airlie,
and, in consequence, he assumed the name of Ogilvy. He is said to have been the third son
of Gillibrede, or Gilchirst, maormor of Angus. In the charters of the second and third
Alexanders there are witnesses of the name of Ogilvy. Sir Patrick de Ogilvy aheared
steadily to Robert the Bruce, who bestowed upon him the lands of Kettins in Forfarshire.
The barony of Cortachy was acquired by the family in 1369-70. The "gracious gude Lord
Ogilvy", as he is styled in the old ballad of the battle of Harlaw, in which battle
the principal barons of Forfarshire fought on the side of the Earl of Mar, who
commanded
the royal army, was the son of Sir Walter Ogilvy of Auchterhouse, slain in a clan battle
with the Robertsons in 1394.
"Of the best amang them was
The gracious gude Lord Ogilvy,
The sheriff-principal of Angus
Renownit for truth and equity -
For faith and magnanimity
He had few fellows in the field,
Yet fell by fatal destiny,
For he nae ways was grant to yield".
His eldest son, George Ogilvy, was also slain.
Lord Ogilvy, the first title of Airlie family, was conferred by James IV, in 1491, on Sir
John Ogilvy of Lintrathen.
James, seventh lord Ogilvy, was created Earl of Airlie, in 1639.
The title of Lord Ogilvy of Deskford was conferred, 4th October 1616, on Sir Walter Ogilcy
of Deskford and Findlater, whose son, James, second Lord Deskford, was created Earl of
Findlater, 20th February 1638. He was descended from Sir Walter Ogilvy of Lintrathen, high
treasurer of Scotland.
The clan Ogilvy are called "the Siol Gilchrist", the race or posterity of
Gilchrist. In 1526, the Mackintoshes invaded the country of the Ogilvies, and massacred no
fewer than 24 gentlemen of the name. A feud between the Campbells and the Ogilvies
subsisted for several centuries. In Pitcairn's Criminal Trials we find James Ogilvy
complaining, on 21st October 1591, that a body of Argyll's men had attacked him when
residing peaceably in Glenisla, in Forfarshire, which anciently belonged to the Ogilvies,
killed several of his people, ravaged the country, and compelled him and his lady to fell
for their lives.
The Ogilvies had their revenge in 1645, for the burning of "the bonnie house of
Airlie", and the other strongholds of the Ogilvies, when Castle Campbell, near
Dollar, or the Castle of Gloom, its original name, was destroyed by them and the
Macleans, and the territory of the Marquis of Argyll was overrun by the fierce and
ruthless clan that followed Montrose, and carried fire and sword throughout the whole
estates of the clan Campbell. |
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