Battle of Harlaw explained

Conflict:Battle of Harlaw
Partof:the feud between the Clan Donald and the Stewart royal family
Date:24 July 1411[1]
Place:North of Inverurie, Scotland
Coordinates:
57.3081°N -2.4119°W
Map Type:Scotland
Map Relief:1
Result:Tactical draw
Strategic Crown victory
Combatant1:Scottish Crown (Lowland clans loyal to the Duke of Albany)
Combatant2:Lordship of the Isles (Highland clans)
Commander1:Alexander Stewart, Earl of Mar
Commander2:Donald of Islay, Lord of the Isles
Strength1:Several thousand
Strength2:Fewer than 10,000 (up to 40,000 by some accounts)
Casualties1:600 dead
Casualties2:900 dead
Notes:
Embed:yes
Designation1:UK Registered Battlefields
Designation1 Date:21 March 2011

The Battle of Harlaw (Gaelic; Scottish Gaelic: Cath Gairbheach) was a Scottish clan battle fought on 24 July 1411 just north of Inverurie in Aberdeenshire. It was one of a series of battles fought during the Middle Ages between the barons of northeast Scotland and those from the west coast.

The battle was part of a series of battles fought to resolve competing claims to the Earldom of Ross, a large region of northern Scotland. Robert Stewart, Duke of Albany, Regent of Scotland, had taken control of the earldom ostensibly as guardian of his granddaughter Euphemia Leslie, but in truth, though Donald of Islay, Lord of the Isles had the superior claim, Albany wanted Ross for his younger son, John. Donald, Lord of the Isles, had married Euphemia's aunt Mariota. Donald therefore invaded Ross with the intention of seizing the earldom by force and preventing Albany from taking all of Scotland.

The nearest contemporary record of the battle is found in the Irish Annals of Connacht, where under the year 1411, it is stated, "Mac Domnaill of Scotland won a great victory over the Galls of Scotland." The 2011 article by Iain G. MacDonald, "Donald of the Isles and the Earldom of Ross: West-Highland Perspectives on the Battle of Harlaw", also cites sources recording the victory.[2]

Background

During the Early Middle Ages, the territory of what later became Scotland was divided between the Gaelic kingdoms of Dál Riata on the western seaboard and Alba in the south-east, and Pictish kingdoms in the northeast of which Fortriu was the most important.[3] Besides these there were the Anglo-Saxon Kingdom of Bernicia, later part of Northumbria, and the Brythonic Kingdom of Cumbria.[4] Viking influence increased in the west, with the Norse-Gaels that became Lords of the Isles taking control of much of Dál Riata in 1156.[5] The Gaels of Alba acquired Brythonic elements from the conquest of the Kingdom of Strathclyde in the 11th century and increasingly absorbed Norman-French and Anglo-Saxon culture, influences which also spread to the Pictish areas of the northeast.[6] The lands of Fortriu became part of the Province of Moray, which was conquered by Alba in 1130 and fragmented into territories that were semi-independent of the king in Edinburgh.[7] There was a long history of conflicts between the Moray gentry and the clans of the West Coast, but some historians present Harlaw as a clash between the Scottish Highlands and Lowlands, or between Celt and Teuton. John Hill Burton (1809–1881) claimed that in Lowland Scotland Harlaw "was felt as a more memorable deliverance even than that of Bannockburn. What it was to be subject to England the country knew and disliked; to be subdued by their savage enemies of the mountains opened to them sources of terror of unknown character and extent". However Sir Robert Rait (1874–1936) detected no racial antipathy in the two contemporary accounts of the Scotichronicon and the Book of Pluscarden,[8] and viewed Harlaw not as a conflict between races, but between two groups of Scots of which one spoke Scots and the other Gaelic.[9] Rait mentions Buchanan's view that it was a raid for plunder.[10]

Claims on the Earldom of Ross

The Earldom of Ross was a vast territory reaching from Skye to Ross and Inverness-shire, with superiority over the outlying lands of Nairn and Aberdeenshire.[11] In 1370 Uilleam (William), Earl of Ross received a charter from King David II, confirming his right to the title and directing that in the absence of male heirs, the entirety of the earldom, titles and lands would fall to "the elder daughter always" without division. Uilleam died in 1372 without a male heir, and the title passed to his daughter Euphemia. By her first husband Sir Walter Leslie, Euphemia had two children – Alexander Leslie and Mariota (anglicised as Margaret or Mary).[12] After Walter's death, Euphemia married Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan (the "Wolf of Badenoch") in 1382,[13] giving the Stewarts control of the earldom. However, in 1392 the Pope annulled the marriage[14] and Ross was returned to Euphemia as Countess of Ross. The Wolf of Badenoch had long been living with his mistress Mairead inghean Eachainn with whom he had a number of children, including Alexander Stewart, Earl of Mar.[15] Euphemia died in 1394 and her son Alexander Leslie inherited the title.[16]

Robert Stewart, Duke of Albany had taken effective control of mainland Scotland towards the end of the reign of his father Robert II; his power increased during the reign (1390–1406) of his ineffective elder brother Robert III. Albany's daughter Isabel Stewart married Alexander Leslie before 1398 and their only child was a sickly daughter, also called Euphemia. According to the Calendar of Fearn, Leslie died on 8 May 1402, whilst his daughter was still a minor. Albany claimed wardship of Euphemia, and planned to take over Ross. After the capture by the English of Robert III's heir James and Robert's death soon afterwards in April 1406, Albany was confirmed as regent; Albany continued to govern Scotland until his death in September 1420.

Meanwhile, Donald (Domhnall), Lord of the Isles claimed the earldom of Ross through his marriage to Euphemia's aunt, Mariota, the oldest living female descendant of Uilleam. He also signed an alliance with Henry IV of England on 16 September 1405, which was renewed on 8 May 1408.

Many sources such as Skene claim Euphemia, pressured by Albany, became a nun before the battle, but she did not take the veil until 1415. Donald was clearly concerned Albany wanted the throne and Donald's visits to King James I, imprisoned in England, doubtless concerned this subject, given James' actions to destroy the Albany Stewarts when he returned in 1424.

Invasion and the preceding Battle of Dingwall

It took Donald time to ready his assault, but in 1411 he assembled his forces at Ardtornish Castle[17] on the Sound of Mull and invaded Ross.[18] He met no opposition until "a severe conflict"[19] at Dingwall, seat of the Earls of Ross, where, at the Battle of Dingwall, he fought a large body of men of the Clan Mackay from "Strathnaver". Their leader Angus Du Mackay, 7th of Strathnaver was captured and his brother Rory-Gald was killed along with "the greater part of his men";[20] Donald then captured and garrisoned Dingwall Castle. He imprisoned Mackay in a castle on the west coast and after the battle made peace with him, giving Angus his sister, Elizabeth, in marriage.[21]

Donald assembled his army at Inverness, and summoned all the fighting men in Boyne and Enzie (northern Banffshire between the Rivers Deveron and Spey) to join his army. He then swept through Moray meeting little or no resistance. He then turned south-east, following roughly the route of the modern A96 road although the main road ran north of the River Urie, not south as it does today. Donald's men committed "great excesses" in Strathbogie and the Garioch, which belonged to Alexander Stewart, Earl of Mar.[22] Finally the Islesmen and their Highlander allies came to Bennachie, the last hill of the Grampians before the coastal plain between Inverurie and Aberdeen.[23] Donald was now within 20miles of Aberdeen burgh. On 23 July 1411, he set up camp just north of Inverurie, on high ground 2 km northwest of the bridge over the River Urie.

The Earl of Mar, who had made a pact with Albany to lead an army for him, had plenty of warning of their advance, and had assembled a force from among the gentry of Buchan, Angus and the Mearns (Kincardineshire). The Irvings, Maules, Moray, Straitons, Lesleys, Stirlings and Lovels were led by their respective clan chiefs. Mar gathered his troops at Inverurie, a strategic town on the Inverness-Aberdeen road, and on the morning of 24 July marched northwest to meet Donald.

Battle

According to the Scotichronicon, the two armies joined battle on the eve of the feast of St James[24] – 24 July 1411.[25] The same source and many others put Donald's army at 10,000 Islanders, Highland clans with marriage bloodlines as well as men of Ross, They were armed with swords, bows and axes, short knives, and round targe shields.[26]

It is likely that most ordinary highlanders would have worn no armour, if anything, a padded gambeson, known as a cotun. Donald and the clan chiefs would have worn chainmail and helmets and carried swords. Among Donald's men were galloglass from Ireland as his brother, John Mor, Lord of Dunyvaig and the Glens, led the reserve. The gallowglasses of Ireland and the Isles, wore long padded gambesons, mail hauberks, and sometimes partial plate, and carried long axes.

Tradition has it that they faced a force numbering between 1,000 and 2,000 men; with significant numbers of knights. As an example, one Sir Gilbert de Greenlaw died at Harlaw and his tombstone at Kinkell Church[27] gives an idea of how Mar's knights were equipped. Sir Gilbert carried a hand and a half sword and wore an open-faced bascinet helmet with a mail-reinforced arming doublet beneath plate armour. Mar's men also carried spears, maces, and battle axes. Tradition has it that the black armour in the entrance hall of Aberdeen's Town House belonged to Robert Davidson, Provost of Aberdeen,[28] who died in the battle along with most of the city's burgesses.

On spotting the Islesmen and their Highlander allies, Mar organised his force into battle array, with the main army behind a small advance guard of men-at-arms under Sir James Scrymgeour (Constable of Dundee, the hereditary standard-bearer of Scotland) and Sir Alexander Ogilvie of Auchterhouse (Sheriff of Angus). He probably split the army into three, with the knights as a cavalry reserve (some say they led the battle) and the infantry arranged in schiltrons, close-packed arrays of spearmen. There is no mention of significant numbers of archers. The Islanders and their Highlander allies were arranged in the traditional cuneiform or wedge shape, with Hector MacLean commanding the right wing and Callum Beg Macintosh, the chief of Clan Chattan/Clan Mackintosh on the left. At first, the clansmen launched themselves at Scrymgeour's men, but failed to make much impression on the armoured column and many were slain. However, every wave that was repulsed, was replaced by fresh men. Mar led his knights into the main body of Donald's army and became cut off. They brought down the knights' warhorses and then used their dirks to finish off the riders.

By nightfall, the ballads claim that 600 of Mar's men were dead, including Ogilvie and his son, Scrymgeour, Sir Robert Maule, Sir Thomas Morrow, William Abernethy, Alexander Straiton of Lauriston, James Lovel, Alexander Stirling, and Sir Alexander Irvine of Drum; according to Maclean history the latter duelled with Hector Maclean until both were dead. Many families lost every male in their house; Lesley of Balquhain died with six of his sons.

Donald lost 900 men, a much smaller proportion of his total force (he still had 9100 men on the field), but including one of his commanders (Hector Maclean).[29] In the history of the Mackintoshes, chiefs of the Chattan Federation, it is recorded that Mackintosh mourned the loss of so many of his friends and people, especially of Clan Vean (Clan MacBean).[30] [31]

Wounded and too feeble to retreat, Mar and his surviving men camped on the battlefield, expecting combat to resume in the morning. At dawn they found that Donald had withdrawn during the night, going first to Ross and then back to the Isles. Donald clearly had the victory but decided not to press further. The McKean Historical Notes relating to the MacIain MacDonalds of Ardnamurchan, compiled by Fred G. McKean, 1906, at p. 38, refers to the Annals of the Old Abbey of Inis-Macreen and mentions the "great victory" of the Macdonald of Scotland in 1411.

Aftermath

Many of those who died were buried at Kinkell Church south of Inverurie. The heirs of the slain Scots were exempt from death duties[32] in the same way as heirs of those who died fighting the English.

Suspecting that Donald had merely fallen back to rest and reinforce his troops, Albany collected an army and marched on Dingwall, seizing the castle and regaining control of Ross. In mid-1412 he followed up with a three-pronged attack on Donald's possessions, forcing Donald to surrender his claim on Ross, become a vassal of the Scottish crown and give up hostages against his future good behaviour.[33] The treaty was signed at Polgilbe/Polgillip (Loch Gilp), an inlet of Loch Fyne in Argyll.

After Harlaw, the Earl of Mar "ruled with acceptance nearly all the north of the country beyond the Mounth" according to the Scotichronicon. He entered into an "uneasy alliance" with his uncle Albany, but the ruin of Albany's heirs left Mar in control of the north.

It was proposed on 3 June 1415 that Euphemia should marry Thomas Dunbar, 3rd (6th) Earl of Moray but the papal commission would not have arrived before she surrendered her land and titles (possibly under compulsion) to Albany's son the Earl of Buchan on 12 June 1415,[34] after which she appears to have entered a nunnery. Buchan was killed at the Battle of Verneuil in 1424. In 1424, when James I returned to Scotland from his imprisonment in England, he had all of Albany's heirs, the Albany Stewarts, executed.[35] Mariota claimed the earldom of Ross and the Lordship of the Isles once more, and James I awarded it to her in 1424.[36] The title remained with the family for much of the 15th century. Donald's son Alexander succeeded to the title upon Mariota's death in 1429. He attempted an invasion of Ross in 1429 which led to his defeat and capture by Mar at the Battle of Lochaber.

In turn Mar suffered a devastating defeat at the hands of Donald's nephew Donald Balloch, at the Battle of Inverlochy. The resulting power vacuum allowed Alexander to occupy Inverness and perhaps consider himself Earl of Ross by 1437; the title was officially confirmed by the new regent, the Earl of Douglas, after the death of James I that year.

Commemoration and archaeology

The battle is remembered as "one of the hardest fought that ever took place on Scottish soil"; the fighting was so fierce that the battle went down in history as "Red (Reid) Harlaw". The battle is commemorated in a march, The Battle of Harlaw, and in ballads such as Child ballad 163.[37] [38] Maidment has a different ballad which apparently shares the same tune, but he is sceptical of its antiquity.[39] Sir Walter Scott mentions Harlaw in his 1816 novel The Antiquary, particularly in Elspeth's ballad in Chapter 40.[40]

Tradition has it that Mar founded Chapel of Garioch after the battle, to celebrate masses for the souls of the fallen. In 1911, Aberdeen Town Council erected the Harlaw Monument, located to the north of the town of Inverurie, to the memory of Provost Robert Davidson and the burgesses of Aberdeen who died in the battle. Designed by William Kelly and located to the south of Harlaw House, the granite monument is hexagonal and 40feet tall.[41] There were once several cairns in the area that were traditionally associated with the battle, but little remains of them now – Drum's Cairn, Provost Davidson's Cairn, Donald's Tomb and the Liggars Stane.[42] Twelve human skeletons were uncovered northeast of Harlaw House in 1837.[43] Although there have been several discoveries of prehistoric artefacts, such as stone axeheads and a flint core, no artefacts directly attributable to the battle have been recorded.[44] The battlefield has been inventoried and protected by Historic Scotland under the Historic Environment (Amendment) Act 2011.[45]

See also

Bibliography

Further reading

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Battle of Harlaw. UK Battlefields Resource Centre. The Battlefields Trust. 26 January 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20101212164837/http://battlefieldstrust.com/resource-centre/medieval/battleview.asp?BattleFieldId=64. 12 December 2010 . live.
  2. Iain G. MacDonald, "Donald of the Isles and the Earldom of Ross: West-Highland Perspectives on the Battle of Harlaw" .
  3. Lynch (1992), pp. 39–40
  4. Lynch (1992), p. 45
  5. Keay & Keay (1994) pp. 889–890
  6. Lynch (1992), pp. 47–50
  7. Lynch (1992), pp. 48, 58–68
  8. Rait, p. 14 – all references to Rait refer to page numbers in [{{GBurl|id=uoahDiXRqOwC|p=14}} the Echo Library reprint] of 2007.
  9. Rait, pp. 20–21
  10. Rait, p. 24 citing George Buchanan's Rerum Scoticarum Historia Lib. x.
  11. Williams (1997) p. 186
  12. Tytler (1845), p. 27
  13. Roberts (1999) p. 5.
  14. reprinted by John Donald Short Run Press (2007,).
  15. Barrow, G W S, (1981) The Sources for the History of the Highlands in the Middle Ages pp. 16–17 in The Middle Ages in the Highlands ed Lorraine McLean, Inverness Field Club
  16. Roberts (1999) p. 16.
  17. Reprint
  18. Sources differ on whether he marched across Ross or sailed in a fleet of galleys around the north of Scotland to Dingwall. The latter would have played to the islanders' strengths, possibly they did both.
  19. quoting A Genealogical History of the Earldom of Sutherland from Its Origin to the Year 1630 by Sir Robert Gordon
  20. Tytler (1845), p. 28
  21. The Book of Mackay by Angus Mackay, at p. 55.
  22. Tytler (1845), p. 29
  23. Hill Burton (1867), pp. 100–101
  24. Rait (2007), p. 166 quoting the Scotichronicon
  25. Tytler (1845), p. 32
  26. Description of the battle is almost word-for-word the same as Tytler p. 31, and draws heavily on the Scotichronicon.
  27. has a drawing of Sir Gilbert's tombstone that is clearer than a photo. Kinkell Church is south of Inverurie, at
  28. p. 48 has a hand-drawn map of the battle that is very different from the Battlefields Trust map in the external links section.
  29. The Scotichronicon also gives the figure of 900 deaths on Donald's side.
  30. Lachlan Mackintosh of Kinrara: A Chronicle of the Family of Mackintosh to 1680 ('The Kinrara Manuscript) – edited by Dr Jean Munro, published by the Clan Chattan Association
  31. Fraser-Mackintosh, Charles. (1898). Minor Septs of Clan Chattan, p. 31.
  32. Tytler (1845), p. 33
  33. Tytler (1845), p. 34
  34. Maidment (1868) pp. 199 & 200, citing
  35. Thomson (1849), p. 122
  36. republished in 2004 by Kessinger Publishing with a foreword by Thomas Innes
  37. Book: Child . Francis James . 1890 . 163: The Battle of Harlaw . https://archive.org/stream/englishscottishp32chilrich#page/316/mode/2up . English and Scottish Popular Ballads . III, Part 2 . Boston . Houghton Mifflin and Company . 316–320 . 2017-12-26.
  38. Web site: The Battle of Harlaw. The English and Scottish Popular Ballads. Sacred Text Archive. 2011. 2017-12-26.
  39. Maidment (1868) pages 199–209 discusses the origin of his ballad and some of the tunes. On page 146 he describes it as "infinitely finer" than The Raid of the Reid-Squhair, which may have been written by the same author.
  40. "And I will sing of Glenallan's Earl / That fought on the red Harlaw"
  41. Monument is at .
  42. Lists all the archaeological evidence in the area
  43. Skeletons were found at
  44. RCAHMS Canmap for Harlaw
  45. Web site: Inventory battlefields. Historic Scotland . 12 April 2012.