mcleanscotland are local Scots who pride ourselves on showing you the nooks & crannies other tours companies pass on by. We can show you those hidden gems even Scots do not know! mcleanscotland lead you into a we Scottish history lesson of Scottish regiments and general history of Scotland |
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A WEE BIT 'O HISTORY This is our brief step into Scottish history. We are not trying to give you a huge historic journey through our history but some stories (true) that some history books have missed. www.mcleanscotland.co.uk/DALRIADAGROUP.asp the Kingdom of Dalriada THE SCOTTISH REGIMENTS BEFORE TONY BLAIR MERGED THEM INTO ONE SCOTS REGIMENT! The Liverpool Scottish a link to this virtually unknown regiment The New Brunswick Kilties information and pictures here
ARCHAEOLOGISTS believe that they have
unearthed one of Scotland's oldest churches. A dig
underneath the historic Kirk of St Nicholas in
Aberdeen has found graves which are thought to date
back to the sixth century or possibly even earlier.
The hugely significant find has now opened a new
window into the past and allowed experts to delve
into what life was like fifteen hundred years ago.
The team has found skeletons buried in logs in stone
graves and one with a rare pewter badge. Material
which could be the oldest fabric found in Scotland
has also been uncovered.
Many people are unaware of a battle which was
fought on September 1st, 1644, a few miles
from Perth: when it was all over the victors
claimed they could walk on dead men all the way back
into town. Where is this battle site? ‘Tibbermore’.
A we road off the main A9 leads down a country road
past fences, trees, hedges and an old kirkyard
before reaching a little line of white cottages. It
is an isolated, rustic corner. The Picts and Scots defeat Athelstan's Angle (England) army in East Lothian. In 832AD a raiding party made up of Picts under King Angus (Ununst or Hungus) and Scots led by Eochaidh, King of Dalriada, were fleeing from a large contingent of Northumbrian Angles under the command of Athelstan. The Northumbrian force pursued the Picts to Markle, in East Lothian - now Athelstaneford. There they found their passage barred by the wide valley of the River Peffer. The Northumbrian army surrounded the Picts and King Angus realised he’d have to turn and fight. The night before the battle, as the forces mustered around him, he prayed for a miracle. According to legend, Saint Andrew came to him in a vision and not only promised that he would survive but also that he would be victorious in battle. King Angus vowed that if this came true he would adopt Saint Andrew as the patron saint of Alba (Scotland). As the two armies met the next day it is said that a white cloud formation of a Saltire - or X-shaped cross - formed against the blue sky. This highly effective morale-boost encouraged the Picts to fight on, and they triumphed on the battlefield, killing Athelstan and routing the Angle army. From that day on, the Saltire was adopted as the emblem of Scotland and Saint Andrew was indeed adopted as our national Saint. This is now our National Flag - well, the people's flag, the Royal Flag is the Rampant Lion red on a yellow ground. NINTH century Scotland didn't really exist as a united nation. The Picts ruled over much of the east and north, while the Scots ruled out of the Kingdom of Dalriada (see link above - now Argyll) in the west. .......................
above; the battle of Bushy Run
The Black Watch and Red Indians It wasn't
just the 7th Cavalry who fought the Red Indians. The
Black Watch were there long before and beat the
red indians at the Battle of Bushy Run. Argyle
Highlanders SEVENTY-FOURTH HIGHLAND REGIMENT.
1778—1783. Recognised as one of the fiercest conflicts of early
modern Europe, the Thirty Years War was a
series of bloody battles between the opposing
religions of the mighty Holy Roman Empire under the
Hapsburgs and an alliance of Protestant powers that
included Denmark, Holland and Sweden. The conflict
became not only a civil war in Germany but also a
religious clash of international dimensions,
massacres became so widespread that fresh troops
from other nations were welcomed, especially from
Scotland. The motives of those Scots.
Some fought fervently for religious principles,
others risked lives for mercenary reasons. Most
Scots simply enjoyed a good fight and the war
offered an outlet for their martial prowess. Battle of Carham - 1018 An army from Northumberland, seeking to recover Lothian which had been captured by King Malcolm II of Scotland, clashed with Malcolm at Carham on the river Tweed. The Scots were victorious and henceforth the river Tweed became accepted as the border between Scotland and England. ........................ ...................... Battle of Dunnichen - 685 It has been argued that if the King Bruide of the Picts had not defeated an invasion by Ecgfrith, King of Northumbria on May 20, 685, Scotland as a separate nation would not have come into being. The Northumbrians had already advanced as far as Lothian, south of the river Forth and defeated the Gododdin and had subjugated the southern lands of the Picts. The Picts had suffered a serious defeat on the plain of "Manau" (near Grangemouth) and 12 years later a huge force of Northumbrians adavnced into the land of the Picts. But using local knowledge of the area around Dunnichen (known as Nechtansmere to the later southern historians), the Picts won an overwhelming victory, bringing to an end the northern advance of the Northumbrians. ....................... .....................
Battle of Mons Graupius - AD84 The precise place where the Caledonian leader, Calgacus, met the Roman advance led by Agricola is not known but it was probably in north-east Scotland in what is now Aberdeenshire. There were said to be 30,000 Caledonii who were defeated by the disciplined Roman legions in the only known set piece battle in the north. 1,300 years later, a transcription error led to the name becoming "Grampian" which is the name now given to the Cairngorm mountains, east and south of the river Spey. .................... ...................
THE BATTLE OF FLODDEN
STORY TO FOLLOW SOON
..................
Flora MacDonald: Jacobite She was born
in Milton, South Uist, but moved to Skye on the
death of her father and her mother's re-marriage to
Hugh MacDonald of Sleat. Uist in 1746 proved to be a
dangerous place. Bonnie Prince Charlie had
been on the run since the defeat at Culloden, with a
bounty of £30,000 on his head – an enormous sum at
the time - trying to outrun his pursuers he landed
on Uist he heard that General Campbell (there we go
again, those Campbells have lots to answer for eh )
was on the island searching for him. A plan was
formed to help him escape east to the Isle of Skye.
The person chosen to help carry out the plan was
Flora MacDonald. She agreed, and on 20 June the
young prince and Flora met for the first time. They
remained in hiding as they planned the escape. The
prince was to be smuggled off the island in
colourful fashion - disguised as "Betty Burke",
Flora's Irish serving-maid. They left on 27 June. As
they made for open water they were buffeted and
thrown by high winds and tempestuous seas. They
battled for days until catching sight of the isle,
where they landed between the west-coast towns of
Uig and Mogstad at a point now known as Rudha
Phrionnsa (Prince's Point). Once safe they hid
overnight in a cottage and then slowly, and in
secret, travelled overland to Portree. When they
reached Portree, the prince and Flora MacDonald had
to part. Bonnie Prince Charlie continued on to
Raasay, a narrow island between Skye and the
mainland, where a ship was waiting to take him to
France. Flora returned home. As they left, the
prince gave Flora a locket with his portrait, and he
was believed to have said, "I hope, madam,
that we may meet in St James's yet." She
never saw him again. more to follow ... |
