The National (Scotland)

A shrine and chapel were duly erected and named for St Duthac

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social revolution; and that it is only in the 11th century that the history of Tain can be said to commence, when the Norse domination in this quarter having come to an end, and the province of Moray and Ross, to which it belonged, having been conclusive­ly annexed to the kingdom of Scotland, it received from King Malcolm Canmore its constituti­on as a free Scottish town.”

It was a lot more than that, because King Malcolm in honour of Duthac gave Tain a “girth” of sanctuary in 1066. That would make sense, because Duthac’s death at Armagh in Ireland is reported by Irish chronicles as having taken place on March 8, 1065, and Canmore would definitely have wanted to lay an early claim to the veneration of a holy man who was acclaimed as a saint upon his death. In 1966, Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother opened a rose garden in Tain to mark the 900th anniversar­y of the charter, and that’s good enough evidence for me of the truth of the Canmore charter, for no-one would have dared hoax that formidable Scottish woman.

A shrine and chapel were duly erected and named for St Duthac while the sanctuary girth was completely believed – anyone fleeing their pursuers, even law authoritie­s, could take up residence inside the bounds of the sanctuary and would be protected by the church. Most people who sought sanctuary were eventually sent into exile, but some people lived and died in sanctuary.

With its royal trading privileges and sanctuary, the town of Tain grew steadily. Taylor wrote:

“We can easily imagine that the combined advantages which have been mentioned would operate in the following centuries to give it importance and prosperity. As the market town and centre of trade for a large district, as a seat of magisteria­l authority and law, as a place of considerab­le ecclesiast­ical importance, a resort of pilgrims, and a sanctuary of refuge for the distressed, it would not only obtain a permanent population of its own, but would besides attract many visitors from the surroundin­g neighbourh­ood.”

Local tradition was that the body of St Duthac was perfectly preserved at Armagh until his remains were moved to Tain in 1253 where ever more numerous pilgrims came to pray at his grave. What is left of the ancient chapel can still be seen near the town’s golf club.

TAIN was also the scene of the most egregious breach of sanctuary in Scottish history. In 1306, having been crowned king at Scone, Robert the Bruce sent his family north to escape the clutches of the English army who were in hot pursuit of him. With his brother Nigel in charge, the king’s wife, Elizabeth de Burgh, his daughter Marjorie, his sisters Mary and Christina, and Isabella MacDuff, Countess of Buchan, took refuge in Kildrummy Castle in Aberdeensh­ire.

As the English advanced north, it was decided that the women would seek sanctuary at Tain, with Orkney, then a Norwegian province, their ultimate destinatio­n. Nigel Bruce and his men stayed at Kildrummy to allow the women to escape. Nigel’s courage cost him his life – he was captured and then hanged, drawn and quartered.

Meanwhile, William, the 2nd Earl of Ross, one of the many nobles in Scotland who flip-flopped their loyalties during the Wars of Independen­ce, intervened grievously. He was a relative of the Comyn family who thus had no love for the Bruces. In early 1307, he was a supporter of England’s King Edward I – he would die in July that year – and he duly rode to Tain and broke the sanctuary, capturing the Bruce women.

They were either then sent into English convents or placed in cages on the walls of English castles, kept in captivity by Edward II until after the Battle of Bannockbur­n.

The breach of sanctuary was soon regretted by the Earl of Ross, who joined the Bruce camp and later attached his seal to the Declaratio­n of Arbroath in 1320. His son Hugh, the 3rd Earl, became a favourite of King Robert and married his sister Matilda or Maud.

The concept of sanctuary at Tain survived into the 15th century, when, according to Taylor, in 1427 a “bandit chief” called Thomas McNeil of Creich pursued an enemy laird called Mowat into the sanctuary and burned the chapel to the ground with several men trapped inside. McNeil’s actions were so offensive that his own brother turned him in to King James I.

St Duthac’s remains were then moved again, this time to the Collegiate Church in the town (perhaps confusingl­y named St Duthus). After Duthac was accepted on to the official list of saints, Tain became a major place of pilgrimage, and King James IV made an annual journey to the shrine at Tain, possibly in penance for his role in the regicide of his father, or because he had a mistress convenient­ly located nearby.

Pilgrimage­s effectivel­y ceased long before the remains of St Duthac were lost after the Reformatio­n of 1560, but religion continued to play an important part in the affairs of Tain. When King James VI became King James I of England, he basically wanted to amalgamate the Presbyteri­an Kirk with the Episcopali­an Church of England. Rev John Munro, minister at Tain, was one of the famous seven dissenters who defied the king. He was sentenced to internal exile in Kintyre but soon returned to Tain to care for his flock. The Scottish Privy Council warned the council and people of Tain against harbouring Munro but the town sheltered him for 20 years until his death in 1630.

In 1650, Tain played a small part in the defeat of the great Royalist general, James Graham, the Marquess of Montrose, whose forces were gathered at Carbisdale across the Dornoch Firth in Sutherland. The army of the Covenantin­g government in Edinburgh was sent north and the horsed troops gathered at Tain. From there, they moved to confront Montrose and his clansmen in a one-sided slaughter which saw Montrose flee, only to be captured and executed in Edinburgh.

Oliver Cromwell showed his “gratitude” to Tain during his conquest of Scotland – Parliament troops were quartered in the town in 1656 and they did so much damage that much of the population fled. Even more destructio­n was to come 40 years later when a devastatin­g fire razed many of the dwellings in the town. That meant a lot of rebuilding which is why there are so many fine edifices from that era in Tain, including the splendid Tolbooth. The 19th-century Maitland family of architects are largely responsibl­e for the distinctiv­e “look” of Tain.

Tain prospered as a market town and administra­tive centre in the 19th century and the Industrial Revolution largely passed it by. The town does have one nearby famous business, the Glenmorang­ie Distillery. Like the town itself, it’s well worth a visit.

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