The Scotsman

‘No hostility’ at Glencoe Massacre ceremony

- Alison Campsie Heritage Correspond­ent

Members of Clan Macdonald and residents of the Glencoe area were to gather yesterday to remember the 38 people who were killed by soldiers in their Highland homes in one of the worst atrocities in Scotland's history.

On that day, 332 years ago on February 13, 1692, 38 Macdonalds were killed at daybreak after Captain Robert Campbell of Glen Lyon acted on the King’s orders to “put all to the sword under 70”. Many more died as they fled the brutal attempt to assert state authority over the clan members, whose houses were also set on fire.

They were to be remembered at the annual commemorat­ion of the massacre of glen coe service at St Mary’s Church, Glen co eat 11 am. The service was to be followed by the march to the Memorial Cross at noon, led by Pipe Major Brian B Heriot.

The pipes were to be played at a second service at the cross, where Psalm 121 was to be read in Gaelic and wreaths laid.

Rosalin Macdonald, of the Glencoe Heritage Trust, said around 60 people were expected at the event. The family line of her late husband, Alistair, who died in 2021, dated back to the massacre, with Mr Macdonald devoting much of his life to the work of the heritage trust and the area’s history. While the losses are remembered for the anniversar­y, the divisions which led to the atrocity are not. Mrs Macdonald said: “We often get asked is there any modern hostility towards the Campbells – the answer is no.”

The Glencoe Massacre had been planned at the very highest level of the state and carried out by soldiers who stayed for 12 nights in the homes of those they went on to kill. The killings caused uproar across the country and were deemed an outrageous affront to both the rule of law, as well the Highland code of hospitalit­y.

It came after King William issued a proclamati­on to the clan leaders to pledge their allegiance or be answerable at their “highest peril”. On December 30, 1691, Alistair Mciain of Glencoe – head of a sept of Clan Donald – was crossing the north in deep wintry conditions to sign the pledge. Mistakenly, he went to Fort William and then was sent on to Inverary, a Campbell stronghold three days away, to pledge his allegiance to the King via the sheriff. He missed the deadline by six days. Despite assurances at Fort William that Mciain would be protected, word was delivered to the Secretary of State by Archibald, 10th Earl of Argyll, Chief of Clan Campbell, that Maciain’s certificat­e was void.

The King’s order for the massacre said: “This is by the Kings special command, for the good & safety of the Country, that these miscreants be cutt off root and branch”.

The Campbells have long been vilified for their role in the massacre. But accounts exist that a number of Campbells tried to warn the Macdonalds of an impending horror and urged them to flee.

Fugitives were helped at Castle Stalker, a safe place for Clan Campbell, according to tradition. Muster rolls also show Campbells made up a minority of the government-backed troops dispatched to Glencoe. Public outcry led to a parliament­ary commission.

We often get asked is there any modern hostility

 ?? PICTURE: LOZ PYCOCK. ?? The Glencoe Memorial Cross where the annual commemorat­ion of the Massacre of Glencoe of February 13 1692 takes place
PICTURE: LOZ PYCOCK. The Glencoe Memorial Cross where the annual commemorat­ion of the Massacre of Glencoe of February 13 1692 takes place

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom