Download a Neil Oliver Audio Walk in Kilmartin Glen to your mobile phone

Neil OliverBBC Radio Scotland and the Open University have collaborated to produce an Audio Walk in Kilmartin Glen. The presenter is Glaswegian Neil Oliver, arguably – but who would argue? – the most galvanic historian to hit the television screen for a long time when he emerged from the team on the first series of Coast. The extent to which his personal contribution underpinned the series was recognised when he effectively became the lead presenter in the following series.

You can download and print off instructions on the walk and you can download the Audio Walk itself to your mobile phone. Argyll’s Kilmartin Glen is a site of primary archaeological and historical inportance to Scotland – as well as beng a very beautiful and mysterious glen where it’s past never seems far from the surface. This audio walk is an imaginative and mobile information source for locals and visitors alike.

The photograph of Neil Oliver above is a screenshot from the television series Coast, reproduced here under fair use conventions.

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Kilmartin Museum’s March Exhibition – Island Tidelines – links art with action on the beach

The Island Tidelines Exhibition which opens at Kilmartin House Museum on Sunday 1st March 2009 is even more than an exhibition.

Jane Rose, the artist whose work is featured in the exhibition, is island focused and has moved south west from living on Argyll’s Isle of Tiree  to sister Argyll island, Colonsay. She will be running a beach litter art workshop on Saturday 28th February, 10am-11.30am in a runup to the opening on 1st March.

At the same time on Saturday 28th February, Aisa Nebreda from the GRAB Trust will run a workshop for children, making beach litter mobiles to hang in bedrooms or living rooms.

If you fancy trying your hand at either of these ring 01546 510278 to book because places are limited.  Adults £6, children free.

Aisa Nebreda is also organising a beach clean on the dsay of the opening of the exhibition – Sunday, 1st March at 1.00pm at Kilmory Bay beach. For more information ring Aisa on 01546 604226.

Siol Alpin – the seven clans that are ‘the seed of Alpin’

The Siol Alpin seemed a good place to start an occasional feature on the Clans of Argyll – because its origin underlines the centrality of Argyll to Scotland and because not everybody has heard of it.

Cinead mac Ailpin (Keneth MacAlpin), King of the Picts, is tradionally held to have become the first King of Scotland in AD 843, uniting the Scots and the Picts. This was a time when writen records were not kept, so much will remain matter for dispute. MacAlpin was said to have been crowned King at Dunadd Fort in Kilmartin Glen in Mid Argyll. There were certainly crownings there. The hill top, along with some ogham script, has a footprint carved into the stone – a key element in the ritual of the crowning of a King.

Whether or not MacAlpin himself was crowned there, it was his seat and remained the family seat when MacAlpin as King transferred his capital to Scone in Perth.

From Perth, coming successors to the crown were sent to Argyll to prepare for their inheritance and to defend it. This all sounds very ordered. In fact the history of the MacAlpins is a blood-spattered one, with murder after murder as family members dispatched each other to secure the throne for themselves.

This created a situation where there was a MacAlpin King in Scone and a MacAlpin Clan Chief in Argyll. Tensions and conflicts between the two led to the decimation of the clan, the loss of its lands and the absence of a recognised Chief. This 500 year-old situaton has led to the MacAlpins not being recognised as a Clan in their own right – something the Clan MacAlpin Society are disputing in an application for recognition to the Court of the Lord Lyon.

There are two reaosn why the Argyll or MacAlpin Clan may have broken. One was that the authorities at Scone used the Clan lands in Argyll to reward other local clans for loyalty and services – a move with the added advantage of weakening the position of challengers to the King from home territory.

It may also be that the Clan itself, never effective as such anyway, broke as strong family branches of it split away to establish strongholds in the new Kindom of Scotland. Each of these would have taken its own network of clansmen with it. Together, these became the Siol Alpin, a close connection of strong clans allied by a proud blood.

Surnames were not the currency of the Scotland of those days so these branch clans would have taken their names from the patronymic of their progenitor. So the seven clans of Siol Alpin are:

  • Clan Grant
  • Clan Gregor
  • Clan MacAulay
  • Clan MacFie
  • Clan MacKinnon
  • Clan MacNab
  • Clan MacQuarrie

The seven clans share a common bonnet badge – the Scots Pine. Several underline their royal blood in their mottos: Clan Gregor (generally recognised as the senior clan) has S Rioghal Mo Dhream, whose translation from the Gaelic is Royal is My Race. Clan Macfie has Pro Rege, pointing up their Jacobite allegiance meaning, in translation from the Latin, For the King. Clan MacKinnon’s is Cuimhnich bas Alpein which, in translation from the Gaelic, is Remember the death of Alpin.

Behavioural evidence is often cited as proof of the known blood bond between the seven clans of Siol Alpin.

Early on in 1603, the Campbells (of Argyll) persuaded the MacGregors to raid the Lennox clan. This resulted in the MacGregors routing the Lennox-supporting Colquhouns of Luss in something if a slaughter at Glenfruin, with much booty gained. This brought down on them the wrath of James VI who instructed the Duke of Argyll to extirpate the MacGregors – an ironic tasking, given that it was Argyll who had induced them to attack the Colquhours.

However, the name of MacGregor was proscribed. All MacGregors who had fought at Glenfruin were outlawed. Alasdair MacGregor was hanged. Argyll was granted Kintyre as a reward for his efforts. (There is a curious little contemporary note in that the widow of the last, the 12th, Duke of Argyll, now the Dowager Duchess Iona, is a Colquhoun of Luss, married into the family who incited the slaughter of her ancestors at Glenfruin.)

Anyway, during the 17th century proscription of the name MacGregor, the Chief of Clan Grant gave a massive amount of aid to the MacGregors and was very heavily fined for breaking the law in tbis way. The Chief of Grant would have had no reason for doing this at such cost unless he knew himself to be helping and protecting his own Siol Alpin kin.

Later, in the early eighteenth century, there was a two-week long meeting between the Grants and the MacGregors at Blair Atholl to discuss a merging of the clans. Provided the proscription of the MacGregor name could be lifted,  the agreement was that MacGregor would be the name for the combined clan. If it could not be lifted, the name to be adopted was to be MacAlpin of Grant. These promising discussions broke down over the issue of who was to be Chief of the new Clan. Nevertheless, several Grants – including Ballindalloch – went on to demonstrate fidelity to their kinship by adding the MacGregor patronymic to their name.

Other pieces of evidence for the known kinship between the seven clans of Siol Alpin and their individual blood link to Cinead mac Ailpin include:

  • In 1591 Alasdair MacGregor of Glenstrae and Aulay MacAulay or Ardencaple entered into a bond to aid each other against anyone but the King. The document recording the bond includes the sentence: ‘Alexander M’Gregor of Glenstray on the ane part and Awly M’Cawley of Ardingapill on the other part understanding ourselfs and our name to be M’Calppins of auld and to be our just and trew surname’…
  • In 1606 Lauchlan MacKinnon of Strathairdle and Finlay MacNab of Bowaine entered into a bond to aid each other, saying that they: ‘come from ane house and one lineage’.
  • In 1671, Lauchlan MacKinnon of Strathairdle and James MacGregor of MacGregor entered into a bond describing themselves as: ‘twa breethren of auld descent’.
  • in the aftermath of the first failed Jacobite rising in 1715, the lands on the Isle of Skye of Iain Dubh, Chief of Clan MacKinnon, were forfeited under the Act of Attainder. The Chief of Clan Grant then bought these lands from the Government and handed them back to the heirs of Iain Dubh. In the habits of the time, it is unthinkable that Grant would have done such a thing for anyone other than a known blood relative, sharing the special kinship of Siol Alpin.

NOTE: Links to the Clan Societies of the 7 Clans of Siol Alpin are to be found under Clan Associations in For Argyll’s Links Directory.

Some useful ‘lucky dip’ background articles include:

Kilmartin House Museum offers Burns supper menu and access to archaeological survey as 2,000 year old bead found

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On Saturday 24th January the restaurant at Kilmartin House Museum is offering a Burns night-themed menu from 6.00-9.00pm

Then, around the turn of the month of January, the Museum will also be undertaking some survey work which it is opening to new volunteers. if you are keen to take part in this or other archaeological digs contact Katy Crowson by email at: katy@kilmartin.org  She will add you to the archaeology e-group.

This offer comes on the heels of the finding of a 2,000 year old glass ‘toggle’ bead on a dig near Kilmartin. The iron-age bead was found at the Dun dig at Achnamara. This site is now closed for the winter, reopening in Spring.

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Kilmartin Glen through the eyes of its children

A recent Kimartin Primary School project had Primary 4 and 5 pupils learning about people who lived in their glen from 7000 BC until the iron age. Their interest in their discoveries bred the notion that they would create their own guide to the area.

They did get a little help from their friends – one of whom was particularly well placed (so they also learning the value of networking). Janet West, Argyll and Bute Council’s Project Information Officer, gave them advice and ideas before the children themselves designed the guide and set what they thought was a fair price.

Isobel Strong, the Council’s Education Spokesperson, fresh from putting Historic Scotland back in its box over the issue of ‘the Rothesay Windws’, (see earlier news item) says: ‘It’s great to see the pupils of Kilmartin Primary School taking on such an initiative and showing an active interest in their local history’.

Kilmartin Glen through the eyes of its young people was also the focus of a BBC Radio Scotland programme on Monday 10th November, one of a new series, ‘Walking through history’. Children from Kilmichael Glassary Primary School were featured, talking about what the area means to them.

Kilmartin Museum is now stocking the Kilmartin Glen Kids Guide at £3.50 a copy.

Kilmartin Primary School

Above are the enterprising pupils of Kilmartin Primary School, with copies of their Guide to the Glen. For Argyll has permission to use the photograph.

Bus service to Kilmartin Museum criticised in Scottish Government report

A report commissioned by the Scottish Government and published yesterday criticised the bus access to Kilmartin Glen In Argyll, with over 350 ancient monuments. The report, concerned with improving access to cultural activities in Scotland, noted that Kilmartin Museum had only a limited bus service with ‘inconsistent timetabling’ from its provider, West Coast Motors. It also highlighted less than satisfactory public information on this service which runs between Lochgilphead and Oban. A major conclusion of the report is that a low priority on public transport access to cultural sites and activities excludes a large number of potential customers. With Scottish tourism revenues from the UK and elsewhere targeted for a rise of 50% by 2015, this is a ball that cannot be dropped.

Nether Largie Stones, Kilmartin Glen. by Terry A McDonald, Creative CommonsPhoto left is of the Nether Largie Stones in Kilmartin Glen and is by Terry A McDonald, Creative Commons licence.