MacDonald
'By Sea and By Land'

Claig Castle on Am Fraoich Eilean, off Jura's southwest coast
and sea-fortress of the MacDonalds.
The Clan Donald, often described as
the most powerful of the ancient Highland clans, hold as their
eponymous ancestor Donald of Islay, son of Somerled, Lord of the Isles in 1207.
Somerled's campaigns spanned over 40 years, during which time he gained
a kingdom and the hand of Ragnhild, daughter of King Olav the Red,
Norse King of Man and the Isles. The story of this match is part
of the origin legends of Clan MacIntyre. The new empire stretched
from Bute to Ardnamurchan, including Lorne, Argyll and the Kintyre on
the mainland. On Somerled's death his realm was partitioned
between his heirs, each of whom was to establish the fortunes of a
great clan. Dugall received Lorne, Mull and Jura, and from him
sprang the MacDougalls. Angus had Bute, Arran and Garmoran
(Morar, Moydart and Knoydart), which passed through his heiress, Jane,
to the Stewarts. Reginald fell heir to Islay and Kintyre, which
passed in due course to his son Dugald. Unlike his father, who
seems to have tempered personal valour with a love of peace and
culture, donald was an iron warrior. He perpetrated so many black
deeds in defiance of his possessions that he feared for his salvation,
and went on a pigrimage to Rome to seek absolution for his sins to the
Pope. He died, probably in 1269, when he was succeeded by Angus
Mor.
When Alexander III determinded
to oppose nominal suzerainty of Norway over the Hebrides, he provoked
the launching of King Haakon's Norwegian Fleet, whioh anchored off
Largs in 1263. Angus Mor and his uncle, Ruari, were technically
vassals of Haakon, and after his defeat at the Battle of Largs,
confirmed in the treaty of Perth in 1266, the King of Scots became
their overlord. An uneasy truce existed for sometime, and Angus'
son, Angus Og, came to the aid of Robert the Bruce, leading his fierce
clansmen against Edward II of England at Bannockburn in 1314.
When Angus Og died in 1330, he
left two sons, JOhn, later Lord of the Isles, and Iain, from whom
descended the MacDonalds of Glencoe. John's son, donald,
inherited the Lordship in 1386. He unsuccessfully laid claim to
the great earldom of Ross thorugh his wife Margaret, which led to the
bloody Battle of Harlaw in 1411. After his defeat at Harlaw,
Donald returned to the Isle of Islay, and it was left to his son,
alexander, to reassert, this time successfully, their right to the
earldom.
The power of the lordship
reached its peak under Alexander's son, John, Earl of Ross and Lord of
the Isles. Not since the time of Somerled had the isles enjoyed
such independence, but his ambitions were to be his undoing. He
entered into the Treaty of Ardtornish with Henry VII of England win
1462, agreeing to accept the English king as overlord once James IV had
been defeated. James, with customary decisiveness, actly swiftly,
invading the isles and ultimately stripping John of all his titles in
May 1493. Attempts were made over the next two generations to
revive the Lordship, but by 1545 it had become a forlorn hope.
The various branches of the descendants of Donald gradually accepted
Crown charters and recognition of their separate holdings. This
was part of the successful royal policy to keep Clan Donald divided,
and thereby less of a threat to central authority.
Various claims were made to the
chiefship of the whole Clan Donald, but by the late 17th century, hugh
MacDonald of Sleat on Skye was recognised by the Privy Council as Laird
of MacDonald. The Lairds were first created baronets and then, in
1776, Lord MacDonald in the Irish peerage. The thrid Lord
MacDonald sought to split the paramount chiefship with the peerage,
from the House and Barontecy of sleat, and an Act of Parliament was
procured in 1847 to effect this. The dispute was resolved in
1947, when the present chief's father was recognised by the Lord Lyon
as Lord MacDonald, high chief of Clan Donald, under whom are registered
the chiefs of Sleat, Glengarry and Clanranald. A recent petition
to the Lord Lyon in favour of a claimant to be recognised as chief of
the MacDOnalds of Keppoch was unsuccessful, but may be
re-submitted. A highly active Clan Donald Society exists, with
its centre at Armadale Castle on Skye. Lord MacDonald still lives
on the island and is vice-convenor of the Council of Chiefs.
Places associated with the
MacDonalds on Jura are Claig
Castle, Camas Staca
and Sannaig, among others.