Mac Fie History
In modern Gaelic, this name is
written as Macaphi. It is usually rendered
in English, Mac Fie, Mac Phee or Mac Afie, and
sometimes shortened to Duffie in the Lowlands.
The name appears to be derived from Mac
Dhuibhshith, meaning "son of the dark
fairy". The Dark Fairy is evocative of the
dark stranger who must be the first to cross the
threshold at the new year, bringing food and
drink as symbols of good fortune as the leanest
season of the year approaches. It is likely that
Duibhshith is simply a personal name. Tradition
asserts, however, that the Mac Fies are descended
from a seal-woman who was prevented from
returning to the sea. In many countries the most
aboriginal stock, often a defeated remnant living
in remote places, came to be looked upon as a
fairy folk. It is hardly surprising that legend
should have given the sons of the Dark Fairy,
living in small islands, descent from a
supernatural creature of the sea.
In 1164 a Duibhshith was known
to have been ferleighinn or "reader" at
Iona when Malcolm IV was king. The Mac Phees of
Colonsay were the hereditary keepers of the
records of the Lords of the Isles and there is a
tradition that one of the chiefs of Colonsay,
serving in the retinue of the Lord of the Isles,
fought and overcame Sir Gile de Argentine at the
Battle of Bannockburn in 1314.
In the 15th century, the
Stewart kings, and particularly James IV, were
determined to bring the isles under direct royal
control - a process naturally opposed by the Mac
Donalds and their allies. In 1615 Malcolm Mac
Phee of Colonsay joined Sir James Macdonald in
his rebellion against the Earl of Argyll, who
represented royal authority. Mac Phee and 18
other leading conspirators were betrayed to the
Campbells and were forced to submit to royal
authority. Colonsay was later murdered in 1623;
the clan broke up and dispersed, and the Mac
Phees became the classic type of the broken clan,
landless and chiefless and finding protection
wherever they might. Most went to the mainland
where they found shelter in Lochaber. Many Mac
Phees followed Cameron of Lochiel at the
ill-fated Battle of Culloden in 1746. In the
middle of the 19th century Ewan Mac Phee became
famous as the last Scottish outlaw, when he
settled with his band on Eilean Mhic Phee in Loch
Quoich. He recognised no law and was an
inveterate sheep stealer. Contemporary accounts
describe him as a man of ferocious appearance and
stature who was heavily armed at all times. He
raised a family in atrocious conditions and in
later years became a local, if eccentric,
celebrity, supported in part by neighbours. Many
of the clan became rootless, becoming itinerant
tin-smaiths or tinkers. Since tinkers have
occupied something like the position of
Duibhshith of immemorial antiquity, an historical
cycle has come full circle.
Mac Fie of Dreghorn
matriculated arms in the Lyon Register in 1864.
He was a member of a powerful merchant family
with considerable interests in the sugar-refining
industry. The company was eventually to be taken
over by the present sugar giants, Tate &
Lyle. Hugh Mac Phee, born in Ballachulish, was
the first BBC Gaelic broadcaster. There is an
active Mac Fie Society worldwide and the Lord
Lyon has recognized this by granting a commission
for the appointment of a clan commander.
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