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The first of this clan to
stride into the centre of the stage of Highland
history was named Alasdair. He did so as late as
the 15th century, although in less than two
centuries thereafter his descendants were to
possess territories that stretched from the outer
Hebrides in the west to the Black Isle in the
east. Alasdair Mac Kenzie was one of those
summoned to meet James I in 1427 and he lived
until the murder of James III in 1488. In the
interval he was perhaps the most significant
chief to support the Crown against the Lord of
the Isles, and for this he received the titles to
his lands so often withheld from the ancient
inhabitants of the Highlands. These lands
included Kintail in Wester Ross, for long
distinguished as Kintail Mackenzie to distinguish
it from the other long salt-water inlet on the
north coast, now called the Kyle of Tongue, but
once known as Kintail Mac Kay. Alasdair's son
Kenneth of Kintail continued the work of
consolidation until he died in 1492 and was
buried in Beauly Priory. There his stone effigy
is still to be seen.
Kenneth's son Iain was one of
those who escaped with his life from the field of
Flodden in 1513, when he brought a contingent of
his clansmen to fight there under James IV. He
again survived the defeat of Pinkie in 1547, and
lived until after the return of Mary, Queen of
Scots to her kingdom in 1561. His grandson Colin
remained loyal to Queen Mary but evaded the
hazards of James VI's minority, and it was during
this king's reign that the Mac Kenzies repeated
their tactics of joining the forces of the south
against their Gaelic neighbours, with even more
spectacular success. This time the victims were
the Mac Leods of Lewis. They had survived James
VI's orders to Gordon of Huntley to exterminate
them: they beat off the Fife Adventurers. But
these sold their interest in Lewis to Colin's son
Kenneth of Kintail, and while Mac Leod of Lewis
himself continued his ten years' imprisonment in
Edinburgh, the Mac Kenzies moved into his island
realm. Their chief was created Lord Mac Kenzie of
Kintail, his son Earl of Seaforth. The Black Isle
estates were erected into a separate county and
earldom of Cromartie. Lochalsh was wrested from
the Glengarry Mac Donnells. The 2nd Earl of
Seaforth became Charles II's secretary of state
for Scotland. It is an exceptional record for a
dynasty of Gaelic chiefs of no particular
consequence in ancient days.
The clan's luck turned when
the 4th Earl remained loyal to James VII at the
Revolution of 1688, to die in exile. It is to his
time that the traditional Gaelic prophecies
attributed to the Brahan seer, Coinneach Odhar,
are attributed. The greatest mystery concerning
these is that some of the most intricate of them
were actually in print before they were
fulfilled. Another is that there is no historical
record of the seer's execution in the period
during which he is supposed to have lived. It was
in 1578 that orders were issued for the
apprehension of " Kennoch Owir, principal or
leader in the art of magic". There was no
Earl of Seaforth at that date.
The 5th Earl was attained
after the 1715 rebellion. It was then that the
Mac Kenzies' last song of triumph was composed,
one of the finest rants in the language. It is
called Caber Feidh, which means Deer Antler, the
badge of the Mac Kenzies; and the verses ridicule
the surrounding clans which had fled before it.
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