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Battle of Inverlochy (1431)

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Battle in Highland, Scotland, UK

Battle of Inverlochy (1431)
Part of the Scottish clan wars

Battlefield is the green field above the squareish central building of the aluminium factory
DateSeptember 1431
LocationFort William, Scotlandgrid reference NN126750
56°49′53″N 5°5′6″W / 56.83139°N 5.08500°W / 56.83139; -5.08500
Result Lordship victory
Belligerents
Lordship of the Isles Scottish Crown
Commanders and leaders
Donald Balloch
Alasdair Carrach.
Alexander Stewart, Earl of Mar
Allan Stewart, 4th Earl of Caithness
Strength
Unknown Unknown
Casualties and losses
30 900
Registered battlefield
Official nameBattle of Inverlochy I
Designated14 December 2012
Reference no.BTL34
Clan Donald and Stewart royal family wars
Conflict between Donald of Islay, Lord of the Isles and Robert Stewart, Duke of Albany

Conflict between Alexander of Islay, Earl of Ross and James I of Scotland

Conflict between Aonghas Óg and James III of Scotland

Conflict between John of Islay, Earl of Ross and James IV of Scotland

Rebellion of Domhnall Dubh

The Battle of Inverlochy (1431) (Scottish Gaelic: Blàr Inbhir Lòchaidh) was fought after Alexander of Islay (Alasdair Ìle, Rìgh Innse Gall), Lord of the Isles and Earl of Ross, had been imprisoned by King James I. A force of Highlanders led by Donald Balloch, Alexander's cousin, defeated Royalist forces led by the Earls of Mar and Caithness at Inverlochy, near present-day Fort William. Over 1000 men were supposedly killed, among them the Earl of Caithness. Balloch then went on to ravage the country of Clan Cameron and Clan Chattan, clans who had been disloyal to Alexander. King James himself soon after led an army into the Highlands, and Highland forces left off.

Alexander was liberated by King James in October 1431, it is said as a part of a royal amnesty granted to several upon the birth of the king's son James II. but the timing for that doesn't fit. When King James finally set Alexander free, he was the only magnate who could offer security in the Highlands. Upon the king's murder in 1437, Alexander was again recognized as the Earl of Ross, and not only received control of Dingwall, but Inverness, too, which he would hold until at least 1447.

The pibroch The End of the Great Bridge is traditionally held to have been composed during the battle and Piobaireachd Domhnull Dubh, named for clan chief Donald Dubh Cameron, commemorates the battle.

By January 1437 Alexander was styling himself "Earl of Ross" in his charters, and this style was acknowledged in royal documents by 1439. Finally, in February 1439, Alexander was appointed Justiciar of Scotia, an office which made him the chief legal official in the Kingdom of Scotland.

See also

Notes and references

  1. Historic Environment Scotland. "Battle Of Inverlochy (1431) (23707)". Canmore. Retrieved 1 May 2017.
  2. Angus MacDonald, et al, The Clan Donald, vol I, 1896, at p. 191.
  3. "BBC Radio Scotland - Pipeline, Ciaren Ross". BBC. 34:00 minutes in.
  4. Historic Environment Scotland. "Battle of Inverlochy I (BTL34)". Retrieved 26 October 2021.
  5. "The Battle of Inverlochy - 1431". www.clan-cameron.org.
  6. "The End of the Great Bridge" (PDF). pipesdrums.com.
  • Bower, Walter, Scotichronicon, 1987–96.
  • Brown, M., James I, 1994.
  • MacDonald, Hugh, History of the MacDonalds, in Highland Papers, vol. I, 1914.
Scottish clan battles
Wars of Scottish Independence
First War of Scottish Independence
Second War of Scottish Independence
Anglo-Scottish Wars
Border wars
Flodden campaign
Solway Moss campaign
Rough Wooing
Private and local clan battles
(Many of these also had links at national
level, including the feuds between Clan Donald
and the Crown, Clan Douglas and the Crown
and the Mary, Queen of Scots civil war)
13th century
14th century
15th century
16th century
Early 17th century
Scotland in the Wars of
the Three Kingdom
Bishops Wars
First English Civil War
Second English Civil War
Third English Civil War
Glencairn's rising
Period from Restoration of 1660
to Glorious Revolution of 1688
Covenanter rebellion of 1679
Monmouth Rebellion
Private and local clan battles
Jacobite risings
Jacobite rising of 1689
Jacobite rising of 1715
Jacobite rising of 1719
Jacobite rising of 1745
See also


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