- Clan Urquhart
-
Clan Urquhart Crest badge Motto: Meane weil speak weil and doe weil.[1] War cry: Trust and go forward Profile Plant badge Wallflower.[1] Chief
Kenneth Trist Urquhart 27th Chief of Clan Urquhart Seat Castle Craig Historic seat Castle Craig Septs of Clan Urquhart Urquhart, Cromarty[2] Urquhart is a Highland Scottish clan. They traditionally occupied the lands in the district and town of Cromarty, a former Royal Burgh with an excellent natural harbour on the tip of The Black Isle. Chiefs of the Clan were Barons and hereditary Sheriffs of the county for hundreds of years. Today the Clan is an international body organized in part by the Clan Urquhart Association, with Clan members in Scotland, England, Wales, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and America. The current and 27th Chief of Clan Urquhart, Kenneth Trist Urquhart of Urquhart, is one of four Scottish Highland Chiefs that are American citizens.
Contents
History
Origins of the name
The name Urquhart is of ancient Gaelic origin, believed to be derived from Airchartdan. This has been variously translated as "upon a rowan wood" (copses of rowan trees are common in Glen Urquhart, the Clan's place of origin according to oral tradition) and the "fort on the knoll," perhaps alluding to Castle Urquhart and/or the previous neolithic forts upon which it was built. Some suggest the Urquhart family derive their name from the district of Urquhart on the Black Isle, located on the north side of the Great Glen. Earlier phonetic spellings include Urchard; the name, first recorded in the 13th century in a Charter from King Robert the Bruce to allow William de Urquhart of Cromarty to build Cromarty Castle, was written down long before the development of early modern English in the 16th to 17th centuries.
Origins of the clan
The apical ancestor of Clan Urquhart was Conachar Mor, founder of the Clan. According to an historical address by the current Chief,
"As legend has it, in the days when wild boar, wolves and bears still roamed the Scottish Highlands a mighty warrior named Conachar Mor ruled over a swathe of territory near Inverness, on the northwest side of Loch Ness. A scion of the Royal House of Ulster, *Conachar became a hero in the folklore of the region for his strength and valour after he and his faithful, but aged hound An Cu Mor slew a ferocious wild boar that had long terrorised the Great Glen.
It is said that Conachar and his sword lie buried somewhere in what is today Glen Urquhart, and Conachar's feat is reflected in the boars' heads adopted as part of the heraldic achievement of the Chief of Clan Urquhart, who regards Conachar Mor as the founder of his clan.
Clan Urquhart took its name from Airchartdan or Urchard, as Conachar's territory was named when St. Columba visited the area in the 6th century, bringing Christianity to a hitherto heathen land. Later a castle was built there, overlooking Loch Ness, Scotland's most famous loch. Urchard became Urquhart, and the area became known as Glen Urquhart. Today the remains of Urquhart Castle stand as an imposing monument to the past and a symbol of the ancient connection between Clan Urquhart and Glen Urquhart. The castle and glen serve as constant reminders to Urquharts throughout the world that their name had its origin here.".[3]
Conachar Mor's son succeeded him as O'Conachar Mor, the second Urquhart, and so on down to the first Urquhart recorded in historical documents, William de Urquhart mentioned above. It has been tenuously suggested Conachar Mor's two other sons went on to become the founders of Clan Mackay and Clan Forbes.
16th century and Anglo Scottish wars
During the Anglo-Scottish Wars the Clan Urquhart fought at the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh in 1547, where nine sons of the Chief died in battle. This was the last major battle between the Royal Scottish and Royal English armies. Clan chiefs from Clan Munro, Clan Hunter, Clan Colquhoun, Clan MacFarlane and Clan Farquharson also died at this battle.
17th century and Civil War
In 1649 a body of Covenanters, opposed to Parliament, assaulted and took control of the town of Inverness and Inverness Castle. Commanded by Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromarty, Colonel John Munro of Lemlair, Colonel Hugh Fraser, and Thomas Mackenzie of Pluscardine, they then expelled the garrison and razed the fortifications. On the approach of the parliamentary forces led by General David Leslie, they retreated back into Ross-shire. (See: Siege of Inverness (1649)).
By 1651 Scottish Royalist Covenantors had become disillusioned with Parliament. The Clan Urquhart fought at the Battle of Worcester in 1651 where the Chief, Sir Thomas Urquhart of Cromarty, was taken prisoner. The Clan had always been Stuart loyalists; further, Sir Thomas was knighted by Charles II, and was an active member of the King's court. During his subsequent captivity at the Tower of London ordered directly by Oliver Cromwell, Sir Thomas published several books in an effort to demonstrate his value to society to secure his release. In 1662 he returned to Scotland on parole to find that his estate had been ruined and pillaged. Probably as a condition of his final release, Sir Thomas spent the rest of his life in Holland. The Chiefship then passed briefly to his brother Alexander before falling to the Urquharts of Craigston, a family near Turriff in Aberdeenshire.
From the Jacobite uprisings to modern times
The Urquharts supported the Jacobite Risings of 1715, with the 15th chief, James Urquhart of Cromarty, participating at the Battle of Sheriffmuir and later serving the exiled King James.
At the death of James Urquhart of Cromarty in 1741, the chiefship passed to the Urquharts of Meldrum near Aberdeen. After the Meldrum line ended with Major Beauchamp Urquhart, who was killed in action with the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders in 1898, the Chiefship passed to his cousin of the Urquhart of Braelangwell line, Francis Fortesque Urquhart of Urquhart, a notable figure in literary circles at Oxford University. Upon his death in 1934, the Chiefship lay dormant until 1959 when another descendant of the Braelangwell line, Wilkins Fisk Urquhart of that Ilk, who was descended from a George Urquhart who emigrated to America in the 18th century, established his rights with the Lord Lyon. He was succeeded by his son in 1974, the 27th Chief, Kenneth Trist Urquhart of Urquhart. The seat of the clan is Castle Craig on the Cromarty Firth. It was presented to the 26th clan chief by Major Iain Shaw of Tordarroch – the Shaws had been a neighbouring clan of the Urquharts in earlier times.
Castles
- Castle Craig, although in ruins is still the current seat of the Chief of Clan Urquhart. A 15th century tower originally occupied by the Urquharts of Braelangwell and Newhall that overlooks the Cromarty Firth from the north shore of the Black Isle. Braelangwell House was built in 1801 by the Urquharts of Braelangwell, then Chiefs of the Clan, on the much older Braelangwell estate, which was held by a branch of the clan for several centuries prior.
- Craigston Castle in Aberdeenshire, and the present-day Cromarty House on the hill above the Black Isle town of Cromarty was built from the stone and timbers of the former Urquhart stronghold of Cromarty Castle.
- Despite its name Urquhart Castle, one of the most famous castles in the highlands that sits beside Loch Ness, was never associated with the Clan Urquhart. Urquhart Castle in fact belonged to the Clan Grant.[5].
Clan chief
See also
Notes
- ^ a b c "Clan History". http://www.scotclans.com/scottish_clans/clans/urquhart/history.html. Retrieved 2007-12-12.
- ^ "Septs". http://www.urquhart.org/Sept.htm. Retrieved 2007-12-12.
- ^ "OLD WORLD AND NEW". http://www.burkes-peerage.net/articles/fsjan02.aspx.
- ^ "Urquhart Tartans". http://www.clanurquhart.com/tartans. Retrieved 2008-10-10.[dead link]
- ^ , http://www.historic-scotland.gov.uk/educurquhart.pdf
- ^ "burkes-peerage.net". http://www.burkes-peerage.net/familyhomepage.aspx?FID=0&FN=URQUHARTOFURQUHART.
External links
- website of the Chief of the Clan Urquhart
- http://www.electricscotland.com/webclans/stoz/urquhar2.html
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