Bertram de Shotts

Bertram de Shotts

Bertram de Shotts is known locally as a legendary Giant that roamed the village of Shotts, Scotland in the 15th Century. Shotts was then a dreary moorland place on the Great Road of the Shire. The road was an important route for tradesman carrying their wares around Scotland. Bertram de Shotts habitually savaged packmen and peddlers for treasure carried along the Great Road. Such was the menace of Bertram de Shotts, King James IV of Scotland ordered his death. Bertram de Shotts was probably in fact seven or eight feet high, yet nonetheless, his presence merited Giant status.

A gripping tale is told how a young man, namely John Gilchrist, Laird of Muirhead, killed the Giant. With cunning patience he ambushed Bertram de Shotts, immobilising him by slicing both his hamstrings as he lay down to drink at Kate’s Well. Disorientated, Bertram de Shotts was then decapitated in an unpleasant death. A proud, and now wealthy, John Gilchrist then carried the blooded head to the King.

A relic of Bertram’s exploits is still to be seen in one of his hide-outs, Law’s Castle, known to old residents as the Giant’s Cup and Saucer. Huge stones they are, standing sentinel in a desolate moorland bowl, in an unutterable silence, brooding and age old.

Despite Bertram de Shotts being a savage thief, the village Shotts is said, with much probability, to have derived its name from the legendary Giant.

Bertram is believed to have lived from around 1467 to 1505, although this cannot be verified.

ource

*http://web.ukonline.co.uk/scotlandgenealogy/Short%20hist.htmhttp://www.geocities.com/liamfaetheshire/Review_Bertram


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