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PART 5 THE LAST OF THE OLD JACOBITE CHIEFS

CHAPTER II. DESCENT OF CLUNY FROM GILLICATTAN MOR1

   Footnote 1 shown below states that this material was taken from the earlier publication. This material involves a delicate subject which has engendered much debate over a period of 700 years. Its sources can be found in Glimpses Appendices 9, 16 and 20. Readers should reserve judgement on the material that follows until they have read pp 10-14 of Alan G. Macpherson¼s Posterity of the Three Brethren which is based on more recent scholarship. This latter book should have a prominent place in the library of anyone who is serious about the history of the Clan Macpherson. It is available from the Clan Store at the ridiculously low price of $9. Other points of view on the subject can be found by returning to the Glimpses Menu Page and clicking on "Other Opinions on the Clan Chattan Controversy"

   Although a number of differences in dates, the numbering of the chiefs, and other details will be discerned between the Memorial and The Posterity, there is much valid, unduplicated information to be gained from what follows. Note that dates for the reigns of the various Kings of Scots are inserted by me to provide a time framework. It should be remembered that at that time the Memorial was written, Cluny was considered to be the Chief of Clan Chattan as well as the Clan Macpherson, by many Macphersons at least. Some of us still do.            Rory Mor, Editor.

      VARIOUS origins have been assigned to the Clan Chattan; some writers deriving them from a warlike German tribe called the Catti, mentioned by Tacitus, others from Ireland, and others from the native tribes of Moray. All we know with certainty is that they occupied part of Lochaber in the thirteenth century, and that in the succeeding century, on the displacement or extermination of the Cummings and their followers, the Macphersons were located in Badenoch.

                                                                                                                                                                           The earlier portion of the following abridged account is said to have been handed down by the genealogists of the clan, and from the time of Muirach the Parson it can be fairly corroborated. The first Gillicattan would appear to have been so named in honour of St Catan, to whom there were several dedications in Scotland -- notably the Priory of Ardchattan in Lorn, and as he was probably the name-father of the Clan Chattan, we begin our account with him, although the clan history has been carried much farther back.

     1. GILLICATTAN MOR, head or Chief of the Clan Chattan, lived in the reign of Malcolm Canmore [1058-1093], and left a son,
     2. DIARMID, who succeeded his father about the year 1090, and was father of
     3. GILLICATTAN (second of that name), who flourished in the reign of David I [1124-1153], and left issue two sons, Diarmid and Muirach. He was succeeded by his eldest son,
     4. DIARMID, who did not long survive his father, and dying without issue anno 1152, was succeeded by his brother,
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1 From the Memorial of Cluny's Golden Wedding, published in 1883

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      5. MUIRACH, parson of Kingussie, who, on thus becoming head of his family and Chief of Clan Chattan, married, about 1175, a daughter of the Thane of Calder, by whom he had five sons -- viz., Gillicattan, Ewen ban, Neill crom, Ferquhard Gillirioch, and David dubh. From this Muirach or Murdoch it is that the Macphersons derive their Gaelic name of Clann Mhuirich. He died in the end of the reign of William the Lion [1165-1214], and was succeeded by his eldest son,
     6. GILLICATTAN (third of that name), who lived in the reign of King Alexander III [1249-1286]; he left issue only one son,
     7. DOUGAL DALL, who died in the reign of King Alexander III., leav [sic] issue a daughter,
      Eva, his only child and sole heiress, who, anno 1292, was married to Angus Mackintosh, head of the family of Mackintosh, who with her got a good part of the Clan Chattan territory.
      Dougal dall having died without male issue, as above mentioned, in him ended the whole male line of Gillicattan the third, eldest son of Muirach the Parson. The representation therefore devolved upon his cousin and heir-male, Kenneth, eldest son of Ewen ban before mentioned, to whom we now return.
      Ewen ban, second son of Muirach the Parson, was called Macpherson, or son of the Parson; and surnames about this time becoming hereditary, it became the distinguishing clan appellation of his posterity, who were sometimes, however, indifferently named Macphersons, Macmhuirichs, and Clan Chattan. He left issue three sons--
          1. Kenneth, progenitor of Sliochd Kynich vic Ewen, or first branch of the Macphersons, from whom the present Chief Cluny is lineally descended; [the words in italics are not Gaelic but phonetic English approximations of the Gaelic -- Ed.]
          2. John, progenitor of Sliochd Ian vic Ewen, or second branch of the Macphersons, from whom Berkeley Macpherson, Esq., is said to be lineally descended; and
          3. GillÏosa, progenitor of Sliochd Ghilliosa vic Ewen, or third branch of the Macphersons, represented by Phoness and Invereshie in the earliest records of the clan, and now by Sir George Macpherson-Grant of Invereshie, Bart. [The Gaelic name Gilliosa means servant of Jesus -- Ed.].

      From the three sons of Ewen ban above mentioned all the Macphersons are descended, and from that circumstance they were at one time known in their own tongue as Sliochd nan triuir bhraithrean, or the Posterity of the Three Brethren.
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      8. KENNETH, the eldest son of Ewen ban, upon the decease of his cousin Dougal dall without issue male, became undoubted male representative of the family, and consequently Chief of Clan Chattan. But as the family of Mackintosh, by marrying the heir of line, got possession of the Lochaber estate, the inhabitants thereof behoved to follow Mackintosh as their landlord, who was thereupon designed Captain of that part of the Clan Chattan of which he had thus got the command. The rest of the clan, who followed this Kenneth as their true Chief and heir-male, retired to Badenoch, where they settled, and where, for their special services to the king and country, they soon got large possessions. He married ____ ____ , and had by her three sons, Duncan, Lachlan, and Donald.
      9. DUNCAN, eldest son of Kenneth, married Isobel, daughter of the Laird of Mackintosh, and had by her two sons, Donald mor and Bean.
     10. DONALD MOR, eldest son of Duncan, married M'Gillichguich, daughter of the Chieftain of the M'Gillichguichs (who were then a strong people in Badenoch), and had by her two sons, Donald dall and Gillicallum beg.
      11. DONALD DALL, eldest son of Donald Mor, married _____ Macpherson, daughter of William Macpherson of Rimore, and had by her nine sons--viz., Donald og, Thomas, Ewen, Malcolm, Duncan, Bean, Alexander, John, and William og.
     12. DONALD OG, eldest son of Donald dall, married _____ Gordon, daughter of James Gordon, then of Ardbrylach, and had by her four sons, Ewen, James, Paul, and William.
     13. EWEN, eldest son of Donald og, married _____ Mackintosh, daughter of Donald Mackintosh of Stron, and had by her three sons, Andrew, William, and John.
     14. ANDREW, eldest son of Ewen, married _____ Gordon, daughter of Gordon of Achamachy, and had by her an only son, Ewen.

     Ewen (who predeceased his father, who lived to a great age) married _____ Forbes, daughter of Duncan Forbes of Culloden, and had by her two sons, Andrew and Duncan, and three daughters. He was a colonel in the army of Montrose, the first in Scotland to join him and fought with the whole clan in all his battles. [1644-1650].
     15. ANDREW, eldest son of Ewen, succeeded his grandfather Andrew, and died unmarried.
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     16. DUNCAN, second son of Ewen, succeeded his brother Andrew, and married (1) Isabel, daughter of Robert Rose, Provost of Inverness, by whom he had an only child, Ann, who was married to a son of the Laird of Calder. He married (2) Elizabeth, daughter of Alexander Gordon of Aradoul (relict of John Rose of Allanbuy), and had by her an only son, George, who died in childhood. He died in 1722, and was succeeded in the chiefship by his cousin and heir-male.
     17. LACHLAN (of Noid), third in descent from John, third son of Ewen, thirteenth Chief. He married Jean, daughter of Sir Ewen Cameron of Lochiel, and had by her seven sons and three daughters.
     18. EWEN, eldest son of Lachlan, born 1706, married Janet, eldest daughter of Simon, Lord Lovat, by whom he had one son and one daughter.
     19. DUNCAN, only son of Ewen, born 1750 [actually 1748], married, in 1798, Catherine, daughter of Sir Ewen Cameron of Fassifern, by whom he left issue four sons and four daughters. He was succeeded by his eldest son.
     20. EWEN, the [then] present Chief, and twentieth in succession from Gillicattan mor, born in 1804, married, in I832, Sarah Justina, daughter of Henry Davidson, Esq. of Tulloch, by whom he has issue:--
           1. Colonel Duncan, C.B., late of the 42d Royal Highlanders. [Born in 1883; died in1886. He succeeded his father as Chief #21].
           2. Ewen Henry Davidson, colonel commanding the 93d Highlanders. [Born in 1836; died in 1900. He succeeded his brother as Chief #22]
           3. George Gordon, late captain in the Coldstream Guards. [He was disinherited by his father who paid off huge gambling debts that his son amassed.]
           4. Albert Cameron; and three daughters.*
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* [Born 1854; died 1932. He inherited Cluny when his brother Ewen died but he never considered himself to be Chief of the Clan. Rather he acknowledged the son of George Gordon, Ewan George (born 1891; died 1965) as Chief #23. Ewan moved to Australia at an early age. During World War I he returned to Britain and served in the Scots Grays as a trooper. He married in 1934 but had no children.

     When he died in 1965 the nearest descendant was Francis Cameron born in 1901. He was the grandson of 'Old Cluny's brother, John Cameron. Francis became Chief #24. When he died less than a year later in 1966, the nearest descendant was Brigadier Alan David of the Blairgowrie branch who was born in 1887, the seventh-generation from Andrew, brother of Lachlan (Chief #19). Alan became Chief #25 and served until his death in 1969. He was succeeded by his son, William Alan who was born in 1926 and is the present chief, in the minds of some , the 26th in succession to Gillicattan Mor. The hint of doubtpertains to the particular number. It stems from the fact that there are some gaps of many years longer than any reasonable expectation of human lifespans in that genealogy. These gaps suggest to me that there are probably some chiefs who existence has been forgotten.
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***
      Although not explicitly stated, the principal bone of contention between the Memorial and The Posterity is whether Muriach was, in fact, the 'Parson of Kingussie' whose sons were the first to call themselves mac a' phearsain (Macpherson). If the Sliochd nan triuir bhraithrean didn't come to Badenoch from Lochaber until the 14th century, is itÝlikely that Muriach was the parson at Kingussie? In those days the pears-eglais (literally 'person of the church') was not a priest or minister but a steward of church property responsible for collecting the rents from lands belonging to the church.

     A number of efforts have been made to find evidence of Muriach in Badenoch to no avail. This included a search of the Vatican archives. On the other hand there is strong evidence that Duncan, his great grandson was the parson of Laggan parish and did live in that parish at Clunie. In my view it is quite likely that the Gaelic name of the Clan -- Clann Mhuirich -- did derive from Muriach but the first sons of the parson were the sons of Duncan -- Donald Mor and Bean.

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