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The MacIains of Glencoe The crest for the MacIains of Glencoe is a hand holding a sgain dhu, pronounced "ske-in gu" The MacIains of Glencoe were a small branch of Clan Donald descended from Iain Fraoch or Iain of the heather. Glencoe was among the lands granted Angus Og by Robert the Bruce. Iain Fraoch was a younger son of Angus Og and founder of this small, but scrappy branch. They lived in almost isolation scattered up the glen known for its haunting beauty even before it became the unwilling scene of the Highland's most infamous See Glencoe in the Armadale video
The Glencoe MacDonalds were mostly Episcopalian and Jacobites (Jacob is Latin for James), loyal to King James in exile while the other clans around them had become Presbyterian Covenanters, loyal to King William. In the previous centuries the Catholic Church had suppressed the Protestant Reformation by heresy trials and public execution of those who dared challenge the authority of the Bishops. The Reformation gave birth to the Episcopal Church of England so named because its hierarchy remained Bishops. Scotland gave birth to a church run by council, a presbytery, rather than bishops. These Protestant Covenanters responded to the years of suppression by burning Cathedrals, destroying records, and massacring Catholics and even Episcopalians solely because of their religious beliefs. Clanranald, Glengarry, and Keppoch all felt the brunt of this religious civil war, but none more than the MacIains of Glencoe. The enmity between Clan Donald and Clan Campbell was, if not orchestrated, at least utilized by the The Glencoe Monument
A Memorial Cairn was erected in 1883 by Ellen Burns-Macdonald, last representative of the MacIains of Glencoe. The cairn has a tall Celtic cross ornately engraved with Celtic knotwork. Each February 13th a wreath is laid at the base of the cairn. "MacDonalds and others gather here to lay wreaths and somehow reassure those spirits so horribly jolted that some Celtic tenderness is reaching out to them". The words of Peter MacDonald, past resident director of Armadale Gardens & the Museum of the Isles.
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meaning "dark dagger," surrounded by a memorial wreath. The motto of the MacIains of Glencoe is often depicted as the Gaelic word Cuimhnich pronounced "Kuinich" meaning "remember". The pre massacre motto is the Latin "Nec Tempore Nec Fato" which means "Neither Time Nor Fate", a haunting motto considering the history of this branch of Clan Donald.
The
government to maintain a “balance” of power between the clans. It didn’t take much to set one clan against another.