Battle of Bun Garbhain

Battle of Bun Garbhain
Part of Cameron-Mackintosh feud

Loch Arkaig
Date1570
Location
Bun Garbhain by Loch Eil
Result Cameron victory
Belligerents
Clan Cameron Chattan Confederation
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Clan Cameron-Clan Mackintosh feud

The Battle of Bun Garbhain was a Scottish clan battle fought in 1570, in the Scottish Highlands, between the Clan Cameron and the Clan Mackintosh.[1]

Division and Invasion

Donald Dubh Cameron, XV Chief of Clan Cameron, died, leaving an infant son, Allan, at the head of the clan. As the young boy could not lead, this brought about internal disagreements between two main branches of the family, the Lochiel and the Erracht. Cameron of Erracht claimed chiefship himself. To add to the confusion the little boys mother was from Clan Mackintosh, a clan with a long history of enmity towards Clan Cameron.

In this pretext, the chief of Clan MacKintosh, led 200 men, into the Cameron lands near Loch Arkaig whereupon a bloody battle ensued.

Battles

Though outnumbered, the Camerons had the high ground and soon there were many dead and injured from the MacKintoshes. MacKintosh led his men in retreat around the head of Loch Eil to the Ardgour shore and rallied his men.

The Camerons were in swift pursuit and a second engagement took place, with similar results as the first. In the midst of this action, the chief of MacKintosh is believed to have been killed by Donald 'Taillear Dubh na Tuaighe' Cameron (son of the XIV Chief of Clan Cameron), with a fearsome Lochaber axe. MacKintosh's followers took their stricken chief and fell back to Bun Garbhain (Bun Garvan).

Both sides met once again for an indeterminate time, before disengaging for the night. The MacKintoshes made camp in a small hollow called Cuil nan Cuileag, and thought that they were safe. However, the Camerons stormed the encampment and killed every MacKintosh.

Aftermath

The mother of Allan Cameron, the infant chief of Clan Cameron, was in fact a MacKintosh. After the battle, Taillear Dubh came to give her an account of the fighting. He apparently said “Gun robh bian cait au diugh air plang, agus rogha’s taghadh air peighinn” which translates to "A cat’s skin might be had this day for a plack (coin)" in obvious reference to the killing of the Mackintosh whose symbol was the highland cat. Enraged with the news of all her dead kin, she tried to kill her son, but Taillear Dubh intervened in time. Allan Cameron was safe, but his mother was banished from Lochaber forever.[1]

References

  1. ^ a b "The Battle of Bun Garbhain". clan-cameron.org. Clan Cameron Association. Retrieved February 3, 2019.
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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 Kingdoms
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
Private and local clan battles
Covenanter rebellion of 1679
Monmouth Rebellion
Jacobite risings
Jacobite rising of 1689
Jacobite rising of 1715
Jacobite rising of 1719
Jacobite rising of 1745
See also

56°50′46″N 5°19′05″W / 56.846°N 5.318°W / 56.846; -5.318