The Battle of Killiecrankie and Bonnie Dundee: Jacobite Rebellion or Counter Revolution
In The Battle of Killiecrankie: Jacobite Rebellion or Counter Revolution, Scottish history tour guide Bruce Fummey explains the events in the first 'Jacobite rebellion' leading up to The Battle of Killiecrankie and two great songs that followed. Links below to The Corries versions of Bonnie Dundee and Killicrankie.
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The Corries - Killicrankie
• The Corries-Killiecran...
The Corries - Bonnie Dundee
• The Corries --- Bonnie...
Tales from Scotlands History, Jacobite rebellion,
Scotland History Tours is here for people who want to learn about Scottish history and get ideas for Scottish history tours. I try to make videos which tell you tales from Scotland's past and give you information about key dates in Scottish history and historical places to visit in Scotland. Not all videos are tales from Scotland's history, some of them are about men from Scotland's past or women from Scotland's past. Basically the people who made Scotland. From April 2020 onward I've tried to give ideas for historic days out in Scotland. Essentially these are days out in Scotland for adults who are interested in historical places to visit in Scotland.
As one of Scotland history tour guides people ask: Help me plan a Scottish holiday, or help me plan a Scottish vacation of your from the US. So from April 2020 I've tried to give a bit of history, but some places of interest in Scotland as well.
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@globe0147
Жыл бұрын
Yes! I know of both the songs and their meaning before you even mentioned them
@globe0147
Жыл бұрын
8:19 well, I think it matters little, after all aren’t we singing about him today? On the braes o’ Killiecrankie-o?
@raydriver7300
Жыл бұрын
Such a clappy song to commemorate a bloodbath. I know the song and also that a new road is proposed to run through the site of the battle 🌞
@cmb9993
7 ай бұрын
In reference to the comment about building a road through Killiecrankie battle field....Tell me it ain't so! (Sorry that's a American-ism🥴). Why does everyone have to pave over history? It truly breaks my heart!
Bonnie Dundee is my direct ancestor. We have his cane and the family ring. Thank you for shedding so much more light in my family history ❤ from Canada 🇨🇦
@ajames-js3ef
Жыл бұрын
his cane... where could one see pictures of dundees cane?
@Alba1st
Жыл бұрын
Would be a beautiful thing if your family might lend it to the people of Dundee to view for a small period of time. Maybe something you could think about. X
@amandagraham4254
Жыл бұрын
I would love to share the family archives and relics with Scotland. In a heartbeat, but I do not own them. My Uncle being the Oldest, asked for the Cane. We gave it to him and so he now has both. I can however ask.
@lancegraham4865
Жыл бұрын
We might be related you and I. Lance Graham. wouldn't that be a small world?.....From Canada as well.
@lancegraham4865
Жыл бұрын
I'm Saskatchewan, and thru my brothers research, we are of the Grahams of Claverhouse....I would love to reach out. We have family in Ontario and Alberta.
I learned the tune for Bonnie Dundee with the words Riding the Raid. Thanks for teaching the history.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
Жыл бұрын
Ah yes, I've heard tell
I swear I learn more from your “stories” than I have anywhere else! Thank you!
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
Yay
Hello.... My name is David Carnachan and I was born in Troon Scotland in 1954. My family moved to USA in 1959 where I have lived and raised a family. 4 wee ones and 9 grandchildren. I pass on stories to them all about our Scottish heritage. Your U-Tube videos' have given me so much history and presented in such a beautiful Scottish way that I pass them on to my family and others. Thank You!!!!!! Your awesome... I loved your video who can be Scottish and can blacks talk about Scotland. I say there are 2 kinds of people in this world.... Those who are Scottish and those who want to be Scottish... Just sayn... Keep up the great work... I'm watching.
Superb. Love the presentation style, lack of seriousness while seriously interesting. Sense of humour with some Scottish history. Top chat.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
That's what I'm going for😎
@LouisMoir-Barnetson
Жыл бұрын
@@ScotlandHistoryTours tainted with left wing politics. I then switch off...
@ScotlandHistoryTours
Жыл бұрын
@R2 D2 I was tempted to say that your comment was tainted with right wing politics then delete it. Would have been a lark, but it got me curious. It's a while since I made this video, and I couldn't remember saying anything political. I just rewatched it and sure enough no mention of politics right or left. Either I'm missing something from my own script, or you have a very vivid imagination. I'm going to guess the latter. Onwards😎😎
I am lucky that I remember my Great Grandmother. I was born & raised in East Tennessee, isolated in The Appalachian Mountains. My ancestors were mostly Ulster & a few highland Scots. My Great grandma used to tell me stories about history, The Siege of Derry, Enniskillen, & Battle of The Boyne. She taught me traditional quilting, ancient ballads & folklore. I remember that whenever any of us children misbehaved, she wood scare us by saying that the bloody cleavers would grab us & take us to hell. It conjured an image of Freddy in The Nightmare on Elm St, or the "Boogeyman", in my young mind. She once told me that it originated from a religious slaughter between Graham & Dundee, back in Scotland. When I told a Scottish friend all about The Bloody Cleavers, she laughed & said she believes that my Great Grandma was attempting to explain the battle that you just described, but after all that time, many things were added & taken out. I just think it is awesome that an event that occurred that long ago, was still passed down over generations & traveled around the world.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
One side called him Bloody Clavers, the other side.Bonny Dundee. It seems political divides are nothing new
@Johnstone72
Жыл бұрын
God bless ye!!
I think I've said, WOW to myself a hundred times now while binge-watching your videos. ABSOBLOOMINLUTELY superb.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
😂😂 You're way to kind.... but I like it
I'm an American of Scots-Irish descent. I 'discovered' The Corries awhile back and have become quite familiar with with both songs and they have taken up permanent residence in my brain. I have learned alot from the songs, and your 'stories' have helped clarify the history. Thank you!🇺🇸🏴
@ScotlandHistoryTours
7 ай бұрын
Well done lad
@cmb9993
7 ай бұрын
@@ScotlandHistoryTours Thank You! (but I'm an auld lass!🧓)
I got shivers when you said Bonnie Dundee's last words 👍
I'm an Aussie but love both songs and the way you present Scotland's history.
@missyflutter5562
Жыл бұрын
Ditto this exactly 😊
Kudos for the Corries plug!
"yer maw!" - priceless 🤣
I learned about Scotland and the jacobites thanks to a french Québec Canadian author Sonia Marmen and her french book series "the heart of gaels". Amazing content, much love from Canada ❤
@ScotlandHistoryTours
10 ай бұрын
Ooooh, Je dois l'acheter
@Ganja_bee
10 ай бұрын
@@ScotlandHistoryTours c'est de voir que tu parles aussi le français 😍
Remember both songs fondly as parents were Corries fans, I even saw them in concert! Never really knew the story behind them though.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
There you go! I'm so chuffed to have given you the background. They're the little things that give me a glow inside and make it worth while
@janetsturgess5858
2 жыл бұрын
I love the corries and know both songs. Absolutely amazing video thanks
Thanx so much. Love what you do
In my family history books it’s written my grandfather (Lotta greats) was wounded during the highland charge with lochiels regiment.
An interesting side note to the story is McBean/McBane went on to be a fencing instructor with a Sal in Edinburgh teaching Gentlemen and officers in the use of the Sword, he also wrote one of the early fencing manuals on the broad sword named "The Expert Sword-Man's Companion (1728)" He had a wild life bouncing up and down the ranks usually due to his habit of fighting duels at the drop of a hat.
Thank you for introducing a new generation to the wonderful Corries! Your history videos are great too! :)
To the Lords of Convention, t’was Claverhouse spoke… Love that song.
Only recently found you, still confused on Scottish history, I’d never heard of Killiecrankie, much less the battle, until, if I can sound oh so American, I traced one line of genealogy back to Killiecrankie during the lockdown. It’s the only village I have found direct links to. It is lovely to see where, if my maths are correct, my 5th great grandfather came from. William Graham, b.1750, in Killiecrankie, died 1816, somewhere in Kentucky. I know his father was also William, but nothing beyond that. I won’t go full American here and claim some link to John Graham, I have no idea, nor do I have some desperate need to be descended from important people of the past, but I do love your videos, and I do wish I had your accent. 🏴
Loved your video, but the bloody Soldier's Leap! We visited there a couple years ago and asked and asked at the visitor center exactly where the battle took place. They were damn cagey on this, but were so thrilled to talk about Soldier's Leap. I guess a murtherin' great battle and massacre is just Tuesday in Scotland, but a guy leaping 18 feet over a rushing river?! Well, you don't see that every day!
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
😂 I think it's just that everyone in the area's heard of the Soldier's Leap, though the details of the battel itself are less well known
I am familiar with both songs. My uncle JH Graham was never able to link our family directly to Claverhouse.
I know the Corries and listen to them a lot - including Bonnie Dundee really great videos thanks
Love singing Bonnie Dundee! Love the Corries 😍 I had some very creative imagined lyrics before I saw them written out, though!
@ScotlandHistoryTours
Жыл бұрын
Love it!!
Im starting my own podcast about the Songs of the Jacobites. Bonny Dundee and Killiecrankie will be featured in the early episodes. Your videos are the easiest research i've ever had to do :)
Brilliant songs! Absolutely love what your doing. Scottish history has needed somone like yourself. There are some really good videos on Scottish history, but these vids are fantastic and covering alot of topics not covered very well in the older Scottish history vids. Tha ks again Steven From Dundee
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you, and keep watching
I first heard Bonnie Dundee played on the Pipes when I was 12 years old. I was marching with my father at a D-Day remembrance in 1975 in Cornwall Ontario, it was his regimental march. After the formalities one of his old mates came up to me and said, in a broad Scots accent " Cubby Jr 'ey, D' ye ney what cha were marchin' ta'. I shook my head, he sat me down and told me the story of Bonnie Dundee. Sixteen year later I named my first daughter Bonnie.
I listen to a fair amount of shanties and folk for a person 1400 mi from an Ocean or sea, and I must confess that only one was new to me. That being said I knew not the full meaning behind the lyrics to either prior to watching your videos. Thank you for the content.
I know Sir Walter Scott's "Bonny Dundee", as sung by the Corries, the reason why I know it is because in the last few years, my mum, who was in her 90s, had almost lost her memory, but she still remembered a few songs, and her favourite song that she still remembered was Bonny Dundee, and everytime I went to see her, she would break out in song several times during our conversation, and the song would usually be.."To the Lords of o' convention Lord Claverhouse spoke....", used to drive me mad!
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
Ah, now that's touching
Brilliant love these history videos. Absolutely easy going and easy to take in. Love the comedy aswell. My kids love these great way for them to learn. More videos always welcome. Half an hour mini series for kids and adults mainly learning for kids
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Ah that's great that it's not just old bufties like my who enjoy them
@gavinmorrow1899
3 жыл бұрын
@@ScotlandHistoryTours not at all mate brilliant take on telling the stories, and history, kids have certainly enjoyed your approach to it made it fun and Interesting. Great story teller also an art itself to capture folks attention. And certainly my twin boys haha. Cheers and all best.
The songs from the Corrie specifically lead me to a life of learning Scottish history, and you sir ,have, yet again gave a short but tantalising insight into the first Jacobite attempt to restore the Stewarts and presented it well.
@amandagraham4254
2 жыл бұрын
I may be related to you! Lol
@jmunro-graham1568
2 жыл бұрын
@@amandagraham4254 you could be, lol
@amandagraham4254
2 жыл бұрын
@@jmunro-graham1568 Bonnie Dundee was my direct ancestor. If yours too we are distant cousins
@jmunro-graham1568
2 жыл бұрын
@@amandagraham4254 I wouldn’t have thought so my family was shipped to Ulster during the times of Borderer plantations in the early early 1600s, then arrived back in Scotland in the 1820s to work as miners.
Anything about the Battle of Sherrifmuir, where according to the song everybody ran away!!
Just discovered these videos! Brilliant story telling, thank you!
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Fiona. Welcome on board
i play Bonnie Dundee on the pipes. Only vaguely knew the meaning. Great explanation Great Video.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
Ай бұрын
Rock on!
@paulcannell7188
Ай бұрын
You inspired me to read Desmond Seward’s book, King Over The Water.
Fantastic Amazing
@ScotlandHistoryTours
Жыл бұрын
Thanks 🤗
i used to work at blair castle was cool seeing it in the video, i was one of the gardener and groundsmen there, used to love the st brides kirk
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
Brilliant
Didn’t have a particular interest before stumbling across one of your presentations. I’ve not watched about ten in a row. Congratulations on a great series. I really like how you tie these specific tales into the larger human experience.
very interested in this whole period - jameson and gunn here. well done on the channel
Love your videos, doing a bit of binge watching, shared on FB.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Good on ye
Thank you, absolutely loved that.....
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks James, did you know the songs?
@jameshalfpenny4726
3 жыл бұрын
Scotland History Tours mum and dad played the Corries every sunday
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Well brought up then
Thanks for the music links. 😎👍 I've heard both songs before - 'though performed by some other group(s). I'm most familiar with (The Bonnie Blue Bonnets of) "Bonnie Dundee" as I heard this one fairly frequently - first hearing it in my childhood (whereas "Killiecrankie" I've heard sung much less - 'though I still recognize the 'Killiecrank-io' refrain: I first heard this one when I was in my 30's). My favorite phrase: ...There Are Heads To Be Broke.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
11 ай бұрын
No problem!
Great interesting video , thank you from Canada
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
...and thank you form Perthshire😊
Great video. My wife and I honeymooned there I Scotland. My mother's ancestors are Robertsons and came from there, so we went to see that area. Absolutely gorgeous. Got to see a small highland gathering at Blair, hiked through the area around Soldier's Leap, and generally just enjoyed the prettiest place-per-square-mile I've ever seen.
Was there at the Kirk a few days ago... so much history and stories in that little place, Scotland... one question... I saw his chest plate in Blair Castle and there was a hole just above the heart is... said to be the bullet that laid him low...theater ye think.... visited the leap site also... Olympic leap I might say... Keep it up laddie... a gang pf us were over there for 275th anniversary of the St Andrew's Society of Philadelphia..
Aye, know both songs well and funnily enough, was listening to the Corrie's sing Killiecrankie only yesterday. Great presentations Bruce thank you.
Thanks for linking the 'Killiecrankie' live recording by 'The Corries'. Great song, I idn't knew yet and a great performance.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Rock on!
I play that tune!!
know and enjoy both the songs especially by the Corries
Absolutely love your videos Bruce. I've known both songs for many years and think The Corries' versions are the best. I wasn’t sure of the background behind Bonnie Dundee, but I had a better handle on Killiecrankie. My dad was German and my mum Scots. Her maiden name was Chisholm and she was proud of the Chisholms' involvement in the '45. Pity we had an unpleasant fop for a leader. Anyway, keep making these brilliant videos 👍
I just found this channel... I love it! After a few videos, I start speaking with a Scottish accent!🤗
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
Aye, that's just voices in your head 😂
Already subscribed, it is one of the only ways I can get out for a walk 🚶♂️ 😉 🙌 👌
@ScotlandHistoryTours
Жыл бұрын
Aye Brucie Fummey's Keep Fit Videos
Thank you
Love your videos!! You make the history truly come alive. As for the tunes I know both of them very well. Am a great fan of the Corries and Gaberlunzie as well. I am the fifth generation Canadian with sturdy Scots roots in Ayrshire on my fathers side and a Gordon on my mothers side. If this pandemic ever ends and I get to Scotland I will be contacting you about a tour. Thanks again for your great videos.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
Brilliant
I love your videos ! I am decended from John Graham and I'm also living in montrose angus scotland 😀
My new puppy likes the sound of your voice. English black flat coated lab. She always sleeps and snores when I play your videos...13 weeks old. :)
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
😂 I have that effect on all females
@kimberlyevans9637
2 жыл бұрын
@@ScotlandHistoryTours I prefer to say your voice is soothing.
I knew the songs and who won the battle. This makes it make sense. Thank you
i'm hooked
Check out "A Parcel of Rogues" by Robert Burns, sung by Steeleye Span, if you haven't already. "We were bought and sold by English gold . . . such a parcel of rogues in a nation.
I’ve just learnt how to play Bonnie Dundee!
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Wohooo! On what?
Know and sing/have sung both songs; competed MSR using 'Bonnie Dundee.'
we sang Bonnie Dundee in primary school with the radio programme Singing Together so all Southern Britsh kids knew it in the 50s
Hi Bruce, I was out for a walk in Seattle listening to the Corries "Braes of Killecarankie" (my parents got me hooked a long time ago). I thought I should find out what this song is about. I found your excellent channel and look forward to seeing your other videos. Subscribed.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Yay! I'm absolutely delighted to hear that I filled in the details, and to hear of your excellent upbringing.
@stepstar6187
3 жыл бұрын
South of Seattle is big Scottish identified people, north of Kelso south of glencoe off Interstate 5 Highland games festival very Year - without Covid
My Scottish grandmother from Dundee was quite often heard saying ''up with the bonnets o' Bonnie Dundee'. I never had a clue what she was talking about.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
😄
Very well done, Bruce👍 ...outlines a history full of paradoxical scenarios! (Even the songs - baith written by Lowlanders, Scott n Burns, themselves undoubtedly anti-Royalists, and surely sprung from Covenanter stock; yet seemingly left with an indelible impression of the Highlanders' courageous Jacobite stand.) ...afterall, the "rebels", win or lose, always end up with all the romance - and the best ballads! First rate presentation!😎👍
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Thanks Ken
The poem and song 🎵 now belong to the city oh dundee , bonnie dundee written by sir walter scott at Abbotsford 1825 , was purchased by public subscription in 1940 by the cheif librarian, £ 132. Pounds a lot of money, then , Robert burns, visited the grave ,1787 on his tour ,dundee was scotlands hero , it was written in a cavalier style just before sir walter had his din dins 🙂🏴💙💙
Great stuff! You're telling the story a heck of a lot of better than many modern historians. Yes, I know these songs well so I know good from bad. Just one thing...."Claverhouse" was pronounced "Clavers" in those days! My ancestor, William Lockhart Bogle RA, painted a portrait of him. Keep up the good work!
@kennylockhart6256
8 ай бұрын
Sorry Sir, Calvert’s was Not a freind of Clan Lockhart!
@GiacomoLockhart
8 ай бұрын
@@kennylockhart6256y - Calvert? Did you mean him, Kenny?
@kennylockhart6256
8 ай бұрын
Sorry Sir! Should check my spelling before posting! Just saying, that in almost all the larger’ memorials to the Covenanters around Scotland, the sir name Lockhart, appears on almost all of them! So I would assume, ‘Clavers’ would be no freind of the clan Lockhart!?
@GiacomoLockhart
8 ай бұрын
@@kennylockhart6256 - Well actually, Kenny, most of the Lockhart Clan were Jacobites or at least sympathetic. George Lockhart of Carnwath was the Jacobite agent of King James II & VIII in the Scottish Lowlands and Count James Lockhart of Wishart and Carnwath, the later Chief of the Clan, was also a Jacobite. So, yes, Clavers would have been a good friend of Lockhart of Carnwath. But that doesn't mean that some of the Lockharts sided with the Covenanters.
I really enjoy your videos. I’m familiar with both songs. As a piper, I play “Bonnie Dundee”, but haven’t learned “Killiecrankie” yet.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
Жыл бұрын
Get learning lad😁
Killiecrankie by the Picts is awesome!
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
Not the Corries?
We sang Bonnets of Bonnie Dundee at school in Yorkshire in the 50s and 60s!.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
Wow😮
There was still a Plantagenet heir that got overlooked. Their line is still in existence, with the present heir leaving in Australia to escape the circus of the monarchy.
I love your videos
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Thank you so much. If you keep watching, commenting and sharing them, then I'll try to keep making them 😎😎😎
@portorico2319
3 жыл бұрын
@@ScotlandHistoryTours You keep making them and I will keep sharing them, I share them with a lot of my friends abroad,
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Good man. Spread the Gospel of Scottish history
You arrre still adorrrable...even more so than before i watched 5 videos in rapid succession!!!
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
😂😂😂
McCord descendant here and I lost my very distant grandfather in this battle.
I love the song sang by The Corries, I've been to Glencoe too and it feels eerie. I get a cold shiver down my spine not a nice feeling at all, might be just because i know wot happened here but could be 6th sense??
The most amazing feat of Claverhouse was to keep the highland clans from fighting amongst each other same as Charles Edward Stuart... Unite we stand!
Was in dunkeild a few weeks ago
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
Bonnie place
I know both songs and a bit of the history behind them
Bruce, I think you could use some new images for your TShirts and hoodies. May I politely suggest you use the graphic from this video or the one from the Jacobite rebellion and print them in that all over style. Add in an appropriate Gaelic quote. I promise they will sell. You are terrific thanks
@ScotlandHistoryTours
7 ай бұрын
That might be a good idea
Nice to see a stretch of the River Garry that still has some water flowing through it. So sad to drive up the A9 these days and see that dry river bed winding it's way through the glen. Even sadder the wildlife that was dependent on it's flow and the wildlife that is no more in the area. Migratory fish like salmon and sea trout etc. Oh well, cheaper leccy all round.
Loved the vid, esp the line about cinq vergule quatre if you're a pedant.
Knew Bonnie Dundee, but not Killiecrankie. When I was a kid (American) we learned about the American Revolution as if the result was always meant to be, and it was really over the course of many years that I began to see all the places the whole thing had hung by a thread. A man doesn't read an order, the fog rolls in just in time, Hessian troops don't understand a warning from an English Tory. Bonnie Dundee's chance death at Killiecrankie seems to have been one of those moments for the Jacobites. What if...
There were many in Scotland who were glad to see James 7 replaced by William & Mary (Stuart). James and Charles 2 had been behind "The Killing Times" persecution of the Covenanters so were hated by many.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Of course there are two sides to every story. Bloody Clavers or Bonnie Dundee. Take your pick
@molecatcher3383
3 жыл бұрын
@@ScotlandHistoryTours They were tough times and both sides were ruthless to the other when they got the chance.
Fans of The Corries will be familiar with sings commemorating battles and leaders in Scottish history. An you hae been as I hae been ye wouldna be so brankie-O. Spellings a mystery to me, but that’s the gist of the line from the braes of Killiecrankie-O. Incidentally, there is, or was in the 1950s a Killiecrankie Inn on the Gaspé coast of Quebec.
I know bot songs and went to many Corries concerts and met them after one concert
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
Well done loon
To the Lords o' convention 'twas Claverhouse spoke E'er the King's Crown go down, there are crowns to be broke So each cavalier who loves honor and me Let him follow the bonnets o' Bonnie Dundee Come fill up my cup, come fill up can Come saddle my horses and call out my men Unhook the West Port, and let us gae free For it's up with the bonnets o' Bonnie Dundee This is yin ae my fav songs by the corries absolute class
Yes, Yes and Yes 😊
I really enjoy your videos, very interesting and informative. I'd like to see you do a video about Hugh McKay of Scourie. He was the Highland Laird who commanded the defeated Williamites at Killiecrankie and was ridiculed by his opponents who claimed that he hid in a bush while his men perished. Who knows the truth but this same man was, more or less, responsible for the final defeat of those first Jacobites at Aughrim and it was his own personal bravery in single handedly scouting the causeway that allowed the flanking manoeuvre of the Williamite Cavalry. I'd also like to point out that few of the Williamite soldiers at Killiecrankie were 'battle hardened'. The Scots Dutch regiments of McKay, Balfour and Ramsay were a paper tiger. They looked good and were well drilled but it is debatable how many had ever fired their muskets in anger. They had been too late for Sedgemoor and the wars with the French had abated since 1678. Leven's and Kenmure's were newly raised Scots Foot and definitely hadn't seen battle. Likewise, Hastings' battalion, the only actual English men on the field had never seen battle. Keep up the good work though.
Bruce, please do a video on the Battle of Pinkie Cleugh. In my ancestry research I just discovered that almost a whole family line was wiped out at this battle.
@ScotlandHistoryTours
3 жыл бұрын
Can you drop a line to requests@scotlandhistorytours.co.uk so that I have this with the other requests? Cheers
@josephcianflone9901
3 жыл бұрын
@@ScotlandHistoryTours Done
Quality stuff; how has STV or Netflix not snapped you up ?
@ScotlandHistoryTours
2 жыл бұрын
I don't think that train is coming 😜
Three hundred years have passed an the Scottish insults haven't changed 🤣🤣"yer maw!"🤣🤣
Childish I know but whenever I hear krancie I giggle 😃
Still fumbling over a few notes of the tune but it’s certainly a stirring 6/8 March
Enjoyed the 'Welsc assembly' joke. As someone who lives in England, but self-identifies as British.
My own personal view is that William was King fair and square and the heroism of the Covenanting Regiment (Cameronians) that defeated the Jacobites against the odds at Dunkeld is so great that it would make a great movie. Gaelic vs English? Not quite! Rightful King vs chosen one. Not quite! Biased as hell, but a good video nonetheless mate. Thanks.
The FKIN CORIEEEEEEEEEES!!! xxxx
Hey Hey Bruce F. Great video as always. If you don't believe in hereditary monarchies--this is the 21st century--come to America!!
@ScotlandHistoryTours
Жыл бұрын
I think I prefer a constitutional monarch to your system😁
McKay’s troops also included two Scots regiments raised in 1689. Lord Leven raised a regiment in Edinburgh and set off with McKay. Rather than fleeing as you suggest, they shot the prick Dundee and marched out to Stirling in good order, effectively ending the rising
@rabmurray5600
5 ай бұрын
he WAS not a"prick" he was a supporter of the rightful king
I think considering how deadly those mini balls were, if his arm had be down it would have broken through his arm and into his chest anyway. If he has lived, he would have lost his arm in the very least. And that might have been worse than death to him
I miss going to the common riding in the borders, me cousin was the bannerman a few years ago and my uncle was a member of P for the SNP (who rightfully) got suspeneded for saying all gays are condemned to hell on BBC Alba. In america now but I'll make my way back to galashiels.