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Campbell of Calder History
At the very time when the
Gordons were conspiring to seize the earldom of
Sutherland in the far north, the Campbells scored
their most dramatic success in the Gordon sphere
of influence. John of Calder died in 1494,
leaving a daughter Muriel as his posthumous heir.
The baby's maternal grandfather, Rose of
Kilravock, faced a criminal prosecution at the
time for robbery, and the Justice-General was
Archibald, 2nd Earl of Argyll. By 1495 he had
eased Kilravock's difficulties and obtained
the ward ship of the baby heiress of Calder from
James IV, A force of Campbells then seized her by
force and carried her away to Inveraray in 1499.
Legend tells that her mother
had time to brand her with a red-hot key, and her
nurse to bite off the joint of a little finger,
lest the Campbells should put a spurious heiress
in her place. It would have been a wise
precaution. The Campbells lost many of their men
as they beat off their pursuers, and someone
suggested that if the child were to die, much
blood would have been spilt in vain. To this the
leader of the Campbell gang replied that the
heiress could never die so long as there was a
red-haired lass on the banks of Loch Fyne.
Supposedly it was the genuine heiress Muriel who
was married in 1510 to Sir John Campbell, third
son of Argyll, and returned with him to live at
Calder in the country of Nairn, now known as
Cawdor.
Their castle stands in the
fertile lands south of the Moray Firth which
enjoy an exceptionally fine climate for their
latitude, and it is said that the lord of Cawdor
had selected this pleasant location in 1454 by
letting loose a donkey laden with gold, and
observing the spot where it stopped to rest. The
hawthorn tree beneath which the donkey halted
still stands in the vaults of the castle.
Here the heiress Muriel
outlived her husband by several decades and was
succeeded by her grandson when she died in 1573.
But instead of resting content with his
delightful patrimony, he sold many of his lands
in order to finance the conquest of Islay, still
the possession of Sir James Mac Donald after the
abolition of the Lordship. In this operation Sir
John of Cawdor was assisted by the 7th Earl of
Argyll, who became a Catholic and ended his days
in exile. In 1624 Cawdor too was converted to the
Catholic faith, by the Irish Franciscan Father
Cornelius Ward. Thus these two Campbells
demonstrated in the end that their convictions
meant more to them than material gain. But Islay
fell under the remote dominion of the Campbells
of Cawdor until 1726, when it was purchased by
another member of the same clan.
Fine additions were made to
the castle by Sir Hugh Campbell (1642-1716), who
married Henrietta Stuart, daughter of the Earl of
Moray. But after their son Sir Alexander married
the heiress of Stackpole in Pembrokeshire the
family gravitated increasingly to Wales. John
Campbell the heir married another Welsh heiress,
and it was their grandson John who in 1796 was
created Baron Cawdor of Castlemartin in
Pembrokeshire. The second Baron was created Earl
of Cawdor after George V's visit to
Stackpole in 1827.
Subsequently his kinsfolk have
earned one of the most impressive collections of
gallantry awards on record in a single family,
including three Victoria Crosses. The 5th Earl, a
Lieut. Colonel in the Cameron Highlanders during
the Second World War, returned to make Cawdor his
family's principal home once more. He was
also Chairman of the Scottish Historic Buildings
Council and a Trustee of the National Museum of
Antiquities. Since his death in 1970 his son
Hugh, the 6th Earl (b. 1932), has dismantled the
gigantic mansion of Stackpole and opened that gem
of Scots baronial architecture, Cawdor Castle, to
the public.
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Campbell of Calder Links
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Background: Lightened Campbell of Cawder Tartan |
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