Galbraith
History
After the British
(Welsh-speaking) kingdoms of southern Scotland
had been extinguished in the Dark Ages, some
record of the Men of the North was preserved in
Wales. It may be assumed that British society was
not entirely destroyed in Scotland, particularly
in Strathclyde which lay furthest from the
Northumbrian English. Its capital had been
Dumbarton, the precipitous rock called in Gaelic
the Fortress of the Britons. In nearby Loch
Lomond lies the island called lnchgalbraith
Gaelic for the Island of the British Foreigner.
Strathclyde was united with the kingdom of
Scotland in 1124, and it is at the end of this
century that the first Galbraith Chief appears,
in circumstances that suggest he was the social
equal of the Gaelic royal house of the Lennox.
His name was Gilchrist Bretnach and he married a
daughter of Aiwyn Og, son of Muireadhach, 1st
Earl of Lennox in the new order. Their son
Gillespic was father of a 3rd Chief of Galbraith
who bore the suggestive name of Arthur. The
family stronghold stood upon lnchgalbraith.
Arthur'
s son, Sir William, moved into the
centre of the national stage when he became one
of the co-regents of Scotland.
Sir William died shortly
before the outbreak of the Scottish wars of
independence, but his son Sir Arthur supported
Robert Bruce and outlived the victory of
Bannockburn. Thereafter the fortunes of the
Galbraiths varied with those of the house of
Lennox. James the 9th Chief was the first of
Culcreuch in Strathendrick, a cadet branch until
then. It was in his time that James I returned
from his 18-year captivity in England and
decimated his own Stewart relatives. Chief among
these were the ducal family of Albany and their
Lennox kinsmen. James of Gilcreuch is said to
have helped them to sack Dumbarton in 1425, and
to have fled west to Kintyre and Gigha with 600
Galbraiths and their families to escape the
King'
s wrath. After James III had been
murdered in 1488, Thomas the 12th Chief took up
arms with Lennox against the regicides. But these
possessed the person of the young King, and after
the defeat of Talla Moss Thomas was hanged in
1489. His brother escaped from the field and
received the estates in the general remission
which followed. Andrew the 14th Chief once again
joined Lennox in 1526, when he attempted to
rescue the young King James V from the Douglases.
Lennox was captured and killed, but the King
remained grateful. The last office in the long
association between the houses of Galbraith and
Lennox was performed by James the 1 6th Chief,
who administered the Lennox on behalf of Esme,
its absentee first Duke.
Robert the 17th Chief proved
to be an unscrupulous rogue who brought nemesis
upon his house. In 1592 he was given a commission
to pursue the Clan Gregor, and he misused his
powers to persecute the Chief of Mac Aulay, who
had married his widowed mother against his
wishes. His subsequent misdeeds led finally to
his being denounced as a rebel. In 1622 he fled
from an order for his arrest, and died in Ireland
sometime before 1642. His heir inherited nothing
and his grandson James the 19th Chief is the last
traceable member of his line.
A generation after the sack of
Dumbarton in 1425, Giolla Criost, a member of the
family of hereditary Galbraith harpers in the
island of Gigha, was composing the poems that
survive in the Book of the Dean of Lismore. This
ancient tradition is represented today by the
Gaelic singer Carol Galbraith wife of the poet
Ruaraidh Mac Thomais.
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