Mac Gillivray History
The name is derived from the
Gaelic, Mhic Gille-brath, which means "son
of the servant of judgment". The Mac
Gillivrays were an important clan in the western
isles even before King Somerled, Lord of the
Isles, drove the Norsemen out of the area in the
middle of the twelfth century. When Alexander II
subdued Argyll in 1222, the Clann Mhic Gillebrath
were dispersed. Some of the clan remained in Mull
and Morvern. Tradition asserts that Gillivray,
the progenitor of the clan, placed himself under
the protection of the chiefs of the Clan
Macintosh; the clan thereafter belonged to the
Clan Chattan confederation. The Mac Gillivrays
were first accurately recorded in Dunmaglas in
1549.
At the great gathering of the
Clan Chattan in 1609, when all bound themselves
in loyalty to the young Mackintosh chief and in
mutual support , the "haill kin and race of
Mac Gillivray"was represented by Malcolm of
Dalcrombie and Duncan Mac Farquhar of Dunmaglas.
This is a classic example of the use of
patronymics and the territorial designations
common in the Highlands before the use of what
would now be considered surnames became
widespread in the eighteenth century. The Mac
Gillivrays were supporters of an episcopacy in
the church and this caused them to be persecuted
by their Calvinist and Presbyterian neighbours.
In common with most of the
confederated Clan Chattan families, the Mac
Gillivrays were staunch Jacobites, and they
fought in both the Fifteen and the forty-five. In
1745, the chief of the Mackintoshes was an
officer in a Hanoverian regiment. His wife, a
formidable lady with distinct Jacobite
sympathies, summoned Alexander Mac Gillivray and
placed him in command of the regiment raised by
Clan Chattan. Mac Gillivray was at the head of
his men at Culloden where he fell along with many
of his followers, and the graveyard at Dunlichity
commemorates the many Mac Gillivray fallen. After
Culloden, many emigrated across the Atlantic
where their spirit of independence and fortitude
made many successful, particularly as traders.
William Mac Gillivray became head of the Canadian
Northwest Company and member of the Legislative
Council of Lower Canada. Another William Mac
Gillivray published five volumes of The History
of British Birds in the mid-1800'
s.
The estates in Dunmaglas were
sold off in 1890 and the last Chief is believed
to have died in Canada. The Mac Gillivrays have
become organized and active again in this
century, and there are clan societies throughout
the world.
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