Mac
Kay
The Mac Kay country was the
most remote from the seat of government of any
part of the Scottish mainland. It extended from
Cape Wrath along the north coast to the Caithness
border, and varied between sixteen and twenty
miles in depth, its southern frontiers defended
by bleak uplands and splendid mountains. In 1427
it was estimated that the Chief of Mac Kay
possessed 4,000 fighting men with whom to defend
this province, called Strathnaver, after the
largest river that flows through it. Until the
17th century every known marriage of a Chief of
Mac Kay was with a member of the Scottish Gaelic
aristocracy: and one of them was with a sister of
the Lord of the Isles who led his Highland host
to Harlaw in 1411. A hundred years later a clerk
(as he described himself) of the northern
Highlands wrote a vivid description of his
society, by then labelled 'Irish' in the Lowlands.
'The great courtiers of Scotland repute the
foresaid Irish lords as wild, rude and barbarous
people, brought up (as they say) without learning
and nurture: yet they pass them a great deal in
faith, honesty, in policy and wit, in good order
and civility.' One of those great courtiers, Adam
Gordon, had just seized the neighbouring earldom
of Sutherland, and Strathnaver was the next
Gordon target. In 1588, by violence, fraud and
the abuse of royal authority, the first Mac Kay
Chief was reduced to the status of feudal vassal
to a Gordon Earl. His great body of clansmen was
at once conscripted to assault the next Gordon
target - the Sinclair earldom of Caithness. But
Donald, Chief of Mac Kay, found other service for
his clansmen when 1626 he took a regiment of
three thousand men to fight on the Protestant
side in the Thirty Years' War. At Stettin the
earliest portraits of Mac Kays Highlanders were
published in 1631.
Donald, Chief of Mac Kay had
been raised to the peerage as Lord Reay in 1628,
and throughout the 18th century the Hanoverian
Reay in country remained unmolested. Its ancient
way of life was preserved forever in the poetry
of Rob Donn Mac Kay (1714-1778), the most graphic
of all Gaelic poets in his detailed delineation
of social relationships, everyday occupations and
human aspirations. In his songs and his satires,
Robb Donn is the only Gaelic poet comparable to
his contemporary Robert Burns. The world so soon
to be destroyed in the Sutherland Clearances of
the early 19th century is commemorated in a
language that fewer and fewer are able to
understand. But his poetry has been presented in
English translation in Ian Grimble's The World of
Rob Donn (1979).
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