Coinneach na Cuirc, or Kenneth of the Whittle
Kenneth
Mackenzie, commonly known as Coinneach na Cuirc, or Kenneth
of the Whittle, so called from his skill in wood carving and
general dexterity with the Highland "sgian dubh." He succeeded
his father in 1561. In the following year he was among the chiefs
who, at the head of their followers, met Queen Mary at Inverness,
and helped her to obtain possession of the Castle after Alexander
Gordon, the governor, refused her admission. In the same year
an Act of Privy Council, dated the 21st of May, bears that he
had delivered up Mary Macleod, the heiress of Harris and Dunvegan,
of whom he had previously by accident obtained the custody,
into the hands of Queen Mary, with whom she afterwards remained
for several years as a maid of honour. The Act is as follows:--
"The
same day, in presence of the Queen's Majesty and Lords of Secret
Council, compeared Kenneth Mackenzie of Kintail, who, being
commanded by letters and also by writings direct from the Queen's
Grace, to exhibit, produce, and present before her Highness
Mary Macleod, daughter and heir of the umquwhile William Macleod
of Harris, conform to the letters and charges direct thereupon:
And declared that James Macdonald had an action depending the
Lords of Session against him for deliverance of the said Mary
to him, and that therefore he could not gudlie (well) deliver
her. Notwithstanding the which the Queen's Majesty ordained
the said Kenneth to deliver the said Mary to her Highness and
granted that he should incur `no scaith thairthrou' at the hands
of the said James or any others, notwithstanding any title or
action they had against him therefor; and the said Kenneth knowing
his dutiful obedience to the Queen's Majesty, and that the Queen
had ordained him to deliver the said Mary to her Highness in
manner foresaid which he in no wise could disobey--and therefore
delivered the said Mary to the Queen's Majesty conform to her
ordinance foresaid." [Transactions of the Iona Club, pp. 143-4.]
Prior
to this Mackenzie refused to give her up to her lawful guardian,
James Macdonald of Dunyveg and the Glens. In 1563 we find him
on the jury, with James, Earl of Moray, and others, at Inverness,
by whom John Campbell of Cawdor was served heir to the Barony
of Strathnairn. [Invernessiana, p.229.] Kenneth was advanced
in years before he came into possession, and took, as we have
seen, an active and distinguished part in all the affairs of
his clan during the life of his long-lived father. He seems
after his return from Inverness, on the occasion of meeting
Queen Mary there, to have retired very much into private life,
for, on Mary's escape from Lochleven Castle he sent his son
Colin, then quite a youth attending his studies at Aberdeen,
at the head of his vassals, to join the Earl of Huntly, by whom
Colin was sent, according to the Laird of Applecross, "as one
whose prudence he confided, to advise the Queen's retreat to
Stirling, where she might stay in security till all her friends
were convocate, but by an unhappy council she refused this advice
and fought at Langside, where Colin was present, and when by
the Regent's [The Earl of Moray, appointed to the office after
Mary's defeat.] insolence, after that victory, all the loyal
subjects were forced to take remissions for their duty, as if
it were a crime. Amongst the rest Mackenzie takes one, the only
one that ever any of his family had and this is rather a mark
of his fidelity than evidence of failure, and an honour, not
a task of his posterity." It would have been already seen that
another remission had been received at an earlier date, for
the imprisonment and murder of John Glassich, son and successor
to Hector Roy Mackenzie of Gairloch, in Ellandonnan Castle.
Dr George Mackenzie says that Kenneth apprehended John Glassich
and sent him prisoner to the Castle, where he was poisoned by
the constable's lady, [This lady was Nighean Iamhair, and was
spouse to John MacMhurchaidh Dhuibh. the Priest of Kintail,
who was then chosen constable of Ellandonnan for the following
reason:-- A great debate arose between the Maclennans and the
Macraes about this important and honourable post, and the laird
finding them irreconcilable, lest they should kill one another,
and he being a stranger in the country himself, Mackenzie, on
the advice of the Lord of Fairburn, erected the priest constable
of the castle. This did not suit the Maclennans, and, as soon
as Mackenzie left the country, they, one Sabbath morning, as
the priest was coming home from church, `sends a man in ambush
in his road who shot him with an arrow in the buttocks, so that
he fell. The ambusher thinking him killed, and perceiving others
coming after the priest that road, made his escape, and he (the
priest) was carried to his boat alive. Of this priest are all
the Murchisons in thise countries descended."--Ancient MS.]
whereupon "ane certain female, foster-sister of his, composed
a Gaelic rhyme to commemorate him." The Earl of Cromartie gives
as the reason for this imprisonment and murder that, according
to rumour John Glassich intended to prosecute his father's claim
to the Kintail estates, and Kenneth hearing of this sent for
him to Brahan, John came suspecting nothing, accompanied only
by his ordinary servants. Kenneth questioned him regarding the
suspicious rumours in circulation, and not being quite satisfied
with the answers, he caused John Glassich to be at once apprehended.
One of John's servants, named John Gearr, seeing his master
thus inveigled, struck at Kenneth of Kintail a fearful blow
with a two-handed sword, but fortunately Kenneth, who was standing
close to the table, nimbly moved aside, and the blow missed
him, else he would have been cloven to pieces. The sword made
a deep cut in the table, "so that you could hide your hand edgeways
in it," and the mark remained in the table until Colin, first
Earl of Seaforth, "caused cut that piece off the table, saying
that he loved no such remembrance of the quarrels of his relations."
Kenneth was a man of good endowments "he carried so prudently
that he had the good-liking of his prince and peace from his
neighbours." He had a peculiar genius for mechanics, and was
seldom found without his corc--"sgian dubh"--or some other such
tool in his hand, with which he produced excellent specimens
of hand-carving on wood.
He
married early, during his father's lifetime, Lady Elizabeth
Stewart, daughter of John, second Earl of Athol, by his wife,
Lady Mary Campbell, daughter of Archibald, second, and sister
of Colin, third Earl of Argyll, and by her had three sons and
several daughters--
I.
Murdoch, who, being fostered in the house of Bayne of Tulloch,
was presented by that gentleman on his being sent home, with
a goodly stock of milch cows and the grazing of Strathvaich,
but he died before he attained majority.
II. Colin, who succeeded his father.
III. Roderick, who received the lands of Redcastle and became
the progenitor of the family of that name.
IV. Janet, who as his third wife married, first, Aeneas Macdonald,
VII. of Glengarry, with issue--a daughter Elizabeth, who married
John Roy Mackenzie,
IV. of Gairloch. She married secondly, Alexander Chisholm, XIV.
of Chisholm, with issue.
V. Catherine, who, as his second wife, married Alexander Ross,
IX. of Balnagown, with issue--one son Nicholas Alexander, who
died on the 21st of October, 1592.
VI.
Agnes, who married Lachlan Mor Mackintosh of Mackintosh,
[The
following anecdote is related of this match:--Lachlan Mackintosh,
being only an infant when his father, William Mackintosh of
that ilk, was murdered in 1550, was carried for safety by some
of his humble retainers to the county of Ross. This came to
the knowledge of Colin, younger of Kintail, who took possession
of the young heir of Mackintosh, and carried him to Ellandonnan
Castle. The old chief retained him, and treated him with great
care until the years of pupilarity had expired, and then married
him to his daughter Agnes, by no means an unsuitable match for
either, apart from the time and manner in which it was consummated.]
with issue.
VII.
A daughter who married Walter Urquhart of Cromarty.
VIII.
A daughter who married Robert Munro of Fowlis. IX. A daughter
who married Innes of Inverbreackie.
By
Kenneth's marriage to Lady Elizabeth Stewart, the Royal blood
of the Plantaganets was introduced into the Family of Kintail,
and it was afterwards strengthened and the strain further continued
by the marriage of Kenneth's son, Colin Cam, to Barbara Grant
of Grant, daughter of Lady Marjory Stewart, daughter of John,
third Earl of Athol.
By
the inter-marriages of his children Kenneth left his house singularly
powerful in family alliances, and as has been already seen he
in 1554 derived very substantial benefits from them himself.
He died at Killin on the 6th of June, 1568, and was burried
at Beauly. He was succeeded by his second and eldest surviving
son, XI. Colin Cam Mackenzie, Or Colin the One-Eyed.
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