Sunday, September 02, 2007

The Taggarts= Ross Clan

Anything in () or in CAPS is me.

Ross Family Clan History

In 1241, the time of Alexander II, Malcolm, Earl of Lennox, granted the lands of Colquhoun in Dunbartonshire (THAT'S WHERE DAVID BYRNE IS FROM!!!) to Humphrey of Kilpatrick. Humphrey’s son Ingram is the first person recorded as taking Colquhoun for his surname.

Around 1368, Luss, on Loch Lomond (I WAS THERE, HOW CRAZY IS THAT? SO DOES THAT MEAN THAT BECAUSE I'M A DESCENDANT OF THE ROSS CLAN, I OWN LOCH LOMOND? HAHA), was acquired by Sir Robert Colquhoun through marriage. From then on the chiefship has been described as of Colquhoun and Luss.

His grandson Iain Colquhoun of Luss married Margaret, the daughter of the Earl of Lennox. When James I returned from English imprisonment a few years later in 1424, one of the people he took his vengeance upon was the unsupportive Lennox. The position of Lennox was decimated and Iain of Luss took advantage of this to win the King’s favour by capturing Dumbarton Castle from Lennox. (OH, DAMN.)

By 1427 he was Sheriff of Dumbarton and by 1439 he was dead, like his King, killed by those he had treated so badly. (SHIT, MY ANCESTORS WERE OUTLAWS) By way of compensation, James II made Luss a free barony for Colquhoun’s grandson Sir Iain. It remained this way until the Rising of 1745.

Luss was raided by thieving MacGregors (SOMEHOW IRONIC BECAUSE I AM ALSO A DESCENDANT OF THE MACGREGORS)in 1603, leading to a bloody battle and defeat of five hundred Colquhoun men, three hundred of whom were on horseback, by four hundred MacGregor men at Glen Fruin. (EWAN IS SO HOT) Over two hundred of the Colquhoun men were lost when the MacGregors, who had split into two parties, attacked from front and rear and forced the horsemen onto the soft ground of the Moss of Auchingaich.

It meant the proscription of the Clan Gregor.

It wasn’t until the eighteenth century that the enmity between the clans was laid to rest when, at Glen Fruin on the site of the massacre, the chiefs of the Clan Gregor and Colquhoun met and shook hands. (HOW CIVIL)

The 11th Laird of Luss, Sir John Colquhoun, became a Baronet of Nova Scotia in 1625. Seven years later, however, he vanished along with Lady Catherine Graham, his wife’s sister. He was accused of using witchcraft and sorcery to woo her and so, wisely, never returned to clear his name.

Today the family is seated in the great mansion of Rossdhu. (CAN I LIVE THERE TOO)

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