Lochaber

Coordinates: 57°N 5°W / 57°N 5°W / 57; -5
Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.

The viaduct at Glenfinnan
Map of Scotland showing the historic province of Lochaber

Lochaber (

Fort William
.

Name

William Watson outlined two schools of thought on this topic. He favoured the idea that Abar came from the Pictish and Welsh for "river mouth" and that Loch Abar meant the confluence of the Lochy and the Nevis as they flowed into Loch Linnhe, an Linne Dhubh in Gaelic. He also conceded that abar might also come from the Gaelic eabar, meaning "mud" or "swampy place". Thus Lochaber could be the "loch of swamps", a historic water feature that existed on the Blàr Mòr, where the area's High School and Health Centre are situated today.[2] Other experts favour the "swamp" derivation. A Lochaber person is called an Abrach.[3]

History

provincial lordship of Lochaber and site of a possible earlier Pictish
settlement

Lochaber is first recorded in the

Irish clans in Dál Riata to the south.[5]

Archaeological evidence of earlier structures supports the tradition that

Lochaber formed part of the

provincial lordship at the end of the 13th century, but a "Steward of Lochaber" is recorded witnessing a charter sealed by Walter Comyn, Lord of Badenoch in 1234, suggesting that Lochaber had already been granted as a lordship by that date,[11] and had probably, like Badenoch, been granted to Comyn by Alexander II in 1229.[9]

It was therefore one of the seven lordships created within Moray by ca. 1230 that as well as Badenoch included The Aird, Glencarnie, Abernethy, Stratha'an and Strathbogie.[12] The lordship was made up of the two parishes of Kilmallie and Kilmonivaig and had its caput at Inverlochy Castle.[11]

Lochaber was one of the territories that King

Lord of Lochaber and the 1st Chief of Clan MacDonald of Keppoch
.

In the

Skye, Badenoch, and the area west of Inverness between Badenoch and Ross
.

Beginning in 1740, Lochaber was the residence of Fr.

prison hulk anchored in the River Thames. Fr. Cameron is currently being promoted by the Knights of St Columba for canonization
by the Roman Catholic Church.

Due to the "arbitrary and malicious violence" that Hanoverian Redcoats inflicted, the aftermath of Culloden is still referred to in the Highlands and Islands as Bliadhna nan Creach ("The Year of the Pillaging").[13] What is worse, according to John Lorne Campbell, "Lochaber suffered more from Hanoverian reprisals and plundering than any other part of the Highlands."[14]

Furthermore, the local population was decimated over the years that followed by both the Highland Clearances and voluntary emigration. One particularly devastating loss in 1816 was a highly important figure to Scottish Gaelic literature: poet, tradition bearer, and Nova Scotia pioneer Ailean a' Ridse MacDhòmhnaill.

So many other local

Seanachies left Scotland. They left Lochaber for certain."[15]

In the mid 19th century, local government reforms replaced the ancient provinces with

new Counties (shires), aligned to sheriffdom boundaries; hence, Lochaber formed the south-western portion of the new shire of Inverness
.

Map of Scotland showing the district of Lochaber from 1975 to 1996

Under the Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973, Scottish counties and burghs were abolished, creating a new system of nine two-tier regions and three island council areas. Hence it was that Invernessshire was merged with other Highland areas, to form the new statutory region of Highland. This lasted from 1975 to 1996.

Each region consisted of some districts (the island areas were created as unitary council areas). The Lochaber district was created by merging the

Road to the Isles, Moidart, Ardgour, Morvern, Sunart, Ardnamurchan, and the Small Isles (Rùm, Eigg, Muck and Canna
).

In 1994 legislation was passed which abolished the regions and districts and established a system of 32 unitary council areas covering the whole of Scotland; all of the Highland districts were merged into the newly unitary Highland council area.

In 1996 the new

wards of the council area, each electing one councillor
by the first past the post system of election. In 1999 ward boundaries were redrawn to create 80 new wards. Management area boundaries were not redrawn, however, and therefore area committees ceased to represent exactly the areas for which they were named and made decisions. The Lochaber committee continued to have eight members. The area manager throughout this period (1996–2007) was John Hutchison.

Ward boundaries were redrawn again in 2007 under the Local Governance (Scotland) Act 2004, and the council abolished its eight management areas in favour of three new corporate management areas and 16 new ward management areas. Each of the 22 new wards elects three or four councillors by the single transferable vote system, a system designed to produce a form of proportional representation, and the total number of councillors remains the same. Various ward management areas, including the Lochaber area, cover more than one ward.

Governance

The Lochaber

Highland Council's Ross, Skye and Lochaber corporate management area, which in turn is one of Highland Council's three corporate management areas. The Ross, Skye and Lochaber area consists of six out of the 22 wards of the council area and the Lochaber area consists of two wards, the Caol and Mallaig ward, which elects three councillors, and the Fort William and Ardnamurchan ward, which elects four councillors.[17]
Each of the other wards of the corporate area is a separate ward management area.

Lochaber is within the

), but its boundaries are not exactly those of the council corporate management area. The constituency was created in 2005 with boundaries based on those of wards in use during the period 1999 to 2007.

Cultural references

The Shakespearean character Banquo was Thane of Lochaber and a kinsman of his friend Macbeth. His home is reputed to have been at Tor Castle above the River Lochy, near Seangan.[18]

"Lochaber No More" is a traditional folk song, first compiled in 1760[19] — with additional lyrics penned by Allan Ramsay in the 1720s — but with a melody also known in Ireland (where it may very well have originated) as "Lament for Limerick" or "Limerick's Lamentation". The melody was also popular in England — used in "Amintor's Lamentation for Celia's Unkindness", a broadside ballad from the 19th century. The phrase "Lochaber no more" is borrowed by The Proclaimers as the start of the bridge in their hit song about the Scottish clearances "Letter From America".

According to legend, a glaistig, a ghostly woman-goat hybrid, once lived in the area.[20]

Columba

Lochaber is mentioned by

St Columba
on two occasions. Both stories are related to Columba using his saintly blessing to raise people out of poverty and make them wealthier.

In the first story, Columba met a poor man named Nesán in Lochaber who had five cows. Columba blessed the poor man's cows and his descendants, and the poor man's five cows multiplied until he had a herd of one hundred and five cows.[21]

In the second story, Columba met a beggar in Lochaber who had a wife and children. Columba asked the beggar to fetch him a stick from the forest, and the poor man did so. Columba then sharpened the stick into a stake and gave it to the man, telling him that it would catch game for him, but it would never harm a person or cattle. The poor man then took the stake and put it into the forest, and the following day he checked it and found a stag impaled on it. Each day, some new animal fell on it and died. The poor man sold the meat and skins to others and got much profit out of it. However, his wife urged him to get rid of it, because she thought it was too dangerous. The man reluctantly listened to his wife and put the stake next to the wall of his house. But one day, a dog fell on it and got killed. His wife then urged him to get rid of it because it was so dangerous, and the man then put the stake into thick brambles, but the following day he found a goat had somehow impaled itself on the stake through the brambles. He then took the stake to the river Lochy and put it underwater, and returning later he saw a large salmon impaled on it. He then took the stake and set it on the roof of his house, but not long afterwards, a large raven flew by and got impaled on it. The man's wife continued to nag him about how dangerous it was, and so he cut up the stake into pieces and destroyed it. Afterwards he returned to begging again.[21]

Hydroelectric scheme

See also

References

  1. ^ Donald B. MacCulloch (1996). Romantic Lochaber Arisaig and Morar. Spean Bridge: Lines Publishing. pp. 1–2, 168.
  2. ^ W.J.Watson (1973). The History of the Place Names of Celtic Scotland. Shannon: Irish University Press. pp. 78–79.
  3. ^ Iain Taylor (2011). Place Names of Scotland. Edinburgh: Birlinn. p. 110.
  4. ^ Martin 2005, p. xix.
  5. ^ Martin 2005, p. 12.
  6. ^ Miers, Mary (2008). "Inverlochy Castle". Canmore. Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 1 February 2022.
  7. ^ Martin 2005, p. 14.
  8. ^ Martin 2005, p. 13.
  9. ^ a b Martin 2005, p. 15.
  10. ^ Ross 2011, p. 77.
  11. ^ a b Ross 2015, p. 98.
  12. ^ Ross 2015, p. 93.
  13. ^ Michael Newton (2001), We're Indians Sure Enough: The Legacy of the Scottish Highlanders in the United States, Saorsa Media. Page 32.
  14. ^ John Lorne Campbell (1979), Highland Songs of the Forty-Five, Arno Press New York City. Page 277, footnote 7.
  15. ^ Effie Rankin (2004), As a' Braighe/Beyond the Braes: The Gaelic Songs of Allan the Ridge MacDonald, Cape Breton University Press, pg. 49.
  16. ^ "Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973: Schedule 1", legislation.gov.uk, The National Archives, 1973 c. 65 (sch. 1), retrieved 2 February 2022
  17. ^ New Boundary Maps/Wards, Highland Council website Archived 2008-02-15 at the Wayback Machine
  18. ^ Donald B. MacCulloch (1996). Romantic Lochaber Arisaig and Morar. Spean Bridge: Lines Publishing. p. 78.
  19. ^ "Lochaber No More - The Traditional Tune Archive". tunearch.org. 3 September 2021.
  20. .
  21. ^ a b Adomnan of Iona (1995). Life of St Columba. Penguin Books.

Further reading

External links

  • Media related to Lochaber at Wikimedia Commons

57°N 5°W / 57°N 5°W / 57; -5