Reference
Date 1971
Event ID 675910
Category Documentary Reference
Type Reference
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/675910
NN 126 750
(Name: NN 118 752) Site of (NAT)
Battles of Inverlochy (NR) (AD 1431 and 1645) (NAT)
OS 6" map (1904)
'A': The Battle of Inverlochy, fought in January 1431 (NN17NW 3) , seems to have been centred on the castle of Inverlochy (NN17NW 1). It was one of a series of battles in which James I attempted to break the power of Alexander, Lord of the Isles.
Donald Balloch, cousin of Alexander, with the island clansmen, sailed
up Loch Linnhe, landed near Inverlochy, where the royal forces were stationed and attacked it from the S, while Alasdair Carrach of Tor Castle (NN17NW 2) attacked simultaneously from the N. The royal forces were routed.
'B': The second Battle of Inverlochy was fought on the 2nd February 1645 (NN17NW 71) by the royalist army, under the Marquis of Montrose, and the Covenanters, under the Marquis of Argyll.
Argyll, based on Inverlochy, faced Montrose approaching from the NE down the Great Glen.
The battle commenced a short distance SE of the castle, i.e. towards
the mouth of Glen Nevis. Argyll's forces lined the ridge at Tomnahara (Tomnaharry - NN 119 751) overlooking the present highway, having left about 50 men to guard the castle against a surprise attack.
Montrose and his men occupied the almost parallel ridge to that of Argyll which stretches across the mouth of Glen Nevis to the E of the railway, i.e. the vicinity of the present carbon factory ground which used to be called Goirtean Odhar (dun-coloured arable ground) (NN 123 750). As the Campbells were pressed back by the forces of Montrose,
the final scenes of the battle developed on the plain to the S of the castle which is now bisected by the Fort William to Mallaig railway.
The Covenanters made the first onset but were repulsed by the royalists ad pressed back with heavy losses, before they broke and fled.
(This would place the initial phases of the battle at about NN 1215 7510 with the later phases being conducted in the vicinity of the published site).
D B MacCulloch 1971.