{"title":"斯特罗姆,卡伦湖城堡","authors":"James Scott Petre","doi":"10.9750/psas.152.1360","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Few major castles of the western seaboard of the Highlands and Islands have received less attention than Strome on Loch Carron. This essay attempts to rectify this by looking at its history through pursuing certain themes, under subheadings. It begins by examining the castle’s importance, looking at its location and function in which symbolism and, most probably, economics played essential parts. The article then provides a record of who held the castle from 1472, the year it is first mentioned in written sources. It shows that there were times when its traditional owners, the MacDonalds, sometimes had legal title but continued, as far as can be inferred, in occupation, either directly or through constables, during periods when the castle had been sequestrated by the crown or granted to others. This reflects that the crown and its lieutenants saw Strome to be a powerful base which, in recalcitrant hands, had to be neutralised. At the same time, it shows the value placed upon it by the MacDonalds, first of Lochalsh and later of Glengarry. The analysis then moves to the castle’s military role, first by looking at its place in the MacDonalds’ strategy to retain control of their lands in these western areas of the earldom of Ross, then moving on to its more immediate place in warfare when it was attacked. It concludes with the confrontation with the Mackenzies of Kintail, when, despite a tenacious defence, the MacDonalds were compelled to cede the castle at the end of the 16th century. That it was not then simply taken over by the Mackenzies is significant: the castle and MacDonald hegemony of Lochcarron had come to be inseparable. Its destruction was a Mackenzie imperative and so they blew up part of it with gunpowder. Canmore ID 99579","PeriodicalId":161764,"journal":{"name":"Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland","volume":"153 3","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-11-30","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Strome, the castle of Loch Carron\",\"authors\":\"James Scott Petre\",\"doi\":\"10.9750/psas.152.1360\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Few major castles of the western seaboard of the Highlands and Islands have received less attention than Strome on Loch Carron. This essay attempts to rectify this by looking at its history through pursuing certain themes, under subheadings. It begins by examining the castle’s importance, looking at its location and function in which symbolism and, most probably, economics played essential parts. The article then provides a record of who held the castle from 1472, the year it is first mentioned in written sources. It shows that there were times when its traditional owners, the MacDonalds, sometimes had legal title but continued, as far as can be inferred, in occupation, either directly or through constables, during periods when the castle had been sequestrated by the crown or granted to others. This reflects that the crown and its lieutenants saw Strome to be a powerful base which, in recalcitrant hands, had to be neutralised. At the same time, it shows the value placed upon it by the MacDonalds, first of Lochalsh and later of Glengarry. The analysis then moves to the castle’s military role, first by looking at its place in the MacDonalds’ strategy to retain control of their lands in these western areas of the earldom of Ross, then moving on to its more immediate place in warfare when it was attacked. It concludes with the confrontation with the Mackenzies of Kintail, when, despite a tenacious defence, the MacDonalds were compelled to cede the castle at the end of the 16th century. That it was not then simply taken over by the Mackenzies is significant: the castle and MacDonald hegemony of Lochcarron had come to be inseparable. Its destruction was a Mackenzie imperative and so they blew up part of it with gunpowder. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
高地和群岛西部沿海地区的主要城堡很少有像卡伦湖(Loch Carron)上的斯特罗姆城堡这样受到关注的。这篇文章试图纠正这一现象,通过在小标题下探讨某些主题来研究其历史。文章首先探讨了城堡的重要性,研究了它的位置和功能,其中象征意义和很可能的经济因素起到了至关重要的作用。然后,文章记录了自 1472 年(即首次在书面资料中提及城堡的年份)以来,城堡的主人是谁。文章显示,城堡的传统所有者麦克唐纳家族有时拥有合法所有权,但据推断,在城堡被王室查封或授予他人的时期,他们仍直接或通过捕快继续占有城堡。这反映出王室及其副官认为斯特罗姆是一个强大的基地,如果落入顽固不化的人手中,就必须加以解决。同时,这也表明了麦克唐纳家族对它的重视,先是洛恰尔什(Lochalsh),后来是格伦加里(Glengarry)。然后分析了城堡的军事作用,首先研究了城堡在麦克唐纳家族保持对罗斯伯爵领地西部地区土地控制的战略中的地位,然后研究了城堡受到攻击时在战争中更直接的地位。最后是与金泰尔(Kintail)的麦肯齐家族(Mackenzies)的对抗,尽管进行了顽强的防御,16 世纪末麦克唐纳家族还是被迫让出了城堡。城堡当时并没有被麦肯齐人简单地接管,这一点非常重要:城堡和麦克唐纳在洛克卡伦的霸权已经密不可分。摧毁这座城堡是麦肯齐家族的当务之急,因此他们用火药炸毁了城堡的一部分。 坎莫尔 ID 99579
Few major castles of the western seaboard of the Highlands and Islands have received less attention than Strome on Loch Carron. This essay attempts to rectify this by looking at its history through pursuing certain themes, under subheadings. It begins by examining the castle’s importance, looking at its location and function in which symbolism and, most probably, economics played essential parts. The article then provides a record of who held the castle from 1472, the year it is first mentioned in written sources. It shows that there were times when its traditional owners, the MacDonalds, sometimes had legal title but continued, as far as can be inferred, in occupation, either directly or through constables, during periods when the castle had been sequestrated by the crown or granted to others. This reflects that the crown and its lieutenants saw Strome to be a powerful base which, in recalcitrant hands, had to be neutralised. At the same time, it shows the value placed upon it by the MacDonalds, first of Lochalsh and later of Glengarry. The analysis then moves to the castle’s military role, first by looking at its place in the MacDonalds’ strategy to retain control of their lands in these western areas of the earldom of Ross, then moving on to its more immediate place in warfare when it was attacked. It concludes with the confrontation with the Mackenzies of Kintail, when, despite a tenacious defence, the MacDonalds were compelled to cede the castle at the end of the 16th century. That it was not then simply taken over by the Mackenzies is significant: the castle and MacDonald hegemony of Lochcarron had come to be inseparable. Its destruction was a Mackenzie imperative and so they blew up part of it with gunpowder. Canmore ID 99579