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|--Somerled MACGHILLEBRIGHDE
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succeeded in the Jurisdiction and Property of the Isles by his Son.
!SOURCE: Sir Robert Douglas of Glenbervie, PEERAGE OF SCOTLAND, Edinburgh, 1764?, pp. 357ff. I. Somerled, thane of Argyle, (the immediated ancestor of this noble family) flourished in the reign of king David I. who succeeded to the crown of Scotland, anno 1124, and died in 1153. It is acknowledged by all our historians, that this Somerled was a man of great
power and interest. He married the daughter and heiress of Olaus, one of the kings of the AEbudae, whereupon he and his posterity, for several generations, assumed to themselves the title kings of the Isles. Somerled being no less ambitious than great, raised an army, and invaded the territories of Malcolm IV. who succeeded David, was joined by Donald, son of Malcolm MacBeth, who had been at the head of a formidable rebellion in the preceeding reign; but king Malcolm sent the brave Gilchrist, earl of Angus, against them, who defeated them, took Donald prisoner, and obliged Somerled to fly to Ireland, anno 1157. Somerled afterwards returned, raised a new army, made a descent at a bay in the river Clyde, and penetrated into the country as far as Renfrew, where he was met and attacked by the king's army, under the command of Walter high steward of Scotland, was enterely routed, and himself slain, anno 1164. He had issue four sons. 1. Dulgal, who was killed with his father at Renfrew, and, it is said, was progenitor of the MacDougals. 2. Reginald, who succeeded his father in the lorship of the Isles. 3. Angus. 4. Olaus, who, in the chronicle of Man, are both designed filii Somerledi.
!SOURCE: Rev. Dr. Donald MacKinnon, MACLEOD CHIEFS OF HARRIS AND DUNVEGAN, Edinburgh, The Clan MacLeod Society, 1969, p. 4. Alick Morrison, THE CHIEFS OF CLAN MACLEOD, East Kilbride, Scotland, Associate Clan MacLeod Societies,1986, p. 13.] Regulus of Argyle, progenitor of Clan Donald, Lords of the Isles.
!BIOGRAPHY: Sir Robert Douglas of Glenbervie, Bart., THE PEERAGE OF SCOTLAND, Vol. 2, Second Edition, John Philip Wood, Esq., Editor, Edinburgh, 1813, p. 5. This very antient Norwegian race, long independent of the Scotish Kings, is derived from I. Somerled, Thane of Argyll, who acquired the Western Islands, by his marriage with Effrica, or Rachel, daughter of Olavus the Swarthy, King of Man, and grand-daughter of Harald Harfager, King of Denmark. he assumed the designation of King of the Isles. He gave one of his daughters in marriage to Wimund, the pretended Earl of Moray, (who invaded Scotland in 1114, and being afterwards taken, had his eyes put out.) On the death of King David I., Somerled, accompanied by the children of Wimund, landed with a great force in Scotland, 5th November 1153, in order to revenge the wrongs done to his son-in-law. The predatory incursions of Somerled distressed the kingdom, and spread consternation among the inhabitants. Disdaining submission, he continued to infest the coasts of Scotland; but at length, in 1157, he agreed to terms of accommodation with King Malcolm IV. However, in 1164, he again invaded Scotland with a mighty force, landing at Renfrew. The inhabitants of the country repulsed his army with great slaughter. Somerled, and his son, Gillecolane, were slain. It is said he had four sons, 1. Gillecolane, killed with his father [In the first edition the eldest son is called Dulgal, and is stated to be progenitor of the Macdougals. Crawford, in his Peerage, does not mention him; and it may be asked how, if he was the eldest son, he did not inherit the isles?] 2. Reginald. 3. Angus. 4. Olaus. The two last in the Chronicle of Man are designed sons of Somerled.
!BIOGRAPHY: John Burke, Esq., A GENEALOGICAL AND HERADIC HISTORY OF THE COMMONERS OF GREAT BRITAIN AND IRELAND, Vol. II, Baltimore, Genealogical Publishing Co., Inc., 1977, pp. 175-178.