Clan Eliott | |||
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Elloch, Eloth | |||
Motto | Fortiter et recte (Boldly and rightly) [1] | ||
Profile | |||
Region | Borders | ||
District | Dumfries and Galloway | ||
Plant badge | White hawthorn [1] | ||
Pipe music | "All The Blue Bonnets Are Over The Border", Sir Walter Scott | ||
Chief | |||
Margaret Eliott of Redheugh | |||
29th Elliot Clan Chief | |||
Historic seat | Redheugh Tower [2] | ||
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Clan Eliott is a Border Reiver Scottish clan. [3]
The origins of the Eliotts is surrounded in obscurity. [3] The Eliotts suddenly appear as a distinct clan with a chief in the late 15th century. [3] The lack of information is believed to be due to the destruction of their old castle at Stobs in a fire in 1712. [3] All of the family documents, with one exception were lost in the fire. [3]
According to tradition the Ellots (as the name was originally spelled) came from the foot of Glenshie in Angus and that they had moved to Teviotdale during the time of Robert the Bruce. [3] Such a move would have been considered exceptional, however an event in 1320 does give some credence to the story. [3] In 1320 William de Soulis, one of Scotland's most powerful nobles was convicted of treason against Robert the Bruce. [3] He was imprisoned for life and his lands of Liddesdale along with the great fortress of Hermitage Castle were made over to Bruce's illegitimate son, Robert Bruce, Lord of Liddesdale. [3] Bruce would have needed to ensure his hold on such a strategically important frontier by encouraging the settlement of a loyal and tested clan - such as the Ellots. [3]
It is known that Ellot of Redheugh was living in the early 1400s. [3] In 1426 John Elwalde of Teviotdale is recorded. [3] In 1476 Robert Ellot of Redheugh appears as the tenth chief of the clan. [3] From that time onwards the formal history of the clan can be said to have begun. [3] Robert Ellot built a strong tower on a cliff overlooking the ford on Hermitage Water in 1470. [3] This was just one of about one hundred strong towers that were dotted around Liddesdale which belonged to the Ellots and which they shared with the Clan Armstrong who were another Border Reiver clan. [3]
Robert Ellot, the thirteenth chief was killed at the Battle of Flodden in 1513. [3] The Eliotts supported Scott of Buccleuch at the Battle of Melrose in 1526. [4] However, in 1565 a deadly feud arose between the Ellots and their neighbours, the Clan Scott. [3] Scott of Buccleuch executed four Ellots for the minor crime of cattle rustling. [3] In response three hundred Ellots rode to avenge the fate of their kinsmen. [3] During the battle losses on both sides were heavy but eventually the two clans came to terms with each other. [3]
Another feud took place between the Ellots and James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell, the future husband of Mary, Queen of Scots. [3] A skirmish took place around Hermitage Castle in which the earl was wounded. [3] In reprisal, in 1569, a royal force of nearly four thousand men devastated the Ellot's lands. [3]
In 1603 the Union of the Crowns marked the end of the border reivers. [3] Many people were executed and many of the Borderers found new lives in Ulster when much of that province was colonised. [3]
Robert Eliott of Redheugh left his broad lands in Liddesdale and went into exile in Fife. [3] The use of the letter "i" in the Ellot surname was introduced in about 1650. [3]
In 1666 Sir Gillbert Eliott of Stobs was created a Baronet of Nova Scotia by Charles II of England. [3] He became chief of the Clan Eliott in 1673. [3]
In 1764 the third Baronet remodelled the old Tower of Stobs into a mansion house. [3] His second son was George Augustus Eliott who was rewarded for a spirited defense of Gibraltar in 1782. [3]
A branch of the chief's family acquired the lands of Minto in 1703. [3] Gilbert Elliot-Murray-Kynynmound, 1st Earl of Minto was a diplomat who served in Corsica and Vienna. [3] He later became Governor General of Bengal. [3]
The chief of Clan Eliott is Madam Margaret Eliott of Redheugh, 29th Chief of the Name and Arms of Eliott. [5] The present chief is the daughter of Sir Arthur Eliott, eleventh baronet and twenty-eighth chief of Clan Eliott. [3] There is no bar on females succeeding to Scottish chiefships but the baronetcy passed to a male heir. [3]
The crest badge used by clan members consists of a crest encircled by a strap and buckle containing a motto. The crest is a raised fist holding a sword, while the motto is FORTITER ET RECTE (translation from Latin: "Boldly and Rightly"). [6]
Border reivers were raiders along the Anglo-Scottish border from the late 13th century to the beginning of the 17th century. They included both Scottish and English people, and they raided the entire border country without regard to their victims' nationality. Their heyday was in the last hundred years of their existence, during the time of the House of Stuart in the Kingdom of Scotland and the House of Tudor in the Kingdom of England.
Clan Keith is a Highland and Lowland Scottish clan, whose Chief historically held the hereditary title of Marischal, then Great Marischal, then Earl Marischal of Scotland.
Clan Kerr is a Scottish clan whose origins lie in the Scottish Borders. During the Middle Ages, it was one of the prominent border reiver clans along the present-day Anglo-Scottish border and played an important role in the history of the Border country of Scotland.
Hermitage Castle is a semi-ruined castle in the border region of Scotland. It is under the care of Historic Scotland. The castle has a reputation, both from its history and its appearance, as one of the most sinister and atmospheric castles in Scotland.
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William Armstrong of Kinmont or Kinmont Willie was a Scottish border reiver and outlaw active in the Anglo-Scottish Border country in the last decades of the 16th century.
Clan Armstrong is a Scottish clan of the Scottish Borders. The clan does not currently have a chief recognised by the Lord Lyon King of Arms and therefore it is considered an Armigerous clan.
Liddesdale, the valley of the Liddel Water, in the County of Roxburgh, southern Scotland, extends in a south-westerly direction from the vicinity of Peel Fell to the River Esk, a distance of 21 miles (34 km). The Waverley route of the North British Railway runs down the dale, and the Catrail, or Picts' Dyke, crosses its head.
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Clan Johnstone is a Border Reiver Scottish clan.
The Eliott Baronetcy, of Stobs in the County of Roxburgh, is a title in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia. It was created on 3 December 1666 for Gilbert Eliott. The second baronet was a member of the pre-union Parliament of Scotland. The third Baronet sat as Member of Parliament for Roxburghshire. The Eliott Baronets share a common early Elliot ancestry with the nearby Earls of Minto (Elliot). It is thought that the surname spelling differences were contrived to differentiate the branches.
Clan Cunningham is a Scottish clan. The traditional origins of the clan are placed in the 12th century. However, the first contemporary record of the clan chiefs is in the thirteenth century. The chiefs of the Clan Cunningham supported Robert the Bruce during the Wars of Scottish Independence. In the 15th and 16th centuries, the Clan Cunningham feuded with the Clan Montgomery. Historically, the chief of Clan Cunningham held the title of Earl of Glencairn. However, in modern times the chief of the clan is Cunningham of Corsehill. On 18 December 2013, Sir John Christopher Foggo Montgomery Cunninghame, Baronet of Corsehill, was recognized by Lord Lyon as Clan Chief after the chiefship had been vacant for over 200 years.
Sir William Douglas, Lord of Liddesdale, also known as the Knight of Liddesdale and the Flower of Chivalry, was a Scottish nobleman and soldier active during the Second War of Scottish Independence.
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Elliot is a personal name which can serve as either a surname or a given name. Although the given name has historically been given to males, females have increasingly been given the name as well in the United States.
Sir Walter Scott, 1st of Branxholme, 3rd of Buccleuch, known as "Wicked Wat", was a nobleman of the Scottish Borders and the chief of Clan Scott who briefly served as Warden of the Middle March He was an "inveterate English hater" active in the wars known as The Rough Wooing and a noted Border reiver. He was killed on Edinburgh High Street in a feud with Clan Kerr in 1552. His great-grandson was Sir Walter Scott, 1st Lord Scott of Buccleuch, the "Bold Buccleuch" (1565–1611), a border reiver famed for his role in the rescue of Kinmont Willie Armstrong.
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Margaret Eliott of Redheugh is the 29th Clan Chief of Clan Elliot. The daughter of the Elliot Clan's late hereditary Chief, Sir Arthur Eliott, 11th Baronet of Stobs and Laird of Redheugh the ancient seat of the Clan Elliot Chiefs.