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Highland
Warrior

Highland
Warrior: Alasdair MacColla and... the Civil Wars. In 1644
James Grahame, Marquis of Montrose, stormed his way into legend
with a series of astonishing victories over the Covenanters.
At his side stalked a shadowy but terrible ally, Alasdair MacColla,
who had a far more ancient agenda of his own. MacColla's aim
was nothing less than the effective destruction of the power
of Clan Campbell and its replacement by the older overlordship
of the Macdonalds. MacColla was the first - and perhaps the
last - great Celtic general of modern times, who lived at a
dynamic time which saw the increasingly forgotten and marginalised
Gaelic speaking peoples of Scotland and Ireland nearly succeed
in regaining control of their lands and destiny. The author
argues that it was in fact MacColla and not Montrose who was
the true architect of the 'Year of Victories', and that without
his Highland ally, Montrose's blunders would have doomed him
to disaster, thus presenting a compelling and radical reappraisal
of Scottish history during the crucial years of the 1640s. As
MacColla's actions were unwittingly to lead his people and culture
to ruin, so his own career ended in chaos when, despite leading
his own troops in a victorious charge, an incompetent general
led him to defeat and death at Knocknanuss in Ireland. Superbly
written, Highland Warrior is a compelling and dramatic sweep
through some of the most eventful years in Scottish history,
told in a text both authoritative and highly readable.
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