Posted in History, Trips, War Memorials at 12:00 on 14 September 2015
As the wording on the cairn at the centre of the battlefield of Culloden on Drummossie Moor says, the graves of the clans are marked by the names of the clans.
Clan Fraser:-

Mixed clans. The graves go all the way to the back of the mound:-

Clan MacKintosh. Again, the graves go all the way to the back of the mound:-

Clan Cameron. Yet again:-

Clan Stewart of Appin:-

Clans McGillivray, MacLean, MacLachlan and Atholl Highlanders. Nearly three hundred years on and floral tributes are still being paid:-

Well of the Dead. Here the chief of the McGillivray fell:-

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Posted in History, Trips, War Memorials at 12:00 on 12 September 2015
Drummossie Moor, site of the Battle of Culloden, where Bonnie Prince Charlie suffered his first and only defeat at the end of the ’45, otherwise known as the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745-6 (an event which signalled the end of the old Highland way of life,) is one of the more dispiriting places I have visited. It seems a godforsaken area for men to have died over. I went there again this year when the good lady’s blog friend Peggy was over from the US in May. For some strange reason, though, it wasn’t as depressing this time as last. Maybe it was the presence of a Visitor Centre (built in the interim) which made it seem not so bleak and remote.
This is a close-up view of the government (Hanoverian) line – marked by the red flag.

Thios one was taken from the centre of the battlefield. Away in the distance (blue flags) is the Jacobite start line.

This is looking back to the Governent lines (red flags) from the battlefield’s centre.

A cairn lies at the battlefield centre:-

The cairn’s wording is slightly inaccurate. Yes, they fought for Prince Charlie, but in the main they fought for their clan chief (feudally) and not for Scotland per se.

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