Iain Lom's stick

Dublin Core

Title

Iain Lom's stick

Subject

Highlands

Description

This blackthorn walking stick belonged to the famous Scottish Gaelic bard Iain Lom MacDonald (1624 – 1710). He carried it by him after the Battle of Inverlochy in February 1645. He lost his sword during the battle, but managed to fight his way home to Keppoch, near Roy Bridge. Iain was the most outstanding of the Keppoch bards. Lom is the Gaelic word for bald; his nickname rather than a surname. Iain was a Stuart loyalist all his life and Charles II made him his poet laureat. When his young clan chief was murdered, he endured great danger and hardship to bring the guilty to justice, cutting off the heads of the murderers. Today there is a monument beside the Inverness Road at Tobar nan Ceann, The Well of the Heads, where Iain washed his grizzly trophies before presenting them to MacDonnell of Invergarry.

Creator

Scottish Highlands & Islands

Source

objects,highlandlife

Date

17th century

Contributor

eulac3d

Type

Physical Object

Identifier

56

Date Modified

05/02/2021

Extent

L 914 mm

Medium

West Highland Museum

Spatial Coverage

find,56.8323253,-5.0823782;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

West Highlands Museum

Europeana Type

TEXT

Physical Object Item Type Metadata

Prim Media

173

Material

blackthorn

Object Number

1277

Citation

Scottish Highlands & Islands, “Iain Lom's stick,” West Highalnds Museum, accessed January 23, 2025, https://whm100.org/omeka/items/show/172.

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