Annotation:Moy Hall: Difference between revisions
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'''MOY HALL.''' Scottish, Reel. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. "Moyhall is the romantic residence of Sir Aeneas MacIntosh, Bart., chief of that name, a most worth, benevolent, and hospitable character. {Alexander Aeneas Mackintosh of Mackintosh is now [in 1816] Chief of the Clan, and owner of Moyhall}" (Fraser). Moy Hall [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moy_Hall], near Inverness, has been the seat of the Clan Mackintosh chiefs since the 14th century. | '''MOY HALL.''' Scottish, Reel. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. "Moyhall is the romantic residence of Sir Aeneas MacIntosh, Bart., chief of that name, a most worth, benevolent, and hospitable character. {Alexander Aeneas Mackintosh of Mackintosh is now [in 1816] Chief of the Clan, and owner of Moyhall}" (Fraser). Moy Hall [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moy_Hall], near Inverness, has been the seat of the Clan Mackintosh chiefs since the 14th century. | ||
[[File: | [[File:MoyHall.jpg|200px|thumb|left|Old Moy Hall, demolished after World War II due to dry rot. A new, smaller, Moy Hall was constructed near the same site.]] | ||
Charles Edward Stuart was entertained at Moy Hall, in 1746, by Lady Anne Mackintosh, a Jacobite supporter. Her husband, the clan chief, was fighting for the Government Army. Prince Charles escaped capture here, when Lord Louden's government soldiers were swiflty sent from Inverness, to halt his progress. Lady Mackintosh, secretly informed about the planned capture, arranged for four of her men to hide by the roadside when the government troops approached. Setting off their pistols to fire one at a time, they were to shout for the clans of MacDonald and Cameron to advance, thus tricking the government army into thinking they had stumbled into the whole of the Jacobite Army. The trick worked, and Lord Louden's troops speedily retreated. The event is known as 'The Rout of Moy' | Charles Edward Stuart was entertained at Moy Hall, in 1746, by Lady Anne Mackintosh, a Jacobite supporter. Her husband, the clan chief, was fighting for the Government Army. Prince Charles escaped capture here, when Lord Louden's government soldiers were swiflty sent from Inverness, to halt his progress. Lady Mackintosh, secretly informed about the planned capture, arranged for four of her men to hide by the roadside when the government troops approached. Setting off their pistols to fire one at a time, they were to shout for the clans of MacDonald and Cameron to advance, thus tricking the government army into thinking they had stumbled into the whole of the Jacobite Army. The trick worked, and Lord Louden's troops speedily retreated. The event is known as 'The Rout of Moy' | ||
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Revision as of 01:55, 31 January 2014
Back to Moy Hall
MOY HALL. Scottish, Reel. C Major. Standard tuning (fiddle). AB. "Moyhall is the romantic residence of Sir Aeneas MacIntosh, Bart., chief of that name, a most worth, benevolent, and hospitable character. {Alexander Aeneas Mackintosh of Mackintosh is now [in 1816] Chief of the Clan, and owner of Moyhall}" (Fraser). Moy Hall [1], near Inverness, has been the seat of the Clan Mackintosh chiefs since the 14th century.
Charles Edward Stuart was entertained at Moy Hall, in 1746, by Lady Anne Mackintosh, a Jacobite supporter. Her husband, the clan chief, was fighting for the Government Army. Prince Charles escaped capture here, when Lord Louden's government soldiers were swiflty sent from Inverness, to halt his progress. Lady Mackintosh, secretly informed about the planned capture, arranged for four of her men to hide by the roadside when the government troops approached. Setting off their pistols to fire one at a time, they were to shout for the clans of MacDonald and Cameron to advance, thus tricking the government army into thinking they had stumbled into the whole of the Jacobite Army. The trick worked, and Lord Louden's troops speedily retreated. The event is known as 'The Rout of Moy'
Source for notated version: "From the Inverness Collection" [MacDonald].
Printed sources: Fraser (The Airs and Melodies Peculiar to the Highlands of Scotland and the Isles), 1816; No. 128, p. 51. MacDonald (The Skye Collection), 1887; p. 116. Stewart-Robertson (The Athole Collection), 1884.
Recorded sources: