Dòmhnall Ballach Mac Dhòmhnaill

Dòmhnall Ballach Mac Dhòmhnaill, aka Donald Balloch MacDonald, Gaelic lord, died about 1476.

Dòmhnall Ballach Mac Dhòmhnaill
Title2nd Clan Chief
PredecessorJohn Mór Tanister
SuccessorJohn Mor MacDonald, 3rd of Dunnyveg

Biography

Dòmhnall Ballach was a son of Iain Mòr Tànaiste MacDhòmhnaill and Margaret Bisset, daughter of MacEoin Bisset, Lord of The Glens. He was the second lord of Clan MacDonald of Dunnyveg.

He succeeded to the lordship after his father was murdered by James Campbell after a scheduled meeting at Ard-du, Islay in 1427. Mac Dhòmhnail took revenge and James Campbell was executed, protesting however, that it was done under the orders of King James I of Scotland.

Known as a military leader he was chosen to lead Clan Donald and defeated the forces of King James I at the battle of Inverlochy in 1431.[1] Subsequently, after a number of defeats against Royal forces Mac Dhòmhnail was forced to flee to Ireland. A pickled head was presented by his friend, the Irish king, Eoghan mac Néill Óg Ó Néill, who presented it to the King James I, as that of Mac Dhòmhnail. After the death of King James I, he returned to Dunnyveg in 1437.

He died on an islet upon Loch Gruinart, Islay about 1476.

Family

By his first wife Johanna, daughter of Conn O'Neill of Edenduffcarrick, they had;

  • John Mor MacDonald, m. Sabina O'Neill, daughter of Felim 'Bacach' O'Neill
  • Margaret, b. c. 1414 married Ruari MacDonald, 3rd of Clan Ranald.

By his second wife Joan, daughter of O'Donnell, Lord of Tyrconnel, they had;

  • Agnes, who married Thomas Bannatyne of Knraes.

Notes

  1. Roberts (1999) p. 16.
gollark: https://docs.standardnotes.org/usage/tags
gollark: Notably, you can have tags with some amount of logic in them for filtering based on various predicates.
gollark: Now, while very ææææ in some ways (they say stuff about keeping notes around for 100 years, but run on a subscription model, and do their stuff as a clientside webapp?!), some of the features there ARE very cool.
gollark: Another one of the inspirations which fed into the utterly nonexistent idea of minoteaur I have in my head is Standard Notes.
gollark: Oh, and a full text search index obviously, although ripgrep *is* pretty fast on plain text files.

References

  • Roberts, John Leonard (1999), Feuds, Forays and Rebellions: History of the Highland Clans, 1475-1625, Edinburgh University Press, ISBN 978-0-7486-6244-9
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.