Eilean Donan Castle
by Alan Lakin
Original - Sold
Price
$3,200
Dimensions
36.000 x 24.000 x 2.000 inches
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Title
Eilean Donan Castle
Artist
Alan Lakin
Medium
Painting - Acrylic On Gallery Wrap Canvas
Description
The morning mist disappears as the sun illuminates the Isle of Skye Castle.
The story of Eilean Donan Castle and of Eilean Donan, the island on which it stands, is an ancient one. Until the 1920s traces remained of what was probably an Iron Age fort and settlement on the island. This is perhaps no surprise. Eilean Donan stands in a strategically important location. To its west is Loch Alsh which helps separate the Isle of Skye from the mainland. To its south east the loch becomes Loch Duich, and extends for five miles inland to the mouth of Glen Shiel. To its north east the narrower Loch Long extends for over four miles into the surrounding mountains.
By the 600s, it seems that the island here was the site of a monastic cell founded by the Irish bishop, St Donan: and the name Eilean Donan or "Island of Donan" has stuck ever since. The next stage in the story came in the mid 1200s, when Kenneth MacKenzie held the island for the Scottish crown against Norse incursions with the help of a large medieval stone castle he built here. This seems to have enclosed virtually the whole area of the island with a curtain wall, supplemented by a keep and a massive northern tower built with walls some 4.3m thick.
Some time around 1400, for reasons that remain unclear, the castle was dramatically reduced in size so it covered a total area that was only a fraction of it previous size: 528 square metres compared with nearly 3,000 square metres for the earlier castle. The focus remained the earlier keep, but it was now accompanied by a much smaller courtyard in which were located a number of domestic buildings. The massive Northern Tower and much of the curtain wall were apparently demolished. The third phase of the castle involved further construction during the 1500s, of a heptagonal bastion to the east of the main castle linked to it by a tapering extension of the courtyard. This seems to have been built as a platform for cannons, and provided a new and more easily defended main entrance to the castle.
After King James VII/II was displaced by William and Mary in the "Glorious Revolution" of 1688, a series of Jacobite uprisings took place intended to reverse the revolution. The best known of these occurred in 1689, 1715, and 1745. Rather less well known was the attempt by Jacobites with Spanish support to launch what amounted to a second Armada in 1719. The plan was for a main force to land in southern England, preceded by a diversionary attack in north west Scotland which it was hoped would raise the Jacobite clans and draw Government forces away from the site of the main landings.
On 13 April 1719, William Murray, Earl of Tullibardine, and George Keith, the Earl Marischal of Scotland, landed with a force of Spanish marines in Lochalsh, and sent out messengers to call the clans to arms. The debacle of the failed 1715 uprising was still fresh in many memories, however, and only around 1,000 clansmen answered the call. The Jacobites took control of Eilean Donan Castle as their headquarters, and it was garrisoned by 46 Spanish marines. Meanwhile, the main Spanish fleet carrying 7,000 men ran into a storm in the English Channel and was dispersed, causing their attack to be called off. On 10 May 1719 three Royal Navy frigates sailed into Loch Alsh and Loch Duich and bombarded Eilean Donan Castle. The garrison surrendered and the Navy proceeded to blow up what remained of the castle to prevent it being used again: along with 343 barrels of Spanish gunpowder that had been stored here.
The remaining Jacobites, comprising some 200 Spanish marines and 1,000 clansmen, decided to march on Inverness, but encountered Government troops in Glen Shiel on 10 June. At the Battle of Glen Shiel, which saw fighting extend high up the sides of the enclosing mountains, the Jacobites were defeated. The clansmen subsequently melted away into the surrounding landscape while the unfortunate Spaniards surrendered.
Eilean Donan spent the next two centuries as a romantic island ruin. When MacGibbon and Ross visited in the 1880s while researching The Castellated and Domestic Architecture of Scotland they noted that the castle's architectural features were "almost entirely destroyed", and mapped out the fragmentary walls that remained surrounding the ruined keep.
The castle you see today is the result of the vision and dedication of two men: the laird of the day, Lt. Col. John MacRae-Gilstrap, and his clerk of works, Farquhar MacRae. Work on rebuilding the castle as a family home began on 23 August 1913. It resumed after World War One and was finally completed in July 1932 at a total cost of a quarter of a million pounds. The result is an absolute triumph, and a castle that amply deserves its iconic status.
Uploaded
January 17th, 2017
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Comments (44)
Sarah Irland
Congratulations, Alan, on your 1st Place Win in the Historic Castles of the World Contest for this beautiful painting! Voted. L/F
Maria Faria Rodrigues
Congratulations, on 1st Place Win, in HISTORIC CASTLES OF THE WORLD, contest! v/f
James Brunker
Beautiful painting, congratulations on your 1st Place in the Paint or Draw the UK contest!
Angela Davies
Such a lovely castle and work of art, really love the light and palette, congrats on second place contest win in Best of British Group FL
Sarah Irland
Congratulations, Alan, on your 1st Place Win in the Paint or Draw the UK Contest. What a beautiful painting! Voted. L/F
Michaela Perryman
Congratulations, shared First Place in Paint or Draw UK - April 2023 - Best of British group
Lesley Evered
This is a superb painting....like and favourite and voted for in the contest PAINT OR DRAW THE UK in the group Best Of British
Hanne Lore Koehler
Congratulations, Alan, on your INTERNATIONAL ARCHITECTURE contest win with this magnificent castle painting! L/F
Gary F Richards
Spectacular Skye Castle composition, lighting, shading, brilliant colors and artwork! F/L voted
Sarah Irland
Congratulations, Alan, on your 1st Place Win in the Best of Buildings Contest for this beautiful painting! Well deserved. Voted.
Morris Finkelstein
Beautiful painting, Alan! Congratulations on your first place finish in the Castles contest! F/L