Episodes

  • After 1493, There Was No Clan Donald — There Were Several: The Branches That Survived and Those That Vanished — Part 2
    Jun 11 2026

    The fall of the Lordship of the Isles didn't just fracture a clan — it set off a centuries-long story of survival, rivalry, and extinction. In Part 2, we continue our deep dive into the independent branches that emerged from the ruins of Clan Donald, focusing on four clans that carved out their own identities and legacies — and honoring the branches that didn't survive into the modern era.

    If you haven't listened to Part 1 yet, start there — we lay the groundwork with the history of the Lordship, its forfeiture in 1493, and an introduction to the major branches of Clan Donald.


    The Branches Covered in This Episode:

    🗡️ MacDonalds of Keppoch — Based in Lochaber, the Keppoch MacDonalds were notorious for holding their lands by the sword rather than by legal title. They remained a powerful and combative force in the Highlands well into the 18th century, fighting at Killiecrankie and Culloden.

    🗡️ MacDonalds of Glencoe — A small branch descended from Iain Abrach, the MacDonalds of Glencoe are best known today as the victims of the 1692 Massacre of Glencoe, one of the most notorious acts of betrayal in Scottish history.

    🗡️ MacDonalds of Largie (Kintyre) — Descended from the ancient line holding Kintyre, the Largie branch maintained a presence in one of the most historically significant territories of the old Lordship of the Isles.

    🗡️ Clan Donald of Dunyveg — Also known as Clan Ian Mòr, this branch dominated Kintyre and Islay and had deep ties to the MacDonnells of Antrim in Ulster, making them a major force in Gaelic Scotland and Ireland.

    ⚔️ Honorable Mentions — The Lost Branches:

    • MacIain of Ardnamurchan — Once powerful, this branch was ultimately destroyed, its chiefs killed and lands forfeited in the early 16th century.
    • MacDonald of Islay — Holders of the ancient heartland of the Lordship, this branch dwindled and eventually disappeared from the historical record.
    • MacDonald of Lochalsh — Claimants to the Lordship itself, this branch was extinguished through conflict and forfeiture in the late 15th and early 16th centuries.

    Missed Part 1?Catch up on the history of the Lordship of the Isles, its dramatic fall in 1493, and the first wave of independent Clan Donald branches — including Sleat, Clanranald, Glengarry, and the MacDonnells of Antrim.

    Resources & Links:

    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Scottish Clans Website: www.scottishclans.info

    Support the Show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scottishclansHelp keep Scottish clan history alive — every contribution makes a difference!

    👕 Battle Shirts & Clandanas: https://stores.inksoft.com/the_scottish_clans/shop/homeWear your clan pride!

    🎤 Book an In-Person or Virtual Scottish Clans Seminar: Email thescottishclans@gmail.com

    📺 Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@thescottishclans

    Clan Donald · MacDonalds of Keppoch · MacDonalds of Glencoe · Massacre of Glencoe · Clan Dunyveg · MacDonalds of Largie · Kintyre · Lordship of the Isles · Scottish clans · Scottish history · Highland clans · Scottish ancestry · MacIain of Ardnamurchan · Clan Ian Mòr · Scottish podcast · Gaelic history

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    20 mins
  • After 1493, There Was No Clan Donald — There Were Several: The Legacy of the Lordship of the Isles — Part 1
    May 20 2026

    When the Lordship of the Isles fell in 1493, it didn't just end a political dynasty — it shattered one of the most powerful Scottish clans in history. In this episode, we explore how the mighty Clan Donald ceased to exist as a single unified clan and instead splintered into multiple independent branches, each with its own chief, territory, and identity.

    Whether you're tracing Scottish ancestry, fascinated by Highland history, or just discovering the world of Scottish clans, this is the story that explains why the MacDonalds cease to exist as one clan and, until recently, there was no single MacDonald clan.

    What You'll Learn in This Episode:

    • The rise and golden age of the Lordship of the Isles — the near-independent Gaelic kingdom that dominated the west coast of Scotland for over a century
    • The key events and political pressures that led to the forfeiture of the Lordship by the Scottish Crown in 1493
    • The desperate attempts to restore the Lordship — and why they all failed
    • An introduction to the major cadet branches of Clan Donald that emerged after the fall — each becoming, in effect, its own independent Scottish clan

    Resources & Links:

    🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 Scottish Clans Website: www.scottishclans.info

    Support the Show on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scottishclansHelp keep Scottish clan history alive — every contribution makes a difference!

    👕 Battle Shirts & Clandanas: https://stores.inksoft.com/the_scottish_clans/shop/homeWear your clan pride!

    🎤 Book an In-Person or Virtual Scottish Clans Seminar: Email thescottishclans@gmail.com

    📺 Watch on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@thescottishclans

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    24 mins
  • The Biggest Clans in Scottish History Pt 2
    Apr 26 2026

    Which Scottish clans truly dominated the landscape of Scotland? In Part 2 of this two-part series, we continue our look at the 15 biggest Scottish clans, measured by territory, influence, and the number of cadet branches they produced. These were the kindreds that expanded, adapted, and established lasting power across multiple regions—shaping the political and social fabric of Scotland.

    Aimed at those newer to clan history, this episode completes the list and adds important context for understanding how these large kin-groups functioned, grew, and maintained influence over time. Together with Part 1, this provides a clear foundation for identifying the major clans and understanding why some families rose to prominence while others remained more localized.

    Website: https://scottishclans.info
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    17 mins
  • The Biggest Clans in Scottish History P t 1
    Apr 17 2026

    Which Scottish clans were truly the largest and most powerful? In this episode of the Scottish Clans podcast, we look at the 15 biggest Scottish clans, judging their influence by the amount of land they controlled and the number of cadet branches they produced. These were the kindreds that dominated regions, produced numerous offshoot families, and shaped the political and military landscape of Scotland for centuries.

    Designed especially for those newer to clan history, this episode provides a clear introduction to the major players of the clan world and explains how certain families grew into sprawling kin-groups with far-reaching influence. This is Part 1 of a two-part series, where we begin examining the clans whose power, territory, and branches made them giants in Scottish history.

    Website: https://scottishclans.info
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    Email: thescottishclans@gmail.com

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    23 mins
  • The Keppoch Murders: Darkness within Clan Donald
    Feb 19 2026

    In this episode, I read and discuss the story behind the Keppoch Murders from Stuart McHardy’s The Well of the Heads, one of the most haunting episodes in the history of Clan Donald. This account explores the killing of the Keppoch chief and his brother by members of their own kindred, revealing the volatile internal politics of Highland clan society and the deadly consequences of disputed leadership. After reading the story that gives McHardy’s book its name, I close with historical context on the cadet branches of Clan Donald and explain how Coll “of the Cows” MacDonald of Keppoch connects to the lineage involved in the Keppoch Murder narrative. For those interested in Scottish clan history, Highland succession disputes, and the realities behind clan violence, this episode separates legend from documented tradition while situating the event within the broader structure of Clan Donald.

    Support the work on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/scottishclans
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    Email: thescottishclans@gmail.com

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    20 mins
  • The Complex World of Gaelic Scotland
    Jan 27 2026

    In this episode, I step away from a simple Highland–Lowland divide and draw on research from Wilson McLeod’s PhD thesis, Divided Gaels: Gaelic Scotland and Gaelic Ireland, 1200–1650 to show just how fragmented and uneven Gaelic Scotland really was. Using McLeod’s work, I explore how some Highland regions lay at the cultural core of the Lordship of the Isles, while others sat on its margins or were shaped by entirely different political and social forces—and how parts of the Lowlands retained Gaelic far longer than is usually assumed. The result is a far messier, more regional picture of language, identity, and power than the clean lines we often draw on maps. This episode is an invitation to rethink easy categories and to see Gaelic Scotland as a patchwork of overlapping influences rather than a binary world.

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    31 mins
  • The Galloway Clans: MacDowall
    Jan 14 2026

    Clan MacDowall (often rendered MacDougall or MacDowell in later forms) represents one of the most significant Gaelic kindreds of medieval Galloway, rooted in the same west-Gaelic world that shaped the clans of Argyll and the Hebrides. Emerging from the Gall-Ghaidheil milieu—a fusion of Gaelic and Norse influence—the MacDowalls were established as regional lords in Galloway well before the Wars of Independence, holding land and authority through kinship rather than later feudal clan structures. Like many Galloway families, they became entangled in the political struggles of the late 13th and early 14th centuries, and their alignment with the Balliol cause brought lasting consequences after Robert the Bruce’s victory, contributing to the erosion of their power and territorial base. Though often overshadowed in popular clan narratives, the MacDowalls illustrate how deeply Gaelic Galloway was integrated into the wider clan world of medieval Scotland—and how its clans paid a heavy price for backing the losing side in the struggle for the Scottish crown.


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    22 mins
  • The Galloway Clans: McCulloch
    Jan 5 2026

    This episode tells the story of Clan McCulloch, a proud Galloway family with deep Celtic ties but a surprising genetic signature. We examine their documented beginnings in 1296, loyalty to the Balliols, violent rivalries (especially the long feud with the Gordons that ended in a public execution), key alliances, and roles in Scottish history. Recent DNA results show the senior Myretoun line belongs to haplogroup R1a-BY32010 – a marker more common in Eastern Europe than typical Scottish Gaelic lines – challenging old origin tales. Though chief-less and with most ancestral estates lost, the McCullochs remain connected through societies, research, and diaspora pride.


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    28 mins