Buchan History
A name derived from the
district of Buchan which comprises the north-
eastern part of Aberdeenshire and part of
Banffshire. The ancient mormaership, or earldom
of Buchan came into the hands of the Comyns who
were later deprived of it after their defeat at
the hands of Robert the Bruce. Buchan was
thereafter conferred on Alexander Stewart, the
feared Wolf of Badenoch, natural son of Robert
II. The geo-graphic name would, however, have
been used by notable inhabitants of the district,
even although they may have had no provable connection with the great earls. Black lists
Ricardus de Buchan as clerk to the bishopric of
Aberdeen around 1207. William de Buchan held land
in Aberdeen before 1281. Sir Thomas de Boghan
appears on the Ragman Roll rendering homage to
Edward I of England in 1296. His lands were
around Edinburgh, and his seal bears an
eight-rayed figure which may be the derivation of
the shining sun which forms part of the chiefs
crest.
It cannot be accurately
ascertained when the Buchans gained the lands of
Auchmacoy, but Andrew Buchan of Auchmacoy was one
of the assize appointed to settle the boundaries
of the lands of St Peters Hospital in 1446.
Auchmacoy seemed to have been in the
familys hands from the beginning of the fourteenth century, but it was in 1503 that
Andrew, generally reckoned to be the second
chief, received a charter to the lands from James
IV.
The Barons of Auchmacoy were
staunch royalists and firm supporters of the
Stuarts throughout the seventeenth century.
Thomas, the third son of James Buchan of
Auchmacoy, was a professional soldier who learned
his trade in the wars in France and Holland. He
served in Douglass Scots Regiment, raised
for the king of France, until 1686, when he was
commissioned colonel in the Earl of Mars regiment by James VII. Loyal to his commission,
he joined Viscount Dundee to fight for his
deposed monarch. After Dundees death at
Killiecrankie in 1689, Buchan was appointed
commander-in-chief of all Jacobite forces in
Scotland, receiving his commission from the king
in Ireland. He returned to Scotland in April 1690
where he met at Keppoch with chiefs sympathetic
to the Jacobite cause. It was resolved to delay
the general muster of the clans until the summer,
but General Buchan was to harry the enemy with
his force of twelve hundred foot. On 1 May 1690
at Cromdale, Buchan was taken by surprise by a
strong government force under General Mac Kay.
Buchan escaped, regrouped his men, and joined
forces with the Farquharsons. The Highland
reinforcements encouraged Buchan to take the
offensive again. He marched from Abergeldie
through the Mearns towards Aberdeen but he was
soon opposed by the Master of Forbes and a strong
force of cavalry. Buchan cleverly disposed his
troops to give an appearance of numerical
superiority and his ruse was successful. Forbes
retreated towards Aberdeen, causing panic in the
city. Buchan, however, had no intention of
attacking the city and turned towards Inverness.
General Mac Kays forces however, marched to
intercept him, and Buchans Highlanders
drifted away into their home glens. Buchan was
allowed to go into exile in France, but he fought
again at the Battle of Sheriffmuir in 1715 and
was still in communication with the exiled royal
family when he died in 1721.
James Buchan, fourteenth of
Auchmacoy was recognised by the Lord Lyon as
chief of the name in April 1830. The title then
passed through his only daughter, Louisa, to her
cousin, Sir Norman Sinclair, eighteenth Earl of
Caithness. He petitioned the Lyon Court in April
1913, taking the surname and arms of Buchan of
Auchmacoy. His daughter, Lady Lucy Buchan,
married Sir Thomas Innes of Learney, the great
Lord Lyon, in 1928. She was the mother of Sir
Thomass younger son the present Lord Lyon,
Sir Malcolm Innes of Edengight. The earls
eldest daughter, Lady Olivia, became the
seventeenth of Auchmacoy Her son changed his name
in 1949 to be recognised by the Lord Lyon as
chief of the Buchans. The chiefs seat remains at
Auchmacoy House near Ellon.
Alexander Buchan was an
eminent British meteorologist who first observed
what were become known as Buchan Spells:
departures from the normally expected temperature
occurring during certain seasons. Buchan
established the weather map as the basis for
weather forecasting. John Buchan, born in August
1875, was a clergymans son, educated at the
Universities of Glasgow and Oxford before being
called to the Bar in 1901. He served in the
colonial service in South Africa and this
inspired his literary career. His most famous
work was The Thirty-nine Steps, popularised by
the motion picture directed by Alfred Hitchcock.
In 1935 he was appointed Governor General of
Canada and was created first Baron Tweedsmuir.
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