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Cunningham
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- CREST: A unicorn's head,
Argent, crined and armed, Or.
- MOTTO: Over fork over.
- TRANSLATION: Over fork
over. A phrase from clan legend.
- PLANT: None
- GAELIC NAME: Mac
Cuinneagain
- ORIGIN OF NAME: Place-name,
Ayrshire
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Cunningham

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At some time before Hugh de Moreville,
Constable of Scotland, died in 1162, he granted to Warnebald,
presumably a Fleming, the property of Kilmaurs in the district
of Cunningham in Ayrshire. When Haakon IV of Norway brought his
fleet to this coast in 1 263, to assert his sovereignty over the
western isles, Harvey Cunningham of Kilmaurs was among those who
helped to repulse him at Largs. The family property was
increased by Robert Bruce as a reward for their support. Hugh
Cunningham of Kilmaurs was granted the lands of Lamburgton in
1321 by King Robert. His grandson Sir William married the
heiress of the Denniestons of that Ilk and thus added the
property of Glencairn also. Sir William’s grandson was raised to
the peerage by James Ill, first as Lord Kilmaurs in 1462, then
as Earl of Glencairn in 1488. The King’s favour is perhaps
indicative of the new Earl’s character, for James III bestowed
it upon men of culture and talent, to the fury of the older
nobility. When they hounded James Ill to his death in 1488, the
1st Earl perished with him.
Alexander Cunningham, 5th Earl of Glencairn, played a very
different part. He was a member of the band which called itself
the Lords of the Congregation of Jesus Christ, and whose
activities included embezzling church property, and furthering
England’s political aims in Scotland in return for English gold.
Glencairn was a particular patron of Knox, who sent Cecil
military information and begged for money in return. These were
the instruments which enabled the Tudors to destroy both the
Regent Mary and her daughter Mary, Queen of Scots, under the
cloak of supporting a creed which they themselves persecuted in
England as neither Mary nor her mother ever did in Scotland. In
1565 Glencairn joined Moray’s rebellion against his sister, and
he held a command among her enemies at Carberry, where she
surrendered to them in 1567, only to be imprisoned in Loch Leven
Castle. While Moray secured the Regency, looted his sister’s
jewellery, and sent her famous pearl necklace to Queen Elizabeth
as her share, Glencairn went on his own initiative to the chapel
of Holyrood and smashed all its furniture and works of art in an
orgy of destruction. He has since been much praised by
Protestant historians, not merely for his religious zeal, but
more strangely, for his patriotism.
The 9th Earl of Glencairn returned to the traditions of the 1st
when he played his gallant and forlorn part in raising a
rebellion in the Highlands for Charles II in 1653. The King had
fled back to the Continent after the defeat at Worcester, and
Scotland was now under the military government of Cromwell’s
generals. Glencairn’s rising could hardly succeed, but after the
Restoration in 1660 he was made Lord Chancellor of Scotland.
In the time of Robert Burns, the Cunninghams, including their
Chief the 14th Earl and two of his more humble clansmen, stepped
upon quite a different stage. The two were the brothers Allan
and Thomas Cunningham, born to an unsuccessful farmer in
Dumfreisshire in 1785 and 1776. Allan was the more successful
poet and writer of the two, and he enjoyed the friendship of
James Hogg, Sir Walter Scott and Chantrey the sculptor, as well
as that of Burns himself. But Thomas also made his contribution
as a poet and songwriter to this golden age of Scottish
literature, while Glencairn himself earned from Burns this
tribute:
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The bridegroom may forget the bride
Was made his wedded wife yestreen;
The monarch may forget the crown
That on his head an hour has been;
The mother may forget the child
That smiles sae sweetly on her knee;
But Ill remember thee, Glencairn,
And a that thou hast done for me
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Clan
Cunningham Links
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| Background: Lightened Cunningham
Tartan |
Copyright ©1995-2010 by Celtic Studio
Produced by Louis James Walsh |
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