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Baillie
Clan
Baillie Crest: A boar's head, erased, proper.
Baillie Clan Motto: Quid Clarius Astris (What is
brighter than the stars?).
Baillie Clan History: There are those who assert
that the surname originates from Balliol, that of the deposed king of
Scots, but this is incorrect. Regardless of the “de” attached in early
records, it is certainly derived from the position of bailie or
bailiff. The first recorded use in Scotland occurs in 1311 when a
William de Baillie is listed as a juror in a trial over forfeited land
in the Lothians. William Baillie of Hoprig was knighted by David II in
1357 and, in 1368, was given a Charter for lands at Lamington.
There are a number of other prominent families
sharing the name and these include the Baillies of Carphin. Polkemmet,
Provan, Jerviswood, Dunrogal and Dochfour. The Baillies of Dunain are
said to have been founded by a younger son of the house of Lamington
who fought at the Battle of Brechin in 1452 and was rewarded with lands
by the Earl of Huntly. He was also made Constable of
Inverness Castle.
Sir William of Lamington married Janet, daughter
of James, Earl of Arran and Duke of Chatelherault and was appointed
Master of the Wardrobe to Mary de Guise. He fought on the side of Mary
Queen of Scots at the Battle of Langside in 1568, and, as a result, his
estates became forfeit.
In the early 12th century, 5,000 acres covering
much of what is now the north eastern part of Glasgow were granted to
the Church by David I in support of the Prebendary of Barlanark. Four
centuries later, William Baillie was appointed to the post of
Prebendary and, as was often the case in the decades before the
Reformation took place in Scotland, the distinction between church
ownership and private ownership became increasingly vague. When the
Reformation arrived in 1560, the post of Prebendary had already been
passed down through several generations of the Baillie family and, in
1562, Sir William Baillie, Lord President of the Court of Session,
formally took over the Barlanark estate.
Before 1719, Charles Hamilton, Lord Binning, heir
to the 6th Earl of Haddington, married Rachel Baillie, daughter and
heiress of George Baillie of Jerviswoods and Mellerstain. Their
descendants thereafter assumed the additional surname of Baillie.
In 1894, Colonel James Baillie, Member
of Parliament for Inverness, married Nellie Lisa Bass, daughter of the
wealthy Victorian industrialist Lord Burton. As there was no male heir,
this title thereafter came into the family of the Baillies of Dochfour.
Sir William Baillie of Provand was called to the
Scottish Bench in 1566 with the judicial title of Lord Provand. He was
Lord President of the Court of Session between 1566 and 1593.
Robert Baillie (1599-1662) was born in Glasgow, and took Episcopal
ordination. In 1637, he refused to preach in favour of Archbishop
Laud's service book. He was subsequently appointed joint-Professor of
Divinity at Glasgow University and, in 1649, was sent to Holland on
behalf of the Church of Scotland to invite Charles II to accept the
Covenant and Crown of Scotland. After the Restoration, he was appointed
Principal of Glasgow University.
General William Baillie of Letham, natural son of
Sir William Baillie of Lamington, commanded a regiment of Dutch
Infantry for Gustavus Adolphus before returning to Scotland in 1638 to
support the Covenanters. He served under Alexander, Earl of Leven, and
when Scotland joined the English Civil War, he commanded two Scottish
brigades on the right of the Parliamentary front line. In 1645, his
army was utterly destroyed at the Battle of Alford by the Marquis of
Montrose
Robert Baillie of Jerviswood (1634-84) plotted
against Charles II in the Rye House Plot and was caught and executed.
Grizel Baillie (1665-1746), was the daughter of Sir Patrick Home, and
married Robert Baillie of Jerviswood's son George. When her
father was imprisoned for his Protestant principles and then escaped,
she sheltered him in Polwarth Church. She accompanied him to Holland
where he became an advisor to William of Orange. On his return to
Scotland, he was appointed Lord Chancellor to William and
Mary. Matthew Baillie (1761-1823), born at Shotts Manse, was
an anatomist and physician. In 1793, he was author of the first
treatise in English on Morbid Anatomy. His sister. Joanna
Baillie (1762-1851, poetess and playwright, was born in Bothwell Manse.
Her tragedy De Montfort was produced at Drury
Lane Theatre in 1800.
Places of Interest: Baillieston, situated on the
north side of the River Clyde in the East End of Glasgow, was part of
the old Bishopric of Glasgow. Jerviswood is situated on the Mouse Water
in Lanarkshire. Mellerstain House, north west of Kelso, was built for
the Baillie-Hamilton family, earls of Haddington. Dochfour House, on
the banks of Loch Ness, is the home of Lord Burton.
Click here to buy a unique personalised Clan Baillie certificate.
Click
here for Baillie tartan.
Click
here for Baillie Clan crests and gifts.
Click
here for Baillie Kilts.
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