The Bonnie House of Airlie is a traditional Scottish folk song of the seventeenth century, telling the tale of the raid byArchibald Campbell, Earl of Argyll, onAirlie Castle, the home ofJames Ogilvy,Earl of Airlie, in the summer of 1640.[1] A broadsheet version first appeared in 1790 and it received formal publication as number 199 inFrancis Child's collectionThe English and Scottish Popular Ballads of 1882.
Although there had been traditional enmity between theCampbells andOgilvys since at least the sixteenth century, their private feud intensified in 1638, when the two clans joined opposite sides in theNational Covenant rebellion: Ogilvy supported the king,Charles I, and Campbell the rebels. When James Ogilvy raised a regiment of several hundred men and marched south to the king's aid, Archibald, claiming to act on behalf of the anti-royalist alliance, seized and destroyed the castle of Airlie and, according to some accounts, brutally raped James Ogilvy's wife, Margaret.[2]
Child, collecting in the 1870s, found four broadly similar versions.[3] These all describe how the castle was destroyed by fire after Lady Ogilvy refused to reveal the whereabouts of the family treasure. However other versions continued in oral circulation and the one reproduced here, with its bleak penultimate verse, was collected on 27 June 1955 inFetterangus byHamish Henderson andPeter Kennedy from Lucy Stewart:[4]
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Given the numerous references to "Chairlie" and the allusion toLocheil, the song has inevitably taken on additional layers of meaning, being incorrectly understood to refer toCharles Edward Stuart andArchibald Cameron of Lochiel in the1745 rebellion, long after the events at Airlie.[5]
Alan Lomax included the song in hisClassic Ballads of Britain and Ireland of 1961. It was sung byBelle Stewart, who learned the song from her 91-year-old uncle Henry MacDonald, and recorded by Peter Kennedy.[6] Later recordings, using different tunes, have been made byEwan MacColl andKate Rusby.
Different versions of the song were collected in Scotland, Canada, and the US.[7]
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