The main Norwegian source for the battle is
Hakonar saga Hakonarsonar, a contemporary account of the life of
Hakon Haakonarson, King of Norway (d. 1263), composed by the
Icelandic historian
Sturla Thordarson (d. 1284). Although the saga describes the events purely from the Norwegian perspective, its narrative of the battle appears to have been drawn from eyewitness accounts, and it is the most detailed source available for the Scottish–Norwegian conflict, given that many contemporary Scottish archival holdings are lost to history. While lying off the Cumbraes, on the night of 30 September, Haakon's fleet was battered by stormy weather. During the night, the saga records that a merchantman dragged its anchor and was driven aground. The following morning, it and four other vessels were floated off by the rising tide but carried by the current towards the Scottish mainland where they
ran aground again. The crews of the beached vessels were soon harassed by a small force of Scots armed with
bows. After the Norwegians had suffered some casualties, Haakon sent reinforcements ashore, and the Scots fled the area. Haakon's reinforcements remained ashore for the night, and the Norwegian king himself came ashore to oversee the salvage operation the next morning. According to the saga, the main Scottish force, consisting of heavily armoured
cavalry and
infantry, arrived on 2 October. The saga numbers the mounted troops at about 500 and states that they rode high-quality horses protected by
mail. The use of a substantial force of mounted
knights or sergeants appears to be corroborated in contemporary records of payments made to troops. For example,
Walter Stewart, Earl of Menteith had to maintain 120 sergeants—which could include knights, mounted
men-at-arms,
archers, or other footsoldiers—at
Ayr Castle for three weeks. Although surviving records fail to mention the number of knights assembled at
Ayr, the record of wages suggests that it was "more than a mere handful". the Scottish army must have also included
slingers. The Latin
Chronicle of Melrose simply describes the Scottish infantry as
pedisequi patrie (the "foot-sloggers of the locality"). If this description refers to the men of the surrounding countryside, the Scottish infantry would have been made up of men from the '
common army', drawn only from
Strathgryffe,
Cunninghame and
Kyle. These levies would have been
mustered by the
Sheriff of Ayr, the
Sheriff of Lanark, and the local
magnates. At the time of Largs, the Scottish king thus had at his disposal men from the 'common army' (lesser men who owed service to their king), the feudal host (greater men who owed military service for their lands), and also paid troops. The evidence suggests that the main Scottish force arrived from the south, rather than from the east or the north. For example, Alexander III is recorded to have been south at Ayr in September, and the power centre of
Alexander of Dundonald, Steward of Scotland (d. 1282), who is thought to have commanded the Scottish forces at the battle, was also located to the south. Furthermore, at the time of the battle, the Sheriff of Ayr was probably a member of the
steward's family If the Scots had indeed arrived from the south, then they would have also assembled at a mustering site to the south, possibly somewhere near Ayr. These two detachments were likely only a fraction of the total number of forces at Haakon's disposal. The numbers that the saga allows for either side may be exaggerated. A more likely number may be only about one hundred or several hundred men per side with the number of knights present may have been closer to 50 than the saga's 500. The forces which Haakon had mustered in Norway formed part of his realm's
leidang, a naval levy in which districts contributed men, ships, and provisions for military service. illustrates the armament of a contemporary mounted knight. As the Scots advanced towards the Norwegians, the saga indicates that Ogmund withdrew his troops from the mound to avoid being cut off from his comrades on the beach below. If the Scots had indeed marched northwards, their advance would have threatened to drive a wedge between the Norwegians on the mound and those on the beach. Once the Scottish
vanguard came into contact with Ogmund's men, the saga indicates that his orderly withdrawal disintegrated into a chaotic scramble. On the beach below, Haakon followed the advice of his men and retired to the safety of his ships. To the men on the beach, the rapid descent of Ogmund's men towards them looked like an all-out retreat; they turned and fled. The Norwegian army was thus
routed, and in the mad dash back to their ships they suffered substantial casualties. This entry confirms that at least some of the Scottish knights present were able to engage their foes on horseback. For several days, Haakon's forces laid off the coast of Arran. After rendezvousing with the returning fleet that had plundered Lennox, Haakon's entire forces made for the Hebrides. At
Mull he rewarded a number of his Norse-Gaelic vassals with grants of lands. By the end of October, the Norwegian fleet reached
Orkney. In mid December, the Norwegian king fell ill and died at the
Bishop's Palace, and was temporarily buried in nearby
St Magnus Cathedral. == Aftermath ==