Domnall mac Uilleim Although apparently the legitimate heir to Moray, Domnall did not receive the rule of the province from David on his father's death. The suggested reason is that Domnall would have been a child, and no suitable ruler for such a fractious and distant province. Domnall does not certainly appear in the record of events until the late 1170s, although it may be that he should be linked to disorders in Moray in the 1160s in the reign of
Malcolm IV. In 1179, King
William and his brother
Earl David took an army north to
Ross, likely to deal with some threat from Domnall, or from Domnall and supporters. Two years later, Domnall was reported in Scotland with a large army. The focus of royal activity at this time was in
Galloway, and it was not until
Lochlann, Lord of Galloway was brought to an agreement with King William, by diplomacy rather than military success, that affairs in Moray and Ross could be settled. By then, Domnall appears to have controlled much of the north, the royal castle at
Auldearn and the new
burgh there having been betrayed and destroyed respectively. An attempt by a royal army to deal with Domnall in 1187 appears to have been a failure, perhaps a farce, with the leaders quarreling among themselves because, as
Roger of Howden reports, "some loved the king not at all". A second army, led by Lochlann of Galloway, defeated Domnall at the
Battle of Mam Garvia suggested to be near
Dingwall or in Moray.
Adam mac Domnaill In 1186, a certain Adam son of Domnall, "the king's outlaw", was killed by
Máel Coluim,
Mormaer of Atholl, in the sanctuary of the church at
Cupar, and the church burnt with 58 of Adam's associates within. It may be that this Adam mac Domnaill was a son of Domnall mac Uilleim. If this is so, then the presence of his son in Cupar, south of the
Mounth, reinforces the conviction that Domnall fought, not for the Mormaerdom of Moray, but for the kingship of Scotland. However, his identification is not certain. One reading would give his name as
Áed mac Domnaill, and it may be that he should be counted among the
MacHeths, the sons of Áed. ===
Gofraid mac Domnaill=== With the death of Domnall and Adam, the Meic Uilleim disappear for some years. In their place,
Harald Maddadsson,
Earl of Orkney, becomes the chief threat to the tenuous authority of King William in northern Scotland. However, in 1211, Gofraid (or Guthred), son of Domnall, came from
Ireland to Ross, and raised a rebellion. King William led a great army north, but failed to bring Gofraid to decisive battle. Late in the year King William returned south, leaving
Maol Choluim,
Mormaer of Fife, as his lieutenant in Moray. Gofraid soon afterwards captured a royal castle, showing that he was far from being defeated. The following year,
Alexander (later Alexander II) son of King William, led an army north once more. King William followed with yet more soldiery, including mercenaries from
Brabant supplied by King
John of
England. As it fell out, Gofraid's supporters betrayed him to
William Comyn,
Justiciar of Scotia, before battle was joined. Gofraid was executed on the King's orders. Gofraid's revolt is said to have been a bloody affair, and although it was ended relatively quickly, it was, nonetheless, a serious threat to the aged King William.
Domnall Bán mac Domnaill King William died in 1214, and was succeeded by Alexander. The new chief of the Meic Uilleim, Domnall Bán, brother of Gofraid, in company with Cináed, the chief of the
MacHeths, and an unnamed Irish prince, launched another invasion. This failed quickly and completely, crushed by
Ferchar mac in tSagairt, the future
Mormaer of Ross, who killed the leaders and sent their heads to King Alexander.
Gille Escoib The failure of the 1215 invasion and the death of Domnall Bán in no way ended the efforts of the MacWilliams to prosecute their claims to Moray and to the throne of Scotland. Gille Escoib (or Gillescop) Meic Uilleim and his sons were actively in rebellion in the 1220s. Gille Escoib's descent is nowhere stated, and he may have been a son of Domnall, or, more probably given his dates, a grandson.
Walter Bower may be incorrect in dating Gille Escoib's rebellion to 1223, and it is more probably in the period around 1228 that his activities should be placed. Gille Escoib's revolt, which probably began in 1228, ended in 1229, perhaps as Gofraid's had — in betrayal and execution — or perhaps defeated by
William Comyn. The last remaining Meic Uilleim, an infant daughter of Gille Escoib or one of his sons, was put to death in 1229 or 1230: It seems that by this time, the MacWilliams had concentrated their families and forces in the strongly defensible region between the
Cairngorms and the
Grey Mountains. With the defeat of Escoib's revolt, this region became
Badenoch and was handed to the Comyn family, who thus became
Lords of Badenoch. ==Notes==