A RARE gathering of Scotland's clan chiefs was held to pay respect to soldiers who died at the Battle of Flodden, 500 years after their ancestors fought the English.
Around 40 clan leaders from families across Scotland attended a special service at St Giles' Cathedral in Edinburgh.
A spokesman for the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs said that such numbers of clan chiefs had never been brought together before, though a small number had met in 2009
The charity service also saw Edinburgh's historic 'Blue Blanket' unfurled, this was the city's fighting banner, which was brought back along with news of the "disastrous" defeat.
The Battle of Flodden, fought near Branxton in Northumberland on 9 September 1513, saw a Scottish army led by King James IV defeated by the English and 10,000 killed.
The king himself and much of the country's nobility perished in the battle, and less than a century later Scotland and England would be joined in the Union of the Crowns. Organisers the Standing Council of Scottish Chiefs said the service, which also paid tribute to 500 years of Scottish military tradition, raised £25,000 for charities Combat Stress and Erskine.
Hundreds packed out the cathedral for the service. Field Marshall the Lord Guthrie of Craigbank, a former head of the Army whose ancestors fought at Flodden, read the first lesson from Ecclesiastes.
The Blue Blanket, a replica of the original, was solemnly brought in to the service by Ian Robertson of the Convenery of the Trades of Edinburgh. Five hundred years ago Captain Randolph Murray of the city band returned from the battle with the blanket, which bears the names of Edinburgh's prominent trades, and news of the defeat.
Historian Alistair Moffat gave a vivid address to the service, describing the bloody battle and its aftermath. He described the battle as "the greatest military disaster in Scotland's history", which left the field strewn with "broken pikeshafts, shattered shields and the sickening stench of death."
Singer Isla St Clair sang the Flowers of the Forest at the service, which mourns Scotland's loss at the battle. Many of the gathered clan leaders could trace their lineage back to Flodden.
Malcolm Sinclair, the Earl of Caithness and a hereditary peer, owes his family's noble heritage to the events at Flodden. In the 16th Century the Sinclair clan had been censured by James IV's father, and were in danger of losing their noble title.
But he explained the family's wrongs were forgiven when the chief of the clan contributed a force of 300 men to James IV's army. He said before the service: "He turned up at Flodden and King James was so pleased to see him he forgave all his wrongs.
"He wrote a pardon, but all that was available was the skin of a drumhead.
"He sent the drummer boy home [to Caithness] and he was the only one to go home."
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