April 14, 2019 Campbeltown Market Cross (front face) |
Campbeltown's Market Cross was something of a wanderer, literally. In general, today most (but not all) accept that it was carved on Iona, and was probably created by the commission of Andrew MacEachern, pastor at Kilchoman parish church on the Isle of Islay, sometime around 1370 A.D. Beyond this, the "stories" diverge.
One of the privileges of a royal burgh is that it can hold trade markets by its own authority. Usually, a market cross served as the axis around which trade fairs assembled. So, the royal burgh of Campbeltown required a Market Cross (or Mercat Cross) by the first decade of the 1600s. Though perhaps a curious custom to us today, within the "boundaries" of a market cross not only were markets formed, but official public business was transacted as well. This is evidenced in a royal charter by William III (William of Orange) issued April 19, 1700.
April 15, 2019 The Campbeltown Fair by Archibald MacKinnon (1886) |
More onerous powers assigned to the Market Cross were also enumerated. The Market Cross was where rebels were denounced. And it was authorized: "to do all other acts of proclamation and legal executions there at in like manner and as freely in all respects as if the same were the market cross of the principal burgh of the said Sheriffdom."
The royal charter of 1700 was retroactive, however, perhaps issued to recognize the de facto existence of Campbeltown's Market Cross. Indeed, twenty years earlier, the Campbeltown Cross is known to have been standing. A.I.B. Stewart ("Campbeltown Cross") noted that it was mentioned in criminal proceedings in 1680. A certain Finvall McCannill was "to be taken to the Mercat Cross of Campbeltwon and there to be whipt and scourgit by the hands of the common executioner."
Exactly when the Market Cross was removed from its ecclesiastical moorings (whether at Kilchoman on Islay of Kilkivan on Kintyre) and made its journey to Campbeltown in the 1600s may not be known. But what is known is that it certainly did not escape unscathed in its wanderings. More ardent critics of the era use the terms--desecrated or mutilated.
The Market Cross was indeed greatly "modified". Figuratively speaking, its head was shamefully shaved by Reformation zealotry aimed at what they defined as graven images. The Market Cross is emblematic, it bears witness of the fickleness of mankind, the mob.
A.I.B Stewart records that in 1640, at the beginning of the English Civil War (Oliver Cromwell and the Roundheads), an act of Parliament declared that "all idolatrous images, crucifixes, pictures of Christ and all other idolatrous pictures were to be demolished and removed forth from all churches, colleges, chapels and other public places."
April 15, 2019 Hogmanay at the Cross, Campbeltown by Archibald MacKinnon (1899) |
Thus, some submit that the Market Cross made its journey to Campbeltown at this time in the early 1640s. In any case, its carved image of our crucified Savior, which formerly occupied the central position on the disc head, was removed. Two other figures (clerics--likely the MacEachern who commissioned the Cross) were chiseled away. Interestingly though, the figure of Mary was left untouched by Reformation iconoclasts, as were images of St. John, the Archangel Michael slaying a dragon, a mermaid and various animals.
Thus, "purged of its Catholic excrescences" as one historian put it, it was erected (or possibly re-erected) as the town's Market Cross. That it survived the destructiveness of the Protestant Reformation and mobs of iconoclasts at all is a wonder. Local Reformationists were not so keen to destroy the magnificent artifact...as had been done so many times to countless others.
This was also not the end of its wandering. In 1939, as the Battle of Britain raged in the skies over the United Kingdom, Campbeltown's Market Cross was taken down from its plinth at the Town Hall for safe keeping from German bombing raids. After the Second World War, the Market Cross was relocated down Main Street from its former site to its current location at the Old Quay Head in the middle of the traffic roundabout...at Campbeltown's de facto gateway.
April 14, 2019 The Old Quay at Campbeltown |
April 18, 2019 Davaar Island at the head of Campbeltown Loch |
April 18, 2019 Davaar from the Doirlinn at low tide |
April 18, 2019 Boulder field below the sea cliffs on Davaar Island |
Second, care regarding tide tables is absolutely required when visiting Davaar. For example, we were told by our Campbeltown hosts (Earadale B&B) that only a few days before we made our trek out to MacKinnon's sea cave painting a couple tourists had to be rescued off the Doirlinn beacon by the Royal Navy Life Boat Station at Campbeltown.
April 18, 2019 The Doirlinn Beacon; Campbeltown Loch in background |
April 18, 2019 The Doirlinn Beacon |
April 18, 2019 Tidal flats on The Doirlinn |
Once the source of the painting was known, MacKinnon suffered the indignation of public denouncements in the press...accused as an egotistical fame seeker, he was run off. MacKinnon returned to Campbeltown to retouch his painting in 1902 and again in 1934.
By then, the Campbeltown public opinion had markedly changed regarding MacKinnon. He would be celebrated as a local artist, likely because many people came to Campbeltown to see the masterpiece. Money (from enhancing the business of tourism) certainly has a way of changing opinions.
Over the past century, many thousands have made a pilgrimage out to the Davaar sea cave. When we visited, votive offerings and small crucifixes below the painting were evident.
April 18, 2019 Votive offerings left at the Davaar sea cave painting |
Given more than a century since MacKinnon painted his sea cave work, some damage to the painting has been incurred due to water and the cave's humidity. Restoration work has been done to the painting since MacKinnon last visited it in 1934. A metal strip was installed above it help keep water from above running directly down the painting. But all in all, given where it is--at sea level--the painting has survived well.
April 18, 2019 View from inside the Davaar sea cave |
A note on the location, besides being on a boulder and shingled beach, the cave itself (despite claims on various websites) is not sign posted. It is in what is claimed to be the seventh and final cave. And so, we visited the various caves until we found what is today known as "The Crucifixion Cave". But such is the stuff of pilgrimages...a search for quiet constancy beyond the howls of fickle mankind.
That is, as it has always been, a difficult path.
That is, as it has always been, a difficult path.
April 18, 2019 The Crucifixion Cave, Davaar Island; by Archibald MacKinnon (1887) |
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