The King became angry and Sir Robert Dalrymple of Stair recommended to him
that the MacDonalds should be wiped out for their disobedience. The King agreed.
The Campbells, the MacDonalds' hereditary enemies, were approached
and given the task, and told to 'put all to the sword that were under 70'.
The Campbells
were quartered on the MacDonalds, and after a week of apparent friendship, at 5am the Campbells turned on their hosts and massacred them.
The clan chief Alasdair MacDonald, known as MacIain and 37 MacDonalds
perished, but some managed to escape and report on the massacre to the other clans.
To this day the 9 of diamonds in a pack of playing cards is known
as the 'Curse of Scotland' because the pips on the card bear some resemblance to the arms of the Master of Stair (Robert Dalrymple)
who like William III bore the greatest responsibility for the slaughter. Also even today the old Clachaig Inn at Glen Coe
carries the sign on its door, 'No Campbells'.
The clan system was already dying by the 18th century; it was extraordinary
that this 'tribal' system had survived so long. The clans lived by the sword and perished by the sword, and the last feeble
embers flickered out at the battle of Culloden in 1746.
Even though the clan system has lost the power
it had over the years, people still wear the tartan of their clan, either a tie or a kilt to proclaim their pride in their
ancestry and in a vanished world.