[691] The Charter is printed in full in the Reliquiæ Antiquæ Scoticæ, No. xxxv. p. 150.
[692] Rev. Æneas M'Donell Dawson.
[693] Archæologia, vol. xxii. Plate XXXIII.
[694] I have ventured on two slight alterations of Sir Walter Scott's reading of the original inscription, which seem indispensable for making sense of it. What he calls "the puzzling letters Hr," there can be little doubt is the Celtic Hi, or island. The concluding words of the first part, which Sir Walter renders illdra. ipa, and then extends to illorum opera, somewhat to the confusion both of derivation and grammar, become by the simple substitution of an e for an r—letters nearly similar in the old Gothic character—ill. dea. ipa, fully admitting of the rendering above suggested. Not having seen the cup myself, I must leave the date for determination by some future observer; but from the character of the lettering it is probable that it will prove at least a century later, the ix. being more likely an m, which would assign it to the memorable year in which Malcolm, Margaret, and Edgar died. Vide note E., Lord of the Isles.
[695] Fountainhall's Historical Notices, Bann. Club, vol. ii. p. 498.
[696] Archæol. Journ., vol. iii. p. 361.
[697] Journal of the Archæological Association, vol. iv. p. 403.
[698] Archæological Journal, vol. vii. p. 81. Vide also vol. vi. p. 189.
[699] This quaint version of an old popular error forms the crest of more than one Scottish family, but there is no indication of its being introduced on the mazer as a heraldic device, or symbolic reference to its original owner.
[700] Archæologia, vol. xxxi. p. 437.