When you think of Scottish 'monsters' you probably think of Nessie, the famous aquatic beast that's supposed to dwell in the depths of Loch Ness, right? But a closer look at the country's history shows that tales of unusual animals and giant fish are far more widespread than you'd think.
As early as 1500, a man called Hutcheon Frizell in Glenconie [Glencoe?] shot at a creature while out hunting. He was on high land when he heard an unusual call, and turning, released an arrow from his bow into the animal that had made it. It squirmed with the pain, and Frizell noticed it on the ground - it had no feet but two fins on either side of its body as it lay among the heather. It also had a tail and 'a terrible head', and his hunting dogs refused to go near it. He was convinced that he had caught a dragon. Frizell's description does bring to mind the characteristics of something the shape of a dolphin, which is known to venture into local shores but there is no explanation as to why it was on high ground or considered unusual enough to have been thought of at the time as a dragon.
Just ten years later, another creature was seen in a loch in Argyll. This time, a knight named Duncan Campbell claimed to have witnessed in 1510 a ‘terrible beast... of the bigness of a greyhound, and footed like a gander. Issuing out of the water early in the morning about midsummer,’ he ‘did very easily and without any force or straining of himself, overthrow huge oaks with his tail, and therewith killed outright three men that hunted him with three strokes of his said tail, the rest of them saving themselves in trees thereabouts, whilst the aforesaid monster returned to the water. Those that are given to the observation of rare and uncouth sights, believe that this beast is never seen but against some great trouble and mischief to come upon the realm of Scotland.’ The identity of the animal is certainly a mystery even today.
Residents living close to Loch Fyne in 1570 also believed the sighting of a 'monster' was an omen of future worrying events. They swore they'd seen a 'monstrous fish' that could stand above the water 'as high as the mast of a ship'. The creature was reported to have had two crowns, one large and one small, on its head. In an age where almost anything unusual was taken as a sign of prophecy, locals insisted that its appearance heralded 'sudden alteration within this realm'. The period was certainly turbulent, with changes of government, the fall of Mary Queen of Scots and religious change in the Scottish kingdom and residents must have feared for what the future might bring.
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| Saunders, Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons |
Ralph Holinshed, the Tudor chronicler, noted in 1577 in the Firth of Forth ‘sundry fishes of a monstrous shape, with cowls hanging over their heads like unto monks, and in the rest resembling the body of man. They show themselves above the water to the navel, howbeit they never appear but against some great pestilence of men or murrain of cattle; wherefore their only sight doth breed great terror to the Scottish nation, who are very great observers of uncouth signs and tokens.’
Another unusual animal was noted in 1635, during the reign of Charles I, in the River Don of Aberdeenshire. It actually seems very similar by its description to that seen by residents in 1577 at the Firth of Forth. 'There was seen in the water of Don a monster-like beast, having the head like to one great mastiff dog or swine, and hands, arms, and paps like to a man. The paps seemed to be white. It had hair on the head, and the hinder parts, seen sometimes above the water, seemed clubbish, short-legged, and short-footed, with one tail. This monster was seen swimming bodily above the water about ten hours in the morning, and continued all day visible, swimming above and below the bridge without any fear. The townspeople came out in great multitudes to see this monster. Some threw stones; some shot guns and pistols; and the salmon-fishers rowed cobles with nets to catch it, but all in vain. It never shrinked nor feared, but would duck under the water, snorting and bullering, terrible to the hearers and beholders. It remained two days, and was seen no more.’ Robert Chambers, writing of events in Scotland's history, offered the explanation that locals here had seen a lost manatee. 'The manatees haunt the mouths of rivers in the hottest parts of the Atlantic Ocean, and it is just possible that a stray individual may have found its way to the coast of Scotland, more especially as it was the summer season', he wrote in 1885. Manatees certainly have facial features that resemble a mastiff dog or even a pig, and as it moved quickly through the water, its fins might have been interpreted as arms from the distance to the shore. It may also have been a manatee that locals also saw in 1577, based on Holinshed's similar account.
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Source: Domestic Annals of Scotland, Robert Chambers. 1885.





