1721 in Scotland
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Events from the year 1721 in Scotland.
See also:List of years in Scotland
Timeline of Scottish history
1721 in: Great Britain ⢠Wales ⢠Elsewhere
Timeline of Scottish history
1721 in: Great Britain ⢠Wales ⢠Elsewhere
Incumbents
Law officers
- Lord Advocate â Robert Dundas[2]
- Solicitor General for Scotland â Walter Stewart; then John Sinclair and Charles Binning
Judiciary
- Lord President of the Court of Session â Lord North Berwick
- Lord Justice General â Lord Ilay (also this year appointed Keeper of the Privy Seal of Scotland)
- Lord Justice Clerk â Lord Grange
Events
- Battle of Glen Affric: Men of the Jacobite Clan Mackenzie and Clan Macrae ambush men of the pro-Hanoverian Clan Ross led by William Ross, 6th of Easter Fearn (who is fatally wounded) when he attempts to collect rents (forfeit to the crown) on the Mackenzie estates.
- Battle of Coille Bhan: British Army troops of Colonel Kirk's Regiment under Captain McNeill drive off an attack from the Clan Mackenzie but again fail to collect rents on their estates.
- Ruthven Barracks completed.
- Chandos Chair of Medicine and Anatomy established at the University of St Andrews.
- Robert Wodrow publishes The History of the Sufferings of the Church of Scotland.
Births
- 21 January â James Murray, military officer and colonial administrator (died 1794)[3]
- 5 March â John Adam, architect (died 1792)[4]
- 19 March (baptized) â Tobias Smollett, novelist (died 1771 in Tuscany)[5]
- 24 June â Francis Garden, Lord Gardenstone, judge (died 1793)[6]
- 14 July â John Douglas, Anglican bishop of Salisbury and man of letters (died 1807 in England)[7]
- 19 September â William Robertson, historian and Principal of the University of Edinburgh (died 1793)[8]
- 3 October â John Skinner, Episcopalian minister, historian, poet and songwriter (died 1807)[9]
- 5 October â William Wilkie, Presbyterian minister, natural philosopher and poet (died 1772)[10]
- 6 December â James Elphinston, philologist (died 1809 in England)[11]
- Earliest likely date â James Grainger, physician, poet and translator (died 1766 in the West Indies)[12]
Deaths
- 14 January â William Johnstone, 1st Marquess of Annandale (born 1664)
- 13 December â Alexander Selkirk, sailor and castaway (born 1676; died at sea)
