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・ Battle of the Network Stars
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・ Battle of the Neva (1708)
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・ Battle of the Nile (47 BC)
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・ Battle of the North
・ Battle of the North (cricket match)
・ Battle of the North Cape
・ Battle of the North Foreland
・ Battle of the North Fork of the Red River
Battle of the North Inch
・ Battle of the Notch
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Battle of the North Inch : ウィキペディア英語版
Battle of the North Inch

The Battle of the North Inch (also known as the Battle of the Clans)〔 was a staged battle between the Chattan Confederation and the "Clan Kay" in September 1396. 30 men were selected to represent each side in front of spectators that included King Robert III of Scotland and his court, on land that is now the North Inch park in Perth, Scotland.
The Chattan Confederation killed all but one of their opponents at a cost of 19 deaths on their own side, and were awarded the victory. It is not clear who they were fighting: it may have been their traditional enemies Clan Cameron〔(Battle at the North Inch of Perth )〕 or it may have been Clan Davidson, in an internal dispute for precedence in the Chattan line of battle in future campaigns against the Camerons.
== Background ==
According to historian Alexander Mackintosh Shaw, Clan Chattan was composed of MacKintoshes, MacPhersons, Davidsons, MacGillivrays and Macbeans, while Marshall's ''History of Perth'' states that "it is generally accepted that the Clan Chattan were the MacKintoshes, but, as always happens with the unfortunate, no sept or clan is willing to claim kindred with the Clan Kay".〔Sir Walter Scott, in his novel ''The Fair Maid of Perth'', states that the clan opposing the Chattans was Clan Kay (or ''Quhele'').〕 Some historians identify Clan Kay with Clan Cameron, whose feud with the Chattans would last 360 years.
More recent historians, however, have suggested that the battle was an internal dispute between two clans from within Clan Chattan over who should take precedence in order of battle. This dispute had almost given the Camerons victory at the Battle of Invernahavon (1370 or 1386).
At the King's insistence, David Lindsay, 1st Earl of Crawford and Dunbar, had attempted to get the two feuding clans to settle their differences amicably. This failed, however, which led the two chiefs to put forth the notion of a trial by combat between members of the two parties, with the monarch awarding honours to the victors and a pardon to the defeated.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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