A Scottish raid on Skye in 1262…
1263 CE
A Scottish raid on Skye in 1262 provokes a response: Haakon launches a fleet of one hundred ships towards Largs, Scotland, in the summer of the following year, retaking the islands with his formidable fleet of free farmers, and launching some forays also onto the Scottish mainland.
The storms around the coast of Scotland take their toll, however, on the Norwegian fleet, which at one point means dragging forty ships overland to Loch Lomond.
The Scottish monarch negotiates, dragging the talks out until the fall, when autumn storms anticipated by the wily Alexander batter and destroy enough Norse ships that their capacity for a sea battle is insufficient; a small skirmish near Largs in the Firth of Clyde proves indecisive: the Norwegians and their Manx allies under Magnus III of the Isle of Man fail to achieve anything more than a minor tactical victory against the Scots led by Alexander Stewart.
The bad weather after the battle forces the Norwegian-Manx fleet to sail back to Orkney.