In the 17th century, a humble tenant farmer from the Outer Hebrides claimed to see the future. He saw battles before they happened, deaths before they occurred, and the fate of Scotland’s most powerful clan centuries before it unfolded. Then he prophesied his own death — and was immediately killed to prevent him saying more.

The Stone in the Eye
Coinneach Odhar Fiosaiche — Kenneth the Dun Seer — was not a king, a priest, or a scholar. He was an ordinary man who, according to Highland tradition, received an extraordinary gift.
Legend says he found a small stone with a hole through it lying in a field. When he looked through it, he could see things no one else could — distant events, coming deaths, the fate of men and clans not yet born.
He became the most famous seer in Scottish Highland history. His prophecies spread across the glens and into the drawing rooms of the powerful. Some say his gift was a blessing. Those who knew him best understood it was also a curse.
The Prophecies That Came True
The Brahan Seer’s most famous predictions are unsettling in their accuracy.
He foretold that “the day will come when full-rigged ships will be seen sailing east and west by the back of Tomnahurich Hill.” This seemed impossible — Tomnahurich Hill sits miles inland, near Inverness. Then the Caledonian Canal was built in the 19th century, and ships began sailing exactly where he described.
He predicted that “when there are five bridges over the River Ness, the world will be in turmoil.” The fifth bridge was completed in 1939 — the same year the Second World War began.
He warned that the ancient lands of the great Highland clans would be broken up and sold to strangers. The Highland Clearances, which drove thousands from their homes across the following centuries, fulfilled this in ways even he may not have imagined.
The Prophecy That Sealed His Fate
The Brahan Seer’s death came from a single act of honesty that cost him everything.
Isabella, Countess of Seaforth, summoned him to Brahan Castle. Her husband, the Earl of Seaforth, had been away in Paris for a long time. She demanded to know his whereabouts and his wellbeing.
The Seer was reluctant to answer. When pressed, he revealed what he saw — the Earl was in Paris, in good health, but not alone. He was in the company of a fine French lady, and showed no signs of hurrying home.
The Countess was furious. She accused him of slander and condemned him to death. According to tradition, he was burned alive at Chanonry Point on the Black Isle, not far from Fortrose, in a barrel of tar.
Before he died, he threw his seeing stone into Loch Ussie and delivered one final prophecy — the doom of the Clan MacKenzie itself.
The Last Seaforth Prophecy
His dying words described the end of the Seaforth MacKenzies in precise detail. He said the last chief of the line would be deaf, would outlive his four sons, and would see his lands pass to strangers. He named the characteristics of the four lairds who would precede the end.
More than a century later, it came true.
Francis Humberston Mackenzie, the last Earl of Seaforth, lost his hearing after a childhood illness. His four sons all died before him. When he passed away in 1815, the Seaforth line ended exactly as foretold, and the estates were broken up. Those who knew the prophecy recognised every detail as it unfolded.
It remains one of the most documented cases of Highland second sight in Scottish history. You can read about Scotland’s other great castle curses to understand how deeply this tradition runs in Highland culture.
Chanonry Point Today
A memorial stone stands at Chanonry Point on the Black Isle, marking the spot where the Brahan Seer is said to have been executed. It is a quiet, windswept place on the Moray Firth, more likely these days to attract dolphin-watchers than history seekers.
But locals know what happened here. They point to the stone. They tell the story.
The tradition of second sight — An Dà Shealladh, meaning “the two sights” — is still spoken of in parts of the Highlands and Islands. It refers to an involuntary ability to see things that have not yet happened, or events unfolding far away. It is not celebrated. It is not welcomed. It is simply something some people have, and most would rather not.
The Brahan Seer is the most famous example. He saw clearly, spoke truthfully, and died for it.
If you want to understand the deeper currents of Highland history, a journey through Scotland’s ancestral heartland will take you past the places where these stories were born.
Stand at Chanonry Point on a grey afternoon, with the firth stretching out before you and the Black Isle at your back, and you will understand why the Highlands produce these stories. There is something in the light here — low, shifting, ancient — that makes the past feel very close.
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