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A32776 A second edition of Camden's description of Scotland containing a supplement of these peers, or Lords of Parliament, who were mentioned in the first edition, and an account of these since raised to, and further advanced in the degrees of peerage, until the year 1694.; Britannia. English. Selections Camden, William, 1551-1623.; Dalrymple, James, Sir, fl. 1714. 1695 (1695) Wing C376; ESTC R4896 99,150 213

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very fair House of the Kings a goodly Church and a fishful Lake of which Lake it may seem to have assumed that Name For Lin in the British Tongue soundeth as much as a Lake A Sheriff it had in times past by inheritance out of the Family of the Hamiltons of Peyle and now in our days it hath for the first Earl Sir Alexander Livingston whom King James the sixth raised from the Dignity of a Baron wherein his Ancestors had flourished a long time to the Honour of an Earl In the same Shire is situat Livingstoun the Peyle of Livingstoun which was burnt by Oliver Cromwell and did antiently belong to the Family of Livingston who from the seat and sirname were first designed Lairds of Livingstoun And afterward Callender of that Ilk being Forfaulted for adhering to the Baliol. A Daughter of that Family was married to Livingstoun who by Right of Blood and Grant from King Robert the Bruce obtained the Lands and Barony of Callender whose Successor Sir Alexander Livingston of Callender was great Counsellor to King James the first and by him appointed Governour to King James the second himself or his Heir was created Lord Livingstoun Alexander Lord Livingstoun about the year 1603 was by King James the sixth created Earl of Linlithgow and was one of the Commissioners for the Union 1604. George Earl of Linlithgow great Grand child to the first Earl doth presently enjoy the Dignity and is one of the Commissioners of the Thesaury Near to Livingstoun is the Castle of Calder which antiently belonged to the Family of Sandilands in the Reign of Queen Mary 1563 Sir James Sandilands being Preceptor of Torphichen and Lord of St. John was created Lord Torphichen whose Successor Walter Lord Torphichen doth enjoy the Title The Sheriffdom of Linlithgow being annexed to the Barony of Abercorn it doth belong to Charles Hope of Hoptoun who doth inherit the Barony and Sheriffship CHAP. VIII SELGOVAE BEneath the Gadeni toward the South and West where now are the small Territories of Liddesdale Eusdale Eskdale Annandale and Nidesdale so called of little Rivers running through them which all lose themselves in Solway Firth dwelt in antient times the Selgovae the Reliques of whose name seemed to the Author to remain in that name Solway In Lidesdale there riseth aloft Armitage so called because it was in times past dedicated to a solitary life of old a very strong Castle which belonged to the Hepburns who draw their Original from a certain Englishman a prisoner whom the Earl of Merch for delivering him out of a danger greatly enriched These were Earls of Bothwell in Clydsdale and a long time by the right of inheritance Admirals of Scotland But by a Sister of James Earl of Bothwell the last of the Hepburns married unto John Prior of Coldinghame base Son to King James the fifth who begat many Bastards the Title Inheritance both came unto his Son now extinct Hard by is Branksholm the Habitation of the warlike Family of Buckcleugh surnamed Scot of whom already in Teviotdale or the Shire of Roxburgh where Branksholm is situat beside many little Piles or Forts of military Men every where In Eusdale one would deem by the affinity of the Name that old Vzellum mentioned by Ptolomy stood by the River Euse. In Eskdale some are of Opinion that the Horesti dwelt into whose Borders Julius Agricola when he had subdued the Britains inhabiting this Tract brought the Roman Army especially if we read Horesci insteed of Horesti For Ar-Esc in the British Tongue betokeneth a Place by the River Eske The Author hath disjoyned this Chapter too far from the Description of Teviotdale but gives an Entry to treat of Annandale CHAP. IX ANNANDALE UNto this on the West side adjoyneth Annandale that is The Vale by the River Annan into which the Access by Land is very difficult The Places of greater note herein are these a Castle and Town by Lough-Maban three parts whereof are environed with Water and strongly walled and the Town Annan at the very mouth almost of the River Annan which lost all the Glory and Beauty it had by the English War in the Reign of Edward the sixth In this Territory the Johnstons are Men of greatest Name a Kindred even bred to War between whom and the Maxwels there hath been professed an open Enmity over long even to deadly Feud and Blood-shed which Maxwels by Right from their Ancestors had the Rule of this Seneschalsie or Stewartrie for so it is accounted This Vale Edgar King of Scots after he was restored to his Kingdom by auxiliary Forces out of England gave in Consideration and Reward of good Service unto Robert Bruse or Brus Lord of Cliveland in York-shire who with the good favour of the King bestowed it upon Robert his younger Son when himself would not serve the King of Scots in his Wars From him flowered the Bruses Lords of Annandale of whom Robert Brus married Isobel the Daughter of William King of Scots by the Daughter of Robert Avenal His Son likewise Robert the third of that Name wedded the Daughter of David Earl of Huntington and of Garioch whose Son Robert surnamed The Noble when the Issue of Alexander the third King of Scots failed challenged in his Mothers Right the Kingdom of Scotland before Edward the first King of England as the direct and superiour Lord of the Kingdom of Scotland so the English give it out or an honourable Arbitrator for so say the Scots as being nearer in proximity in Degree and Bloud to King Alexander the third and Margaret Daughter to the King of Norway although he was the Son by a second Sister who soon after resigning up his own Right granted and gave over to his Son Robert Brus Earl of Carrick to his Heirs the Author alledges this out of the very Original all the Right and Claim which he had or might have to the Kingdom of Scotland But the Action and Suit went with John Balliol who sued for his Right as descended of the eldest Sister although in a degree farther off and Sentence was given in these words For that the Person more remote in the second Degree descending in the first Line is to be preferred before a nearer in a second Line in the succession of an Inheritance that cannot be parted Howbeit the said Robert Son to the Earl of Carrick by his own vertue at length recovered the Kingdom unto himself and established it to his Posterity A Prince who as he flourished notably in regard of the glorious Ornaments of his Noble Acts so he triumphed as happily with invincible Fortitude Courage over Fortune that so often crossed him Sir Richard Murray of Cock-pool Baronet was first created Viscount of Annan is so designed in the year 1623 and thereafter in the 1624 was by King James the sixth created Earl of Annandale The Laird of Johnstoun was created Lord
Charles the First and afterward Earl of Belcarras by King Charles the Second when in Scotland his Son is Colin Earl of Belcarras The Viscount Fentoun of whom before was created by King James the Sixth about the year 1617 Earl of Kelly and is in the Rolls of Parliament 1621 next after the Earl of Roxburgh and before Buckcleugh whose Successor is Alexander Earl of Kelly Sir John Living stoun of Kinnaird Baronet was by K. Charles the First made Lord Newburgh and Earl of Newburgh by King Charles the Second whose Male Successor is deceased lately in England without Issue Male. Sandilands Laird of St. Minnans was by King Charles the First advanced to the Title of L. Abercromby in the year 1648 whose Honour is not now claimed by any Lieutenant General David Lesly Son to the Lord Lindoris was created by King Charles the Second Lord New-warkî he had been Lieutenant General to the Scots Army and at Philiphaugh surprised and defeat the Marquess of Montross he was General of the Army at Dumbar and Worcester his Son being deceased without Heirs Male the Grand child is married to Mr. Alexander Anstruther a younger Son of Sir Philip Anstruther of that Ilk. Beside the Burghs Royal mentioned in this Shire there are also others viz. Innerkeithing Kirkaldy Anstruther Easter and Wester Pitttenweem Crail and Kilrenny all lying on Forth from the West to the East CHAP. XXI STRATHERN AS far as to the River Tau which Boundeth Fife on the North-side Julius Agricola the best Proprietar of Brittain under Domitian the worst Emperour marched with victorious Armies in the third year of his warlike Expeditions having wasted and spoiled the Nations hitherto Near the out-let of Tau the notable River Ern intermingleth his Waters with Tau which River beginning out of a Lake or Loch of the same name bestoweth his own name upon the Country through which he runneth for it is called Strathern which in the ancient Tongue of the Brittains signifieth the Vale along Ern. The Bank of this Ern is beautified with Drymein Castle belonging to the Family of the Barons of Drummond advanced to highest Honours ever since that King Robert Stewart the third took to him a Wife out of that Linage for the Women of this Race have for their singular Beauty and well favoured sweet Countenance won the prize from all others insomuch as they have been the Kings most amiable Paramours Baron Drummonds Successor was created by King James the Sixth Earl of Perth about the year 1605 and so designed from the head Burgh of the Shire of whom is descended James now Earl of Perth his great Grand-child who was an extraordinar Lord of the Session Justice General and Chancellor to K. Ch. the 2d K. Ja. the 7th James a Son of this Family was created by K. Ia. the 6th Lord Maderty and is in the Rolls of Parliament 1617 after the Lord Garlies and before the Lord Kintail whose Successors second Son L. General William Drummond was by King James the Seventh about the year 1686 created Viscount of Strathallan to whom his Son William now Viscount of Strathallan succeeded and also is Heir to his Uncle the Lord Maderty Upon the same Bank Tullibardine Castle sheweth it self aloft but with greater jollity since that by the propitious favour of King James the Sixth Sir John Murray created Baron of Tullibardine before the Lords Colvil and Scoon was raised to the Honour and Estate of Earl of Tullibardine anno 1606. By an unprinted Act anno 1612 there is a Ratification to the Master of Tullibardine of the Lands of the Earldom of Athol who was the Earl of Tullibardines eldest Son Earls eldest Sons at that time being designed Masters and not Lords this Master afterward William Earl of Tullibardine having married the Heiress of Stuart Earl of Athol his Son John succeeded to the Dignity of Earl of Athol and his Uncle Sir Patrick Murray by Resignation became Earl of Tullibardine whose Son James Earl of Tullibardine dying without Issue his Estate and Dignity fell to his Cousin Iohn Earl of Athol Son to the Earl of Athol before named who liveth and was to King Charles the Second Lord Justice General and thereafter Lord Privy Seal and extraordinar Lord of the Session and before the year 1677 created Marquess of Athol he retains the sirname of Murray and carries the Arms of Stuart Earl of Athol quartered Upon the other Bank more beneath Duplin Castle sometime the Habitation of the Barons Oliphant reporteth yet what an overthrow the like to which was never before the English men that came to aid King Edward Balliol gave there unto the Scots insomuch as the English Writers in that time do write that they won this Victory not by mans hand but by the power of God and the Scottish Writers relate how that out of the Family of the Lindseys there were slain in the Field fourscore persons and that the name of Hays had been quite extinguished but that the chief of that House left his Wife behind him great with Child The Precedency of Oliphant is transmitted to Dowglass Lord Mordingtoun as Heir of Line of whom before and Charles Lord Oliphant residing in the Shire of Bamff as Heir-male doth also claim the Precedency The Lands of Duplin were purchased by Sir George Hay of Kinfauns a Lord of the Session and Clerk of Register and thereafter in the year 1622 made Lord Chancellor September 25 1629 George Viscount Dupline is one of the Commissioners for holding of the Parliament in a Roll of the Nobility about that time he is ranked last Viscount after the Viscount of Drumlanrig and in anno 1632 created by King Charles the First Earl of Kinnoul to whom he continued Chancellor till his death and was succeeded by John Spotswood Arch-Bishop of St. Andrews the Earl of Kinnoul his Successor resides in England Not far from it standeth Innermeth well known by reason of the Lords thereof the Stuarts out of the Family of Lorn this Dignity at present is claimed by none Inch Chafra that is in the old Scottish tongue the Isle of Masses hereby may be remembered when as it was a most famous Abbey of the Order of Saint Augustine founded by Gilbert Earl of Strathern about the year 1200. When Ern hath joined this Water with Tau in one Stream so that Tau is now become more spacious he looketh up to Abernethy seated upon his Bank the Royal Seat in old time of the Picts and a well peopled City which as we read in an ancient Fragment Nectane King of the Picts gave unto God and St. Brigid until the day of Doom together with the bounds thereof which ly from a stone in Abertrent unto a stone near to Carfull that is Loghfoll and from thence as far as to Ethan But long after it became the possession of the Dowglasses Earls of Angus who are called Lords of Abernethy
hand until they be come thither at length in the dark Night where they would be When they have laid hold of a Bootie back again they return home likewise by Night through blind ways only and fetching many a compasse about The more skillful any Leader or Guide is to pass through those wild Desarts crooked turnings and steep Down-falls in the thickest Mists and deepest Darkness he is held in greater Reputation as one of an excellent Wit And so Crafty and Wily these are that seldom or never they forgo their Booty and suffer it to be taken out of their hands unless it happen otherwhiles that they be caught by their Adversaries following continually after and tracting them directly by their footing according as quick-senting Slugh-hounds do lead them But say they be taken so fair spoken they are and eloquent so many sugared words they have at will sweetly to plead for them that they are able to move the Judges and Adversaries both be they never so Austere and Severe if not to Mercy yet to Admiration and some Commiseration withal CHAP. XI NOVANTES GALLOWAY FRom Nithsdale as you go on west-ward the Novantes inhabited in the Vales all that Tract which runneth out far and wide toward the West between the Sea and Dunbritain Frith or Clyd-forth yet so indented and hollowed with Nooks and Creeks that here and there it is drawn into a narrow Room and then again in the very utmost Skirt it openeth and spreadeth it self abroad at more Liberty whereupon some have called it the Chersonesus that is The Biland of the Novantes But at this day their Countrey containeth Galloway Carrick Kyle and Cunninghame Galloway in the Latine Writers of the middle time Gaelwallia and Galovidia so called of the Irish who in times past dwelt there and term themselves short in their own Language Gael is a Countrey rising up every where with Hills that are better for feeding of Cattel than bearing of Corn the Inhabitants practise Fishing as well within the Sea lying round about them as in little Rivers and the Loches or Myres in every place standing full of Water at the foot of the Hills out of which in September they take in Weels and Weer-nets an incredible Number of most sweet and savourie Eels whereby they make no less gain than others do by their little Naggs which for being well Limmed fast knit and strongly made to endure Travail are most in request and bought from hence Among these the first place that offereth it self by the River Dea mentioned in Ptolomy which keeping the Name still full and whole they call d ee is Kirkcudbright the most commodious Port of this Coast and the second Stwartrie of Scotland which belongs Heretably to the Earls of Nithsdale The Family of Mcclellan of Bomby was dignifyed by King Charles the first about the year 1633 with the Title of Lord Kirkcudbright but at present no person claims that Dignity Then Cardines a Fort set upon a craggie and high Rock by the River Fleet and fenced with strong Walls Near unto it the River Ken corruptly read in Ptolomy Jena runneth into the Sea On this River standeth Kenmore from which Alexander Gordon now Viscount of Kenmore is designed whose Predecessor was dignified with that Title by King Charles the first before the year 1633 descended from an antient Family of the Gordons of Stitchel near Kelso and Lochinvar in this Stewartrie near to Kenmore is New-Galloway a Burgh Royal. After it is Wigton an Haven Town with a narrow Entrance unto it between the two Rivers Bluidnoo and Crea which also is counted a Sheriffdom over which Sir Andrew Agnew of Lochna● Baronet is Heretable Sheriff and a Member for that Shire to this current Parliament In times past it had for Lord Archibald Douglas renowned in the French War and by the Favour of King James the Sixth John Lord Fleming of Cummernald who deriveth his Pedegree from the antient Earls of Wigton was created Earl of Wigton whose Posterity doth still enjoy that Honour Near unto this Ptolomy placed the City Leucopibia which I know not to say truth where to seek Yet that place requireth that it should be that Episcopal Seat of Ninian which Bede calleth Candida Casa and the English and Scots in the very same sense Whithern What say you then if Ptolomy after his manner translated that Name in Greek 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 〈◊〉 that is White-houses in stead whereof the Transcribers have thrust upon us Leucopibia which the Brittains termed Candida Casa In this place Ninia or Ninian the Brittain an holy Man the first that instructed the South-Picts in Christian Faith in the Reign of the Emperor Theodosius the younger had his Seat and built a Church consecrated to the Memory of Saint Martin after a manner unusual among the Brittains as Bede saith who wrote that the English in his time held this Countrey and when the Number of the faithful Christians multiplied an Episcopal See was erected at this Candida Casa A little higher there is a Bi-land having the Sea insinuating it self on both sides with two Bayes The Loch of Lucé on the South toward Whit-hern and Loch-rian to the North designed Abravanus which being set a little out of his own place is so called of Ptolomy for Aber-Ruanus that is The mouth of Ruan For at this day that River is named Rian and the Lake out of which it floweth Loch-Rian exceeding full of Herrings Stone-fishes On this Lake standeth Stranrawer a Burgh-Royal the Promontory or point by which it entereth into the sea is called the point of Corsehill stretching to Cantyre and on the other side is Port-Patrick a known Sea-port opposite to Donaghadee in Ireland from thence running southward to the point of the Mule The land betwixt the two points of Corsehill and the Mule is called the Rinnes of Galloway perhaps because the points run out narrow a great length into the sea and are twenty four Miles distant And to the south of Lochrian is another Bay called the Loch or Bay of Luce running betwixt the points of the Mule and Whitehern opposite to the Isle of Man the neck of land interjected betwixt the Lakes joining the Rinnes to the main-Main-land is six mile broad and near to the midst whereof in a little rising ground standeth the Castle of the Inch among the Lakes on this Bay is the Vale or Glen of Luce where there was an Abbey founded by Rolland Lord of Galloway father to Allan confirmed by the King with a Regality whereof the Viscount of Stair is hereditary Baillie This Galloway had in times past Princes and Lords over it of whom the first recorded in Chronicles was Fergus in the Reign of Henry the first King of England who gave for his Arms A Lyon rampant Arg Crowned Or in a Shield Azur who after many troubles that he had stirred was driven to this
exigent by King Malcolm that he gave his Son Vcthred to the King for an Hostage and himself weary of this world took the Habit of a Chanon at Holy-rud-house in Edinburgh As for Vcthred Gilbert his younger Brother took him Prisoner in Battel and when he had cut out his Tongue and plucked his Eyes forth of his Head he cruelly bereaved him both of Life and Inheritance But within some few years when Gilbert was dead Vcthreds Son recovered his fathers Inheritance who of a Sister of William Morvill Constable of Scotland begat Allan Lord of Galloway and Constable of Scotland This Allan by Margaret the eldest Daughter of David Earl of Huntingtoun had Dervolgilda wife to John Balliol and the Mother of John Balliol King of Scotland who contended with Robert Brus for the Kingdom of Scotland and by a former Wife as it seemeth he had Helen married to Roger Quincy Earl of Winchester who thereby was Constable of Scotland like as William Ferrars of Groby the Nephew of the said Roger by a Daughter and one of the Heirs But these Englishmen soon lost their Inheritance in Scotland as also the Dignity of Constably which the Cummins Earls of Buchan descended likewise from a Daughter of Roger Quincy obtained until it was translated unto the Earls of Errol But the Title of the Lords of Galloway fell afterward to the Family of the Dowglasses And now the Title of Earl of Galloway belongeth to the Family of Stuarts of Garleis an antient Family of the name of Stuart which being first dignified by King James the Sixth about the year 1609 with the Title of Lord of Garleis is marked in the Rolls of Parliament after the Lord Haly-rood-house and before the Lords Cowper Maitherty Kintail and Cranstoun he was also created by the same King about the year 1622 Earl of Galloway and is ranked in the Rolls of Parliament next after the Earl of Haddingtoun and James now Earl of Galloway is the fifth Earl and Great Grand-child of the first CHAP. XII CARRICTA CARRICK NOw followeth Carrick upon Dumbritain Frith lying on the East-side of Loch-Rian opposite to the Corse-hill fair to be seen with fresh Pastures supplyed both by Land and Sea with Commodities abundantly In this Province Ptolomy placed Rerigonium a Creek and Rerigonium a Town For which Berigonium is read in a very antient Copy of Ptolomy printed at Rome in the year 1480 so that we cannot but verily think it was that which now is called Bargeny A Lord it hath out of the Family of the Kennedies which came forth of Ireland in the Reign of Robert Brus and is in this Tract of high Birth spread into many Branches and of great power The Chief of which Linage is the Earl of Cassils for this is the Name of a Castle wherein he dwelleth by the River Dun Upon the Bank whereof he hath also another Castle Named Dunnure his Predecessor was first designed of Dunnure and being married to Mary Stuart lawful daughter to King Robert the Third whose Successor was first created Lord Kennedy and thereafter Earl of Cassils and John now Earl of Cassils is one of the Commissioners of the Thesaury An ancient Family of the Kennedies did possess the forementioned Lands of Bargeny which were purchased from them by Sir John Hamilton Son to John Marquess of Hamilton whose Son Sir John was created Lord Bargeny by King Charles the First Anno 1639 his Grand-child is William Lord Bargeny The Earl of Cassils is the hereditary Bailiff of this Countrey For this Carrick together with Kyle and Cunninghame are counted the three Bailleries of Scotland because they that govern these with an ordinary Power and Jurisdiction are called Bailliffs by a Term that came up in the middle times and among the Greeks Sicilians and French men signifieth a Conservator or Protector But in the Age aforegoing Carrick had Earls for to say nothing of Gilbert of Galloway's Son unto whom King of William gave all Carrict to be possessed for ever we read that Adam of Kilconcath was about the year 1270. Earl of Carrick and died serving in the Holy-land whose only Daughter Martha fell extremely in love with Robert Bruce a beautiful young Gentleman as she saw him hunting and thereupon made him her Husband advanced him with the Title of Earl and with Possessions unto whom she bare Robert Bruce that most renowned King of Scots from whom the royal Line of the Kings is descended But the Title of the Earl of Carrick being left for a time to the younger Sons of the Family of Bruce afterwards among other honours encreased the Stile of the Princes of Scotland The Title of the Lord Kincleven in Perth-Shire was conferred by King James the Sixth Anno 1607. and Earl of Carrick by King Charles the First upon John Stuart brother to Patrick Stuart last Earl of Orkney descended of King James the Fifth by a natural Son which is now Extinct CHAP. XIII KYLE MOre inward toward Clyds-forth followeth Kyle plentiful in all things and as well inhabited In Bedes Auctarium it is called Campus Cyel that is The Field Cyel and Coil where it is recorded That Eadbert King of Northumberland annexed this with other Territories unto his own Kingdom In Ptolomy's time there was known a place here named Vidogara happily Air which is a Sheriffdom hath a Town also of Merchandise and a well known Port by a River of the same name This Country lyeth between the River of Dune bordering Carrick and the River of Irwine northward bordering Cunninghame and is divided in Kings-Kyle under the Jurisdiction of the Sheriff which lyeth betwixt Dune on the South and West and the Rivers of Air and Lougar running into Air on the North and East including also the Paroch of Achinleck on the other side of Lougar and Kyle-stewart containing the rest of the Country northward to the River of Irwine which belonged anciently to the Stuarts of Scotland since to the Prince the Kings eldest Son The Wallaces Lairds of Craiggie were heretable Stuarts but now both Sheriffship and Stewartry being at the Kings disposal are granted to one person which Rivers hath many little Villages scattered along their Banks Upon Lougar standeth Vchiltrie sometime the Seat of the Stuarts of the Blood-Royal as who issued from the Dukes of Albanie and were created Lords of Vchiltrie which Title is now failed out of which House was that noble Robert Stuart who kept continually with the Prince of Condie as an inseparable Companion and was slain in Battle with him in France Near to this place to the westward on the River Air in Kings-kyle is situat Stair the Inheritance of Sir James Dalrymple Knight and Barronet who being learned in the Laws was admitted an ordinar Lord of Session in the first nomination and settlement of the Judicatory by King Charles the Second after his Restauration anno 1661 and President anno 1671. And
day Arran of a Castle bearing the same name Inwardly it mounteth up altogether with high rising hills at the bottom and foot whereof along the Shore it is well inhabited The first Earl hereof that I can read of was Thomas eldest Son to Robert Boyd whose Wife and Earldom together when Boyd was banished the Realm James Lord Hamilton as I said before obtained and his Posterity enjoyed the same Earldom saving that Sir James Stuart appointed Guardian to James Hamilton Earl of Arran when he was so defective in understanding that he could not manage his Estate took this Title in the right of being Guardian Near unto this standeth Bute so called of a little Religious Cell which Brendanus founded for so is a little religious Cell tearmed in the Scottish Tongue In this Island is Rothsay Town and Castle which giveth the Title of Dukedom unto the King of Scots eldest Son who is born Prince of Scotland Duke of Rothsay and Seneschal of Scotland since the time that King Robert the third invested Robert his eldest Son Duke of Rothsay the first in Scotland that ever was created Duke With which Title also Queen Mary honoured Henry Lord Darnly before she took him to be her Husband Then shew themselves Hellan sometimes called Hellan Leneow that is as Iohn Fordon interpreteth it The Saints Islands and Helen Tinoc that is The Swines Island with a great number of other Islands of less Note and Reckoning in the same Forth These Islands are erected in a Sheriffdom and Sir James Stuart of Bute descended of a Son of King Robert the second is Heretable Sheriff thereof CHAP. XVI DAMNII CLYDSDALE c. BEyond the Novantes more inward by the River Glotta or Clyd and farther still even to the very East-Sea dwelt in times past the Damnii in those Countries if I have any Judgment for in things so far remote from our Remembrance and in so thick a Mist of Obscurity who can speak of Certainty which are now called Clydsdale the Barony of Renfrew Lennox Stirlingshire Monteith and Fife Near unto the head of Clyde in Crawford Moor among the wild Wastes certain Husband men of the countrey after great store of violent Rain happened to find certain small Pieces like scrapings of Gold which gave great hope of much Riches since that Sir Beamis Bulmer undertook with great endeavour to find out here a Mine of gold near to which place are the Lead-mines belonging to the Laird of Hoptoun The Castle of Crawford together with the Title of the Earl of Crawford was by Robert the Second King of Scots given unto Sir James Lindsey who by a single Combate performed with Baron Welles an English man won high Commendation for his Valour These Lindseys have deserved passing well of their Country and are of ancient Nobility ever since that Sir William Lindsey married one of the Heirs of William of Lancaster Lord of Kandale in England whose Neice in the third Degree of lineal Descent was married unto the most honourable Family of Coucy in France The Dignity of the Earl of Crawford was conveyed to the Lord Lindsey of whom hereafter Clyde after he hath from his Spring-head with much strugling got out northward by Baron Somervels house called Carnwath which being purchased by the Family of Dalziel also residing in Clyds-dale was by King Charles the First created Lord Dalziel who is ranked the last Lord in the Rolls of Parliament 1633 and thereafter Earl of Carnwath whose Grand-child is John Earl of Carnwath No person at present claims the Dignity of Lord Somervel The last Lords marked in the Rolls of Parliament 1633 are Cranstoun Deskford Melvil Carnegy Ramsey Naper Cameron Newburgh Weyms Ashtoun of Forfar Rae Dalziel And thereafter out of the West falleth in the River Duglasse or Douglasse so called of a blackish or greenish water that it hath which River communicateth his name both to the Vale through which he runneth called Douglasdale and also to Douglasse Castle therein which name that Castle likewise hath imparted unto the Family of the Dowglasses which I assure you is very ancient but most famous ever since that Sir Iames Dowglas stuck very close at all times as a most fast friend unto King Robert Bruce and was ready always with singular Courage Resolution and Wisdom to assist him claiming the Kingdom in most troublesome and dangerous times and whom the said King Robert charged at his death to carry his Heart to Jerusalem that he might be discharged of his Vow made to go to the Holy-land in memorial whereof the Dowglasses have inserted in their Coat of Arms a mans Heart from which time this Family grew up to that power and greatness and namely after that King David the Second had created William Earl of Dowglass that they after a sort awed the Kings themselves For at one time well near there were six Earls of them namely of this Dowglass of Angus of Ormund of Wigton of Murray and of Morton among whom the Earl of Wigton through his martial Prowesse and desert obtained at the hands of Charles the Seventh King of France the Title of Duke of Tourain and left the same to six Earls of Dowglasse his Heirs after him The Earl of Dowglass being forefeited by King James the Second the Earl of Angus got the Castle and Countrey of Dowglasse whose Heir William Earl of Angus was created Marquess of Dowglasse by King Charles the First in the year 1633 whose Grand-child is James Marquess of Dowglass Concerning the Lives and Actions of this Family see the History written by Godscroft In this place of Clyds-dale is the Seat of the Lairds of Carmichael Sir James Carmichael Baronet was a Lord of the Session and Thesaurer Depute to King Charles the First and by King Charles the Second when in Scotland created Lord Carmichael whose Grand-child is John Lord Carmichael he hath been twice employed by Their Majesties as Commissioner to the General Assembly and is of the Privy Council Below the falling of Dowglasse into Clyde is the Town of Lanerk head Burgh of the Sheriffdom thereof whereof the Lords of Hamilton are heretable Sheriffs and eight Miles below that standeth the Town and Castle of Hamilton in a fruitful and pleasant Soil the Lords whereof derive there Original from England They have enjoyed great Lands in Scotland since the time of King Robert Bruce and their Estate was much augmented by the Bounty of King Iames the Third who bestowed upon the Lord Hamilton his Sister in marriage after the death of the Lord Boyd her first Husband as is asserted by Mr. John Ballenden Arch-Dean of Murray Translator in Scots of the Chronicle of Hector Boetius who lived in the Reign of King James the Fifth Book 12. Chap. 5. anent the Genealogy of the Stuarts in these words The first Douchter of James the Secound was marryit to the Lord Boyd of whom was gottin ane Son quhylk
small River coming out of Athol This Athol that I may digress a little out of my way is infamous for Witches and wicked Women the Countrey otherwise fertile enough hath Valleys bespread with Forrests namely where that Wood Caledonia dreadful to see for the sundry turnings and windings in and out therein for the hideous horrour of dark Shades for the Burrows and Dens of Wild Bulls with thick Manes whereof I made mention heretofore extended it self in old time far and wide every way in these parts As for the Places herein they are of no great account but the Earls thereof are very memorable Thomas a younger Son of Rolland of Galloway was in his Wives Right Earl of Athol whose Son Patrick was by the Bissets his Concurrents Murdered in Feud at Had dingtoun in his Bed-chamber and forthwith the whole House wherein he Lodged burnt that it might be supposed he perished by casualty of Fire To the Earldom there succeeded David Hastings who had Married the Aunt by the Mothers side of Patrick whose Son that David surnamed of Strathbogie may seem to be who a little after in the Reign of Henry the third King of England being Earl of Athol married one of the Daughters and Heirs of Richard base Son to John King of England and had with her a very goodly inheritance in England She bare unto him two Sons John Earl of Athol who being of a variable disposition and untrusty was hanged up aloft on a Gallows fifty Foot high and David Earl of Athol unto whom by Marriage with one of the Daughters and Heirs of John Cummin of Badzenoth by one of the Heirs of Aumer de Valence Earl of Pembroch there fell great Lands and Possessions His Son David who under King Edward the second was other whiles amongst English summoned to the Parliaments in England and under King Edward Baliol made Lord Lieutenant General of Scotland was vanquished by the valerous Prowess of Andrew de Murray and slain in Battel within the Forrest of Kelblen in the year of our Lord 1335 And his Son David left two young Daughters only Elisabeth Wedded unto Sir Thomas Piercy from whom the Barons of Burrough are descended and Philip Married to Sir Thomas Halsham an English Knight Then fell the Title of Athol unto that Walter Stuart Son to King Robert the second who cruelly Murdered James the first King of Scotland who for this execrable cruelty suffered most condign punishment accordingly in so much as Aeneas Sylvius Ambassadour at that time in Scotland from Pope Eugenius the fourth gave out this Speech That he could not tell whether he should give them greater commendations that revenged the Kings Death or brand them with sharper Censure of Condemnation that distained themselves with so hainous a Paricide After some few years passed between this honour was granted unto John Stuart of the Family of Lorn the Son of James surnamed The Black Knight by Joan the Widow of King James the first Daughter to John Earl of Somerset and Niece to John of Gaunt Duke of Lancaster whose posterity at this day enjoy the same The eldest son of Tullibardine being descended of the Stuarts of Athol whose successor is John Marquess of Athol as hath been said Lord Charles Murray second Son to the Marquess of Athol was by King James the seventh Created Earl of Dunmore and Sir Robert Nairn of Stra●hurd one of the Lords of Session was by King Charles the second about the year 1681. Created Lord Nairn his only Daughter to be Married to a younger Son of the Marquess of Athols by vertue whereof William Lord Murray is now Lord Nairn The Marquess of Athol is Heretable Sheriff of Perth This River is increased by receiving the River of Bra●n which having given name to a Strath through which it passeth loseth its name by augmenting of Tau at Dunkeld which was adorned by King David the first with an Episcopal See Sir James Galloway Master of Requests to King James the sixth and King Charles the first was by the latter Created Lord Dunkell about the year 1646. whose Grand Child is Forfeited for opposing their Majesties in the Highlands by force of Arms. In these bounds lyes Gillichrankie a place remark●ble for the Defeat of the Kings Forces under the Command of General Major Mckay by the late Viscount of Dundee and his Associats but himself was killed in the Action which fell out the 27th of July 1689. Most Writers grounding upon the signification of that Word suppose Dunkeld to be a Town of the Caledonians and interpret it The Mount or Hill of Hazeles as who would have that name given unto it of the Hazel-trees in the Wood Caledonia from hence the Tau passeth forward to the old Castle of Kincleiven where it is much augmented by the River Ila a very pleasant and large River and thence goeth downward by the Carcass of Bertha a little desolat City remembring well enough what a great loss and calamity he brought upon it in times past when with an extraordinary swelling Floud he surrounded all the Fields laid the goodly standing Corn along on the Ground and carried headlong away with him this poor City with the Kings Child and Infant in his Cradle and the Inhabitants therein In steed whereof in a more commodious place King William builded Perth which straightways became so wealthy that Necham who lived in that age versified of it in this manner Transis ample Tai per rura per oppida per Perth Regnum sustentant istius urbis opes By Villages by Towns by Perth thou runn'st great Tay amain The Riches of this City Perth doth all the Realm sustain But the posterity ensuing call it of a Church founded in honour of Saint John Saint Johns Town and the English whiles the Wars were hot between the Bruces and the Balliols Fortified it with great Bulwarks which the Scots afterwards for the most part overthrew and disman led it themselves Howbeit it is a proper pretty City pleasantly seated between two Greens and for all that some of the Churches be destroyed yet a goodly shew it maketh ranged and set out in such an uniform manner that in every several Street almost there dwell several Artificers by themselves and the River Tau bringeth up with the Tide Sea Commodities by Lighters King James the sixth having erected it to the Title of an Earldom Created James Baron Drummond Earl of Perth of whom in Strathern Unto Perth these places are near Neighbours Methven near to which runneth the river of Almond which passing downward falleth in Tau near to the place where the antient Town of Bertha stood Margaret an English Lady Widow unto King James the fourth purchased Methven with ready Money for her third Husband Henry Stuart descended of the Royal Blood and for his Heirs and withal obtained of her Son King James the fifth for him the dignity of a Baron since extinct and was one of the
with the Front of the Shore looketh full against the North Point and hath the midst of the greater Bears Tail which as Cardan was of Opinion causeth Translations of Empires just over head was inhabited as we may see in Ptolomy by the Carnabii among whom he placeth the River Nabeus which names are of so near Affinity that the Nation may seem to have drawn there Denomination from the River that they dwelt by neither doth the modern name Strath-Navern which signifieth the Valley by Navern jar altogether in sound from them The Earl of Sutherland is Superior of this Country and his eldest Son is designed from it Lord Strathnaver The chief Inhabitants here are the Mackeys who were designed from their Lands of Fare but about the year 1625 Sir Donald Mackey was designed of Strathnaver and made a Baronet in the year 1631 was created Lord Rae from a place belonging to him in the Country of Caithness holding of the King he was imployed by Gustavus K. of Sweden in his Wars George Lord Rae is his great Grand-child of whose Grand-uncle by the Mothers side Lieutenant General Hugh Mackey descended of the same Stock and Linage it is reasonable to make mention he was one of the Captains of Dowglass Regiment who for his Service to the Venetians did from them receive a Medal of considerable value he continued in that Regiment and the French Service till they had made their Conquests of some of the united Provinces in the year 1672 and then being imployed by the States he was at the Siege of Grave made Lieutenant Collonel and thereafter Collonel in the year 1685 his Regiment others were called over to England by K. Ja. the 7th to oppose the D. of Monmouth when he was made General Major in the year 1688 he did attend and assist his Majesty in his Expedition to Britain and in anno 1689 was sent to command the Forces in Scotland where albeit he had not good Success at Gillicharnkie yet by his great Fidelity and Diligence he settled Garisons at Inverlochy and other places of the High-lands which laid the Foundation of the settlement of these Countries and then was appointed to Command in Ireland where with great Courage amongst the first to encourage the Souldiers under him he Waded through the River whereby they gained the Town of Athlone did signalize his Courage and Conduct at the Battle of Aghrim and in the other parts of that War till the Reduction of the whole Kingdom which by the acknowledgement of his Fellow Great Captains and Commanders was in a great measure due to him for which Service he was made Lieutenant General and with the Duke of Wirtemberg having Commanded at Steenkirk was near the beginning of that Action unfortunatly slain with James Lord Angus and Sir Robert Dowglass of Glenbervie both Collonels and Heirs of these two noble Families of the Dowglasses and representing the Valour of their many Predecessors the Dowglasses the last of whom slain in Flanders was L. Ja. Dowglass Mareschal of the Camp Grand-Uncle to the Lord Angus of the first Marriage immediat elder Brother to the last Duke Hamilton in which Action also were many other brave Scottish Officers concerned and of them a great part killed or wounded and amongst the rest Lieutenant Collonel Aeneas Mackey Uncle to the Lord Rae was wounded who succeeded as Collonel to the Lieutenant General his Uncle to whom both he and Collonel Robert the younger Brother were Disciples in the War and in recompense of the Dangers undertaken and Wounds they received are advanced to the Commands they now worthily Exerce The Country it self is for the Soil nothing fertile and by reason of the sharp and cold Air less inhabited and thereupon sore haunted and annoyed with most cruel Wolves which in such violent rage not only set upon Cattel to the exceeding great damnage of the Inhabitants but also assail men with great danger and not in this Tract only but in many other parts likewise of Scotland in so much as by vertue of an Act of Parliament the Sheriffs and Inhabitants in every Country are commanded to go forth thrice a year a Hunting for to destroy the Wolves and their Whelps But if in this so northerly a Country this be any comfort to speak of it hath of all Britain again the shortest night and the longest day for by reason of the position of Heaven here distant from the Aequinoctial Line 59. Degrees and forty Minuts the longest day containeth 18 hours and 25 Scruples and the shortest night not above five hours and 45 Scruples so that the Panegyrist is not true in this who made report in times past That the Sun in manner setteth not at all but passeth by and lightly glanceth upon the Horizon happily relying upon this Authority of Tacitus for that the extream Points and plain Levels of the Earth with their shade so low raised up no darkness at all But more truly Pliny according to true reason where he treateth of the longest days according to the inclination of the Suns Circle in the Horizon The longest days saith he in Italy are 15 hours in Britain 17 where the light nights do prove that undoubtedly by experience which reason forceth credibly that in Mid-summer days when the Sun approacheth near to the Pole of the World the places of the earth under the Pole have day 6 Months though the Light having but a narrow compass the night contrarywise when he is far remote in middle Winter In this utmost Tract which Ptolomy extendeth out far East whereas indeed it beareth full North for which Roger Bacon in his Geography taxed him long since where Tacitus said That an huge and enorm space of Ground running still forward to the farthest Point groweth narrow like a Wedge There run out three Promontories mentioned by the old Writers namely Berubium now called Vrdehead near to Bernswal a Village Virvedrum now Dunsby otherways named Duncansbay which is thought to be the most remote Promontory of Britain Orcas now named Howburn which Ptolomy setteth over against the Islands Orcades as the utmost of them all this also in Ptolomy is called Tarvedrum and Tarvisium and so named as is conjectured because it is the farthest end of Britain for Tarvus in the British tongue hath a certain signification of ending CHAP. XXXVII The Stewartry of ORKNAY and the other Northern and Western Isles I Do not design to treat particularly concerning the Isles of Scotland where I can find little to my purpose of Jurisdiction Nobility or Burghs Royal and as to these I leave the Reader to Straloch and Scots-Tarbat who made very particular Descriptions of them published in Latine at Amsterdam in the year 1654 and to Mr. Adairs Geography not yet fully ended which is expected will be exact in relation to them only something I would add first concerning the Northern Isles called the Orcads and Shotland who have been longer in the possession of the Kings of
Johnstoun by King Charles the first anno 1633 and by the same King made Earl of Hartfield and so designed in the rescinded Parliament 1644 and by King Charles the second after the Restauration the Title of Earl of Hartfield was changed into that of the Earl of Annandale the Dignity of Annandale Murray being extinct and William the present Earl is a Privy Counsellor and extraordinar Lord of Session and now Hereditary Stewart of Annandale CHAP. X. NIDISDALE CLose unto Annandale on the West-side lyeth Nidisdale sufficiently furnished with Corn-fields and Pastures so named of the River Nid which in Ptolomy is wrongly written Nobius for Nodius or Nidius of which Name there be other Rivers in Britain full of shallow Foords and muddy Shelves like as this Nid is also It springeth out of the Lake Logh-Cure by which flowrished Corda a Town of the Selgovae He taketh his course first by Sanquher a Town and Castle of the Creightons who a long time kept a great Port as enjoying the Dignity of the Barons of Sanquher and the Authority besides of Hereditary Sheriffs of Nidisdale Afterwards by King james the sixth anno 1622 was created William Viscount of Air and by K. Cbarles the first anno 1633 Earl of Dumfreis whose great Grand-child is Penelope Countess of Dumfreis then by Morton which gave Title of Earl to some of the Family of Dowglas out of which others of that Sirname have their Mansion and Abiding at Drumlanrig The Laird of Drumlanrig was one of the Commissioners to the Parliament 1617 for the Shire of Dumfreis and being a Baron of a great Estate was at his first Promotion created Viscount of Drumlanrig after the Viscount of Air and is so Ranked in the Rolls of Parliament 1633 and in the same year was created Earl of Queensberry whose Grandchild William Earl of Queensberry was first created Marquess thereafter Duke of Queensberry by King Charles the second and was Lord high Thesaurer of Scotland and Commissioner to the Parliament anno 1685 and did enjoy other great Offices and Honours The Lordship of Sanquhar and Sheriff-ship of Dumfreis was purchased by the Earl of Queensberry from the Earl of Dumfreis whose Residence since hath been at Leifnoris near Cumnock a Regality belonging to them in Kingskyle in the Shire of Air The Duke of Queensberries eldest Son is James Earl of Drumlanrig who besides other Offices enjoyed by him is one of the Commissioners of the Thesaury and by a special Commission did represent the Lord High Thesaurer in the last Session of this current parliament I cannot pass over in silence his Uncle James Dowglas of Scraling second Son to James the second Earl of Queensberry who being an expert Captain and Lieutenant General was joyned with the Duke of Schomberg in the first Expedition into Ireland 1689 where he continued that year and the next until he went with the Army into Flanders in the year 1691 where he died leaving Children by his Wife Anna Hamilton Daughter to the Laird of Red-house of the Family of Haddingtoun Also a Natural Son of the Regent Mortons was created by King James the sixth Lord Tothorwald it seems betwixt the year 1585 at which time the natural Children of the said Earl were restored and the year 1592 Tothorwald being ranked in the Rolls of Parliament 1612 before the Lord Thirlestane albeit omitted out of the Decreet of Ranking 1606 his Honours are now extinct but many considerable Persons are descended of him his Lands being purchased by the Family of Queensberry is one of the Titles of the present Duke By the same River near unto the Mouth whereof standeth Dumfreis between two Hills the most flourishing Town of this Tract which hath to shew also an old Castle in it famous for making of Woollen Clothes and remarkable for the Murder of John Commin the mightiest man for Manred and Retinew in all Scotland whom Robert Brus for fear he should fore-close his way to the Kingdom ran quite through with his Sword in the Church soon obtained his Pardon from the Pope for committing that Murder in a Sacred place Near unto the Mouth is Solway a little Village which retaineth still somewhat of the old Name of Selgovae Upon the very mouth is situat Caer-Laverock which Ptolomy I suppose called Carbantorigum accounted an impregnable Fort when King Edward the first accompanied with the floure of English Nobility besieged and hardly won it but now it is a weak Dwelling-house of the Barons of Maxwel who being men of an ancient and noble Linage were a long time Wardens of these West Marches and of late advanced by Marriage with the Daughter of one of the Heirs of the Earl of Morton whereby John Lord Maxwel was declared Earl of Morton upon the Forfaulture of the Regent Morton and is designed John Earl of Morton in the Parliament 1581 and the Dowglasses being restored to the Dignity of Earl of Morton in the Parliament 1585 the E. of Angus Nephew to the Regent was first vested with that Earldom Thereafter it came to the Laird of Loch-Leven of which Family was William E. of Morton Thesaurer to K. Ch. the first and James now Earl of Morton is his Grandchild The Lord Maxwel was created by King James the sixth Earl of Nithsdale with the same precedency he would have had when created E. of Morton which Dignity his Successor William now E. of Nithsdale doth enjoy As also by the Daughter and Heir of Lord Hereis of Taregles whom J. a younger Son of the Family of Maxwel took to Wise and obtained by her the Title of Baron Hereis The Heirs of the eldest Son of the Earl of Nithsdale failing in the Reign of King Charles the second the Lord Hereis succeeded to be Earl of Nithsdale and so the lesser Dignity of Hereis is swallowed up in the greater of the Earl Nithsdale and is now in the person of the present Earl Moreover in this Vale by the Lake side lyeth Glencairn whence the Cunninghams of whom I am to write more in place convenient bare a long time the Title of Earl This Nithsdale together with Annandale nourisheth a War-like kind of Men who have been infamous for Robberies and Depredations for they dwell upon Solway Frith a foordable Arm of the Sea at Low-waters through which they made many times Out-rodes into England for to fetch in Booties and in which the Inhabitants thereabout on both sides with pleasant Pastime and delightful Sight on Horse-back with Spears hunt Salmons whereof there is abundance What manner of Cattel-stealers these be that inhabite these Vales in the Marches of both Kingdoms John Lesly Bishop of Ross will tell you in these Words They go forth in the Night by Troops out of their own Borders through desart by-ways and many winding Crankies All the day time they refresh their Horses and recreat their own Strength in lurking places appointed before
Son to Alexander the first Earl of Linlithgow who by King Charles the First was created Lord Almond and then Earl of Callender in the year 1641 he was Lieutenant General to the Parliaments Army his Successor by entail is James Brother Son to George now Earl of Linlithgow mention hath been made of the Earl of Linlithgow in Lithgow Shire The Family of the Barons F●●●ing dwelling hard by at Cumbernald which they received at the hands of King Robert Bruce for their Service valiantly and faithfully performed in defence of their Country whereby also they attained unto the hereditary Honour to be Chamberlanes of Scotland and the favour of King James the Sixth honoured this House with the Title of Earl of Wigtoun About the year 1606 his Predecessor had that Title with the Lordship of Galloway in the Reign of King David Bruce which they resigned to the Earl of Dowglass who and his Successors amongst other Titles were designed Earls of Wigtoun till the Forefaulture in the Reign of King James the Second and the Dignity was vacant till conferred by King James the Sixth as said is the Heir of this Family is Iohn Earl of Wigtoun In a place near adjoyning standeth Elphingstoun which likewise hath his Barons advanced to that Dignity by King James the 4th of whom is descended Iohn now Lord Elphingstoun And where Forth full of his windings crooked Cranks runneth down with a rolling pace and hath a Bridge over him standeth Stirling commonly called Striviling and Stirling Burgh where on the very brow of a steep Rock there is mounted on high a passing strong Castle of the Kings which King James the Sixth beautified with new Buildings and where of a long time the Lords of Areskine Earls of Marr have been Captains unto whom the Charge and Tuition of the Princes of Scotland during their Minority have been at other times committed Whereas some there be that would have the good and lawful money of England which is called Sterling money to take the name from hence they are much deceived for that Denomination came from the Germans of their easterly Dwelling termed by English men Easterlings whom King John of England first sent for to reduce the silver to the due fineness and purity and such Monies in ancient writing are ever more found by the name of Easterling About two Miles hence the Banock-burn runneth between exceeding high Banks on both sides and with a very swift Stream in Winter toward the Forth a Burn most famous for as glorious a Victory as ever the Scots had what time as Edward the Second King of England was put to flight who was fain to make hard shift and in great haste and fear to take a Boat and save his life yea and the most puissant Army which England had before sent out was discomfited through the valiant prowess of King Robert Bruce insomuch as for two years after the English came not into the Field against the Scots About Stirling Ptolomy seemeth to place Alauna which is either near the little River Alon that here entreth into the Forth or else by Alloway an house and ordinar Residence of the Areskins who by Inheritance are the Sheriffs of all this Territory without the Burgh but have been of a long time Earls of Marr from a country in Aberdeen Shire to be described after The Sheriffship of this Shire belongs to the Earls of Callender Sir William Alexander was the Kings Lieutenant in Nova Scotia and had Precedency of all those Baronets he succeeded Sir Archibald Aitchison as Secretary of State to King Charles the First and is so designed in the Kings Letter anent the Baronets November 17. 1629. Amongst the Commissioners for continuing the Parliament August 4. 1631 is William Viscount of Stirling principal Secretary he was created Earl of Stirling anno 1633 his Heir doth reside in England To conclude this Chapter take here a Description of the principal Seal of the Burgh of Stirling which carries on the one side a Bridge of seven Arches with a Cross mounted on the the middle and armed men on each side of the Cross with this Inscription Hic armis Bruti Scoti stant hic Cruce tuti And on the other side a large strong Castle in a Wood with this Motto Continet hoc in se Nemus Castrum Strivlingnense Which two Inscriptions they give us in English thus The Brittains stand by force of Arms The Scots are by this Cross preserv'd from Harms The Castle and the Wood of Stirling town Are in the compass of this Seal set down Which agreeth well with what Buchanan said that the River Carron was the Boundary of the Roman Conquests and Stirling the Limits of the Brittains and Scots However it be the Seal and Inscription must be very old when special notice is taken of a Wood at Stirling whereof there is but small Remains and at this place doth the River Forth admit of a Bridge which is the secure Passage betwixt the South and North of Scotland CHAP. XIX CALEDONIA WHatsoever part of Brittain lyeth northward beyond Grahams Dyke or the Wall of Antoninus Pius before named and beareth out on both Seas is called by Tacitus Caledonia likeas the people thereof Brittains inhabiting Caledonia Ptolemy divideth them into many Nations as Caledonii Epidii Vacomagi c. who were all of them afterward for continuing their ancient manner and custom of painting their Bodies named by the Romans and provincial people Picts divided by Ammianus Marcellinus into two Nations the Dicalidones and Vecturiones howbeit in the approved and best Writers they go all under the name of Caledonians whom I would think to have been so called of Kaled a Brittish word that signifieth Hard and in the plural Number maketh Kaledion whence the word Caledonii may be derived that is to say hard rough uncivil and a wilder kind of people such as the northern Nations for the most part are who by reason of the rigorous cold of the Air are more rough and fierce and for their abundance of Blood more bold and adventurous Moreover beside the position of the Climat this is furthered by the nature and condition of the Soil which riseth up all throughout with rough and rugged Mountains and Mountainers verily all men know and confess to be hardy stout and strong But whereas Varro alledgeth out of Pacuvius that Caledonia breedeth and nourisheth men of exceeding big Bodies I would understand the place rather of Caledonia the Region of Epirus than this of our although ours may also justly challenge unto it self this commendation Among this was the Wood Caledonia termed by Lucius Florus Saltus Caledonius that is the Forrest of Caledonia spreading out a mighty way and impassible by reason of tall Trees standing so thick divided also by Gramp Hill now called Granizbain that is the crooked bending Mountain That Vlysses arrived in Caledonia saith Solinus appeareth plainly by a votive Altar with
yea and of Pit Coals the Sea besides other Fishes affordeth Oysters and and Shell-fish in great abundance and the Coasts are well bespread with pretty Townlets replenished with stout and lusty Mariners In the south side hereof by Forth first appeareth westward Culross which gave the Title of a Barony to Sir I. Colvil created Lord Colvil of Culross about the year 1604 and is the last in the Decreet of Ranking except the Lord Scoon his Father was a Lord of the Session and Commendator of Culross and King Charles the Second when in Scotland created Sir Robert Colvil of Cleish Lord Colvil his Successor is Robert Lord Colvil Near to Culross to the north-west is Kincardine whereof Edward Bruce of Carnock was created Earl by King Charles the First anno 1648 his Brother Alexander succeeded him in his Dignity who was one of the Commissioners of the Thesaury to King Charles the Second his Son is Alexander Earl of Kincardine Culross and these places adjacent albeit surrounded with Fife and Clackmannan yet make a part of the Shire of Perth Then standeth Dumfermling a famous Monastery in old time both the Building and Burial place of King Malcolm the Third which gave both name and honour of an Earl unto Sir Alexander Seton a most prudent Counsellor whom James King of Great-Brittain worthily raised from Baron of Fivie to be Earl of Dumfermling and Lord Chancellor of the Realm of Scotland of the Succession of this Earl mention is made in the Description of the Family of Seton in East Lothian Then Kinghorn standeth hard upon the Forth from which place Sir Patrick Lyon Baron Glames received at the bountiful Hand of K. James the 6th the Title and honour of an Earl anno 1606. After this there is upon the Shore Dysert situat on the rising of an Hill from whence there lyeth an open Heath of the same name where there is a good large place which they call the Cole-plot that hath great plenty of an earthy Bitumen and partly burneth to some damnage of the Inhabitants William Murray of the Bed-chamber of the Family of Tullibardine was by King Charles the First created Earl of Dysert whose Daughter and Heiress Elizabeth Countess of Dysert is Dutchess of Lawderdale by Marriage with John late D. of Lawderdale and by a former Marriage her Son Sir Leonald Talmash L. Huntingtour residing in England is to succeed her as Earl of Dysert Her second Son of that Marriage was Thomas Talmash who attended his Majesty in his Expedition to Brittain in the year 1688 who for his Valour in the Wars and Reduction of Ireland was advanced to be General Major and thereafter Lieutenant General which Office he did worthily discharge in Flanders and in the Summer 1694 being chief Commander in the Attempt upon Brest was unfortunatly wounded whereof he died after his landing in England Unto it adjoineth Ravens-Heugh as one would say the steep hill of Ravens the Habitation of the Barons Sinclar whose Successor is Henry Lord Sinclar Above it the River Levin hideth himself in the Forth which River running out of the Lake Levin wherein standeth the Castle of the Dowglasses which belonged to the Earls of Mortoun Sir Alexander Lesly General of the Scots Forces was by K. Charles the 1st created Earl of Levin anno 1641 whose Successor is David now Earl of Levin second Son to George Earl of Melvil begotten on Lady Katherine Leslie Grandchild and Heiress to the said Earl of Levin which River hath at the very mouth of it Weyms Castle the Seat of a noble Family bearing the same sirname The Laird of Weyms is in the Rolls of Parliament 1617 one of the Commissioners for the Shire of Fife he was thereafter made Lord Weyms and in the Parliament Rolls 1633 is ranked after the Lord Newburgh and before Ashtoun of Forfar and in the same year created Earl of Weyms whose Grandchild Margaret now Countess of Weyms was married to Sir James Weyms who by K. Charles the 2d was made Lord Burntisland from a Burgh Royal of the same Shire and hath a Son Lord Elcho to succeed her in that Dignity From hence the Shore draweth back with a crooked and wiuding Tract unto Fife-ness that is the Promontory or Nose of Fife Above it Saint Andrews an Archiepiscopal City hath a fair Prospect into the open main Sea the more ancient name of the place as old Memorials witness was Regimund that is Saint Regulus Mount in which we read thus Oeng or Vng King of the Picts granted unto God and Saint Andrew that it should be the chief and mother of all Churches in the Picts Kingdom Afterward there was placed here an Episcopal See the Bishops whereof like as all the rest within the Kingdom of Scotland were consecrated by the Arch-bishop of York as is asserted by the English Historians until at the Intercession of King Iames the Third by reason of so many Wars between the Scottish and English men Pope Sixtus the fourth ordained the Bishop of Saint Andrews to be Primat and Metropolitan of all Scotland and Pope Innocentius the eighth bound him and his Successors to the imitation and precedent of the Metropolitan of Canterbury in these words That in Matters concerning the Archiepiscopal state they should observe and firmly hold the Offices Droits and Rights of Primacy and such like Legacy and the free Exercise thereof the Honours Charges and Profits and that they should endeavour to perform inviolably the laudable Customes of the famous Metropolitan Church of Canterbury the Arch-bishop wherewhereof is Legatus natus of the Kingdom of England c. Howbeit before that Laurence Lundoris and Richard Corvel Doctors of the Civil Law publickly professed here good Literature laid the Foundation of an University which now for happy increase of Learned men for three Colledges and the Kings Professors in them is become highly renowned Hard by there loseth it self into the Sea Edan or Ethan a little River which springeth up near Falkland a place from which Carry an English man had the Designation of Viscount from King James the Sixth and is so marked in the Rolls of Parliament 1621 his Successor is Anthony Viscount of Falkland a Member of the House of Commons in the current English Parliament it belonged anciently to the Earls of Fife and was a retiring place of the Kings when residing in Scotland and is very well Seated for hunting Pleasures and Disports sometimes it was reckoned amongst the Burghs Royal and is the Seat of the Stewartry of Fife this River hath its Course under a continued Ridge of Hills which divide this Country in the midst by Struthers a place so called of a Reed plot a Castle of the Barons Lindsey of whom is descended Iohn Lord Lindsey created by King Charles the First anno 1633 Earl of Lindsey And in anno 1641 was Lord High Thesaurer and after the Forfaulture of
treeple Trenches wherein at several times Roman Medals have been found and from that there is a great Mercat-Road leadeth towards St. Iohnstoun or Perth Calseyed in many places and thence through Strathmore toward Angus This incampment is believed to have been made by Iulius Agricola being near to the Grampian Hills where he defate the Scots and Picts Within this Camp there was found a squair Stone which is yet kept at the Castle of Drummond and may be seen there whereon is engraven the Inscription following DIS MANIBUS ANTONIUS DAIMONIUS COHORTIS I. LEGIONIS XVII HISPANORUM HEREDES F. C. Mr. Adair in his Map of Strathern hath printed this Inscription with some small difference whee rhe hath also a draught of the Roman Camp before mentioned CHAP. XXII ARGATHELIA OR ARGILE BEyond the Lake Lomund and the west part of Lennox there spreadeth it self near unto Dumbarton Firth the large Country called Argathelia and Ar. Gwithil that is Near unto the Irish or as old Writings have it the edge or Border of Ireland for it lyeth toward Ireland the Inhabitants whereof the Brittains term Gwithil and Gaothel The Country runneth out in length and breadth all mangled with fishful Pools and in some places with rising Mountains very commodious for feeding of Cattel in which also there range up and down wild Kine and red Deer but along the Shore it is more unpleasant in sight what with Rocks and what with blackish barren Mountains In this part as Bede writeth Brittain received after the Brittains and Picts a third nation of Scots in that Countrey where the Picts inhabited who coming out of Ireland under the leading of Reuda either through friendship or by dint of Sword planted their seat amongst them which they still hold Of whom their Leader they are to this very day called Dalreudini for in their language Dal signifieth a part And a little after Ireland saith he is the proper Country of the Scots for being departed out of it they added unto the Brittains and Picts a third Nation in Brittain And there is a very great Bay or Arm of the Sea that in old time severed the Nation of the Brittains from the Picts which from the West breaketh a great way into the Land where standeth the strongest City of all the Brittains even unto this day called Alchith In the north part of which Bay the Scots aforesaid when they came got themselves a place to inhabite Of that name Dalreudin no Remains at all are now extant neither find we any thing thereof in Writers unless it be that same Dalrieta For in an old Pamphlet touching the division of Albany we read of one Kinnady who for certain was a King of Scots and denyed the Picts these very words Kinnady two years before he came into Pictavia for so it calleth the Country of the Picts entred upon the Kingdom of Dalrieta Also in an History of latter time there is mention made of Dalrea in some place of this Tract where King Robert Bruce fought a field unfortunatly That Justice should be ministred unto this Province by Justices itinerant at Perth whensoever it pleased the King King Iames the Fourth by Authority of the States of the Kingdom enacted a Law But the Earls themselves have in some cases their Royalties as being men of very great Command and Authority followed with a mighty Train of Retainers and Dependants who derive their Race from the ancient Princes and Potentates of Argile by an infinite descent of Ancestours and from their Castle Campbel took their sirname but the Honour and Title of Earl was given unto them by King James the Second who as it is recorded invested Colin Lord Campbel Earl of Argile in regard of his own vertue and the worth of his Family whose Heirs and Successors standing in the gracious favour of the Kings have been Lords of Lorn and a good while General Justices of the Kingdom of Scotland or Justices ordained in General and Great Masters of the Kings Royal Houshold Archibald Earl of Argile by King Charles the First created Marquess of Argile was forefaulted by King Charles the Second and his Son Archbald Lord Lorn restored to the Dignity and Precedency of the Earl of Argile who thereafter in that same Kings Reign upon very nice slender Grounds was also forefaulted which Forefaulture was particularly taxed as a Reproach to the Nation in the Claim of Right or Instrument of Government anno 1689 and by a special printed Act of Parliament 1690 his Son Archbald Lord Lorn now Earl of Argile restored Since the printing of the first Sheets of this Book he hath presented a Letter from the King to the Lords nominating him an Extraordinar Lord of the Session in place of the Duke of Hamilton deceased and is accordingly admitted From Melfort in this Country did John Drummond of Lundie first married to the Heiress of that Family and Brother to James Earl of Perth by grant from King James the Seventh take first the Title of Viscount and thereafter of Earl and was Thesaurer Depute to King Charles the Second and Secretary to him and King James the Seventh The head Burgh of this Shire is Inerara a Burgh Royal. CHAP. XXIII CANTIRE LOgh Fin a Lake breeding such store of Herrings at a certain due season as it is wonderful severeth Argile from a Promontory which for thirty Miles together growing still toward a sharp Point thrusteth it self forth with so great a desire toward Ireland betwixt which and it there is a narrow Sea scarce thirteen Miles over as if it would conjoyn it self Ptolomy termeth this the Promontory Epidiorum between which name and the Islands Aebudae lying over-against it there is in my conceit some affinity At this day it is called in the Irish Tongue which they speak in all this Tract Can-tyre that is The Lands Head inhabited by the Mac-conells a Family that here swayeth much howbeit at the pleasure and dispose of the Earl of Argile yea and other times they make out their light Pinnaces and Gallies for Ireland to raise Booties and Pillage who also hold in Possession those little Provinces of Ireland which they call Glines and Rowts This Promontory lyeth annexed to Knapdale by so thin a Neck as being scarce a Mile broad and the same all Sandy that the Mariners find it the nearer way to convey their small Vessels over it by Land Which I hope a man may sooner believe than that the Argonauts laid their great Ship Argos upon their Shoulders and so carried it along with them five hundred Miles from Aemonia unto the Shores of Thessalia This place gave first the Title of Lord to a Brother of the Earl of Argiles as hath been said and thereafter when Argile became Marquess he was designed Earl of Kintyre CHAP. XXIV LORN SOmewhat higher toward the North lyeth Lorn bearing the best kind of Barley in great plenty and divided with Leave a vast and huge
But Antoninus Pius who being adopted by Hadrian bare his name stiled thereupon Titus Aelius Hadrianus Antoninus Pius under the conduct of Lollius Vrbicus whom he had sent hither Lieutenant repelled the northern Enemies back again beyond Bodotria or Edinburgh Firth and that by raising another Wall of Turff namely besides that of Hadrianus as Capitolinus writeth which Wall that it was reared in this very place whereof I now speak and not by Severus as it is commonly thought I will produce no other Witnesses than two ancient Inscriptions digged up here of which the one fastned in the Wall of an house at Calder belonging to the Laird of Keir Chief of the sir-name of Stirling near to the place where the Wall was built sheweth how the second Legion Augusta set up the Wall for the space of three Miles and more the other now in the house of the Earl Marshal at Dunnotire which implyeth that a Band of the twentieth Legion Victrix raised the Wall three Miles long But see here the very Inscriptions themselves as Servatius Riheley a Gentleman of Silesia who curiously travailled these Countries copied them out for the Author Camden IMP. CAESARI T. AELIO HADRIANO ANTONINO AUG PIO P. P. VEXILLATIO LEG XX. VAL. VIC F. PER. MIL. P. III. IMP. CAES. TIT. IO AELIO HADRIANO ANTON AUG PIO P. P. LEG II. AUG PER. M. P. III. D. CIX VIS. At Calder where this latter Inscription is extant there is another Stone also erected by the second Legion Augusta wherein within a Lawrel Garland supported by two little Images resembling Victory are these Letters LEG II AVG. FEC And in a Village called Miniabruch out of a Ministers house there was removed this Inscription into a Gentlemans house which is there new built out of the Ground D. M. C. JULI MARCELLINI PRAEF COH I. HAMIOR But when the northern Nations in the Reign of Commodus having passed once over the Wall had made much waste and spoil in the Country the Emperor Severus repaired this Wall of Hadrian Howbeit afterwards the Romans brought oft-times the Country lying between under their subjection For Ninius hath recorded that Carausius under Dioclesian strengthened this Wall another time and fortified it with seven Castles Lastly the Romans fenced this place when Theodosius the younger was Emperor under the conduct of Gallio of Ravenna Now saith Bede they made a Turff Wall rearing it not so much with Stone as with Turfs as having no cunning Artificer for so great a piece of Work and the same to no use between two Firths or Arms of the Sea for many miles in length that where the fense of Water was wanting there by the help of a Wall they might defend there Borders from the Invasion of enemies of which work that is to say a very broad and high Wall a man may see to this day most certain and evident Remains This Wall began as is generally believed at the River Aven that goeth into Edinburgh Firth and having passed over the River of Carron reacheth unto Dunbarton but Bede affirmeth that it beginneth in a place called Pen-vael that is in the Picts Language as much as the head of the Wall in the Brittains tongue Pen-Gual in English Penwalton in Scottish Cevall all which names no doubt are derived from Vallum in Latine and he saith that place is almost two Miles from Abercurvig or Abercurving and it endeth as the common Sort think at Kirk-Patrick the native Soil as some write of Saint Patrick the Irish-mens Apostle near unto Clyde according to Bede at Al. cluid after Ninius at the City Pen Aloloyt which may seem all one Now this Wall is commonly called Grahams Dyke either of Graham a Warlike Scot whose Valour was especially seen when the breach was made through it or else of the Hill Grampie at the foot whereof it stood The Author of Rota Temporum calleth it the Wall of Aber. corneth that is of the mouth of the River Corneth where in Bedes time there was a famous Monasterie standing as he hath recorded upon English Ground but near unto that Firth or Arm of the Sea which in those days severed the Lands of the English and the Picts Hard by this Wall of Turff what way as the River Carron crosseth this Sheriffdom of Stirling toward the left hand are seen two Mounts cast up by mans hand which they call Duni-pacis that is Knolls of peace Near to this place is Kilsyth which belonged to an ancient Cadet of the Family of the Livingstons who in the year 1606 was a Lord of the Session and his Successor was by King Charles the Second in the year 1661 created Viscount of Kilsyth which Dignity his Son now enjoyeth here the Marquess of Montross obtained a signal Victory And almost two Miles lower there is an ancient round Building four and twenty Cubits high and thirteen broad open in the Top framed of rough Stone without Lime having the upper part of every Stone so tenanted into the nether as that the whole work still rising narrow by a mutual interlacing and clasping upholdeth it self Some call this the Temple of God Terminus others Arthurs-Oven who father every stately and sumptuous thing upon Arthur Others again Julius Hoff and suppose it to have been built by Julius Cesar. But I would think rather that Julius Agricola built it who fortified this frontier part were it not that Ninius hath already informed us that it was erected by Carausius for a triumphal Arch. For he as Ninius writeth built upon the Bank of Carron a round house of polished Stone erecting a triumphal Arch in memorial of a victory he re-edified also the Wall and strengthened it with seven Castles The mid space between Duni-pacis and this Building on the right hand Bank of Carron there is yet to be discerned a confused face of a little ancient City where the vulgar people believeth there was sometimes a Road for Ships who call it Camelot by a name that is rise in King Arthurs book and they contend but all in vain to have it that Camalodunum which Tacitus mentioneth But it would seem rather by the name of the River Carron running underneath to have been Corta Damniorum which Ptolomy mentioneth in this Tract And now take with you that which George Buchanan that excellent Poet wrot of the limit of the Roman Empire at Carron Roma securigeris praetendit maenia Scotis Hic spe progressus posita Carronis ad undam Terminus Ausonii signat divertia regni 'Gainst warlike Scots with Axes armed A mighty frontier Wall The Romans rais'd and limit there Which Terminus they call Near Carron Stream now past all hope More Brittish ground to gain Marks out the Roman Empires end Whence they to turn were fain In this Territory of Stirling on the East side there sheweth it self Castle Callender belonging to the Barons of Livingstoun which with the Lands of Almond were purchased by James second