John M. Gilbert
Medieval Woodland Management in Southern Scotland
Mediaeval, Arboriculture
TDGNHAS Series III, 86 (2012), 77(4.08 MB)
Abstract
There is documentary evidence for the management of woods in southern Scotland in the medieval period. At Coldingham, from the 12th to the 15th centuries, the abbey managed at least some of its woods by directing cutting to certain areas, by using servants to supervise cutting and in the 15th century, and probably earlier, by enclosing some woods. Kelso Abbey placed an area of woodland in defence in the Monynut area in the 12th century and in Gala and Leader forest pressure on woodland and other resources led to disputes, the settlements of which throw light on woodland management and the possible use of pollarding. The wood banks on Bowden Moor, previously described in these Transactions, may well centre on a dispute in the 12th century over a divided wood and there is evidence from Jedburgh in the 13th century of enclosure of woods and of the use of quick-set hedges either in the 13th century or earlier. Teinds of underwood are also recorded for Teviotdale in the 12th century and point to the harvesting of coppices at that time. In the Bowmont valley in the 12th and 13th centuries Anselm de Mow and then Richard de Lincoln held several woods in their fief of Mow and their grants to Melrose and Kelso abbeys show that in certain instances they tried to manage their woods by limiting cutting to spring and summer and by stipulating a 10 to 15 year rota for cutting wood. Combined with the palynological evidence from the area this all points to a system of coppicing, but coppicing is nowhere mentioned in the sources nor do the sources explain how these arrangements affected common rights or the practices of the local population as a whole. In the South-West the place name Hardgrove points to the existence of coppicing probably as early as the 7th century and in Annandale at Stapleton enclosure of common wood took place in the 13th century. In the 15th century at Woodcockair the Crown had rented the vert of the wood which suggests management and regular cropping of the wood. Between Dalbeattie and Dumfries there is some suggestion that in the later 12th century the lords of Galloway were trying to manage their woods to meet the demands being made on them both for pannage and for fuel. There are no direct descriptions or accounts in the medieval period of the ways in which woods in Scotland were managed and so it is only by a process of deduction, such as this article attempts to carry out, that a cumulative picture begins to emerge.
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Stuart Campbell
A Medieval Hunting Leash Mount from Palnure, Dumfries and Galloway Analysis and Discussion
Mediaeval, History
TDGNHAS Series III, 85 (2011), 164(3.42 MB)
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Alistair Livingston
Gaelic in Galloway: Part One – Expansion
Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval, History, Ethnography
TDGNHAS Series III, 85 (2011), 85(3.42 MB)
Abstract
For at least 600 years, between the tenth and the sixteenth centuries, Galloway was a Gaelic speaking land. Although both the beginning and the end of Gaelic Galloway are uncertain, that Gaelic was the language of the kingdom of Galloway established by Fergus in the early eleventh century, and was still the main language of the Douglas lordship of Galloway at its end in 1455, is indisputable. In addition to the Gaelic personal and place names recorded in medieval charters, the thousands of Gaelic place names which survived to be recorded by the Ordnance Survey in the 1840s bear witness to Galloway’s Gaelic past. Furthermore, despite the language shift to Scots, there is evidence of cultural continuity between the agriculture of Gaelic Galloway and the farming practice of seventeenth and early eighteenth century Galloway. Then, at the end of the eighteenth century, the process of agricultural improvement began, a process which has continued to the present. The cumulative effect of this process in the lowlands, combined with afforestation in the uplands, has been the erasure of Galloway’s past. The Galloway landscape known to the Galloway Levellers and the Covenanters would have been familiar to the medieval Gaelic farmers who named the land, but none would recognise the landscape of the present.
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Alex Maxwell Findlater
Sir Enguerrand de Umfraville: His Life, Descent and Issue
Mediaeval, History, Genealogy
TDGNHAS Series III, 85 (2011), 67(3.42 MB)
Abstract
The relationship of the Balliols and Umfravilles of Redcastle and Urr has caused historians problems, even to the extent of the suggestion that there might have been two of the name Enguerrand (Ingelram) de Umfraville. The most recent book3 shows Enguerrand in an altogether different position in the pedigree, without annotation, but obviously as an attempt to make sense of the evidence. I shall show that Sir Enguerrand de Umfraville enjoyed an exceptionally long life, being born about 1245 and dying after 1321, that he was the first cousin and co-heir of Sir Enguerrand de Balliol II (d 1298) son of Sir Eustace (d 1270/76), and that his mother was indeed Eustace’s sister Eva, daughter of Sir Enguerrand de Balliol I (d ca 1244) of Urr and Redcastle. Furthermore I reposition Sir Henry de Balliol of Cavers as the son, not the brother, of Sir Enguerrand de Balliol I, both on chronological grounds, and on the evidence that Sir Enguerrand had a son Henry who also had a son Henry, as did Sir Henry de Balliol of Cavers have a son Henry, so giving two matching pairs of Henrys.
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A.J. McCulloch
The Gordons of Earlstoun
Mediaeval, Recent, History, Genealogy
TDGNHAS Series III, 84 (2010), 73(3.44 MB)
Abstract
The Gordons of Earlstoun are interesting in that they, probably more than any other family in Galloway, suffered the most extreme vicissitudes of fortune. Senior cadet branch of the Gordons of Lochinvar (later Viscounts Kenmure), they built up such a large landholding that by the mid-1600s they had become one of the most powerful and influential families in Kirkcudbrightshire, and later they acquired a baronetcy. Yet within a century the family were so reduced that they were compelled to dispose of their estates, and for the next seventy-five years they remained landless. However, in the mid-eighteenth century a younger son emigrated to Jamaica where he became involved in the lucrative sugar trade, and established the foundations for a revival in the family’s fortunes. Building on this, and inheriting the baronetcy, his son was adjudged heir of entail to an estate near Borgue. Consequently the family regained much of its former eminence
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Stuart McCulloch
Personal Allegiance in South West Scotland: 1286 – 1356
Mediaeval, History
TDGNHAS Series III, 84 (2010), 57(3.44 MB)
Abstract
The death of Alexander 3rd in 1286 threw Scotland into tumult and struggle. When, in the same year, the South West was attacked by the forces of Robert Bruce it gave an unpleasant foretaste of what was to come. The strategic position of the region ensured that it became a transit area, traversed by the participating armies at least 13 times during the period. However, through-transit cannot explain the full-scale invasions, almost 30 battles and serious skirmishes and the very frequent harrying of the region throughout a 70 year period of intermittent warfare. Indeed, only 27 of these 70 years were without significant conflict somewhere in the South West. Thus the South West became pivotal in the wars of this period and often exhibited non-conformist and anti-central authority patterns of allegiance and support. The reasons for this persistent local turbulence are complex.
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Michael McCarthy, I. Armit, Chris Gaffney and Bobby Friel
The Isle of Whithorn: Towards a Reassessment
Archaeology (General), Iron Age, Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval
TDGNHAS Series III, 84 (2010), 43(3.44 MB)
Abstract
One of the characteristic archaeological features of the Machars is the series of promontory forts occupying remote headlands projecting out into Wigtown Bay, Luce Bay and the Irish Sea. They are generally characterized by one or more ramparts and ditches that appear to cut the headland off from its hinterland, but little is known about them. Morphologically they are a class of monument typical of the Iron Age and attributed very broadly to the second half of the 1st millennium BC (Armit 1997, 59; Harding 2004, 144-7).
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R. Smith
Evidences for ‘Lost’ Thirteenth-Century Enclosure/Courtyard Castles in S W Scotland: An Overview Assessment and Survey
Mediaeval, Architecture
TDGNHAS Series III, 83 (2009), 67(WARNING large file size: 5.11 MB)
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R.D. Oram
A Note on the Dating of Barhobble Chapel Bones and the Historical Context of their Deposition
Mediaeval, History
TDGNHAS Series III, 83 (2009), 51(WARNING large file size: 5.11 MB)
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G. Riddle
The Natural History of Culzean Castle and Country Park
Mediaeval, Recent, Recent (Social), Zoology, Botany
TDGNHAS Series III, 79 (2005), 191(4.05 MB)
Abstract
Summary of a lecture delivered to the Society on 19th November 2004.
Originally a bare tract of crofts and a few trees, dominated by a Tower House, the environment at Culzean changed with the building of the mansion house by Robert Adam and the developme
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R.C. Reid
The Border Grahams, their Origin and Distribution
Genealogy, Recent, Mediaeval, Recent (Social), History
TDGNHAS Series III, 38 (1959-60), 85(WARNING very large file size: 44.37 MB)
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David F. Devereux
An Observation of Kirkcudbright's Town Wall
Mediaeval, Post-mediaeval archaeology, Recent
TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 136(2.63 MB)
Abstract
Brief report of the exposure of traces of Kirkcudbright's town-wall in the garden ground at number 62 High Street. The evidence from the excavation supports other similar exposures within the burgh.
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Alex Maxwell Findlater
Another Look at Bagimond
Mediaeval, Etymology
TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 59(2.63 MB)
Abstract
In preparation for the last crusade, the Pope ordered that all church-men should pay a tithe towards its cost. This tithe was to be calculated, not on the ancient valuation of their holdings, but on their current value. In about 1275 Master Baiamundus de
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G. Thomson
A Possible Discoid Gravemarker at Kirkconnel Lea
Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval, Recent, Recent (Literature & Art), Architecture
TDGNHAS Series III, 82 (2008), 51(2.63 MB)
Abstract
The old ruined church and graveyard at Kirkconnel Lea on the Springkell Estate near Eaglesfield (NGR: NY 250753) is best known for its association with ‘Fair Helen’ Irving or Bell and her betrothed Adam Fleming de Kirkpatrick. This connection dominates th
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Magnus Kirkby
Excavations at Lockerbie Academy
Proceedings, Neolithic, Bronze Age, Mediaeval, Recent
TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 139(2.95 MB)
Abstract
An archaeological excavation carried out by CFA Archaeology at the site of the new Lockerbie Academy identified four concentrations of archaeological features. These consisted of a Neolithic timber hall, a segmented ditched enclosure, an Anglian timber ha
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D. Caldwell
The Firth of Clyde in the Mediaeval Period - a clash of cultures?
Proceedings, Mediaeval
TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 138(2.95 MB)
Abstract
The speaker noted that it is reasonably obvious to many that the two sides of the Firth of Clyde, the coast of Ayrshire on the one hand and Kintyre on the other, are two different worlds. This was not always the case. What is more, the flow of ideas and o
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D. Collin
Shipping in Kirkcudbright 1300 to 2005
Proceedings, Mediaeval, Recent, Recent (Social), Industrial Archaeology
TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 138(2.95 MB)
Abstract
The speaker gave a comprehensive review of all aspects of shipping in Kirkcudbright throughout the period 1300 to 2005. Particular attention has been devoted to identifying the individual vessels and further information will be found in the author's publi
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K. Dingwall
Recent Work at Whithorn: Research and Training Excavation in the Manse Field
Proceedings, Archaeology (General), Bronze Age, Mediaeval, Prehistory (General)
TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 137(2.95 MB)
Abstract
A lecture reporting on excavations in the Manse Field, Whithorn. The excavations revealed features dating from the prehistoric period onwards. Comparisons with other features identified in the Manse Field can be seen at Hoddom where excavations revealed e
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Alex Anderson and James Williams
Bridgend Bridge, Dundrennan - A Monastic Structure?
Mediaeval, Recent
TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 71(2.95 MB)
Abstract
Bridgend Bridge at Dundrennan is situated on the branch road to Rerrick Kirk and Orroland and has the appearance of a mediaeval ribbed arch. In order to gain some idea of its age and origin, the writers have examined both the documentary evidence and the
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R. Chadburn
Building Stone Sources for Whithorn Priory, Dundrennan Abbey and other historic Buildings in Galloway
Geology, Mediaeval, Industrial Archaeology
TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 63(2.95 MB)
Abstract
In 2003, during a survey of the collection of decorative carved stones from the ecclesiastical buildings on the site of Whithorn Cathedral Priory, the writer was asked to add a geological annotation to the stonework typologies. Upon analysis, the stonewor
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Andrew Breeze
Brittonic Place-names from South-West Scotland Part 7: Pennygant
Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval, Etymology
TDGNHAS Series III, 81 (2007), 61(2.95 MB)
Abstract
Pennygant is a fell in Roxburghshire/Borders, by the border of Dumfries and Galloway. Its name has been of obscure meaning, but seems to mean ‘hill of the English, summit of the foreigners’ in Cumbric. It would apparently date from the occupation of the D
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E.J. Cowan
The Slaying of the Red Comyn, Dumfries 10th February, 1306
Mediaeval, History, Proceedings
TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 179(3.8 MB)
Abstract
Lecture to the Society, 3rd February, 2006. Mention only.
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M.M. Stewart
The Brus Family in England and Scotland 1100-1295 by Ruth M Blakely. A Review
Review, Mediaeval, History
TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 174(3.8 MB)
Abstract
Ruth Blakely’s magisterial study of the rise of the Brus family, from its Norman roots, through its acquisition of land in both Scotland and England throughout the 12th and 13th centuries, defines the power base from which its most famous descendant, Robe
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J.C. Henderson, B.A. Crone and M.G. Cavers
The South West Crannog Survey: Recent Work on the lake dwellings of Dumfries and Galloway
Prehistory (General), Iron Age, Roman and Romano British, Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval, Botany
TDGNHAS Series III, 80 (2006), 29(3.8 MB)
Abstract
The second season of the SWCS Phase 2 was carried out in September 2003 and January 2004 and comprised detailed digital survey of submerged and dry areas of selected crannog sites in Dumfries and Galloway. Small scale underwater excavations at one site, L
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M. Brann
Excavations at Old Caerlaverock Castle
Mediaeval, Post-mediaeval archaeology, Recent
TDGNHAS Series III, 79 (2005), 192(4.05 MB)
Abstract
Summary of a lecture delivered to the Society on the occasion of Members' Night 4th March 2005.
A concise summary of the excavations at the Old Caerlaverock Castle was given. The talk coincided with the Society’s publication of the monograph ‘Excavations
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R.D. Oram
Warrior, State Builder and ... Failure? The Career of Fergus of Galloway
Mediaeval, History, Genealogy
TDGNHAS Series III, 79 (2005), 191(4.05 MB)
Abstract
A summary of the Cormack Lecture for 2004 - delivered to the Society on 3rd December 2004 by Dr Richard Oram of Stirling University.
A great deal of myth has built up around Fergus of Galloway as there is little in the way of definite information about h
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A. Penman
The New Barns Project: from the Neolithic to the Mediaeval
Archaeology (General), Prehistory (General), Neolithic, Bronze Age, Mediaeval
TDGNHAS Series III, 79 (2005), 191(4.05 MB)
Abstract
Summary of a lecture delivered to the Society on 5th November 2004. The archaeology of the estate at Newbarns, Colvend, is a unique and mysterious monumental record dating back to the Neolithic era, with multi-settlement evidence of occupation through th
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Ronan Toolis
Fifteenth-Century Town Defences at Annan? A Rebuttal
Archaeology (General), Mediaeval, Post-mediaeval archaeology, Recent
TDGNHAS Series III, 79 (2005), 183(4.05 MB)
Abstract
The results of an archaeological evaluation of Annan burgh ditch presented in Volume 76 of the Transactions tentatively suggested that the late 16th century appeared the most likely date for the origin of the burgh ditch revealed at Butts Street, Annan. T
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M. Drexler
Dervorguilla of Galloway
Mediaeval, History, Genealogy
TDGNHAS Series III, 79 (2005), 101(4.05 MB)
Abstract
The youngest daughter of Alan, last of the lords of Galloway, may be best known for something she probably did not build: the bridge across the River Nith in Dumfries which bears her name, Dervorguilla. It is hardly surprising that the people of Dumfries
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D.H. Caldwell, W.F. Cormack and Thea Gabra-Sanders
A Mail Garment from the Mediaeval Church at Barhobble
Mediaeval
TDGNHAS Series III, 79 (2005), 95(4.05 MB)
Abstract
Description and analysis of fragments of a mail garment found during the excavations at the mediaeval church of Barhobble, Wigtownshire
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D. Hextall
Kirkconnel Parish Heritage Society
Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval, Post-mediaeval archaeology, Recent, Recent (Social), History, Parish History, Proceedings, Industrial Archaeology
TDGNHAS Series III, 78 (2004), 155(4.91 MB)
Abstract
Summary of a lecture delivered to the Society on 16th January 2004 by Derek Hextall of the Kirkconnel Parish Heritage Society. The society was set up in 1997. The society has developed several projects to mark the vast heritage of the parish. Cairn School
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James Williams and D. Shiel
Searching for Mossknow Tower by Resistivity Survey
Archaeology (General), Mediaeval, Post-mediaeval archaeology, Parish History
TDGNHAS Series III, 78 (2004), 142(4.91 MB)
Abstract
In the absence of either any upstanding remains or absolute documentary evidence for the presence of the former Mossknow Towerhouse the Ann Hill Committee commissioned a geophysical survey of two potential locations by GSB Prospection of Bradford. Survey
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C. Wallace
Sixteenth-Century Town Defences at Annan? A case not yet proven
Archaeology (General), Mediaeval, Post-mediaeval archaeology, Recent, Parish History
TDGNHAS Series III, 78 (2004), 141(4.91 MB)
Abstract
In an earlier volume of these Transactions, a case has been made for the burgh ditch of Annan not having been dug until the (later) 16th century (Toolis and Cavanagh, 2002, 151-55). The discussion appears in the report on some archaeological evaluation wo
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A. E. MacRobert
Mary Queen of Scots' Last Night in Scotland
Mediaeval, History
TDGNHAS Series III, 78 (2004), 111(4.91 MB)
Abstract
It is frequently stated as fact that Mary Queen of Scots stayed at Dundrennan Abbey on her last night in Scotland. There is no valid evidence that she did so.
Mary escaped from Loch Leven Castle on 2 May 1568 to Niddry Castle and thence to Hamilton, whe
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C.E. Lowe
53 George Street, Whithorn: The Late Mediaeval Priory Gatehouse, together with a note on a Series of possible Ritual Marian Marks
Mediaeval, Post-mediaeval archaeology, Recent, Architecture, Parish History, Heraldry
TDGNHAS Series III, 78 (2004), 93(4.91 MB)
Abstract
A programme of building recording survey was undertaken in connection with alterations to 53 George Street, Whithorn, a Listed Building. The building lies at the junction of Bruce Street and George Street and forms the north side of the pend that leads up
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Ronan Toolis
Naked and Unarmoured: A Reassessment of the Role of the Galwegians at the Battle of the Standard
Mediaeval, History
TDGNHAS Series III, 78 (2004), 79(4.91 MB)
Abstract
A re-assessment of the role of the Galwegians at the Battle of the Standard. Based upon an analysis of the various contemporary and later texts relating to the event - with comparative data from other sources.
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D. Alexander, E. Pirie, F. Hunter, P. Simpson and G. Thomas
Early Historic and Mediaeval Activity at Chapelton, Haugh of Urr, Dumfries and Galloway
Numismatics, Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval, Recent, Roman and Romano British
TDGNHAS Series III, 78 (2004), 61(4.91 MB)
Abstract
This paper announces the discovery of a potentially important early historic and mediaeval site, with likely ecclesiastical associations at Chapelton, Haugh of Urr. The previously unrecorded remains were exposed during topsoil stripping associated with th
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James Williams
William Fleming Cormack (1920-2002) - An Appreciation
Obituary, Antiquarian, Archaeology (General), Recent (Social), Recent, Mesolithic, Mediaeval
TDGNHAS Series III, 77 (2003), 236(1.68 MB)
Abstract
Obituary of William Fleming Cormack of Lockerbie (1920-2002). Although a practicing lawyer in the family firm in Lockerbie he was associated with local and national archaeology societies for over fifty years. He excavated extensively throughout Dumfries a
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J.C. Grierson
The Galloway Pony or Nag
Zoology, Mediaeval, Recent, Recent (Social), Agriculture
TDGNHAS Series III, 77 (2003), 233(1.68 MB)
Abstract
Reviews the historical status of the Galloway Pony or Nag. Although now extinct it bears a relationship to the still extant Cumbrian Fell Pony. Shakespearean references are included as also an entry from the Dumfries Weekly Journal of 1801 advertising rac
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Andrew Breeze
Brittonic Place-names from south-west Scotland, Part 4: Glentenmont, Rattra, Tarras and Tinny Hill
Etymology, Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval
TDGNHAS Series III, 77 (2003), 161(1.68 MB)
Abstract
Glentenmont, Rattra, Tarras and Tinny Hill are all in Dumfries and galloway, with Cumbric names that respectively seem to mean 'fire-river mountain', 'great homestead', 'strong river' and 'hill of (a man called) Tanet'. They are this evidence for the anci
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J.C. Henderson, B.A. Crone and M.G. Cavers
A Condition Survey of Selected Crannogs in south-west Scotland
Prehistory (General), Iron Age, Roman and Romano British, Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval, Botany
TDGNHAS Series III, 77 (2003), 79(1.68 MB)
Abstract
The first phase of the South-West Scotland Crannog Survey, the primary fieldwork for which was carried out in 1989, examined the assumption that submerged crannogs in the south-west were relatively stable while their counterparts on drained land were rapi
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Ronan Toolis
A Survey of Promontory Forts of the North Solway Coast
Prehistory (General), Iron Age, Roman and Romano British, Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval
TDGNHAS Series III, 77 (2003), 37(1.68 MB)
Abstract
This paper presents the results of a survey of promentory forts on the Solway Coast of Dumfries and Galloway. This work was carried out by the author primarily to determine the extent and nature of erosion affecting these sites. The surveying programme al
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James Williams
Review - The Early Development of Dumfries from William I (1165-1214) till James III (1460-1488) by Inez Debaus
Archaeology (General), Prehistory (General), Mediaeval, Post-mediaeval archaeology, History, Parish History
TDGNHAS Series III, 76 (2002), 171(1.97 MB)
Abstract
Review of a thesis for the degree of Licentiate in Archaeology at the Catholic University of leuven which was the result of practical work in the area under the guidance of A E Truckell. Copy available at the Dumfries Archive Centre
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James Williams
Excavation at Lochrutton Crannog, Summer 1901 (photograph)
Mediaeval, Archaeology (General), Photography
TDGNHAS Series III, 76 (2002), 171(1.97 MB)
Abstract
Photograph of the excavations at Lochrutton Crannog taken in the summer of 1901 - reproduced for the first time and used to support a review of 'The Excavation of a Scottish Lowland Crannog: Excavations at Buiston, Ayrshire 1989-90 by Anne Crone and other
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James Williams
Review - The Excavation of a Scottish Lowland Crannog: Excavations at Buiston, Ayrshire 1989-90 by Anne Crone and others
Review, Archaeology (General), Iron Age, Early Mediaeval, Mediaeval, Antiquarian
TDGNHAS Series III, 76 (2002), 168(1.97 MB)
Abstract
Review of the publication by Anne Cone and others of 'The Excavation of a Scottish Lowland Crannog: Excavations at Buiston, Ayrshire 1989-90'. Covers all aspects of the archaeology - including a review of Robert Munro's 19th century excavations. Includes
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M.M. Stewart
Review - The Royal Burgh of Lochmaben: its history, its castles and churches by John B. Wilson
History, Parish History, Mediaeval, Recent, Recent (Social), Antiquarian, Review
TDGNHAS Series III, 76 (2002), 167(1.97 MB)
Abstract
Review of the second edition of John B Wilson's 'The Royal Burgh of Lochmaben' which includes additional material.
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