|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: EUD-FAT |
|
|
FALKLAND , a royal and police burgh of Fifeshire, Scotland. Pop. (1901) 809. It is situated at the northern base of the hill of East Lomond (1471 ft. high), 2 M. from Falkland Road station (with which there is communication by 'bus), on the North British railway company's main line to Dundee, 21 M. N. of Edinburgh as the crow flies. It is an old-world-looking place, many of the ancient houses still standing
hall
earl
heir -apparent--David, duke of Rothesayto be conveyed to the castle by force and there starved to death, in 1402. The conversion of the Thane's tower into the existing palace was begun by James III. and completed in 1538. The western part had two round towers, similar to those at Holyrood, which were also built by James V., and the southern elevation
earl
Here, too, Queen Mary spent some of her happiest days, playing the country girl in its parks and woods. When the court was held at Falkland the Green was the daily scene of revelry and dance, and " To be Falkland bred " was a proverb that then came into vogue to designate a courtier. James VI. delighted in the palace and especially in the deer. He upset the schemes of the Gowrie conspirators by escaping from Falkland to St Andrews, and it was while His Majesty was residing in the palace that the fifth earl of Bothwell, in 1592, attempted to kidnap him. In September 1 596 an intensely dramatic interview took place in the palace between the king and Andrew Melville
burgh and neighbourhood. Signs of decay were more evident when Thomas Carlyle saw it, for he likened it to "a black old bit of coffin or protrusive shin-bone striking through the soil of the dead past." But a munificent protector at length.appeared in the person of the third marquess of Bute, who acquired the estate and buildings in 1888, and forth-with undertook the restoration of the palace.Falkland became a royal burgh in 1458 and its charter was renewed in 1595, and before the earlier date it had been a seat of the Templars. It gives the title of viscount to the English family of Cary, the patent having been granted in 1620 by James VI. The town's most distinguished native was Richard Cameron, the Covenanter. His housea three-storeyed structure with yellow harled front and thatched roofstill stands on the south side of the square in the main street. The Hackstons of Rathillet also had a house in Falkland. End of Article: FALKLAND If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/EUD_FAT/FALKLAND.html"> FALKLAND </a> |
|
|
(Previous) FALKIRK |
(Next) FALKLAND ISLANDS (Fr. Malouines; Span. Malvinas) |
|
Sponsored Advertisements