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Kilwinning Abbey

Kilwinning Abbey is a ruined abbey located in the centre of the town of Kilwinning, North Ayrshire.

Kilwinning Abbey
Monastery information
OrderTironensian
Establishedcirca 1162 - 1168
Disestablished1592
Mother houseKelso Abbey
People
Founder(s)Richard de Morville
Kilwinning's Main Street on a Sunday, shortly before a papingo shoot to be held at the Abbey tower to the right of the view.

History edit

Establishment of the Abbey edit

Kilwinning was a Tironensian Benedictine monastic community, named after Tiron in the diocese of Chartres. The abbey was dedicated to Saint Winning and the Virgin Mary, and founded sometime between 1162 and 1188 with monks coming from Kelso.[1] The patron is not known for certain, but it may have been Richard de Morville, Lord of Cunninghame and Great Constable of Scotland, perhaps with the backing and assistance of King William of Scotland. A story developed that another Sir Richard de Morville who was involved in the murder of Thomas Becket was the founder of the abbey, however despite the likelihood of the families being the same, the dates of the events make this connection impossible.[2] A connection that does exist is the founding of Arbroath Abbey in 1178, also a Tironensian abbey, in memory of Becket by William the Lion (1165–1214).[3]

 
Saint Winning

The abbey, located far away in the west at a distance from the core of Lowland Scotland, is not very well recorded, and few of its records have come down to posterity as the chartulary has been destroyed or lost. In 1571 the records are said to have been carried away by "a furious horseman", following an attack upon the abbey. In 1591 William Melville took legal action against Jean Blair or Cunninghame, widow of Alexander Cunninghame to force the return of the records, but they were not forthcoming.[4] Timothy Pont in the 17th century claimed to have studied the abbey's chartulary, possibly at Eglinton Castle; certainly the seal of the monastery was preserved at the castle.[5] At the beginning of the 17th century they had been seen in the possession of the Earl of Eglinton until they were loaned to the Ayrshire and Galloway Archaeological Society who were preparing a publication that was never published.

It is significant that Kilwinning Abbey was not founded by a monarch and its beginnings were accordingly less grand than would have otherwise been the case.

An early legend tells of Saint Winning sending his monks to fish in the River Garnock, however no matter how hard they tried or how long they persevered they could catch nothing. The saint in response placed a curse on the river, preventing it from ever having fish in its waters; according to legend, the river responded by changing course and thereby avoiding the curse. It is clear that the river has substantially changed its course in recorded history, previously having entered the sea at Stevenston, Ardeer therefore being an island at that time. Blaeu's map printed in 1654 shows this.[6][7]

The area of Kilwinning on the East bank of the River Garnock is still known as Corsehill in memory of the cross that used to be placed there to welcome pilgrims visiting Saint Winning's shrine and as a place for prayer.[8]

The historian John Smith records that Corsehillmuir was the site of the ecclesiastical execution by burning of witches in the 17th century, and the hanging of other types of condemned criminals from the barony.[9] Corsehillmuir have also have been the site of the old churchyard of Segdoune or Kilwinning.[10]

King Robert II granted the abbey a charter, erecting all the lands of the Barony of Kilwinning into a free regality, with full jurisdiction. They received ratifications of this charter from Robert III and James IV. King James IV visited the abbey in 1507, making an offering of 14s. to its relics.[11]

The abbot was the ecclesiastical baron of the baronies held by the abbey and this gave the rights of 'pit and gallows', the right to hold baronial courts and other duties. The 'Court Hill' at Gateside, North Ayrshire was the 'caput' for the Barony of Beith held by the abbots. A site at Bridgend near the Segdon Inn may have been the location of the 'Court Hill' of Kilwinning.

Abbots and commendators edit

 
The entrance to the ruins of Montgreenan Castle, the 'Bishop's Palace'
 
The Abbot's seal

The list of the Kilwinning abbots starts with Rainer, 1190; Nigellus, 1201–10; John, 1214–26; William, 1280; Bernard, 1296-1307; William Daunant, 1335; William de Deyn, 1344; John of Dalgarno, 1344–67; Robert, 1361–70; John, 1383–84; Roger, 1400-1408; Adam Spark, 1407–39; William Boyd, 1443–74; William Bunsh or Bunche, 1474–1513, killed at the Battle of Flodden; John Foreman, 1512–13; James Beaton, 1513–26; Alexander Hamilton, 1527–45; Henry Sinclair, 1545–50; Gavin Hamilton, 1550-71.[12]

The commendators in theory held the lands and properties in the usually temporary absence of abbots, however the reality of the Reformation effectively terminated such arrangements and the aristocracy 'fought over' the opportunity to acquire revenues, lands and properties. The 'roasting of the Commendator' of Crossraguel Abbey at Dunure Castle in 1570 by Gilbert Kennedy, 4th Earl of Cassilis is a case in point.

Metcalfe[13] records that in 1552, Hugh, third Earl of Eglinton, was made Commendator of the monastery, and had the office of chamberlain, justiciary, and bailie of all the lands belonging to that monastery. Dobie's list starts with Alexander Cunninghame, 1571–91; William Melville, 1591–1615; John Spottiswood, 1615-1639; Andrew, Bishop of Argyll, 1621. After these times of unsettled religious conditions the lands passed back to the Earls of Eglinton following his purchase of the lands, offices, and rights.[14]

In about 1470 James III granted the right to the Abbots of Kilwinning to hold Chamberlain Courts on one privileged acre of land between the Corsehill Burn and Bridgend.

The Abbots of Kilwinning held a townhouse in Glasgow in the Drygate.[15]

Revenues edit

 
The Court Hill of the Abbots of Kilwinning near Beith

In addition to churches within Kilwinning, the abbey had revenues from thirteen other parish churches in Cunninghame, giving sixteen in all. The abbey also held lands at Monkcastle and Monkredding. Monkcastle served as the country residence of the abbots.[16] In the reign of Robert III, Sir William Cunninghame of Kilmaurs gave the lands of Grange in Kilmarnock to the monks. John de Menteth, Lord of Annan and Knapdale gave the monks the right of patronage to the churches of Saint Mary and Saint Bridget on Arran in 1337. The chapel of Saint Bridget also covered the lands at Portencross and West Kilbride, which was established as a separate Parish in 1567.

The monks held Granges, such as the one at Beith, given to the abbey by Sir William de Cunninghame[17] and those of Craignaught. This ownership involved the monks in extensive agricultural activities. Details of the rents from farms show a considerable annual production of cheese in particular, 268 in one year alone.[18] The monks may also have been involved in the mining of coal, especially for the production of sea salt from saltpans at places such as Saltcoats.[19]

 
Kilwinning Abbey ruins in the 19th century[20]

The Barony of Beith had been given to the Kilwinning monks by Richard de Morville's wife towards the end of the 12th century. The monks court hill as ecclesiastical barons, is still in existence and the abbey's farm or Grange was at Grangehill.[21] Local legend has it that Kerelaw Castle was a palace of the abbots of Kilwinning.

Such a wealthy establishment was a great attraction to the aristocracy and it is recorded that the Earls of Glencairn and Angus joined forces as early as 1512, entered the abbey precincts, and tried to physically force Abbot William Bunche (Bunsh) to resign in favour of the preceptor of Glasgow, John Forman.[16]

The revenues of the abbey were calculated in the 1860s as being then equivalent to £20,000,[22] or well over 2 million in modern terms (2008),[23] being derived a variety of sources, including the Parishes and churches of Irvine, Kilmarnock, Loudoun Kirk, Dalry, Ardrossan, Kilbirnie, West Kilbride, Dunlop, Stevenston, Beith, Dreghorn, Dumbarton, South and North Knapdale, Kilmory and Kilbride.[18] In the 1540s the abbey had seventeen monks.[24] In the case of Loudoun Kirk, James, son of Lambinus, established the church before 1189. James, a member of a Flemish family, at or soon after its foundation, gave the revenues of Loudoun Kirk, to support the monks of the then newly founded Kilwinning Abbey, and in return a priest (curate) was provided to attend to the spiritual needs of the parishioners.[25]

The practice at one time of assigning the revenues of parishes to middlemen, who paid a fixed sum to the abbot, was the cause of much disagreement and dissatisfaction. These middle or tacksmen were free to obtain what monies they could for their own benefit.[26]

The abbots held a town house in Irvine known as Lople on the High Street and another adjacent property.[27]

In 1566 the last Roman Catholic vicar of Dunlop, John Houston, with the permission of Gavin Hamilton, commendator of Kilwinning Abbey, granted the church lands of Dunlop to William Cunninghame of Aiket. He kept an acre of land at the manse for his use and for the use of his successors.[26]

Destruction of the abbey edit

 
Kilwinning Abbey ruins in 1789
 
The Oxenward Barn, constructed from abbey stone, but long since demolished

The Earls of Glencairn and Angus had plundered the abbey in 1513 and George Wishart's supporters did some damage in the 1540s. However still more determined action was in 1559, when the Earl of Glencairn led a raid on the abbey during which pictures, statues, books, vestments, and all other images were said to have been taken to the Abbey Green and burned. In 1562, Alexander, Earl of Glencairn is believed to have assaulted the abbey, supposedly at the instigation of John Knox and the Scottish Protestant Reformation; Knox's 'battle cry' being Pull down the nests and the rooks will fly away.[28] It is said that ornamental tombs were broken up and some graves dug up; stained glass windows were broken up, especially those bearing the images of the Virgin Mary or saints.[29] In Kilwinning as elsewhere, the local aristocracy no doubt exploited the situation to grab as much of the church's property and land as possible, something that had in fact been happening before the Reformation, as indicated by the plundering of 1513.

Knox may have referred to the 'casting down' of abbeys etc, but this did not mean that they were physically destroyed, merely overthrown, as the reformers needed some of them as parish churches, though some of them were certainly vandalised as Kilwinning may well have been. However Kilwinning Abbey, like other pre-Reformation religious houses did not fall into ruin due to the actions of the Reformers. Those that had not already been destroyed by English armies fell into ruin simply because they no longer had the revenues and rents to support them from their wider lands. The required buildings were now only parish churches and small parishes, like Kilwinning, could not afford to maintain such large properties. Wind and weather did most of the damage thereafter, though much of Kilwinning Abbey was still standing by the time Timothy Pont visited Scotland in the early 17th century. The structure of this monastery," says Pont, "was solid and grate, all of freestone cutte, the church fair and staitly after ye modell of yat of Glasgow, with a fair steiple of 7 score foote of height, yet standing quhen I myselve did see it."

Pont gives the date of major destruction as 1591, thirty years after the Reformation. This rather suggests that the abbey was demolished in several phases, now partly driven by the practical need for building materials. Once the abbey started to crumble, it became the local quarry, especially for the Montgomeries of Eglinton. Substantial amounts of stone are believed to have been removed between 1561 and 1591. Hay and corn, recently brought in from the fields, were used to stoke the fire which may have destroyed parts of the abbey. According to legend, one monk is said to have cursed the men who were despoiling the abbey and calling upon Saint Winnin to save his abbey the saint's statue toppled over and killed three of the Earl's men.[30]

 
A Mason's Mark on a stone from the old deer park wall, suggesting that the stones came from old Kilwinning Abbey
 
The site of Goldcraigs freestone quarry, a source of the abbey building stone.

In the 16th century the abbey had been gradually secularised and protestantised; the last abbot, Archbishop Gavin Hamilton of Roplock, died at Restalrig, outside Edinburgh on 'Black Saturday, 15 June 1571, following a skirmish between the parties supporting the Queen and the opposing Protestant faction under the Earl of Morton.[2] Although he supported the Reformation, he was also a supporter of Mary Queen of Scots.[31]

Alexander Cunninghame, the third son of the Earl of Glencairn, became the Commendator of Kilwinning Abbey. He refused to pay the stipend of the parish ministers in 1581 from the old abbey's revenues and was declared an outlaw for his refusal to recognise his obligations.[32] He had also passed the valuable lands of Montgreenan to his son, also Alexander.

Alexander, the elder, was shot and killed at his 'palace' gate of Montgreenan by Sir Robert Montgomerie of Skelmorlie on 1 August 1586, as a direct result of the assassination of the Fourth Earl of Eglinton at Lainshaw, Stewarton, in April of that year, an act that he was thought to have had a hand in.[33] His post as commendator, was taken that same day by William Melville of Raith. This was disputed, but confirmed in 1592 by Parliament and finally Melville resigned all of the lands and properties to the Crown.[34]

 
Stonework from the abbey reused in an Eglinton Estate building at Benslie

In 1592 the commendary had been transformed into a free barony for William Melville, brother of Andrew Melville. In 1603 Melville sold the lands and rights of office to Hugh, 5th Earl of Eglinton.[35] This was confirmed when the earl obtained, on 5 January, a Charter under the Great Seal which invested him with these lands and titles of Kilwinning Abbey and its 16 associated parish churches.[31]

A legend tells of Saint Winning sending his monks to fish in the River Garnock, however no matter how hard they tried or how long they persevered they could catch nothing. Saint Winning in response to the river's perversity placed a curse on the river, preventing it from ever having fish in its waters; the river responded by changing course and thereby avoiding the curse. It is clear that the river has substantially changed its course in recorded history, previously having entered the sea at Stevenston.[36]

Ardeer Legend edit

The author John Service relates a story of the murder of the Earl of Eglinton's wife on Ardeer by Nigellus, the Abbott of Kilwinning Abbey in the 16th century. Pilgrims came to Kilwinning Abbey partly because of the miracles that were performed there and the Earl of Eglinton, a follower of John Knox, strongly voiced his disbelief and also stated that he would stop paying tithes to the monks. In revenge the abbott arranged for the Countess of Eglinton to be waylaid on her customary journey to Ardrossan by way of Ardeer. The monks took her to a ruined bothy, below which was a stone lined cellar; she was imprisoned here and starved to death. The earl was never able to find her, although her drowned servant was discovered on the beach and tales of the screams of a woman's voice hidden in the crashing of the waves at Ardeer and of a distressed woman who vanished when approached began to spread. After the earl had died the last monk of Kilwinning Abbey is said to have confessed to his part in this awful crime and thereby revealed the truth behind the unexplained disappearance of the Countess of Eglinton.[37]

Later use of the abbey buildings and properties edit

After the destruction of the main buildings at Kilwinning Abbey the Garden or Easter Chambers within the boundary walls of the old abbey, previously the dwelling of the Abbot were used by the new owners, the Earls of Eglinton, as a dower house and family dwelling. Lady Mary Montgomerie lived here after the death of her husband in the 17th century and her son may have remained here until he succeeded to the Earldom. Garden and orchards still existed within the old abbey walls.[38]

 
The old estate offices and stables built from the masonry of the old abbot's dwelling

Considerable quantities of abbey stonework were used in the construction of buildings at Eglinton Castle and the deer park wall at Eglinton Castle. The dovecot at Eglinton may have come from the abbey and certainly contains carvings from the abbey.[39] The stables were built from stones taken from the Easter Chambers of Kilwinning Abbey; being the Abbots lodgings and later that of the Earls of Eglinton. In 1784, over a period of four months, the building was demolished and the stones were taken to Eglinton.[40] Some of the dressed stone blocks from which the old stables and offices are constructed have masons marks cut into them, showing their origin to be the old abbey.[41]

Part of the old abbey chancel was at first used as the parish church, however this was later demolished in 1775 and the Earl of Eglinton built a new Abbey church using the stones of the old abbey on the same site. An oddity caused by this re-use is the uneven surface of the external walls. A coat of arms of the conjoined arms of the Eglinton and Campbells of Loudoun, in the persons of Robert Montgomerie and his wife Jean Campbell, is built into the church wall above the staircase that leads up to the Eglinton Loft. They may have been placed there to commemorate the building of the first the construction of the first church of the reformist faith.[42]

 
Ornamental entrance doorway
 
The Lylston Row. Possibly built from the abbey ruins.

Seagate Castle was developed as a town house for the 3rd Earl of Eglinton between 1565 and 1582 and the entrance doorway may have been built from the ruins of Kilwinning Abbey.

Until about two hundred years ago various ranges of vaults beneath the abbey ruins were still partly accessible, but with the rebuilding and extension of the Kilwinning old Parish Church, no access is now possible.

A font, possibly from the abbey is situated within the old village of Dalgarven.

Kerelaw Castle was rebuilt, having been burnt down by the Montgomeries, sometime after 1488 and is reported to have contained a number of carved coats of arms of the Scottish nobility, taken from Kilwinning Abbey.[43]

In 1439 the Abbot of Kilwinning Abbey petitioned the Vatican for permission to build a bridge over the Garnock Water. Abbot Adam's Bridge was sadly demolished in 1765 as recorded in the Glasgow Journal of 18-4-1765 to make way for the present bridge. This replacement bridge was reported in the Ardrossan and Saltcoats Heraald of 18-4-1857 as to be widened and strengthened, the work being completed in 1858.

Some parts of the abbey have survived as ruins; later vernacular buildings within the site have been removed[44] and now the ruins serve as a tourist attractions in Kilwinning. The rebuilt tower holds a museum and opens regularly for public access.

Monkcastle near Dalry was the abbot's country retreat[16] and survives as a ruin. Monkredding House was the brother's rest house, the 'Monk's Garden' and survives in a much modified form.

Stones from the abbey buildings were used in the construction of the 'Railway Cottage' at South Millburn near Benslie.

Robert Heron in 1799 recorded that "We crossed the river by a commodious bridge (new in 1765). The walls which surrounded the orchard of the monks, are still partly standing. Various stately fruit-trees yet appear within. Some parts of the buildings which those clergy inhabited, are also standing. The situation was well-chosen."[45]

Archaeological evidence edit

The nave and transept were 100 ft across, broader than those of Paisley, Glasgow or St Andrews. The building wasn't especially long and was unique in Scotland in that it had two western towers, not arising from the building, but standing separately, either side, on massive supporting piers. One of these towers fell at a relatively early date, an inherent weakness being present, probably hastened by reformist action.[46]

 
The abbey resembled Glasgow Cathedral.[22]
 
A possible Green Man from the abbey now at the Eglinton Doocot

The archaeology suggests that the abbey was built around an earlier church that may have been built during the time of Hugh de Morville, circa 1157.[47] A long stretch of walling is suggestive of being the south side of the nave of this earlier foundation. The remnants of the chapter house bordering the cloisters and a passageway may have been built during the 1180s.[48] Richard de Morville may have been responsible in around 1190-1200 for the great processional arch between the gable and the wall; dying in 1189 this may also have been a bequest or gift.[49] Uniquely this arch has a Norman style capital bearing two carved figures, said to be Adam & Eve.[46]

 
The Adam & Eve carvings

A major development or reconstruction phase took place in the 1230s, possibly completed by one of the de Morville daughters as the male line had died out. Pont states that Dorethea de Morville, daughter of Richard de Morville and wife of Philip de Horssey, 'accomplished' the fabric of the monastery.[50] De Morvilles mound at Dreghorn was supposed to have commemorated a daughter of the family, drowned at the Holm ford;[51] any possible link to the abbey is unrecorded. The two towers and the west transept seem to have been added on in the 1250s.[16]

Abbey treasure edit

The Black Book of the abbey, gold candlesticks and crosses, silver cups and bells were never found and legend has it that they were secreted away in a vault beneath the abbey buildings where they lie to this day.[52] A local tradition also asserts that were secreted away on one of the crannogs on the nearby Ashgrove or Stevenston Loch which conveniently lay just off the old Kings Road from the abbey to Portencross.

Kilwinning Abbey tower edit

 
The Kilwinning Monastery seal of the 16th Century

The Earl had used the old tower as a prison and the bells were rung to gather together the local people for the 'King's service' or in times of war.[53] Bessie Graham was imprisoned in the Tower in 1649 on a charge of witchcraft. During a disagreement with her neighbour, comments were made by Bessie that onlookers interpreted as a curse. Mrs Rankin died a few weeks later and this was taken as sufficient proof to formally accuse Bessie of being a witch. Alexander Bogs, a Witch Finder, was called in to examine Bessie and his verdict was that she was a witch, in league with the devil. Bessie was taken to Corsehill Moor and burned at the stake.[54]

 
Part of the 1816 clock mechanism made by John Blair of Kilwinning

The earl spent a considerable sum of money repairing the tower in 1789, however it developed large rents and fissures the sides in 1809.[55] The one remaining northern tower stood until 1814 when it was deemed unsafe and demolished with gunpowder, just when strengthening works were about to begin; one wall had just collapsed with a mighty crash that shook everything as if there had been an earthquake.[55] The tower had been struck by lightning on 2 August 1809, the considerable damage caused hastening its demise. The bells, the original Kilwinning Bell and a smaller bell donated by the Eglinton family, had been removed a fortnight earlier.

 
The replacement tower, seen during an open papingo shoot held by the Ancient Society of Kilwinning Archers.

Designs and plans were quickly produced for a replacement tower, the first by John Connell of Dalgarven then a second and third set by the architect David Hamilton from Glasgow. The Heritors approved of David Hamilton's second design, accepted John Connell's estimate of one thousand four hundred and thirty pounds for building the new Tower and John Wyllie of Corsehill, a mason, was appointed as the inspector and superintendent of the building.[56]

On 21 December 1814, the foundation stone was laid by William Davidson Esq., Grandmaster of the Mother Lodge, Kilwinning, in the presence of the Earl of Eglinton and the Heritors of the Parish of Kilwinning. On 12 November 1816 the new 103 feet high clock tower was completed.[54]

A conservation programme was undertaken by the local authority in 1993-95 and the tower is now owned by North Ayrshire Council. The tower houses a heritage centre which opened in 1995 and displays items of local interest, including the history of the abbey and tower; the poets Robert Burns and the "Bard of the Yukon" Robert W. Service.

The Ancient Society of Kilwinning Archers, dating back to 1483, are an important feature of the collection. The Kilwinning Archers still meets regularly, including the annual papingo shoot held in the grounds of the Abbey on the first Saturday in June. This event is said to be the oldest archery competition in the World and involves a wooden 'papingo' or 'popinjay', which is suspended from the clock-tower, which the archers attempt to dislodge.[57]

The Heritage Centre in the tower is officially managed by the Museum Services of North Ayrshire Council, but staffed and cared for by volunteer members of Kilwinning Heritage.

Views of Kilwinning Abbey edit

Saint Winning edit

Saint Winning's Cross edit

 
The Mercat Cross in Kilwinning

Dobie records that the only surviving remnant of 'Popery' was the Cross on the main street. In the 19th century a replacement was made of wood and was no longer a place of worship or of miracle cures. This is most likely the Mercat Cross, a modern replica of which stands on the Main Street in Kilwinning.

Dobie also records that a recent building had incorporated in its gable end a stone from the abbey representing scripture scenes.[58] This fragment of a more ancient cross, St Winning's Cross, is said to have been originally erected at the first church built by Saint Winning and was dedicated to Saint Bridget and to the Virgin Mary. Miracles are said to have taken place at it.[59]

The surviving shaft segment is housed in the North Ayrshire Heritage Centre, Saltcoats and carries a double-beaded interlace pattern on one side, whilst the other has a carving of David sitting with a harp; David on horseback carrying a spear; and a lamb being attacked by a lion. It has been suggested that David symbolises the power of good preventing evil in the form of the lion, from harming the weak; the lamb. The cross's style places it within the Govan School, with similarities to crosses at Govan, Barochan, and Inchinnan.[60] Two additional sections of this cross were recovered during the excavations in Kilwinning Abbey undertaken in the 1960s, these portions of the cross are held by Historic Scotland.

Saint Winning's Well edit

This well is said to have formed from the tears of the saint. In the 1860s the well still existed and provided pure and excellent water. The well was situated a little to the south of the manse, which is located off Saint Winning's Road.[50] The construction of the Glasgow and South Western Railway resulted in the destruction of the well.

A well blessed by the saint is known to have miraculously flowed red for eight days on significant occasions in 1184, such as at times of war. In 1826 workmen clearing ground near the abbey uncovered a lead pipe which was running down from the abbey to the well, then known as Kyle's Well.

Associated chapels edit

 
Launch of archaeological dig in August 2010
 
The public and VIPs at the launch of the archaeological dig in August 2010

Three or possibly four chapels associated with the abbey may have existed before the reformation; one in the vicinity of either Chapelholm Wood or Benslie wood; one at Weirston; another at Stanecastle gate; and a fourth near the Drukken Steps.

Evidence for these chapels is the Chapelcroft farm that existed near Laigh Moncur, becoming the old deer shelter in the Deer Park, and a Chapel Bridge over the Lugton Water.[61] A John Rankin in 1694 is recorded as living at an 'Eglinton Chapel'.[62] The Weirston chapel is said to have been the private chapel of the Montgomerie family, dedicated to Saint Wyssyn and in use up to as late as 1570.[63][64] Father Elmerides Hentyson may have been their priest.[64] The placename 'Ladyha' survives near Weirston, a likely reminder of our 'Lady', the Virgin Mary; farms here of this name are recorded in the Hearth Tax records of the 1690s.

Masons edit

The masonic link derives from the belief that the abbey was constructed by foreign free Masons, assisted by Scottish masons.[65] The term Freemason derived from the right of these skilled workers to travel without the need to obtain permission from an overlord.[66] These foreign masons brought the principles of their fraternity with them and initiated these principles in Scotland for the first time.[67] The architect or Master Mason is said to have been recognised as the master mason of Scotland.

After the Battle of Bannockburn, Robert the Bruce is said to have attended a masonic festival at Kilwinning.[68] King James I was a patron of the mother lodge of Kilwinning and presided as Grand Master whilst staying at the abbey.[69][70] James II made the St Clair's of Roslin the hereditary Grand Masters of Scotland.[68] The Tironensian monks were recognised for their skill in stonemasonry and architecture; many of the freemasons and architects were in fact monks.[66]

 
The Eglinton Loft within the Abbey church

In 1925 the Mother Kilwinning Social Club of Glasgow presented the Mother Lodge with a case made from wood said to have come from the roof of the Abbey. This case was made to hold the Master's jewel which had been given to the lodge by Patrick Montgomerie of Bourtreehill in 1735.

Ley tunnel edit

Persistent rumours exist of a two-mile long ley tunnel which is said to run from Kilwinning Abbey, under the 'Bean Yaird', below the 'Easter Chaumers' and the 'Leddy firs', then underneath the River Garnock and the Lugton Water on to Eglinton Castle. No evidence exists for it, although it may be related to the underground burial vault of the Montgomeries which does exist under the old abbey[71] or to the main sewer that would have led from the monastery to the river.[72][73] Another tunnel is said to run from the abbey to its former property of Monkredding House on the road to Auchentiber.

Burials edit

The Earls of Eglinton were buried here until 1886. Several of the families burial vaults existed until 1961, when they were demolished due to their unsafe condition.[74] Burials include the following:

Doocot edit

A large ornamental Gothic lectern style doocot (dovecote (English spelling)) or columbarium is located near the scanty remains of the Eglinton Mains farm at Eglinton, situated on the 'Long Drive' towards Sourlie Hill interchange. 55°38′18.2″N 4°39′26.8″W / 55.638389°N 4.657444°W / 55.638389; -4.657444 It is said to have come from the abbey which was latterly a possession of the Earls of Eglinton.

The design is from the 16th or 17th century,[75] the abbey having been dissolved in around 1560. The architectural style is in keeping with the 1802 castle, however the ornamental door carvings and the stones may well have all come from the old abbey. Ness[76] categorically states that the dovecot was moved to its present position in 1898 - 1900 and was hopeful that it would be restored to the abbey grounds.

Abbey mills edit

 
The main Dalgarven Mill buildings

The Bridgend mill on the Garnock was granted by Alexander Cunninghame, Commendator, to his son James of Montgreenan in 1645 and 1674. It is described as being at the west end of the bridge, with the mill lands of Milne Holme (sic) and Strickhirst.[77]

Two other mills were held by the abbey, one being the modern day Dalgarven Mill, then known as the Walkmylne of Groatholm on the River Garnock; the site of the third mill is not known for certain[78] however Sevenacres Mill is the most likely.

Anecdote edit

Robin Cummel tells a story of the old abbey into which no females were allowed to enter. One day the Abbot was seen anxiously entering a dormitory from which a crying noise was coming. Upon further examination a mother cat was found with her five kittens.[79]

See also edit

Bibliography edit

  • Cowan, Ian B. & Easson, David E., Medieval Religious Houses: Scotland With an Appendix on the Houses in the Isle of Man, Second Edition, (London, 1976), p. 69
  • Watt, D.E.R. & Shead, N.F. (eds.), The Heads of Religious Houses in Scotland from the 12th to the 16th Centuries, The Scottish Records Society, New Series, Volume 24, (Edinburgh, 2001), pp. 127–30

References edit

 
Robertson's 19th century map with a vignette of Kilwinning Abbey

Notes edit

  1. ^ Grose, V 2. Page 212.
  2. ^ a b Billings - Kilwinning Abbey, p. 2
  3. ^ Eglinton Archives, Eglinton Country Park
  4. ^ Bayne, Page 38
  5. ^ Dobie, Page 259
  6. ^ Billings - Kilwinning Abbey, p. 1
  7. ^ Blaeu's Map Accessed : 2009-12-06
  8. ^ Dobie, Page 269
  9. ^ Smith, Page 61
  10. ^ Ker, Page 161
  11. ^ Gazetteer of Scotland. Accessed : 2009-12-06
  12. ^ Dobie, Pages 260-262
  13. ^ Metcalfe, Page 88
  14. ^ Dobie, Page 266
  15. ^ Ness, page 23
  16. ^ a b c d Campbell, Page 205
  17. ^ Metcalfe, Page 122
  18. ^ a b Paterson, Page 480
  19. ^ Hall, Pages 29 - 32
  20. ^ Billings, Plate 41.
  21. ^ Hall, Page 135
  22. ^ a b Dobie, Page 267
  23. ^ Relative Values. Accessed : 2009-12-09
  24. ^ Kilwinning Past & Present, Section 2, Page 2.7
  25. ^ History of Loudoun Kirk 8 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved : 2010-12-27
  26. ^ a b Bayne, Page 47
  27. ^ Strawhorn, Page 18
  28. ^ Bayne, Page 49
  29. ^ Kilwinning Past & Present
  30. ^ Service, Pages 7 & 8
  31. ^ a b Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "Benedictine Abbey of Kilwinning" . Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company.
  32. ^ Paterson, Page 481
  33. ^ Kilwinning Past & Present, Section 3.19
  34. ^ Dobie, Pages 265-266
  35. ^ Bayne, Page 50
  36. ^ Billings, Page 1
  37. ^ Service, Pages 249-256
  38. ^ Fullarton, Page 21
  39. ^ Montgomeries of Eglinton
  40. ^ Service, Page 140
  41. ^ Ness, Page 29
  42. ^ Kilwinning Past & Present, Page 2.10
  43. ^ Billings, Page 41
  44. ^ Love (2005), Pages 83 & 84
  45. ^ Heron, p. 383, V.2
  46. ^ a b Close, Page 65
  47. ^ McAleer, Pages 816 - 824
  48. ^ Campbell, Page 207
  49. ^ McAleer, Page 841-853
  50. ^ a b Dobie, Page 255
  51. ^ MacIntosh, Page 262
  52. ^ Service, Page 9
  53. ^ Fullarton, Page 23
  54. ^ a b S1Kilwinning Accessed : 2009-12-06
  55. ^ a b Mackintosh, Page 208
  56. ^ Love (2003), Page 84.
  57. ^ Gazetteer for Scotland. Accessed : 2009-012-06
  58. ^ Dobie, Page 268
  59. ^ Kilwinning. Accessed : 2009-12-05
  60. ^ Strachan, Page 28
  61. ^ Service, page 190.
  62. ^ Eglinton Archive
  63. ^ Kennedy, James (1969) The Inquirer, Vol. 1. No. 5.
  64. ^ a b Kilwinning Past & Present, Section 2.8
  65. ^ Strachan, Page 7
  66. ^ a b Kilwinning Past & Present, Section 8.13
  67. ^ Harvey, Page 111
  68. ^ a b Kilwinning Past & Present, Section 8.15
  69. ^ Paterson, Page 482
  70. ^ Mackey, Page 259
  71. ^ Service, John (Editor) (1887). The Life & Recollections of Doctor Duguid of Kilwinning. Pub. Young J. Pentland. p. 48.
  72. ^ Baird, Vol.1, No.5.
  73. ^ Service, Page 48.
  74. ^ Ness, p. 94
  75. ^ Buxbaum, page 7.
  76. ^ Ness, page 24.
  77. ^ Dobie, Page 271
  78. ^ Ferguson, Page 1
  79. ^ Service, Page 145

Sources edit

  • Baird, Crawford (1969). The Monastic buildings of Kilwinning Abbey. The Inquirer. V.1, No.5.
  • Bayne, John F. (1935). Dunlop Parish. A History of Church, Parish, and Nobility. Edinburgh : T & A Constable.
  • Billings, Robert William (1901). The Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland. Edinburgh : Oliver & Boyd. V. III.
  • Campbell, Thorbjørn (2003). Ayrshire. A Historical Guide. Edinburgh : Birlinn. ISBN 1-84158-267-0.
  • Close, Robert (1992). Ayrshire & Arran. An Illustrated Architectural Guide. RIAS. ISBN 1-873190-06-9.
  • Dobie, James D. (ed Dobie, J.S.) (1876). Cunninghame, Topographized by Timothy Pont 1604–1608, with continuations and illustrative notices. Glasgow: John Tweed.
  • Eglinton Archive, Eglinton Country Park.
  • Ferguson, Robert (2005). The Life and Times of the Dalgarven Mills. Dalgarven Mill Trust. ISBN 978-0-9550935-0-0.
  • Fullarton, John (1864). Historical Memoir of the family of Eglinton and Winton. Ardrossan : Arthur Guthrie.
  • Grose, Francis (1797). The Antiquities of Scotland. High Holborn : Hooper and Wagstead.
  • Hall, Derek (2006). Scottish Monastic Landscapes. Stroud : Tempus. ISBN 0-7524-4012-8.
  • Harvey, William. Picturesque Ayrshire. Shire Series. Dundee : Valentine & Sons.
  • Heron, Robert (1799). Observations Made in A Journey Through the Western Counties of Scotland. Perth.
  • Ker, Rev. William Lee (1900). Kilwinning. Kilwinning : A. W. Cross.
  • Kilwinning Past and Present. (1990). Kilwinning and District Preservation Society.
  • Love, Dane (2003). Ayrshire : Discovering a County. Ayr : Fort Publishing. ISBN 0-9544461-1-9.
  • Love, Dane (2006). Lost Ayrshire : Ayrshire's Lost Architectural Heritage. Pub. Edinburgh : Birlinn Ltd. ISBN 978-1841584362.
  • McAleer, J. Philip (1995). Towards an architectural history of Kilwinning Abbey. Proc Soc Antiq Scot 125.
  • MacIntosh, John (1894). Ayrshire Nights' Entertainment. Kilmarnock : Dunlop & Drennan.
  • Mackey, Albert (1996). The History of Freemasonry. New York : Gramercy. ISBN 0-517-14982-6.
  • Metcalfe, William M. (1905). A History of the County of Renfrew from the Earliest Times. Paisley : Alexander Gardner.
  • Montgomeries of Eglinton. Strathclyde Department of Education. Ayr Division.
  • Ness, J. A. (1969–70). Landmarks of Kilwynnyng. Privately produced.
  • Ness, J. A. The Foundation and Destruction of Kilwinning Abbey. Kilmarnock : George Outram.
  • Paterson, James (1863–66). History of the Counties of Ayr and Wigton. V. - II - Cunninghame. Edinburgh: J. Stillie.
  • Service, John (Editor) (1887). The Life & Recollections of Doctor Duguid of Kilwinning. Pub. Young J. Pentland.
  • Service, John (1913). The Memorables of Robin Cummell. Paisley : Alexander Gardner.
  • Smith, John (1895). Prehistoric Man in Ayrshire. Pub. Elliot Stock.
  • Strachan, Mark (2009). Saints, Monks and Knights. North Ayrshire Council. ISBN 978-0-9561388-1-1.

External links edit

  • The Murder of Alexander Cunninghame, Commendator of Kilwinning Abbey, at the Bishop's Palace at Montgreenan
  • Kilwinning Abbey Tower - official site for the Heritage Centre that is open for visitors
  • Historic Environment Scotland. "Kilwinning Abbey (SM90187)".
  • A Kilwinning Abbey gargoyle
  • Abbey ruins and Abbot's House in 1789

55°39′14.29″N 4°41′52.65″W / 55.6539694°N 4.6979583°W / 55.6539694; -4.6979583

kilwinning, abbey, ruined, abbey, located, centre, town, kilwinning, north, ayrshire, monastery, informationordertironensianestablishedcirca, 1162, 1168disestablished1592mother, housekelso, abbeypeoplefounder, richard, morville, kilwinning, main, street, sunda. Kilwinning Abbey is a ruined abbey located in the centre of the town of Kilwinning North Ayrshire Kilwinning AbbeyMonastery informationOrderTironensianEstablishedcirca 1162 1168Disestablished1592Mother houseKelso AbbeyPeopleFounder s Richard de Morville Kilwinning s Main Street on a Sunday shortly before a papingo shoot to be held at the Abbey tower to the right of the view Contents 1 History 1 1 Establishment of the Abbey 1 2 Abbots and commendators 1 3 Revenues 1 4 Destruction of the abbey 1 5 Ardeer Legend 1 6 Later use of the abbey buildings and properties 1 7 Archaeological evidence 1 8 Abbey treasure 2 Kilwinning Abbey tower 2 1 Views of Kilwinning Abbey 3 Saint Winning 3 1 Saint Winning s Cross 3 2 Saint Winning s Well 4 Associated chapels 5 Masons 6 Ley tunnel 7 Burials 8 Doocot 9 Abbey mills 10 Anecdote 11 See also 12 Bibliography 13 References 13 1 Notes 13 2 Sources 14 External linksHistory editEstablishment of the Abbey edit Kilwinning was a Tironensian Benedictine monastic community named after Tiron in the diocese of Chartres The abbey was dedicated to Saint Winning and the Virgin Mary and founded sometime between 1162 and 1188 with monks coming from Kelso 1 The patron is not known for certain but it may have been Richard de Morville Lord of Cunninghame and Great Constable of Scotland perhaps with the backing and assistance of King William of Scotland A story developed that another Sir Richard de Morville who was involved in the murder of Thomas Becket was the founder of the abbey however despite the likelihood of the families being the same the dates of the events make this connection impossible 2 A connection that does exist is the founding of Arbroath Abbey in 1178 also a Tironensian abbey in memory of Becket by William the Lion 1165 1214 3 nbsp Saint Winning The abbey located far away in the west at a distance from the core of Lowland Scotland is not very well recorded and few of its records have come down to posterity as the chartulary has been destroyed or lost In 1571 the records are said to have been carried away by a furious horseman following an attack upon the abbey In 1591 William Melville took legal action against Jean Blair or Cunninghame widow of Alexander Cunninghame to force the return of the records but they were not forthcoming 4 Timothy Pont in the 17th century claimed to have studied the abbey s chartulary possibly at Eglinton Castle certainly the seal of the monastery was preserved at the castle 5 At the beginning of the 17th century they had been seen in the possession of the Earl of Eglinton until they were loaned to the Ayrshire and Galloway Archaeological Society who were preparing a publication that was never published It is significant that Kilwinning Abbey was not founded by a monarch and its beginnings were accordingly less grand than would have otherwise been the case An early legend tells of Saint Winning sending his monks to fish in the River Garnock however no matter how hard they tried or how long they persevered they could catch nothing The saint in response placed a curse on the river preventing it from ever having fish in its waters according to legend the river responded by changing course and thereby avoiding the curse It is clear that the river has substantially changed its course in recorded history previously having entered the sea at Stevenston Ardeer therefore being an island at that time Blaeu s map printed in 1654 shows this 6 7 The area of Kilwinning on the East bank of the River Garnock is still known as Corsehill in memory of the cross that used to be placed there to welcome pilgrims visiting Saint Winning s shrine and as a place for prayer 8 The historian John Smith records that Corsehillmuir was the site of the ecclesiastical execution by burning of witches in the 17th century and the hanging of other types of condemned criminals from the barony 9 Corsehillmuir have also have been the site of the old churchyard of Segdoune or Kilwinning 10 King Robert II granted the abbey a charter erecting all the lands of the Barony of Kilwinning into a free regality with full jurisdiction They received ratifications of this charter from Robert III and James IV King James IV visited the abbey in 1507 making an offering of 14s to its relics 11 The abbot was the ecclesiastical baron of the baronies held by the abbey and this gave the rights of pit and gallows the right to hold baronial courts and other duties The Court Hill at Gateside North Ayrshire was the caput for the Barony of Beith held by the abbots A site at Bridgend near the Segdon Inn may have been the location of the Court Hill of Kilwinning Abbots and commendators edit nbsp The entrance to the ruins of Montgreenan Castle the Bishop s Palace nbsp The Abbot s seal The list of the Kilwinning abbots starts with Rainer 1190 Nigellus 1201 10 John 1214 26 William 1280 Bernard 1296 1307 William Daunant 1335 William de Deyn 1344 John of Dalgarno 1344 67 Robert 1361 70 John 1383 84 Roger 1400 1408 Adam Spark 1407 39 William Boyd 1443 74 William Bunsh or Bunche 1474 1513 killed at the Battle of Flodden John Foreman 1512 13 James Beaton 1513 26 Alexander Hamilton 1527 45 Henry Sinclair 1545 50 Gavin Hamilton 1550 71 12 The commendators in theory held the lands and properties in the usually temporary absence of abbots however the reality of the Reformation effectively terminated such arrangements and the aristocracy fought over the opportunity to acquire revenues lands and properties The roasting of the Commendator of Crossraguel Abbey at Dunure Castle in 1570 by Gilbert Kennedy 4th Earl of Cassilis is a case in point Metcalfe 13 records that in 1552 Hugh third Earl of Eglinton was made Commendator of the monastery and had the office of chamberlain justiciary and bailie of all the lands belonging to that monastery Dobie s list starts with Alexander Cunninghame 1571 91 William Melville 1591 1615 John Spottiswood 1615 1639 Andrew Bishop of Argyll 1621 After these times of unsettled religious conditions the lands passed back to the Earls of Eglinton following his purchase of the lands offices and rights 14 In about 1470 James III granted the right to the Abbots of Kilwinning to hold Chamberlain Courts on one privileged acre of land between the Corsehill Burn and Bridgend The Abbots of Kilwinning held a townhouse in Glasgow in the Drygate 15 Revenues edit nbsp The Court Hill of the Abbots of Kilwinning near Beith In addition to churches within Kilwinning the abbey had revenues from thirteen other parish churches in Cunninghame giving sixteen in all The abbey also held lands at Monkcastle and Monkredding Monkcastle served as the country residence of the abbots 16 In the reign of Robert III Sir William Cunninghame of Kilmaurs gave the lands of Grange in Kilmarnock to the monks John de Menteth Lord of Annan and Knapdale gave the monks the right of patronage to the churches of Saint Mary and Saint Bridget on Arran in 1337 The chapel of Saint Bridget also covered the lands at Portencross and West Kilbride which was established as a separate Parish in 1567 The monks held Granges such as the one at Beith given to the abbey by Sir William de Cunninghame 17 and those of Craignaught This ownership involved the monks in extensive agricultural activities Details of the rents from farms show a considerable annual production of cheese in particular 268 in one year alone 18 The monks may also have been involved in the mining of coal especially for the production of sea salt from saltpans at places such as Saltcoats 19 nbsp Kilwinning Abbey ruins in the 19th century 20 The Barony of Beith had been given to the Kilwinning monks by Richard de Morville s wife towards the end of the 12th century The monks court hill as ecclesiastical barons is still in existence and the abbey s farm or Grange was at Grangehill 21 Local legend has it that Kerelaw Castle was a palace of the abbots of Kilwinning Such a wealthy establishment was a great attraction to the aristocracy and it is recorded that the Earls of Glencairn and Angus joined forces as early as 1512 entered the abbey precincts and tried to physically force Abbot William Bunche Bunsh to resign in favour of the preceptor of Glasgow John Forman 16 The revenues of the abbey were calculated in the 1860s as being then equivalent to 20 000 22 or well over 2 million in modern terms 2008 23 being derived a variety of sources including the Parishes and churches of Irvine Kilmarnock Loudoun Kirk Dalry Ardrossan Kilbirnie West Kilbride Dunlop Stevenston Beith Dreghorn Dumbarton South and North Knapdale Kilmory and Kilbride 18 In the 1540s the abbey had seventeen monks 24 In the case of Loudoun Kirk James son of Lambinus established the church before 1189 James a member of a Flemish family at or soon after its foundation gave the revenues of Loudoun Kirk to support the monks of the then newly founded Kilwinning Abbey and in return a priest curate was provided to attend to the spiritual needs of the parishioners 25 The practice at one time of assigning the revenues of parishes to middlemen who paid a fixed sum to the abbot was the cause of much disagreement and dissatisfaction These middle or tacksmen were free to obtain what monies they could for their own benefit 26 The abbots held a town house in Irvine known as Lople on the High Street and another adjacent property 27 In 1566 the last Roman Catholic vicar of Dunlop John Houston with the permission of Gavin Hamilton commendator of Kilwinning Abbey granted the church lands of Dunlop to William Cunninghame of Aiket He kept an acre of land at the manse for his use and for the use of his successors 26 Destruction of the abbey edit nbsp Kilwinning Abbey ruins in 1789 nbsp The Oxenward Barn constructed from abbey stone but long since demolished The Earls of Glencairn and Angus had plundered the abbey in 1513 and George Wishart s supporters did some damage in the 1540s However still more determined action was in 1559 when the Earl of Glencairn led a raid on the abbey during which pictures statues books vestments and all other images were said to have been taken to the Abbey Green and burned In 1562 Alexander Earl of Glencairn is believed to have assaulted the abbey supposedly at the instigation of John Knox and the Scottish Protestant Reformation Knox s battle cry being Pull down the nests and the rooks will fly away 28 It is said that ornamental tombs were broken up and some graves dug up stained glass windows were broken up especially those bearing the images of the Virgin Mary or saints 29 In Kilwinning as elsewhere the local aristocracy no doubt exploited the situation to grab as much of the church s property and land as possible something that had in fact been happening before the Reformation as indicated by the plundering of 1513 Knox may have referred to the casting down of abbeys etc but this did not mean that they were physically destroyed merely overthrown as the reformers needed some of them as parish churches though some of them were certainly vandalised as Kilwinning may well have been However Kilwinning Abbey like other pre Reformation religious houses did not fall into ruin due to the actions of the Reformers Those that had not already been destroyed by English armies fell into ruin simply because they no longer had the revenues and rents to support them from their wider lands The required buildings were now only parish churches and small parishes like Kilwinning could not afford to maintain such large properties Wind and weather did most of the damage thereafter though much of Kilwinning Abbey was still standing by the time Timothy Pont visited Scotland in the early 17th century The structure of this monastery says Pont was solid and grate all of freestone cutte the church fair and staitly after ye modell of yat of Glasgow with a fair steiple of 7 score foote of height yet standing quhen I myselve did see it Pont gives the date of major destruction as 1591 thirty years after the Reformation This rather suggests that the abbey was demolished in several phases now partly driven by the practical need for building materials Once the abbey started to crumble it became the local quarry especially for the Montgomeries of Eglinton Substantial amounts of stone are believed to have been removed between 1561 and 1591 Hay and corn recently brought in from the fields were used to stoke the fire which may have destroyed parts of the abbey According to legend one monk is said to have cursed the men who were despoiling the abbey and calling upon Saint Winnin to save his abbey the saint s statue toppled over and killed three of the Earl s men 30 nbsp A Mason s Mark on a stone from the old deer park wall suggesting that the stones came from old Kilwinning Abbey nbsp The site of Goldcraigs freestone quarry a source of the abbey building stone In the 16th century the abbey had been gradually secularised and protestantised the last abbot Archbishop Gavin Hamilton of Roplock died at Restalrig outside Edinburgh on Black Saturday 15 June 1571 following a skirmish between the parties supporting the Queen and the opposing Protestant faction under the Earl of Morton 2 Although he supported the Reformation he was also a supporter of Mary Queen of Scots 31 Alexander Cunninghame the third son of the Earl of Glencairn became the Commendator of Kilwinning Abbey He refused to pay the stipend of the parish ministers in 1581 from the old abbey s revenues and was declared an outlaw for his refusal to recognise his obligations 32 He had also passed the valuable lands of Montgreenan to his son also Alexander Alexander the elder was shot and killed at his palace gate of Montgreenan by Sir Robert Montgomerie of Skelmorlie on 1 August 1586 as a direct result of the assassination of the Fourth Earl of Eglinton at Lainshaw Stewarton in April of that year an act that he was thought to have had a hand in 33 His post as commendator was taken that same day by William Melville of Raith This was disputed but confirmed in 1592 by Parliament and finally Melville resigned all of the lands and properties to the Crown 34 nbsp Stonework from the abbey reused in an Eglinton Estate building at Benslie In 1592 the commendary had been transformed into a free barony for William Melville brother of Andrew Melville In 1603 Melville sold the lands and rights of office to Hugh 5th Earl of Eglinton 35 This was confirmed when the earl obtained on 5 January a Charter under the Great Seal which invested him with these lands and titles of Kilwinning Abbey and its 16 associated parish churches 31 A legend tells of Saint Winning sending his monks to fish in the River Garnock however no matter how hard they tried or how long they persevered they could catch nothing Saint Winning in response to the river s perversity placed a curse on the river preventing it from ever having fish in its waters the river responded by changing course and thereby avoiding the curse It is clear that the river has substantially changed its course in recorded history previously having entered the sea at Stevenston 36 Ardeer Legend edit The author John Service relates a story of the murder of the Earl of Eglinton s wife on Ardeer by Nigellus the Abbott of Kilwinning Abbey in the 16th century Pilgrims came to Kilwinning Abbey partly because of the miracles that were performed there and the Earl of Eglinton a follower of John Knox strongly voiced his disbelief and also stated that he would stop paying tithes to the monks In revenge the abbott arranged for the Countess of Eglinton to be waylaid on her customary journey to Ardrossan by way of Ardeer The monks took her to a ruined bothy below which was a stone lined cellar she was imprisoned here and starved to death The earl was never able to find her although her drowned servant was discovered on the beach and tales of the screams of a woman s voice hidden in the crashing of the waves at Ardeer and of a distressed woman who vanished when approached began to spread After the earl had died the last monk of Kilwinning Abbey is said to have confessed to his part in this awful crime and thereby revealed the truth behind the unexplained disappearance of the Countess of Eglinton 37 Later use of the abbey buildings and properties edit After the destruction of the main buildings at Kilwinning Abbey the Garden or Easter Chambers within the boundary walls of the old abbey previously the dwelling of the Abbot were used by the new owners the Earls of Eglinton as a dower house and family dwelling Lady Mary Montgomerie lived here after the death of her husband in the 17th century and her son may have remained here until he succeeded to the Earldom Garden and orchards still existed within the old abbey walls 38 nbsp The old estate offices and stables built from the masonry of the old abbot s dwelling Considerable quantities of abbey stonework were used in the construction of buildings at Eglinton Castle and the deer park wall at Eglinton Castle The dovecot at Eglinton may have come from the abbey and certainly contains carvings from the abbey 39 The stables were built from stones taken from the Easter Chambers of Kilwinning Abbey being the Abbots lodgings and later that of the Earls of Eglinton In 1784 over a period of four months the building was demolished and the stones were taken to Eglinton 40 Some of the dressed stone blocks from which the old stables and offices are constructed have masons marks cut into them showing their origin to be the old abbey 41 Part of the old abbey chancel was at first used as the parish church however this was later demolished in 1775 and the Earl of Eglinton built a new Abbey church using the stones of the old abbey on the same site An oddity caused by this re use is the uneven surface of the external walls A coat of arms of the conjoined arms of the Eglinton and Campbells of Loudoun in the persons of Robert Montgomerie and his wife Jean Campbell is built into the church wall above the staircase that leads up to the Eglinton Loft They may have been placed there to commemorate the building of the first the construction of the first church of the reformist faith 42 nbsp Ornamental entrance doorway nbsp The Lylston Row Possibly built from the abbey ruins Seagate Castle was developed as a town house for the 3rd Earl of Eglinton between 1565 and 1582 and the entrance doorway may have been built from the ruins of Kilwinning Abbey Until about two hundred years ago various ranges of vaults beneath the abbey ruins were still partly accessible but with the rebuilding and extension of the Kilwinning old Parish Church no access is now possible A font possibly from the abbey is situated within the old village of Dalgarven Kerelaw Castle was rebuilt having been burnt down by the Montgomeries sometime after 1488 and is reported to have contained a number of carved coats of arms of the Scottish nobility taken from Kilwinning Abbey 43 In 1439 the Abbot of Kilwinning Abbey petitioned the Vatican for permission to build a bridge over the Garnock Water Abbot Adam s Bridge was sadly demolished in 1765 as recorded in the Glasgow Journal of 18 4 1765 to make way for the present bridge This replacement bridge was reported in the Ardrossan and Saltcoats Heraald of 18 4 1857 as to be widened and strengthened the work being completed in 1858 Some parts of the abbey have survived as ruins later vernacular buildings within the site have been removed 44 and now the ruins serve as a tourist attractions in Kilwinning The rebuilt tower holds a museum and opens regularly for public access Monkcastle near Dalry was the abbot s country retreat 16 and survives as a ruin Monkredding House was the brother s rest house the Monk s Garden and survives in a much modified form Stones from the abbey buildings were used in the construction of the Railway Cottage at South Millburn near Benslie Robert Heron in 1799 recorded that We crossed the river by a commodious bridge new in 1765 The walls which surrounded the orchard of the monks are still partly standing Various stately fruit trees yet appear within Some parts of the buildings which those clergy inhabited are also standing The situation was well chosen 45 Archaeological evidence edit The nave and transept were 100 ft across broader than those of Paisley Glasgow or St Andrews The building wasn t especially long and was unique in Scotland in that it had two western towers not arising from the building but standing separately either side on massive supporting piers One of these towers fell at a relatively early date an inherent weakness being present probably hastened by reformist action 46 nbsp The abbey resembled Glasgow Cathedral 22 nbsp A possible Green Man from the abbey now at the Eglinton Doocot The archaeology suggests that the abbey was built around an earlier church that may have been built during the time of Hugh de Morville circa 1157 47 A long stretch of walling is suggestive of being the south side of the nave of this earlier foundation The remnants of the chapter house bordering the cloisters and a passageway may have been built during the 1180s 48 Richard de Morville may have been responsible in around 1190 1200 for the great processional arch between the gable and the wall dying in 1189 this may also have been a bequest or gift 49 Uniquely this arch has a Norman style capital bearing two carved figures said to be Adam amp Eve 46 nbsp The Adam amp Eve carvings A major development or reconstruction phase took place in the 1230s possibly completed by one of the de Morville daughters as the male line had died out Pont states that Dorethea de Morville daughter of Richard de Morville and wife of Philip de Horssey accomplished the fabric of the monastery 50 De Morvilles mound at Dreghorn was supposed to have commemorated a daughter of the family drowned at the Holm ford 51 any possible link to the abbey is unrecorded The two towers and the west transept seem to have been added on in the 1250s 16 Abbey treasure edit The Black Book of the abbey gold candlesticks and crosses silver cups and bells were never found and legend has it that they were secreted away in a vault beneath the abbey buildings where they lie to this day 52 A local tradition also asserts that were secreted away on one of the crannogs on the nearby Ashgrove or Stevenston Loch which conveniently lay just off the old Kings Road from the abbey to Portencross Kilwinning Abbey tower edit nbsp The Kilwinning Monastery seal of the 16th Century The Earl had used the old tower as a prison and the bells were rung to gather together the local people for the King s service or in times of war 53 Bessie Graham was imprisoned in the Tower in 1649 on a charge of witchcraft During a disagreement with her neighbour comments were made by Bessie that onlookers interpreted as a curse Mrs Rankin died a few weeks later and this was taken as sufficient proof to formally accuse Bessie of being a witch Alexander Bogs a Witch Finder was called in to examine Bessie and his verdict was that she was a witch in league with the devil Bessie was taken to Corsehill Moor and burned at the stake 54 nbsp Part of the 1816 clock mechanism made by John Blair of Kilwinning The earl spent a considerable sum of money repairing the tower in 1789 however it developed large rents and fissures the sides in 1809 55 The one remaining northern tower stood until 1814 when it was deemed unsafe and demolished with gunpowder just when strengthening works were about to begin one wall had just collapsed with a mighty crash that shook everything as if there had been an earthquake 55 The tower had been struck by lightning on 2 August 1809 the considerable damage caused hastening its demise The bells the original Kilwinning Bell and a smaller bell donated by the Eglinton family had been removed a fortnight earlier nbsp The replacement tower seen during an open papingo shoot held by the Ancient Society of Kilwinning Archers Designs and plans were quickly produced for a replacement tower the first by John Connell of Dalgarven then a second and third set by the architect David Hamilton from Glasgow The Heritors approved of David Hamilton s second design accepted John Connell s estimate of one thousand four hundred and thirty pounds for building the new Tower and John Wyllie of Corsehill a mason was appointed as the inspector and superintendent of the building 56 On 21 December 1814 the foundation stone was laid by William Davidson Esq Grandmaster of the Mother Lodge Kilwinning in the presence of the Earl of Eglinton and the Heritors of the Parish of Kilwinning On 12 November 1816 the new 103 feet high clock tower was completed 54 A conservation programme was undertaken by the local authority in 1993 95 and the tower is now owned by North Ayrshire Council The tower houses a heritage centre which opened in 1995 and displays items of local interest including the history of the abbey and tower the poets Robert Burns and the Bard of the Yukon Robert W Service The Ancient Society of Kilwinning Archers dating back to 1483 are an important feature of the collection The Kilwinning Archers still meets regularly including the annual papingo shoot held in the grounds of the Abbey on the first Saturday in June This event is said to be the oldest archery competition in the World and involves a wooden papingo or popinjay which is suspended from the clock tower which the archers attempt to dislodge 57 The Heritage Centre in the tower is officially managed by the Museum Services of North Ayrshire Council but staffed and cared for by volunteer members of Kilwinning Heritage Views of Kilwinning Abbey edit nbsp The Merry Monk on the clocktower nbsp Inside the old abbey transept looking towards the tower nbsp Archway into the fallen towerSaint Winning editSaint Winning s Cross edit nbsp The Mercat Cross in Kilwinning Dobie records that the only surviving remnant of Popery was the Cross on the main street In the 19th century a replacement was made of wood and was no longer a place of worship or of miracle cures This is most likely the Mercat Cross a modern replica of which stands on the Main Street in Kilwinning Dobie also records that a recent building had incorporated in its gable end a stone from the abbey representing scripture scenes 58 This fragment of a more ancient cross St Winning s Cross is said to have been originally erected at the first church built by Saint Winning and was dedicated to Saint Bridget and to the Virgin Mary Miracles are said to have taken place at it 59 The surviving shaft segment is housed in the North Ayrshire Heritage Centre Saltcoats and carries a double beaded interlace pattern on one side whilst the other has a carving of David sitting with a harp David on horseback carrying a spear and a lamb being attacked by a lion It has been suggested that David symbolises the power of good preventing evil in the form of the lion from harming the weak the lamb The cross s style places it within the Govan School with similarities to crosses at Govan Barochan and Inchinnan 60 Two additional sections of this cross were recovered during the excavations in Kilwinning Abbey undertaken in the 1960s these portions of the cross are held by Historic Scotland Saint Winning s Well edit This well is said to have formed from the tears of the saint In the 1860s the well still existed and provided pure and excellent water The well was situated a little to the south of the manse which is located off Saint Winning s Road 50 The construction of the Glasgow and South Western Railway resulted in the destruction of the well A well blessed by the saint is known to have miraculously flowed red for eight days on significant occasions in 1184 such as at times of war In 1826 workmen clearing ground near the abbey uncovered a lead pipe which was running down from the abbey to the well then known as Kyle s Well Associated chapels edit nbsp Launch of archaeological dig in August 2010 nbsp The public and VIPs at the launch of the archaeological dig in August 2010 Three or possibly four chapels associated with the abbey may have existed before the reformation one in the vicinity of either Chapelholm Wood or Benslie wood one at Weirston another at Stanecastle gate and a fourth near the Drukken Steps Evidence for these chapels is the Chapelcroft farm that existed near Laigh Moncur becoming the old deer shelter in the Deer Park and a Chapel Bridge over the Lugton Water 61 A John Rankin in 1694 is recorded as living at an Eglinton Chapel 62 The Weirston chapel is said to have been the private chapel of the Montgomerie family dedicated to Saint Wyssyn and in use up to as late as 1570 63 64 Father Elmerides Hentyson may have been their priest 64 The placename Ladyha survives near Weirston a likely reminder of our Lady the Virgin Mary farms here of this name are recorded in the Hearth Tax records of the 1690s Masons editThe masonic link derives from the belief that the abbey was constructed by foreign free Masons assisted by Scottish masons 65 The term Freemason derived from the right of these skilled workers to travel without the need to obtain permission from an overlord 66 These foreign masons brought the principles of their fraternity with them and initiated these principles in Scotland for the first time 67 The architect or Master Mason is said to have been recognised as the master mason of Scotland After the Battle of Bannockburn Robert the Bruce is said to have attended a masonic festival at Kilwinning 68 King James I was a patron of the mother lodge of Kilwinning and presided as Grand Master whilst staying at the abbey 69 70 James II made the St Clair s of Roslin the hereditary Grand Masters of Scotland 68 The Tironensian monks were recognised for their skill in stonemasonry and architecture many of the freemasons and architects were in fact monks 66 nbsp The Eglinton Loft within the Abbey church In 1925 the Mother Kilwinning Social Club of Glasgow presented the Mother Lodge with a case made from wood said to have come from the roof of the Abbey This case was made to hold the Master s jewel which had been given to the lodge by Patrick Montgomerie of Bourtreehill in 1735 Ley tunnel editPersistent rumours exist of a two mile long ley tunnel which is said to run from Kilwinning Abbey under the Bean Yaird below the Easter Chaumers and the Leddy firs then underneath the River Garnock and the Lugton Water on to Eglinton Castle No evidence exists for it although it may be related to the underground burial vault of the Montgomeries which does exist under the old abbey 71 or to the main sewer that would have led from the monastery to the river 72 73 Another tunnel is said to run from the abbey to its former property of Monkredding House on the road to Auchentiber Burials editBernard of Kilwinning Earls of Eglinton and Winton Glasgows of Montgreenan Reverend Doctor James Steven mentioned in Burns s The Calf David Muir of Woodgreen town benefactor and chamberlain to the Earl of Eglinton The Earls of Eglinton were buried here until 1886 Several of the families burial vaults existed until 1961 when they were demolished due to their unsafe condition 74 Burials include the following Hugh Montgomerie 1st Earl of Eglinton Anne Hamilton Montgomerie wife of Hugh Montgomerie 7th Earl of Eglinton Alexander Montgomerie 9th Earl of Eglinton and his third wife Susanna Montgomery Countess of Eglinton Alexander Montgomerie 10th Earl of Eglinton Archibald Montgomerie 11th Earl of Eglinton Archibald Montgomerie 13th Earl of EglintonDoocot editA large ornamental Gothic lectern style doocot dovecote English spelling or columbarium is located near the scanty remains of the Eglinton Mains farm at Eglinton situated on the Long Drive towards Sourlie Hill interchange 55 38 18 2 N 4 39 26 8 W 55 638389 N 4 657444 W 55 638389 4 657444 It is said to have come from the abbey which was latterly a possession of the Earls of Eglinton The design is from the 16th or 17th century 75 the abbey having been dissolved in around 1560 The architectural style is in keeping with the 1802 castle however the ornamental door carvings and the stones may well have all come from the old abbey Ness 76 categorically states that the dovecot was moved to its present position in 1898 1900 and was hopeful that it would be restored to the abbey grounds nbsp The Eglinton doocot prior to restoration The local council had used it as a vehicle store nbsp The Doocot the Kilwinning facing end nbsp The restored doocot dovecot nbsp Medieval carving on the doocot originally from Kilwinning AbbeyAbbey mills edit nbsp The main Dalgarven Mill buildings The Bridgend mill on the Garnock was granted by Alexander Cunninghame Commendator to his son James of Montgreenan in 1645 and 1674 It is described as being at the west end of the bridge with the mill lands of Milne Holme sic and Strickhirst 77 Two other mills were held by the abbey one being the modern day Dalgarven Mill then known as the Walkmylne of Groatholm on the River Garnock the site of the third mill is not known for certain 78 however Sevenacres Mill is the most likely Anecdote editRobin Cummel tells a story of the old abbey into which no females were allowed to enter One day the Abbot was seen anxiously entering a dormitory from which a crying noise was coming Upon further examination a mother cat was found with her five kittens 79 See also edit nbsp Scotland portal Drukken Steps Abbot of Kilwinning for a list of abbots and commendators The Lands of Montgreenan details of the murder of Alexander Cunninghame commendator of the abbey Lands of Willowyard Eglinton Country Park details of the abbey doocot etc Bibliography editCowan Ian B amp Easson David E Medieval Religious Houses Scotland With an Appendix on the Houses in the Isle of Man Second Edition London 1976 p 69 Watt D E R amp Shead N F eds The Heads of Religious Houses in Scotland from the 12th to the 16th Centuries The Scottish Records Society New Series Volume 24 Edinburgh 2001 pp 127 30References edit nbsp Robertson s 19th century map with a vignette of Kilwinning Abbey Notes edit Grose V 2 Page 212 a b Billings Kilwinning Abbey p 2 Eglinton Archives Eglinton Country Park Bayne Page 38 Dobie Page 259 Billings Kilwinning Abbey p 1 Blaeu s Map Accessed 2009 12 06 Dobie Page 269 Smith Page 61 Ker Page 161 Gazetteer of Scotland Accessed 2009 12 06 Dobie Pages 260 262 Metcalfe Page 88 Dobie Page 266 Ness page 23 a b c d Campbell Page 205 Metcalfe Page 122 a b Paterson Page 480 Hall Pages 29 32 Billings Plate 41 Hall Page 135 a b Dobie Page 267 Relative Values Accessed 2009 12 09 Kilwinning Past amp Present Section 2 Page 2 7 History of Loudoun Kirk Archived 8 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved 2010 12 27 a b Bayne Page 47 Strawhorn Page 18 Bayne Page 49 Kilwinning Past amp Present Service Pages 7 amp 8 a b Herbermann Charles ed 1913 Benedictine Abbey of Kilwinning Catholic Encyclopedia New York Robert Appleton Company Paterson Page 481 Kilwinning Past amp Present Section 3 19 Dobie Pages 265 266 Bayne Page 50 Billings Page 1 Service Pages 249 256 Fullarton Page 21 Montgomeries of Eglinton Service Page 140 Ness Page 29 Kilwinning Past amp Present Page 2 10 Billings Page 41 Love 2005 Pages 83 amp 84 Heron p 383 V 2 a b Close Page 65 McAleer Pages 816 824 Campbell Page 207 McAleer Page 841 853 a b Dobie Page 255 MacIntosh Page 262 Service Page 9 Fullarton Page 23 a b S1Kilwinning Accessed 2009 12 06 a b Mackintosh Page 208 Love 2003 Page 84 Gazetteer for Scotland Accessed 2009 012 06 Dobie Page 268 Kilwinning Accessed 2009 12 05 Strachan Page 28 Service page 190 Eglinton Archive Kennedy James 1969 The Inquirer Vol 1 No 5 a b Kilwinning Past amp Present Section 2 8 Strachan Page 7 a b Kilwinning Past amp Present Section 8 13 Harvey Page 111 a b Kilwinning Past amp Present Section 8 15 Paterson Page 482 Mackey Page 259 Service John Editor 1887 The Life amp Recollections of Doctor Duguid of Kilwinning Pub Young J Pentland p 48 Baird Vol 1 No 5 Service Page 48 Ness p 94 Buxbaum page 7 Ness page 24 Dobie Page 271 Ferguson Page 1 Service Page 145 Sources edit Baird Crawford 1969 The Monastic buildings of Kilwinning Abbey The Inquirer V 1 No 5 Bayne John F 1935 Dunlop Parish A History of Church Parish and Nobility Edinburgh T amp A Constable Billings Robert William 1901 The Baronial and Ecclesiastical Antiquities of Scotland Edinburgh Oliver amp Boyd V III Campbell Thorbjorn 2003 Ayrshire A Historical Guide Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 1 84158 267 0 Close Robert 1992 Ayrshire amp Arran An Illustrated Architectural Guide RIAS ISBN 1 873190 06 9 Dobie James D ed Dobie J S 1876 Cunninghame Topographized by Timothy Pont 1604 1608 with continuations and illustrative notices Glasgow John Tweed Eglinton Archive Eglinton Country Park Ferguson Robert 2005 The Life and Times of the Dalgarven Mills Dalgarven Mill Trust ISBN 978 0 9550935 0 0 Fullarton John 1864 Historical Memoir of the family of Eglinton and Winton Ardrossan Arthur Guthrie Grose Francis 1797 The Antiquities of Scotland High Holborn Hooper and Wagstead Hall Derek 2006 Scottish Monastic Landscapes Stroud Tempus ISBN 0 7524 4012 8 Harvey William Picturesque Ayrshire Shire Series Dundee Valentine amp Sons Heron Robert 1799 Observations Made in A Journey Through the Western Counties of Scotland Perth Ker Rev William Lee 1900 Kilwinning Kilwinning A W Cross Kilwinning Past and Present 1990 Kilwinning and District Preservation Society Love Dane 2003 Ayrshire Discovering a County Ayr Fort Publishing ISBN 0 9544461 1 9 Love Dane 2006 Lost Ayrshire Ayrshire s Lost Architectural Heritage Pub Edinburgh Birlinn Ltd ISBN 978 1841584362 McAleer J Philip 1995 Towards an architectural history of Kilwinning Abbey Proc Soc Antiq Scot 125 MacIntosh John 1894 Ayrshire Nights Entertainment Kilmarnock Dunlop amp Drennan Mackey Albert 1996 The History of Freemasonry New York Gramercy ISBN 0 517 14982 6 Metcalfe William M 1905 A History of the County of Renfrew from the Earliest Times Paisley Alexander Gardner Montgomeries of Eglinton Strathclyde Department of Education Ayr Division Ness J A 1969 70 Landmarks of Kilwynnyng Privately produced Ness J A The Foundation and Destruction of Kilwinning Abbey Kilmarnock George Outram Paterson James 1863 66 History of the Counties of Ayr and Wigton V II Cunninghame Edinburgh J Stillie Service John Editor 1887 The Life amp Recollections of Doctor Duguid of Kilwinning Pub Young J Pentland Service John 1913 The Memorables of Robin Cummell Paisley Alexander Gardner Smith John 1895 Prehistoric Man in Ayrshire Pub Elliot Stock Strachan Mark 2009 Saints Monks and Knights North Ayrshire Council ISBN 978 0 9561388 1 1 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kilwinning Abbey The Murder of Alexander Cunninghame Commendator of Kilwinning Abbey at the Bishop s Palace at Montgreenan Kilwinning Abbey Tower official site for the Heritage Centre that is open for visitors Historic Environment Scotland Kilwinning Abbey SM90187 A Kilwinning Abbey gargoyle Abbey ruins and Abbot s House in 1789 55 39 14 29 N 4 41 52 65 W 55 6539694 N 4 6979583 W 55 6539694 4 6979583 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kilwinning Abbey amp oldid 1142305349, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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