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Duddingston

Duddingston (Scots: Duddiston)[1] is a historic village in the east of Edinburgh, Scotland, next to Holyrood Park.

Duddingston
A view of Duddingston village from across the loch.
Duddingston
Location within the City of Edinburgh council area
Duddingston
Location within Scotland
OS grid referenceNT299729
Council area
Lieutenancy area
  • Edinburgh
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townEDINBURGH
Postcode districtEH8, EH15
Dialling code0131
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
55°56′29.89″N 3°8′48.23″W / 55.9416361°N 3.1467306°W / 55.9416361; -3.1467306

Origins and etymology edit

The estate wherein Duddingston Village now lies was first recorded in lands granted to the Tironensian monks of Kelso Abbey by David I of Scotland between 1136 and 1147,[2] and is described as stretching from the Crag (from Craggenmarf, an old name for Arthur's Seat)[3] to the Magdalene Bridge. Herbert, the first Abbot at Kelso granted the lands of Easter and Wester Duddingston to Reginald de Bosco for an annual rent of 10 merks.[4]

This land grant included the settlement known by the name of Treverlen or Traverlin, in the western part of it; this being the oldest known name of the village and estates that eventually became known as Duddingston. There are several possibilities for the etymology of "Treverlen":

  • "tref + gwr + lên" meaning "place of the learned man"[5]
  • "tref + y + glyn" with lenition following the definite article, meaning "place of the learned women"[6]
  • "tre + war + lyn" meaning "the farm at or on the loch"[2]
  • "traefor llyn" meaning "settlement by the lake (loch) of reeds and/or rushes"[citation needed]

All these names originate in the Celtic Brythonic languages, which pre-date the use of the Gaelic or Saxon tongues in Scotland, suggesting that they may go back to the time of some of the earliest settlements on Arthur's Seat. The last two names, in particular, fit well as a possible name for the Celtic crannog settlement which stood in the southernmost corner of Duddingston Loch.[2]

The last Celtic owner of the Treverlen estates is said to have been Uviet the White who owned it from at least 1090 onwards.[7] By 1128, though, at the founding of Holyrood Abbey, the lands of Arthur's Seat seem to have become divided between the Royal Demesne and the estates of Treverlen belonging to Uviet the White.[8] For confirmation of what passed in 1128 at the forming of Holyrood Abbey and the passing of the lands to Kelso Abbey, we can look to the later "Charter of Confirmation, Granted to the Monks of Kelso of King Malcolm IV". Malcolm IV of Scotland inherited the throne from his grandfather David I of Scotland, and was perhaps called upon to confirm many such gifts of land in case of later disputes. This he did, in the above-mentioned charter, confirming the previously given entitlement of

Traverlin, with its due bounds, as Vineth fully and freely possessed and enjoyed it, with all the easements of the adjoining strother (march), which is called Cameri; and the Crag of the same village[9]

to Kelso Abbey. Malcolm goes on to state that in his grandfather's time Alfwyn (perhaps the saxonised form of Uviet, or one of his descendants), Abbot of Halyrude (Holyrood Abbey) and Ernald, Abbot of Kelso, came to an agreement concerning a dispute between them over The Crag, which allowed for the lands of The Crag and Traverlin to pass to the church of Kelso, in exchange for the ten-pounds-lands they had in "Hardiggasthorn, near Northamtun".[9]

 
The old Jougs at Duddingston Kirk in 1885.

The name was superseded during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries by "Dodinestun" from "Dodin’s Estate".[10] This name change came about just after the lands and estates were given to Kelso Abbey by David I. The Abbey quickly feued the estate to one Dodin de Berwic, evidently, from his name, an Anglo-Norman knight. Apparently, then, it was Dodin who changed the name of the settlement, as by 1150 he was referring to himself as "Dodin of Dodinestoun". (Dodin's toun or farm place).[11] This last may be slightly misleading, though, as there was a toft (a homestead with attached arable land) near Berwick-Upon-Tweed, also referred to as Dodin's Town, with which he is quite likely to have had connections.[12] However, it seems likely that the names are connected through branches of the same Norman family. Thereafter the village is often, though not always, referred to as Duddingston, with quite a wide range of spellings. For instance, from heraldic sources we are told that in May 1290 Edward I granted a protection against proceedings for debts to William de Dodingstone, burgess of Edinburgh. Also, with quite a different spelling, but six years later, we are told the name is that of a locality near Edinburgh, and Eleyne de Duddynggeston, of that county, swore fealty to Edward I.[13]

The kirk which was built on the newly gifted lands went by the name Duddingston Kirk, but the name Treverlen still survived into the next century as the parish name, being confirmed as such in a list of 13 parishes belonging to Kelso in 1200, which leads one to suspect there had been a kirk on the site previously.[11] The name has now been given to the new park built on the site of the former Portobello High School and St John's Primary School.[14]

History edit

Cassells says the village was a centre of weaving in the 18th century where "over 40 looms" were in production on The Loan, creating a coarse linen called "Duddingston hardings".[4]

Duddingston Loch has been used for ice-skating and curling, even boasting a curling house, for several centuries. In the 17th and 18th century the village was primarily a centre for the coal and salt mining industry, but was also known for its weaving industry, in particular for a cloth known as Duddingston Hardings.

 
'Bonnie Prince Charlie House'

Bonnie Prince Charlie held a council of war in a house ("then thatched now tiled"[4])[15] in the village, shortly before the Battle of Prestonpans in 1745. In the same year, James Hamilton, 8th Earl of Abercorn purchased the Duddingston Estate from the Duke of Argyll. Lord Abercorn commissioned the architect Sir William Chambers to design Duddingston House in the Palladian style, and this was completed by 1768.[16]

The loch provided the setting for Henry Raeburn's painting of The Skating Minister, painted in the 1790s, as well as the less famous but very atmospheric painting by Charles Lees called Skaters on Duddingston Loch by Moonlight.[17][18]

Dr. James Tytler (1745–1804), author, balloonist and encyclopedist, lived in Duddingston. Robert Burns knew him, describing him as a mortal who wandered the precincts of Edinburgh in leaky shoes, a sky-lighted hat and unlikely breeches, who yet was responsible for at least three quarters of Elliot's Encyclopædia Britannica. In 1774 he was living on the Holyrood Abbey "sanctuary lands" to avoid his creditors. After his wife left him and their children in 1775, he was known thereafter to be co-habiting with at least one, if not two women, one of them a Duddingston washerwoman. This circumstance eventually led to his flight from Scottish justice for the crime of bigamy in 1788, when he left Duddingston, and both women, to remove himself to Berwick. Whilst living in Duddingston he did build a printing press, and turned out further copies of the encyclopedia, and other more successful publications, but he was a poor businessman and never seemed to benefit from these and other successes. Sadly, even his attempt at ballooning in 1784 was something of a debacle. He was finally able to rise to a height of 105 feet (32 m) and descend again, which qualified him as Britain's first balloonist, but his success at the time was overshadowed by other more popular balloonists.[19]

The former Home House in Old Church Lane was built in 1820 and is a category B Listed building [20] that was formerly a children's home for Church of Scotland missionary children.

 
The "Sheep's Heid", reputedly Scotland's oldest pub.

Local attractions edit

The Sheep Heid Inn, usually referred to as the "Sheep's Heid", is said to be Scotland's oldest pub, dating from 1360. It is named after a snuff box either embellished with, or in the shape of a ram's head presented to the landlord by King James VI in 1580.

Since 1923, the loch has been a wildlife reserve, managed by the Scottish Wildlife Trust. It contains a variety of wildfowl and reedbeds. The loch is part of Holyrood Park which is 'owned' by the Scottish Ministers. The Scottish Wildlife Trust purchased the adjacent land at Bawsinch in 1971 and expanded the bird sanctuary into this area.

Dr Neil's Garden[21] is located between Duddingston Kirk and the Loch. Andrew and Nancy Neil were awarded the Queen Elizabeth, the Queen Mother Medal by the Royal Caledonian Horticultural Society.

References edit

  1. ^ The Online Scots Dictionary
  2. ^ a b c Stuart Harris "The Place Names of Edinburgh". 1996. p.609
  3. ^ Stuart Harris "The Place Names of Edinburgh". 1996. p.198
  4. ^ a b c Cassells Old and New Edinburgh vol.2 Ch.31
  5. ^ Watson, William J. The History of the Celtic Place-names of Scotland. 1926. Edinburgh: The Royal Celtic Society.
  6. ^ Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru/A Dictionary of the Welsh Language. 1950–2003. Cardiff: Gwasg Prifysgol Cymru.
  7. ^ Old Edinburgh Club, Article, 1959, G. W. S. Barrow
  8. ^ RCHAMS CANMORE NMRS, MS/726/96 (49-50, no. 103).
  9. ^ a b The Monastic Annals of Teviotdale. 1832. By the REV. James Morton, B.D. p156-158 translated from the Chartulary of Kelso, fol. 9, r.
  10. ^ Barrow, G. W. S. 1959. ‘Treverlen, Duddingston and Arthur’s Seat’, Book of the Old Edinburgh Club, 30: 1–9.
  11. ^ a b Stuart Harris "The Place Names of Edinburgh". 1996. p.243
  12. ^ The Monastic Annals of Teviotdale. 1832. By the Rev. James Morton, B.D. p125
  13. ^ Scottish Arms VOL I (1881): Being a collection of armorial bearings A.D. 1370-1678 (Reproduced in Facsimile from Contemporary Manuscripts) with heraldic and genealogical notes by R. R. Stodart [1]
  14. ^ "Treverlen – Everything about the Treverlen development". www.treverlen.org.uk. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  15. ^ "Duddingston from The Gazetteer for Scotland". scottish-places.info. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  16. ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "Duddingston House (105 Milton Road West), Former Stables and Office (115-127 (Odd Numbers) Milton Road West) (Category A Listed Building) (LB28065)". Retrieved 18 March 2019.
  17. ^ "Scran ::: Skaters: Duddingston Loch by Moonlight, 1857 (oil on canvas)". Scran. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  18. ^ . www.bridgemanart.com. Archived from the original on 19 July 2011. Retrieved 21 April 2018.
  19. ^ Swinton, WE (1981). "Dr. James Tytler: author, balloonist, encyclopedist". Can Med Assoc J. 124 (2): 216–23. PMC 1705159. PMID 7006785.
  20. ^ "4 Old Church Lane, Edinburgh, Edinburgh, Edinburgh".
  21. ^ "Home - Dr Neils Garden". Dr Neils Garden. Retrieved 21 April 2018.

External links edit

  • Bartholomew's Chronological map of Edinburgh (1919)
  • Gazetteer for Scotland: Duddingston
  • Sheep Heid Inn, Duddingston
  • Dr Neils Garden Trust, Duddingston

duddingston, scots, duddiston, historic, village, east, edinburgh, scotland, next, holyrood, park, scots, duddistona, view, village, from, across, loch, location, within, city, edinburgh, council, areashow, city, edinburgh, council, arealocation, within, scotl. Duddingston Scots Duddiston 1 is a historic village in the east of Edinburgh Scotland next to Holyrood Park DuddingstonScots DuddistonA view of Duddingston village from across the loch DuddingstonLocation within the City of Edinburgh council areaShow map of the City of Edinburgh council areaDuddingstonLocation within ScotlandShow map of ScotlandOS grid referenceNT299729Council areaCity of EdinburghLieutenancy areaEdinburghCountryScotlandSovereign stateUnited KingdomPost townEDINBURGHPostcode districtEH8 EH15Dialling code0131PoliceScotlandFireScottishAmbulanceScottishUK ParliamentEdinburgh EastScottish ParliamentEdinburgh EasternList of places UK Scotland 55 56 29 89 N 3 8 48 23 W 55 9416361 N 3 1467306 W 55 9416361 3 1467306 Contents 1 Origins and etymology 2 History 3 Local attractions 4 References 5 External linksOrigins and etymology editThe estate wherein Duddingston Village now lies was first recorded in lands granted to the Tironensian monks of Kelso Abbey by David I of Scotland between 1136 and 1147 2 and is described as stretching from the Crag from Craggenmarf an old name for Arthur s Seat 3 to the Magdalene Bridge Herbert the first Abbot at Kelso granted the lands of Easter and Wester Duddingston to Reginald de Bosco for an annual rent of 10 merks 4 This land grant included the settlement known by the name of Treverlen or Traverlin in the western part of it this being the oldest known name of the village and estates that eventually became known as Duddingston There are several possibilities for the etymology of Treverlen tref gwr len meaning place of the learned man 5 tref y glyn with lenition following the definite article meaning place of the learned women 6 tre war lyn meaning the farm at or on the loch 2 traefor llyn meaning settlement by the lake loch of reeds and or rushes citation needed All these names originate in the Celtic Brythonic languages which pre date the use of the Gaelic or Saxon tongues in Scotland suggesting that they may go back to the time of some of the earliest settlements on Arthur s Seat The last two names in particular fit well as a possible name for the Celtic crannog settlement which stood in the southernmost corner of Duddingston Loch 2 The last Celtic owner of the Treverlen estates is said to have been Uviet the White who owned it from at least 1090 onwards 7 By 1128 though at the founding of Holyrood Abbey the lands of Arthur s Seat seem to have become divided between the Royal Demesne and the estates of Treverlen belonging to Uviet the White 8 For confirmation of what passed in 1128 at the forming of Holyrood Abbey and the passing of the lands to Kelso Abbey we can look to the later Charter of Confirmation Granted to the Monks of Kelso of King Malcolm IV Malcolm IV of Scotland inherited the throne from his grandfather David I of Scotland and was perhaps called upon to confirm many such gifts of land in case of later disputes This he did in the above mentioned charter confirming the previously given entitlement ofTraverlin with its due bounds as Vineth fully and freely possessed and enjoyed it with all the easements of the adjoining strother march which is called Cameri and the Crag of the same village 9 to Kelso Abbey Malcolm goes on to state that in his grandfather s time Alfwyn perhaps the saxonised form of Uviet or one of his descendants Abbot of Halyrude Holyrood Abbey and Ernald Abbot of Kelso came to an agreement concerning a dispute between them over The Crag which allowed for the lands of The Crag and Traverlin to pass to the church of Kelso in exchange for the ten pounds lands they had in Hardiggasthorn near Northamtun 9 nbsp The old Jougs at Duddingston Kirk in 1885 The name was superseded during the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries by Dodinestun from Dodin s Estate 10 This name change came about just after the lands and estates were given to Kelso Abbey by David I The Abbey quickly feued the estate to one Dodin de Berwic evidently from his name an Anglo Norman knight Apparently then it was Dodin who changed the name of the settlement as by 1150 he was referring to himself as Dodin of Dodinestoun Dodin s toun or farm place 11 This last may be slightly misleading though as there was a toft a homestead with attached arable land near Berwick Upon Tweed also referred to as Dodin s Town with which he is quite likely to have had connections 12 However it seems likely that the names are connected through branches of the same Norman family Thereafter the village is often though not always referred to as Duddingston with quite a wide range of spellings For instance from heraldic sources we are told that in May 1290 Edward I granted a protection against proceedings for debts to William de Dodingstone burgess of Edinburgh Also with quite a different spelling but six years later we are told the name is that of a locality near Edinburgh and Eleyne de Duddynggeston of that county swore fealty to Edward I 13 The kirk which was built on the newly gifted lands went by the name Duddingston Kirk but the name Treverlen still survived into the next century as the parish name being confirmed as such in a list of 13 parishes belonging to Kelso in 1200 which leads one to suspect there had been a kirk on the site previously 11 The name has now been given to the new park built on the site of the former Portobello High School and St John s Primary School 14 History editMain article Duddingston Loch Cassells says the village was a centre of weaving in the 18th century where over 40 looms were in production on The Loan creating a coarse linen called Duddingston hardings 4 Duddingston Loch has been used for ice skating and curling even boasting a curling house for several centuries In the 17th and 18th century the village was primarily a centre for the coal and salt mining industry but was also known for its weaving industry in particular for a cloth known as Duddingston Hardings nbsp Bonnie Prince Charlie House Bonnie Prince Charlie held a council of war in a house then thatched now tiled 4 15 in the village shortly before the Battle of Prestonpans in 1745 In the same year James Hamilton 8th Earl of Abercorn purchased the Duddingston Estate from the Duke of Argyll Lord Abercorn commissioned the architect Sir William Chambers to design Duddingston House in the Palladian style and this was completed by 1768 16 The loch provided the setting for Henry Raeburn s painting of The Skating Minister painted in the 1790s as well as the less famous but very atmospheric painting by Charles Lees called Skaters on Duddingston Loch by Moonlight 17 18 Dr James Tytler 1745 1804 author balloonist and encyclopedist lived in Duddingston Robert Burns knew him describing him as a mortal who wandered the precincts of Edinburgh in leaky shoes a sky lighted hat and unlikely breeches who yet was responsible for at least three quarters of Elliot s Encyclopaedia Britannica In 1774 he was living on the Holyrood Abbey sanctuary lands to avoid his creditors After his wife left him and their children in 1775 he was known thereafter to be co habiting with at least one if not two women one of them a Duddingston washerwoman This circumstance eventually led to his flight from Scottish justice for the crime of bigamy in 1788 when he left Duddingston and both women to remove himself to Berwick Whilst living in Duddingston he did build a printing press and turned out further copies of the encyclopedia and other more successful publications but he was a poor businessman and never seemed to benefit from these and other successes Sadly even his attempt at ballooning in 1784 was something of a debacle He was finally able to rise to a height of 105 feet 32 m and descend again which qualified him as Britain s first balloonist but his success at the time was overshadowed by other more popular balloonists 19 The former Home House in Old Church Lane was built in 1820 and is a category B Listed building 20 that was formerly a children s home for Church of Scotland missionary children nbsp The Sheep s Heid reputedly Scotland s oldest pub Local attractions editThe Sheep Heid Inn usually referred to as the Sheep s Heid is said to be Scotland s oldest pub dating from 1360 It is named after a snuff box either embellished with or in the shape of a ram s head presented to the landlord by King James VI in 1580 Since 1923 the loch has been a wildlife reserve managed by the Scottish Wildlife Trust It contains a variety of wildfowl and reedbeds The loch is part of Holyrood Park which is owned by the Scottish Ministers The Scottish Wildlife Trust purchased the adjacent land at Bawsinch in 1971 and expanded the bird sanctuary into this area Dr Neil s Garden 21 is located between Duddingston Kirk and the Loch Andrew and Nancy Neil were awarded the Queen Elizabeth the Queen Mother Medal by the Royal Caledonian Horticultural Society References edit The Online Scots Dictionary a b c Stuart Harris The Place Names of Edinburgh 1996 p 609 Stuart Harris The Place Names of Edinburgh 1996 p 198 a b c Cassells Old and New Edinburgh vol 2 Ch 31 Watson William J The History of the Celtic Place names of Scotland 1926 Edinburgh The Royal Celtic Society Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru A Dictionary of the Welsh Language 1950 2003 Cardiff Gwasg Prifysgol Cymru Old Edinburgh Club Article 1959 G W S Barrow RCHAMS CANMORE NMRS MS 726 96 49 50 no 103 a b The Monastic Annals of Teviotdale 1832 By the REV James Morton B D p156 158 translated from the Chartulary of Kelso fol 9 r Barrow G W S 1959 Treverlen Duddingston and Arthur s Seat Book of the Old Edinburgh Club 30 1 9 a b Stuart Harris The Place Names of Edinburgh 1996 p 243 The Monastic Annals of Teviotdale 1832 By the Rev James Morton B D p125 Scottish Arms VOL I 1881 Being a collection of armorial bearings A D 1370 1678 Reproduced in Facsimile from Contemporary Manuscripts with heraldic and genealogical notes by R R Stodart 1 Treverlen Everything about the Treverlen development www treverlen org uk Retrieved 21 April 2018 Duddingston from The Gazetteer for Scotland scottish places info Retrieved 21 April 2018 Historic Environment Scotland Duddingston House 105 Milton Road West Former Stables and Office 115 127 Odd Numbers Milton Road West Category A Listed Building LB28065 Retrieved 18 March 2019 Scran Skaters Duddingston Loch by Moonlight 1857 oil on canvas Scran Retrieved 21 April 2018 Bridgeman Images www bridgemanart com Archived from the original on 19 July 2011 Retrieved 21 April 2018 Swinton WE 1981 Dr James Tytler author balloonist encyclopedist Can Med Assoc J 124 2 216 23 PMC 1705159 PMID 7006785 4 Old Church Lane Edinburgh Edinburgh Edinburgh Home Dr Neils Garden Dr Neils Garden Retrieved 21 April 2018 External links editBartholomew s Chronological map of Edinburgh 1919 Gazetteer for Scotland Duddingston Sheep Heid Inn Duddingston Dr Neils Garden Trust Duddingston Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Duddingston amp oldid 1207799289, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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