Online Encyclopedia

BOTHWELL

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 304 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BOTHWELL  , a

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town of
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Lanarkshire, Scotland . Pop. of town (1901) 3015; of parish (1901) 45,905 . The town lies on the right
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bank of the Clyde, 9 M . E.S.E. of
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Glasgow by the North
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British and Caledonian
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railways . Owing to its pleasant situation it has become a residential quarter of Glasgow . The choir of the old
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Gothic church of 1398 (restored at the end of the 19th century) forms a portion of the parish church . Joanna Baillie, the poetess, was born in the manse, and a memorial has been erected in her honour . The
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river is crossed by a suspension
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bridge as well as the bridge near which, on the 22nd of
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June 1679, was fought the
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battle of Bothwell Bridge between the Royalists, under the duke of Monmouth, and the
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Covenanters, in which the latter lost 500 men and
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I000 prisoners . Adjoining this bridge, on the level north-eastern bank, is the castle that once belonged to James Hamilton of Bothwellhaugh (fl . 1566-158o), the assassin of the regent Murray; and near the
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present farmhouse the South Calder is spanned by a
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Roman bridge . The picturesque ruins of Bothwell Castle occupy a conspicuous position on the side of the river, which here takes the bold sweep famed in Scottish
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song as Bothwell bank . The fortress belonged to
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Sir Andrew
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Moray, who fell at Stirling in 1297, and passed by
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marriage to the Douglases .

The lordship was bestowed in 1487 on

Patrick Hepburn, 3rd Lord Hailes, 1st
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earl of Bothwell, who resigned it in 1491 in favour of Archibald Douglas, 5th earl of Angus . It thus reverted to the Douglases and now belongs to the earl of Home, a descendant . The castle is a
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fine example of Gothic, and mainly consists of a
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great oblong quadrangle, flanked on the south side by circular towers . At the east end are the remains of the
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chapel . A
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dungeon bears the
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nickname of " Wallace's Beef Barrel." The unpretending mansion near by was built by Archibald Douglas, 1st earl of
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Forfar (1653-1712) . The parish of Bothwell contains several flourishing towns and villages, all owing their prosperity to the abundance of
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coal, iron and oil-shale . The
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principal places, most of which have stations on the North British or Caledonian railway or both, are Bothwell Park, Carfin, Chapelhall, Bellshill (pop . 8786), Holytown, Mossend, Newarthill,Uddingston (pop . 7463), Clydesdale, Hamilton Palace, Colliery Rows and Tennochside .

End of Article: BOTHWELL
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