Online Encyclopedia

BRECHIN

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 483 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BRECHIN  , a royal, municipal and

police burgh of Forfarshire, Scotland . Pop . (root) 8941 . It lies on the
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left
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bank of the South Esk, 71 M. west of Montrose, and has a station on the
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loop
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line of the Caledonian railway from
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Forfar to
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Bridge of Dun . Brechin is a prosperous
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town, of
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great antiquity, having been the site of a Culdee abbey, The Danes are said to have burned the town in 1012 . David I. erected it into a bishopric in 1150, and it is still a see of the Episcopal Church of Scotland . In 1452 the
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earl of Huntly crushed the insurrection led by the earl of Crawford at the
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battle of Brechin Muir, and in 1.645 the town and castle were harried by the
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marquis of Montrose . James VI. gave a grant for founding a hospital in the burgh, which yet supplies the council with funds for charity . No trace remains of the old walls and gates of the town, but the
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river is crossed by a two-arched stone bridge of very early date . The
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cathedral church of the
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Holy Trinity belongs to the 13th century . It is in the Pointed style, but suffered maltreatment in 1806 at the hands of restorers, whose
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work, however, disappeared during the restoration completed in 1902 . The western gable with its flamboyant window and
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Gothic door and the massive square tower are all that is left of the
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original edifice .

The

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modern stained glass in the chancel is reckoned amongst the finest in Scotland . Immediately adjoining the cathedral to the south-west stands the Round Tower, built about l000 . It is 861 ft. high, has at the
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base a circumference of 50 ft. and a diameter of 16 ft., and is capped with a hexagonal
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spire of 18 ft., which was added in the 15th century . This type of structure is somewhat
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common in Ireland, but the only Scottish examples are those at Brechin, Abernethy in
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Perthshire, and Egilshay in the Orkneys . force by the
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English under
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Edward I., surrendering only when its governor,
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Sir Thomas
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Maule, had been slain . From the Maule
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family it descended to the Dalhousics . Its library contains many important
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MSS., among them Burns's correspondence with George Thomson, and several cartularies including those of St Andrews and Brechin . In the Vennel (alley or small street) some ruins remain of the maison dieu, or hospitium, founded in 1256 by William of Brechin . Besides these
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historical buildings the
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principal public structures include Smith's school, the municipal buildings, the
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free library, the episcopal library (founded by Bishop Forbes, who, as well as Bishop Abernethy-Drummond, presented a large number of volumes) . The principal
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industries include manufactures of
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linen and
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sailcloth,
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bleaching, rope-making,
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brewing, distilling, paper-making, in addition to nurseries and freestone quarries . Brechin—which is controlled by a provost, baffles and council—unites with Arbroath, Forfar, Inverbervie and Montrose to return one member to parliament . Edzell (pronounced Edyell, and, locally, Aigle) lies about 6 m. north of Brechin, with which it is connected by
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rail .

It is situated on the North Esk and near the West

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Water, which falls into the Esk 2 M. south-west . Edzell is on the
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threshold of romantic Highland scenery . The picturesque ruins of Edzell Castle lie a mile to the west of the town . Once the seat of the Lindsays the estate now belongs to the earl of Dalhousie . The church of the parish of Farnell, 32 M. south-east of Brechin, was erected in 1806 after the model, so it is stated,of the famous Holy House (Casa
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Santa) of
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Loreto in Italy . It was here that the old sculptured stone giving a version of the Fall was found . Between Farnell and Brechin lies Kinnaird Castle, the seat of the earl of Southesk .

End of Article: BRECHIN
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