Online Encyclopedia

CULROSS (locally pronounced Coo-rus)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 618 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CULROSS (locally pronounced Coo-rus)  , a royal and police burgh, Fifeshire, Scotland, 62 m . W. by S. of Dunfermline and 21 M. from East Grange station on the North
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British railway
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company's
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line from Dunfermline to Stirling . Pop . 348 . Until 1890 it belonged to the detached portion of
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Perthshire . Attractively situated on a hillside sloping gently to the Forth, its placid old-
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world aspect is in keeping with its
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great antiquity . Here St Serf carried on his missionary labours, and founded a church and cemetery, and here he died and was buried . For centuries the townsfolk used to celebrate his day (
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July tat) by walking in procession bearing green boughs . Kentigern, the apostle to Cumbria and first bishop of
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Glasgow, was born at Culross, his
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mother having been driven ashore during a tempest, and was adopted by St Serf as his son . These religious associations, coupled with the fertility of the
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soil, led to the founding of a Cistercian abbey in 1217 . O# this structure the only remains are the western tower and the choir, which, greatly altered as well as repaired early in the 19th century, now forms the parish church . It is supposed that a
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chapel of which some traces exist in the east end of the
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town was dedicated to Kentigern .

James VI. made Culross a royal burgh in 1588 . In 1808 there was discovered in the abbey church, embalmed in a
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silver
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casket, still preserved there, bearing his name and arms, the heart of
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Edward, Lord Bruce of Kinloss, who was killed in August 1613 near
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Bergen-op-Zoom in a duel with
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Sir Edward Sackville, afterwards
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earl of Dorset . Robert Pont (1524-1606), the Re-former, was born at Shirresmiln, or Shiresmill, a
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hamlet in Culross parish . Nearly all its old industries—the
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coal mines, salt
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works,
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linen manufacture, and even the making of iron girdles for the
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baking of scones—have dwindled, but its pleasant
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climate and picturesqueness make it a
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holiday resort . Dunimarle Castle, a handsome structure on the sea-
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shore, adjoins the site of the Castle where, according to tradition,
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Macbeth slew the wife and children of
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Macduff .

End of Article: CULROSS (locally pronounced Coo-rus)
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