Online Encyclopedia

DRYBURGH ABBEY

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 609 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DRYBURGH

ABBEY  , a monastic ruin in the extreme south-west of
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Berwickshire, Scotland, about 5 M . S.E. of
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Melrose, and r t m . E. of St Boswells station on the North
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British railway's Waverley route from
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Edinburgh to Carlisle . The name has been derived from the Gaelic darach bruach, " oak
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bank, " in allusion to the fact that the Druids once practised their
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rites here . The abbey occupies the spot where, about 522, St Modan, an Irish Culdee, established a sanctuary—a secluded position on a tongue of
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land washed on three sides by the
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Tweed . Founded in 1150 by David I.—though it has also been ascribed to
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Hugh de Morville (d . 1162), lord of Lauderdale and constable of Scotland —it enjoyed
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great prosperity until 1322, when it was partially destroyed by the
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English under
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Edward II . It suffered again at the hands of Richard II. in 1385, and was reduced to ruin during the expedition of the
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earl of Hertford in 1545 . After the Reformation the estate was erected into a temporal lordship and given (,1604) by James VI. to John Erskine, 2nd earl of Mar . At a later date it was sold, but reverted to a branch of the Erskines in x786, when it was acquired by the x rth earl of Buchan . In 1700 the abbey lands belonged to Thomas Haliburton, Scott's great-grandfather, and, but for an extravagant
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grand-
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uncle who became bankrupt and had to
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part with the
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property, they would have descended to
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Sir Walter by
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inheritance . " We have nothing
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left of Dryburgh," he said, ".but the right of stretching our bones there." The style in general is Early English, but the west door and the restored entrance from the
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nave to the cloisters are
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fine examples of transitional Norman .

Though in various stages of decay, nearly every one of the monastic buildings is represented by a fragment . Of the cruciform church—190 ft.

long by 75 broad at the transepts—there remain some of the
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outer walls, a segment of the choir, the east aisle of the north transept, the stumps of some of the pillars of the nave, the west gable, the south transept and its adjacent
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chapel of St Modan . The most beautiful of these relics is St Mary's aisle of the north transept, in which were buried Sir Walter Scott (1832), his wife, son, his son-in-law John Gibson Lockhart, and his ancestors, the Haliburtons of New Mains . Sir Walter's tomb is a plain block of polished
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Peterhead granite, inscribed only with his name and the
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dates of his birth and
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death . The next aisle is the
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burial-place of:the Erskines of Shielhill and the Haigs of Bemersyde . On the south side of the church, at a
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lower level, stand the cloisters, about Too ft. square, bounded on the west by the dungeons, on the south-west by the cellars and refectory, in the west wall of which is an exquisite ivy-clad rose window, and on the east by the chapter-house, on a still lower level . The chapter-house, a lofty
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building with vaulted roof, is the most
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complete structure of the
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group, and adjoining it on the south are, first the abbot's parlour and then the library, the three apartments communicating with each other, and constituting the
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oldest portion of the abbey . In the grounds are many venerable trees, a yew near the chapter-house being at least coeval with the abbey .

End of Article: DRYBURGH ABBEY
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