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FALKLAND , a royal and police burgh of Fifeshire, Scotland . Pop . (1901) 809 . It is situated at theSee also: northern See also: base of the See also: hill of
See also: East See also: Lomond (1471 ft. high), 2 M. from Falkland Road station (with which there is communication by 'bus), on the See also: North See also: British railway See also: company's See also: main See also: line to Dundee, 21 M
.
N. of See also: Edinburgh as the crow flies
.
It is an old-See also: world-looking place, many of the See also: ancient houses still See also: standing
.
Its See also: industries are chiefly concerned with the See also: weaving of See also: linen and the See also: brewing of See also: ale, for which it was once specially noted; and it has few public buildings save the See also: town See also: hall
.
The palace of the Stuarts, however—more beautiful than Holyrood and quite as romantic—lends the spot its fame and charm
.
The older edifice that occupied this site was a hunting-tower of the Mac-duffs, earls of Fife, and was transferred with the earldom in 1371 to Robert
See also: Stewart,
See also: earl of Fife and See also: Menteith, afterwards duke of Albany, second son of Robert II
.
Because of his See also: father's long illness and the incapacity of Robert III., his See also: brother Albany was during many years virtual ruler of Scotland, and, in the hope of securing the See also: crown, caused the heir-apparent--See also: David, duke of Rothesay—to be conveyed to the See also: castle by force and there starved to See also: death, in 1402
.
The conversion of the Thane's tower into the existing palace was begun by See also: James III. and completed in 1538
.
The western
See also: part had two round towers, similar to those at Holyrood, which were also built by James V., and the See also: southern See also: elevation was ornamented with niches and statues, giving it a close resemblance to the Perpendicular See also: style of the semi-ecclesiastical architecture of See also: England
.
The palace soon became the favourite summer residence of the Stuarts . From it James V. when a boy fled toSee also: Stirling by See also: night from the custody of the earl of See also: Angus, and in it he died in 1542
.
Here, too, See also: Queen Mary spent some of her happiest days, playing the country girl in its parks and woods
.
When the See also: court was held at Falkland the See also: Green was the daily scene of revelry and dance, and " To be Falkland bred " was a proverb that then came into vogue to designate a courtier
.
James VI. delighted in the palace and especially in the See also: deer
.
He upset the schemes of the Gowrie conspirators by escaping from Falkland to St Andrews, and it was while His Majesty was residing in the palace that the fifth earl of Bothwell, in 1592, attempted to kidnap him
.
In See also: September 1 596 an intensely dramatic interview took place in the palace between the See also: king and Andrew
See also: Melville and other Presbyterian ministers sent by the general See also: assembly at See also: Cupar to remonstrate with him on allowing the See also: Roman Catholic lords to return to Scotland
.
In 16J4 the eastern wing was accidentally destroyed by fire, during its tenancy by the soldiers of See also: Cromwell, by whose orders the See also: fine old oaks in the See also: park were cut down for the See also: building of a fort at See also: Perth
.
Even in its neglected See also: state the mansion impressed See also: Defoe, who declared the Scottish See also: kings owned more palaces than their See also: English See also: brothers
.
In 1715 Rob See also: Roy garrisoned the palace and failed not to See also: levy dues on the burgh and neighbourhood
.
Signs of decay were more evident when See also: Thomas Carlyle saw it, for he likened it to "a black old bit of coffin or protrusive shin-
See also: bone striking through the See also: soil of the dead past." But a munificent See also: protector at length.appeared in the See also: person of the third See also: marquess of Bute, who acquired the estate and buildings in 1888, and forth-with undertook the restoration of the palace
.
Falkland became a royal burgh in 1458 and its charter was renewed in 1595, and before the earlier date it had been a seat of the See also: Templars
.
It gives the title of viscount to the EnglishSee also: family of Cary, the patent having been granted in 1620 by James VI
.
The town's most distinguished native was See also: Richard See also: Cameron, the Covenanter
.
His house—a three-storeyed structure with yellow harled front and thatched roof—still stands on the See also: south See also: side of the square in the main street
.
The Hackstons of Rathillet also had a See also: house in Falkland
.
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