Online Encyclopedia

HUNTINGTOWER AND RUTHVENFIELD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 954 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HUNTINGTOWER AND RUTHVENFIELD  , a

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village of
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Perthshire, Scotland, on the Almond, 3 M . N.W. of Perth, and within 1 m. of Almondbank station on the Caledonian railway . Pop . (1901) 459 .
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Bleaching, the chief industry,
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dates from 1774, when the bleaching-field was formed . By means of an old aqueduct, said to have been built by the Romans, it was provided with
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water from the Almond, the properties of which render it specially suited for bleaching . Huntingtower (originally
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Ruthven) Castle, a once formidable structure, was the scene of the
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Raid of Ruthven (pron . Rivven), when the
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Protestant lords, headed by William, 4th Lord Ruthven and 1st
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earl of Gowrie (1J41-1584), kidnapped the boy-king James VI., on the 22nd of August 1582 . The earl's sons were slain in the attempt (known as the Gowrie conspiracy) to capture James VI . (1600), consequent on which the Scots parliament ordered the name of Ruthven to be abolished, and the
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barony to be known in future as Huntingtower .

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