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KELSO , a police burgh and marketSee also: town of See also: Roxburghshire, Scotland, on the See also: left See also: bank of the See also: Tweed, 52 M
.
(43 M. by road) S.E. of See also: Edinburgh and See also: lot m
.
N.E. of See also: Jedburgh by the See also: North See also: British railway
.
Pop
.
(1901), 4008
.
The name has been derived from the Old Welsh calch, or Anglo-Saxon cealc, " See also: chalk", and the Scots how, " hollow," a derivation more evident in the earlier forms Calkon and Calchon, and illustrated in Chalkheugh, the name of a locality in the town
.
The ruined abbey, dedicated to the Virgin and St See also: John the Evangelist, was founded in 1128 by
See also: David I. for monks from Tiron in See also: Picardy, whom he transferred hither from See also: Selkirk, where they had been installed fifteen years before
.
The abbey, the See also: building of which was completed towards the See also: middle of the 13th century, became one of the richest and most powerful establishments in Scotland, claiming precedence over the other monasteries and disputing for a See also: time the supremacy with St Andrews
.
It suffered damage in numerous See also: English forays, was pillaged by the 4th See also: earl of See also: Shrewsbury in 1522, and was reduced to ruins in 1545 by the earl of Hertford (afterwards the See also: Protector See also: Somerset)
.
In 1602 the abbey lands passed into the hands of See also: Sir Robert See also: Ker of Cessford, 1st earl of See also: Roxburghe
.
The ruins were disfigured by an attempt to render See also: part of them available for public worship, and one vault was long utilized as the town See also: gaol
.
All excrescences, however, were cleared away at the beginning of the 19th century, by the efforts of the Duke of Roxburghe
.
The See also: late Norman and Early Pointed cruciform See also: church has an unusual ground-
See also: plan, the west end of the See also: cross forming the See also: nave and being shorter than the chancel
.
The nave and transepts extend only 23 ft. from the central tower
.
The remains include most of the tower, nearly the whole of the walls of the See also: south transept, less than See also: half of the west front with a fragment of the richly moulded and deeply-set doorway, the north and west sides of the north transept, and a remnant of the chancel
.
The chancel alone had aisles, while its See also: main circular See also: arches were surmounted by two tiers of See also: triforium galleries
.
The predominant feature is the See also: great central tower, which, as seen from a distance, suggests the keep of a Norman See also: castle
.
It rested on four Early Pointed arches, each 45 ft. high (of which the south and west yet exist) supported by piers of clustered columns
.
Over the Norman porch in the north transept is a small chamber with an interlaced See also: arcade surmounted by a network gable
.
The Tweed is crossed at Kelso by a See also: bridge of five arches constructed in 1803 by John See also: Rennie
.
The public buildings include a See also: court See also: house, the town See also: hall, corn
See also: exchange, high school and grammar school (occupying the site of the school which Sir Walter See also: Scott attended in 1783)
.
The public See also: park lies in the See also: east of the town, and the See also: race-course to the north of it
.
The leading See also: industries are the making of fishing tackle, agricultural machinery and implements, and chemical See also: manures, besides coach-building, See also: cabinet-making and upholstery, corn and saw mills, iron founding, &c
.
See also: James and John Ballantyne,
See also: friends of Scott, set up a See also: press about the end of the 18th century, from which there issued, in 1802, the first two volumes of the Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border; but when the See also: brothers transferred their business to Edinburgh printing languished
.
The Kelso See also: Mail, founded by James Ballantyne in 1797, is now the See also: oldest of the Border See also: news-papers
.
The town is an important agricultural centre, there being weekly corn and fortnightly cattle markets, and, every See also: September, a great sale of Border rams
.
Kelso became a burgh of See also: barony in 1634 and five years later received the See also: Covenanters, under Sir See also: Alexander
See also: Leslie, on their way to the encampment on See also: Duns See also: Law
.
On the 24th of See also: October 1715 the Old Pretender was proclaimed James VIII. in the market square, but in 1745 See also: Prince See also: Charles
See also: Edward found no active adherents in the town
.
About 1 m
.
W. of Kelso is Floors or Fleurs Castle, the See also: principal seat of the duke of Roxburghe
.
The mansion as originally designed by Sir John See also: Vanbrugh in 1718 was severely plain, but in 1849 See also: William
See also: Henri Playfair converted it into a magnificent structure in the Tudor See also: style
.
On the peninsula formed by the junction of the Teviot and the Tweed stood the formidable castle and flourishing town of Roxburgh,from which the See also: shire took its name
.
No trace exists of the town, and of the castle all that is left are a few ruins shaded by See also: ancient ash trees
.
The castle was built by the Northumbrians, who called it Marchidum, or Marchmound, its See also: present name apparently meaning Rawic's burgh, after some forgotten chief
.
After the consolidation of the See also: kingdom of Scotland it became a favoured royal residence, and a town gradually sprang up beneath its See also: protection, which reached its palmiest days under David I., and formed a member of the Court of Four Burghs with Edinburgh, See also: Stirling and See also: Berwick
.
It possessed a church, court of See also: justice, mint, mills, and, what was remarkable for the 12th century, grammar school
.
Alexander II. was married and Alexander III. was See also: born in the castle
.
During the long See also: period of Border warfare, the town was repeatedly burned and the castle captured
.
After the defeat of See also: Wallace at See also: Falkirk the castle See also: fell into the hands of the English, from whom it was delivered in 1314 by Sir James See also: Douglas
.
Ceded to Edward III. in 1333, it was regained in 1342 by Sir Alexander See also: Ramsay of Dalhousie, only to be lost again four years later
.
The castle was finally retaken and razed to the ground in 146o
.
It was at the siege, that the See also: king, James II., was killed by the
See also: explosion of a huge See also: gun called " the See also: Lion." On the fall of the castle the town languished and was finally abandoned in favour of the rising burgh of Kelso
.
The town, whose See also: patron-See also: saint was St James, is still commemorated by St James's See also: Fair, which is held on the 5th of every See also: August on the vacant site, and is the most popular of Border festivals
.
Sandyknowe or Smailholm Tower, 6 m
.
W. of Kelso, dating from the 15th century, is considered the best example of a Border Peel and the most perfect relic of a feudal structure in the South of Scotland
.
Two m
.
N. by E. of Kelso is the See also: pretty See also: village of Ednam (Edenham, " The Village on the See also: Eden "), the birthplace of the poet James See also: Thomson, to whose memory an obelisk, 52 ft. high, was erected on Ferney See also: Hill in 182o
.
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