Online Encyclopedia

KILWINNING

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V15, Page 798 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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KILWINNING  , a municipal and

police burgh of
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Ayrshire, Scotland, on the right
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bank of the Garnock, 24 in . S.W. of
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Glasgow by the Caledonian railway, and 264 in. by the Glasgow & South-Western railway . Pop . (Igor), 4440• The chief buildings include the public library, the Masonic hall and the
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district hospital . The centre of
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interest, however, is the ruined abbey, originally one of the richest in Scotland . Founded about 1140 by
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Hugh de Morville, lord of Cunninghame, for Tyronensian monks of the
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Benedictine order, it was dedicated to St Winnin, who lived on the spot in the 8th century and has given his name to the
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town . This beautiful specimen of Early
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English architecture was partly destroyed in 1561, and its lands were granted to the
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earl of Eglinton and others . Kilwinning is the traditional birthplace of Scottish
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freemasonry, the lodge, believed to have been founded by the
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foreign architects and masons who came to build the abbey, being regarded as the
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mother lodge in Scotland . The royal
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company of archers of Kilwinning—dating, it is said, as far back as 1488—meet every
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July to shoot at the popinjay . The industry in
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weaving shawls and lighter fabrics has died out; and the large iron,
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coal and fire-clay
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works at Eglinton, and worsted spinning, employ most of the inhabitants . About a mile from Kilwinning is Eglinton Castle, the seat of the earls of Eglinton, built in 1798 in the English castellated style .

End of Article: KILWINNING
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