Online Encyclopedia

OLD DEER

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 69 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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OLD

DEER  , a parish and
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village in the
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district of Buchan,
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Aberdeenshire, Scotland . Pop . (19o1), 4313 . The village lies on the Deer or South Ugie
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Water, 14 m . W. of
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Peterhead, and 2 M. from Mintlaw station on the
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Great North of Scotland Railway
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Company's branch
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line from Aberdeen to Peterhead . The
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industries include distilling,
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brewing, and the manufacture of woollens, and there are quarries of granite and
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limestone . Columba and his
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nephew Drostan founded a monastery here in the 6th century, of which no trace remains . A most interesting relic of the monks was discovered in 1857 in the Cambridge University library by Henry Bradshaw . It consisted of a small MS. of the Gospels in the Vulgate, fragments of the liturgy of the
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Celtic church, and notes, in the Gaelic script of the 12th century, referring to the charters of the ancient monastery, including a
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summary of that granted by David I . These are among the
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oldest examples of Scottish Gaelic . The MS. was also adorned with Gaelic designs . It had belonged to the monks of Deer and been in the possession of the University Library since 1715 .

It was edited by

John Stuart (1813–1877) for the Spalding Club, by whom it was published in 1869 under the title of The
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Book of Deer . In 1218 William Comyn,
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earl of Buchan, founded the Abbey of St Mary of Deer, now in ruins, m. farther up the
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river than the monastery and on the opposite
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bank . Although it was erected for
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Cistercians from the priory of Kinloss, near Forres, the
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property of the Columban monastery was re-moved to it . The founder (d . 1233) and his countess were buried in the church . The parish is rich in antiquities, but the most noted of them—the Stone of Deer, a sculptured block of
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syenite, which stood near the Abbey—was destroyed in 1854 . The thriving village of NEW DEER (formerly called Auchriddie) lies about 7 m . W. of the older village; it includes the ruined castle of Fedderat .

End of Article: OLD DEER
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