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PERTH , a city, and royal, municipal and police burgh, and countySee also: town of See also: Perthshire, Scotland, 32 M
.
N. by W. of See also: Edinburgh See also: direct, and 474 M. by the See also: North See also: British railway, via the Forth See also: Bridge and Kinross Junction
.
Pop
.
(1901), 33,566
.
It is situated on the right See also: bank of the Tay, between the meadows of the North Inch (98 acres) and those of the See also: South Inch (72 acres), both laid out as public parks
.
The See also: river is crossed by St See also: John's Bridge of nine
See also: arches, completed in 1772 from the designs of John See also: Smeaton and widened a century later; by See also: Victoria Bridge, a See also: modern structure connecting South Street with Dundee Road; and farther south (at the end of Tay Street) by a footway alongside of the viaduct belonging to the Caledonian railway
.
Of earlier See also: bridges one, which crossed at High Street, was swept away by the See also: flood of 1621, and another, constructed by General See also: Wade in 1723–1733, was apparently the predecessor of Smeaton's bridge
.
On the See also: left bank of the river lie the suburb of See also: Bridgend and Kinnoull See also: Hill (729 ft.)
.
To the south are the
See also: wood-clad heights of Moncrieffe Hill (725 ft.), Magdalenes Hill (596 ft.), Kirkton Hill (540 ft.) and Craigie Wood (407) ft
.
In the river are Friarton or Moncrieffe See also: Island and the Stanners
.
Notwithstanding the importance of Perth in former times, almost the See also: sole relic of the past is the See also: church of St John the Baptist, a large Decorated cruciform
See also: building surmounted by a massive square central tower 155 ft. high
.
The See also: original edifice is believed to have been erected in the See also: time of See also: Columba, but the transept and See also: nave of the existing structure date from the early See also: part of the 13th century, the choir from the 15th
.
The church was restored in 1891, and' is now divided into the See also: East, See also: Middle and West churches
.
The See also: silver-gilt communion cup used in the Middle Church is said to have been presented by See also: Queen Mary
.
In May 1559 John Knox preached in St John's his famous See also: sermon in denunciation of See also: idolatry
.
The Dominican or Blackfriars' monastery, founded by See also: Alexander II. in 1231, occupied a site near the west end of St John's Bridge; in. what is now
See also: King Street stood the Carthusian monastery, founded by
See also: James I. in 1425; the Franciscan or Greyfriars' monastery, founded in 1460 by Laurance, first
See also: Lord See also: Oliphant, stood on the See also: present Greyfriars' cemetery; the Carmelite or Whitefriars' monastery, founded in 1260, stood west of the town
.
The tombstone of James I. and his queen, who were buried in the See also: Charterhouse, was afterwards removed to St John's East Church
.
During the See also: period between the beginning of the 12th century and the assassination of James I. in 1437, many of the Scottish parliaments were held in Perth
.
The building in which they met stood off High Street and was only cleared away in 1818, itssite being occupied by the Freemasons' See also: Hall
.
The
See also: earl of Gowrie's palace, built in 1520, stood in spacious grounds near the river and was removed in 1805 to provide See also: room for the county buildings
.
The See also: castle of Perth stood on the north of High Street, not far from St John's
.
It was probably built about 86o and demolished about 1400
.
The See also: Spey or See also: Spy tower, the most important fortress on the city See also: wall, guarded the south See also: gate close to the river, but it was taken down early in the 19th century
.
The market See also: cross, erected in High Street in 1669 to replace the older cross which See also: Cromwell destroyed, was removed in 1765 as an obstruction
.
The huge fortress, 466 ft. square, which Cromwell erected in 1651 on the South Inch, close to the river and the Greyfriars' burying-ground, was demolished in 1663 . The See also: house of See also: Catherine Glover, the " See also: Fair Maid of Perth," still stands in See also: Curfew See also: Row
.
James VI.'s Hospital, founded in 1569, occupies the site of the Carthusian monastery, the original structure having been pulled down by Cromwell's orders
.
The pensioners now live out and the hospital has been converted into artisans' dwellings
.
Among modern public buildings the See also: principal are St See also: Ninian's Episcopal See also: Cathedral, in the Early Middle Pointed See also: style, an important example (completed 1890) of the See also: work of See also: William Butterfield (1814–1900); the municipal buildings (1881); the city-hall; the
See also: Marshall Memorial Hall (1823), See also: housing the public library and the museum of the Perth See also: Literary and Antiquarian Society; the Perthshire natural See also: history museum; the Sandeman public library (1898), founded by a bequest of Professor Sandeman of See also: Owens See also: College, Manchester
.
The general prison for Scotland, south of the South Inch, was originally erected in 1812 as a depot for French prisoners, but was remodelled as a convict prison in 1840 and afterwards enlarged
.
North-west of the city are the military barracks built in 1793-1794
.
Besides the See also: regular elementary See also: schools there are the Perth See also: Academy (18oi) with which was subsequently amalgamated the Burgh Grammar School, an institution supposed to date from the 12th century; See also: Sharp's institute (1860); the See also: Stewart's
See also: free school, an See also: industrial school for girls, and the Fechney industrial school
.
The charitable institutions comprise the royal infirmary, in the See also: Italian style, considerably enlarged since its foundation in 1836; the See also: Murray royal lunatic
See also: asylum in Bridgend; the Hillside House in Kinnoull and the small-pox hospital
.
From the south the city is entered by the North British railway and the Caledonian railway (which also runs west to St Fillans, east to Dundee and north-west to See also: Aberdeen); and from the north by the Highland railway, the three systems utilizing a general station in the south-west of the town
.
During the season there is communication with Dundee and other river ports by steamer
.
The navigation of the stream is considerably obstructed by sandbanks, but vessels of 200 tons can unload at the quays, which, with the town and Friarton harbours, lie below the South Inch
.
The greatest tidal rise is 13 ft . The chief imports are BalticSee also: timber, See also: coal, See also: salt and manure; and the exports, manufactured goods, grain, potatoes and slates
.
Perth has long been famous for its dyeing and See also: bleaching, the bleach-See also: fields being mostly situated outside of the city, in convenient proximity to the Tay and Almond
.
The other leading See also: industries include manufactures of gauge-glasses, ink, muslins, See also: India shawls, jute goods, woollens and winceys, See also: floorcloth, and boots and shoes
.
There are iron foundries, breweries, distilleries, rope and See also: sail See also: works, coach-building yards, steam See also: joinery works, and brick and tile works
.
The See also: salmon See also: fisheries of the Tay yield a substantial revenue
.
Perth is under the jurisdiction of a town council, with a lord provost and bailies, and returns one member to parliament
.
History.—During the time that it was occupied by the See also: Romans, a period estimated at 320 years, the city was called Victoria; but shortly after their withdrawal it seems to have See also: borne the See also: Celtic appellation of Aber-tha (" at the mouth of the Tay ")
.
The transition to the latinized See also: form Bertha and later to Perth (the Gaelic name being Peart) appears obvious
.
On the conversion of the original Pictish inhabitants and the dedication of the first church to St John the Baptist, the town
was designated St Johnstoun, and it continued to be known indifferently by this name and that of Perth down to the 17th century
.
See also: Roman remains have often been found in excavations carried out within the existing boundaries, which suggests that the Roman See also: settlement was at least twenty feet below the present See also: surface
.
The obscurity of the early See also: annals of the town is explained by the circumstance that See also: Edward I. caused the records to be removed
.
Perth is stated to have been a burgh in 11o6 and was made a royal burgh by William the See also: Lion in 1210
.
During the Scottish See also: wars of the Independence its fortifications were strengthened by Edward I
.
(1298)
.
Robert See also: Bruce several times ineffectually attempted to seize it, but in 1311 he succeeded in scaling the walls during a See also: night attack
.
This was the See also: fourth and most brilliant of the seven sieges which the city has sustained
.
Taken by Edward III. in 1335, it was recaptured in 1339
.
In 1396 the combat between the Clan Chattan and the Clan Quhele, described in See also: Scott's Fair Maid of Perth, took place on the North Inch in presence of Robert III. and his queen, Annabella See also: Drummond
.
The Blackfriars' monastery was the scene of the See also: murder of James I. by Walter, earl of Atholl, in 1437
.
In consequence Perth lost its status as capital, in which it had succeeded to Scone, and the Parliament Courts were transferred to Edinburgh in 1482
.
Gowrie Palace was the scene of the mysterious " Gowrie " conspiracy against James VI. in 1600
.
The town was taken by Montrose in 1644, by Cromwell in 1651, and was occupied by Viscount Dundee in 1689
.
In 1715 the Old Pretender was proclaimed king at the Mercat Cross (See also: Sept
.
16), and the chevalier himself appeared in the city in the followingSee also: January, only to leave it precipitately on the approach of the earl of See also: Argyll
.
See also: Prince See also: Charles Edward spent a few days in Perth from the 3rd of
See also: September 1745
.
In both rebellions the magistrates took the See also: side of the See also: Crown and were supported by the townsfolk generally, the See also: Jacobites See also: drawing their strength mainly from the county noblemen and gentry with their retainers
.
Since then the city has devoted itself to the pursuits of See also: trade and commerce
.
Perth was visited by plague in 1512, 1585—1587, 16o8 and 1645; by cholera in 1832; and the floods of 1210, -1621, 1744 1773 and 1814 were exceptionally severe
.
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