Skip to main content

Ordnance Survey - Angus county, OS Name Books - Forfar (Angus) county - Volume 45 - Parish of Glamis, OS1/14/45

Continued entries/extra info

[Page] 34
Parish of Glamiss, Co. [County] of Forfar -- Sheet 38-7 Trace 1 -- Names collected by Thomas Lynch C/a [Civilian assistant]

[Note]
Extracts from "Memorials of Angus and Mearns" by Andrew Jervise.

"But this latter point may now be considered pretty well established" (there being two castles at Forfar,
the site of one being still well marked in the town of Forfar) "since, within a hundred and fifty years after the death
of that King" (Malcolm of Canmore) "record shews that Robert de Quincy made over to Roger de Argenten
what he terms "my old castle of Forfar, which our Lord King William gave to me in lieu of a toft".
Jervise supposes the old castle, here alluded to , to be the one on "Queen Margarets Inch". The inch, he says,
was an artificial island, composed, as is yet apparent, of large piles of oak and loose stones and
layers of earth" and though now accessible from land, is said to have been reached by a drawbridge
"Assuming, therefore, that the old castle of Forfar stood upon Queen Margaret's Inch, it
had been there, according to Boyce and others, that King Malcolm held his first Parliament".
"It is certain that a religious house was established upon it" (Queen Margaret's Inch) by
Alexander II in 1234 and that, besides money and other privileges, he gave the two officiating
monks pasture for six cows and a horse on his lands of Tyrbeg".
(See Brev. Antiq. Reg. de Cupro [Brevis Antiquum Registrum de Cupro in Anegus - Short old Register of Coupar in Angus)
The Statistical account of Forfarshire says P. [Page] 695. "On the north side of the Loch
of Forfar, there is a peninsula called the Inch. It has obviously been artificially
formed". --- "It is said that Margaret, Queen of Malcolm Canmore, had a residence
upon it. The ruins of walls of considerable thickness were recently to be traced upon it".

Ordnance Survey - Angus county, OS Name Books - Forfar (Angus) county - Volume 45 - Parish of Glamis, OS1/14/45

This volume contains information on place names found in the Forfarshire parish of Glamis.

Ordnance Survey - Angus county

Ordnance Survey was established in the 18th century to create maps, surveys and associated records for the entirety of Great Britain. These records are arranged by county. This entry has been created to enable searching for Ordnance Survey records for the county of Angus, which is in the east of Scotland. The boundaries of the county were altered by the Boundary Commissioners in 1891.

View more volumes for Ordnance Survey - Angus county