Volume contents
- 1 - Fetteresso , page 1 (start)
- 10 - Fetteresso , page 10
- 20 - Fetteresso , page 20
- 30 - Fetteresso , page 30
- 40 - Fetteresso , page 40
- 50 - Fetteresso , page 50
- 60 - Fetteresso , page 60
- 70 - Fetteresso , page 70
- 80 - Fetteresso , page 80
- 90 - Fetteresso , page 90
- 100 - Fetteresso , page 100
- 110 - Fetteresso , page 110
- 120 - Fetteresso , page 120
- 130 - Fetteresso , page 130
- 140 - Fetteresso , page 140
- 150 - Fetteresso , page150
- 160 - Fetteresso , page 160
- 170 - Fetteresso , page 170
- 180 - Fetteresso , page 180
- 190 - Fetteresso , page 190
- 200 - Fetteresso , page 200
- 210 - Fetteresso , page 210
- 220 - Fetteresso , page 220
- 230 - Fetteresso , page 230
- 240 - Fetteresso , page 240
- 250 - Fetteresso , page 250
- 254 - Fetteresso , page 254 (end)
- 267 - Fetteresso , title page
- 268 - Fetteresso , index
List of names as written | Various modes of spelling | Authorities for spelling | Situation | Description remarks |
---|---|---|---|---|
Stone cist and urn found here | Cist and Urn found here Cist and Urn found here |
Mr Robert Duthie (Stonehaven) Mr John Taylor (Stonehaven) William Cummings (Bogheadley) |
012.09 | During the month of October 1863 while a laborer named James Smith was engaged in excavating a sand bank on the farm of Bogheadley he discovered a Stone Cist about three feet in length two in breadth and of proportionate depth. The chamber contained a cinerary urn, very rudely manufactured, a small quantity of decayed bones, a jet necklace, consisting of about sixty large beads of an elongated shape, and nine ornamental pieces of the same material that had been used in the elaboration of the pattern. The longitudinal position of the grave is east and west, shewing the cist to belong to the Christian period. The presence of the necklace would seem to indicate that the grave had been that of a female and the osseous remains would shew that the body had not been subjected to the process of burning but had been deposited with limbs - a position in which skeletons in that class of tumuli are not unfrequently found. The Urn is of Clay sun-dried but from its moist and fragile condition it went to pieces on being handled, [continued on page 162] |
Continued entries/extra info
[Page] 161
Parish of Fetteresso
Ordnance Survey - Kincardine county, OS Name Books - Kincardine county - Volume 10 - Parish of Fetteresso, OS1/19/10
This volume contains information on place names found in the parish of Fetteresso.
Ordnance Survey - Kincardine 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 Kincardine, which is in the north east of Scotland. The boundaries of the county were altered by the Boundary Commissioners in 1891.