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  2. Greyfriars Burial Ground - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Greyfriars_Burial_Ground

    Dating to 1580, it is now Category A listed, [1] with its collection of gravestones considered one of the best in Scotland. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The cemetery closed to burials in 1978. The cemetery occupies the former location of the Greyfriars Monastery , founded by Laurence Oliphant, 1st Lord Oliphant , in 1496 and destroyed in 1559 at the start of ...

  3. Peter Crerar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Crerar

    His Pictou obituary reads as follows: Died... At Pictou, on Wednesday, 5th inst., Peter Crerar, Esq., a native of Breadalbane, Perthshire, Scotland, First Deputy Surveyor and Registrar of Deeds for the County of Pictou, aged 71. But few men have passed from our midst whose loss will be more generally or so extensively regretted.

  4. Laird of Burnbrae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laird_of_Burnbrae

    He was born about 1590 to Peter Primrose and Margaret Callender. It is unknown who the mother(s) of his children are but it is recorded that he married Elizabeth Sands on 20 September 1665 in Culross, Fife, Scotland. John died in December 1669. John Primrose is the sixth known Laird of Burnbrae. He was born about 1617 to John Primrose, and ...

  5. Magnus Jackson - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Magnus_Jackson

    Jackson died in 1891, aged 59. His death was not unexpected, his having been ill for several years. His causes of death were given as "senile decay, chronic hepatitis, acute dyspepsia and inanition". [1] In his newspaper obituary, the Perthshire Constitutional noted that he was "known across Scotland as a first-rate landscape photographer". [1]

  6. Abernyte - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abernyte

    The group undertook an oral history project in 1996, which is now held at the archives at the University of Dundee. [ 3 ] The history of Abernyte in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries is documented in Abernyte: The Quiet Revolution , which was written by Dr Mary Young and the Abernyte Heritage Group and published in 2008.

  7. Andrew Hay, 8th Earl of Erroll - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Andrew_Hay,_8th_Earl_of_Erroll

    His father inherited the earldom after the death of his uncle, William Hay, 6th Earl of Erroll, who died leaving only a baby girl, Jean Hay. [2] The Peerage of Scotland is unique in that it allows the titles to descend along the female line. Jean could have conceivably inherited the earldom as Countess of Erroll.

  8. Thomas Hay Marshall - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Hay_Marshall

    Thomas Hay Marshall (1770 – 15 July 1808) was twice lord provost of Perth, Scotland. ... is situated just over two miles to the northeast of today's structure ...

  9. Perthshire - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Perthshire

    Perthshire is known as the "big county", or "the Shire", due to its roundness and status as the fourth largest historic county in Scotland. It has a wide variety of landscapes, from the rich agricultural straths in the east, to the high mountains of the southern Highlands .

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