Ettleton
Ettleton is a village near Castleton, in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, in the former Roxburghshire.
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Ettleton churchyard
Etymology and history
Ettleton Parish was once also known as, or contained, Dinwiddie. The first element of this name appears to be the Cumbric word din, meaning 'fort'.[1] Ettleton Cemetery, on the slopes of Ettleton Sike, is the burial place of many members of Clan Armstrong. Other places nearby include Newcastleton.
gollark: Very strong time preference.
gollark: I suppose you can just read that as time preference if you want.
gollark: People don't try and make themselves as happy as possible or they would... probably eat better and exercise more than they (we...) do.
gollark: If you assume people want "fun" or something more than... well, actual monetary value... it kind of makes sense?
gollark: And value that over actual money.
References
- Brooke, C J (2000), Safe sanctuaries: security and defence in Anglo-Scottish border churches 1290-1690, Edinburgh, pages 125, 201, 236–237, 362, held at RCAHMS
- Roy, W (1747–55) Military Survey of Scotland
- Elliot, G.A., Fugitives' graves in Ettleton and Castleton Churchyards, and the Armstrong Cross, in 'Berwickshire Naturalists' Club History for 1965', XXXVII, pt.1. (1966) pp54–7
- Bethany Fox, 'The P-Celtic Place-Names of North-East England and South-East Scotland', The Heroic Age, 10 (2007), http://www.heroicage.org/issues/10/fox.html (appendix at http://www.heroicage.org/issues/10/fox-appendix.html).
External links
- CANMORE/RCAHMS record of Ettleton Cemetery
- CANMORE/RCAHMS record of Ettleton Sike; Kirk Hill; Side
- RCAHMS record of Ettleton
- The Scottish War Graves Project: Ettleton Old Churchyard, nr Newcastleton
- The Armstrong Clan Society
- Scottish Borders Council: Around Newcastleton
- Geograph image: Ettleton Cemetery near to Newcastleton
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