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INDEX.

ABBATIAL changed into Episcopal jurisdic- | Ambry in old church of Turriff, cxliii.

tion, cxxiii.

Aberdeen, charter of David I. dated at,
lxiii.

Aberdour, "city" of, ii.; vestiges of early
population around, ii. ; its "red" dun, iii.;
church dedicated to St. Drostan, iv.; his
well and shrine, v.; other churches
dedicated to him, v. n.
Abernethy, Culdees at, cxxi.

Andrew, Bishop of Caithness, lix.
Arbuthnott, Kirktown of, its Scolocs,
cxxxvii.

Ardmaers in Ireland, lxxvii. n.; receivers
of dues, ib.

Arthur's Oven, cli.

BAILIE of the monks of St. Andrews, his
rights, xcv.

Achad Madchor (Auchmachar) granted to Ball-Domin granted to Deer, lv.
Deer, lvi.

Achad toche temni granted to Deer, xlix.
Adam, brother of Fergus, Earl of Buchan,

X.

Adam, son of Ferdomnac, lxiii.

Adam, son of Fergus, Earl of Buchan, x.
Aids exigible from land, xc.
Alba, early condition of, vii.; clans, mor-
maers, toisechs, brehons, of, vii.; Town-
lands of, vii.; burdens on land, vii.
Alba, King of, nature of his rights in
lands, lxxx.

Aldin Alenn, lvii.

Alexander I., his restoration of the Boar's
Chase to the church of St. Andrews,
lxx. lxxi.

Algune, son of Arcell, liv.

Alterin, liii.

Altrie, lordship of, xiii.

Alvah dedicated to St. Columba, cxxxv.
Alvie, church of, dedicated to St. Drostan,

V. n.

Baptismal dues of a clan payable to a clan
church, cxxxii.

Barry, in Strathisla, given to the abbey of
Deer, xi.

Bede the Mormaer of Buchan, probably an
Oirrigh or under-king, lxxix.
Bidbin granted to Deer, li.
Biffie, circular foundations on hill of, vi. n.
Blackford, church of, founded by St.
Fergus, iv.

Bobbio, monastery of, cix.; its counts,
ib. n.

Book of Deer probably written by a
Pictish scribe, xxiii. xxv.; different
dates of writing in, xxv.; character of
writing, xxvi.; its version of the
Gospels, xxix; orthographical peculiari-
ties, xxix; collations of, with other ver-
sions, xxxiv.-xlv.

Book-covers, or cumhdachs, represented on
sculptured stones of Scotland, xx.; on
illuminations of Book of Deer, xx. n.

Bradshaw, Mr. Henry, discovers the Book | Clan Canan, toisech of, lvi.

of Deer, clviii. ; his notice of it, xvii. Brechin, bishopric of, founded by David I., lx.

Brechin, Culdee monastery of, cxx.

Britons, their dwellings and forts, cxlvi.
Broccin, lvii. lx.

Clan-monasteries, their origin and position,
cxxvii. cxxviii.

Clan-territories become parishes, cxxx. n.
Clann Morgainn, toisech of, lvii.
Clerics' Field granted to Deer, 1.
Clerics of Deer, their Celtic character, lix.

Brude, the Pictish king, his residence in a Cloveth, monastery at, ix. ciii. n.; dediDun, cxlvii.

cated to St. Moloch, ix.

Bruxie, circular foundations on hill of, Colban, mormaer of Buchan, x.

vi. n.

Buchan, Earl of, William Cumyn, founder

of Cistercian abbey at Deer, x.; his gifts to, xi.

Buchan, nobles of, lvii.

Comarba, Coarb, meaning of term, cvii.
Colbain, mormaer of Buchan, lvii.
Comgeall, son of Aed, grant by, xlix.
Comgell, lvi.

Comgell, son of Caennech, lvi.

Burdens on chief monasteries in Scotland, Common pasture, extensive grants of, in

early charters, lxxxvi.

xcvii.

Burdens on land, xc.

CAINNECH, liii.

Cainnech, son of MacDobarchon, liii.

Can, nature of, lxxxvii.

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Cormac, bishop of Dunkeld, liv. lix.

Cannisbay, church of, dedicated to St. Cormac, son of Cennedig, lvi.

Drostan, v. n.

Cathair, meaning of word, cxlv.

Cathal, liii.

Cathal, son of Morcunt, 1.

Celtic Church of Scotland had neither
dioceses nor parishes, cxxvi.

Celtic entries in the Book of Deer, xlvii.;
offerings made to God and to Drostan,
xlix.; abstract of the grants, lxi.
Celtic polity, lxv.
Charters, introduction of, in Scotland, lxix.
lxx.; common among the Saxons in
England at an earlier time, lxxii.
Chester-le-Street, wooden cathedral of, clv.
"Chief" monasteries, meaning of term, ciii.
Churches, precedency among, how ac-
quired, ciii.

Church-founders, iii.; some with local,
others with more diffused reverence, iii.
Church-lands, lay usurpation of, xcvi.
Church-lands secularised, described
dead," ix.

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Culdees, their system, cxiii.; doctrines, cxxii. n.; a Culdee library, ib. n.; meaning of term, cxxi.; Culdee monastery at St. Andrews, cxiv.; reform of, cxvii.; at Monymusk, cxviii.; at Brechin,

CXX.

Culii, son of Baten, grant by, l.
Culros, monks of, writers of breviaries and
missals, xxv.

Cumhdachs, or book-covers, represented on

the sculptured stones of Scotland, xx. ; in Book of Deer, xx. n. Cumyns, family of, their overthrow, xi. Customs and services exigible from lands, xciv.

DAL, its meaning, cxxix.

David I., charter by, to the clerics of Deer, lix.

Deer, Book of, memoranda of grants recorded in, lxix.

Deer, monastic establishment at, ii.; hy

St. Columba and Drostan, ii; given to Drostan by St. Columba, v.; situation of, vi.; supposed rath at, vi.; early remains in district of, vi. ; site of parish church at, x.; Cistercian Abbey of, x.; legend in Gaelic of its foundation, xlvii. Deer, supposed derivation of name, vi. n., xlviii.

Deer, the Book of, history of the manuscript, xvii.; in the library of Bishop Moore, xvii.; contents of, xviii.; date of text, xviii.; character of writing, xviii.; of illuminations of, xviii.; Pictish or Irish, xxi.

Delerc, the, granted to Deer, li.
Dioceses, origin of, cxxvi.
Dobaci, lvii.

Dolpatrick, church of, founded by St.
Fergus, iv.

Domnall, liii.

Domnall, son of Giric, 1.

Domnall, son of MacDubbacin, lii. Domnall, son of Ruadre, li.

Domongart, ferleighin of Turriff, lv.

Donchad, son of Mac Bethad, lvi.

Donnachac, son of Sithech, lvii.

Dornoch, Culdees at, cxx.

Dubni, son of Maelcolaim, lv.

Dunkeld, ib.

EARLY buildings in Scotland, cxlv. Ecclesiastical polity of early Scotland moulded on divisions of tribes, and not on territorial divisions, cxxvi. cxxvii. Ednaham, Ednam, parish of, its origin, cxxxiii.

Edzell dedicated to St. Drostan, iv. n.
Ellon, the capital of Buchan, lviii.; its
moothill, ib.

Ellon, Scolocs of, cxxxix.
Enfranchisement of lands, xc.
Episcopal jurisdiction, growth of, cxxiii.
cxxiv.

Etdanin granted to Deer, liii.

Ete, daughter of Gillemichel, liv. lv.
Eva, daughter of Gartnait, mormaer of
Buchan, x. lvii.

FEDRETH (Fedderat), three davochs of, their boundaries, lxxxii.

Feradach, son of Malbhricin, lv.

Fer-chane, a Celtic poll-tax, lxxxvii. n.
Fergus, Earl of Buchan, x.

Ferleginn, office of, cxxxvi.

Fife, commonty in grazings of, lxxxvi. n.

Fife, the King's Mair of, lxxxii.

Finlay, mormaer of Moray, fights with Earl Sigurd, li.

Dull, monastery at, ciii. n.; subject to Fochyl, or Fechil, on the Ythan, granted

to the abbey of Deer, xi.

Dunaughton, chapel at, dedicated to St. Forglen dedicated to St. Adamnan, cxxxv.

Drostan, v. n.

Dunblane, Culdees at, cxx.
Duncan, Earl of Fife, lx.

Dundarg, early fortifications at, iii.
Dunfermelyn, monastery at, founded or

restored by David I., lxxiii.; his grants made with consent of clergy and people, lxxx.

Dunkeld, Culdees at, cxx.

Fothad, Bishop of the Scots, his copy of

the Gospels, xxii. ; its silver cover, xxii. Founders of Celtic monasteries, reverence for, cvii. cx.

Fresco-painting common in Scotland, cxlii.; at Turriff, cx.

GALLICAN origin of Scots liturgy, lviii. Galloway, Captains of, lxxxi.

Dunkeld, monastery of, ci.; diocese of, cii.; Gartnait, son of Cainnech, liv. lv.

its warrior abbots, cvii.

Duns, wooden structures in, cxlvii. n.; often the sites of monasteries, cxlix.

Durham, canon-clerics at, cxvi.

Gilcomgain, son of Malbride, li. Gillebrite, Earl of Angus, lx. Gillecaline, priest, lv.

Gillechrist, son of Fingune, lvi.

Gillecolaim, son of Muredach, lv. Gillecomdid, son of Aed, lxiii. Gillecrist, son of Cormac, liv.

Gillendrias, son of Mátni, lxiii.

Gillepetair, son of Donnchad, lvii.

Kynedwart, or Kineddar, church of, granted to the Abbey of Deer, xi.

LAND, early condition of, in England, xcii.; burdens on, in Brittany, xciii.

Glammis, church of, dedicated to St. Lands, co-existing rights of different per

Fergus, iv.

Gort lie Mór, lvii.

Greenwell, Rev. Wm., Durham, xxxiii. Gruoch, queen of Macbeth, lands granted by, with "freedoms," lxxxix.

HALKIRK, church at, dedicated to St. Drostan, v. n.

Hennessy, Mr. W. M., collates MS. Gospels in library of Trinity College, Dublin, xxxiii.

Hereditary succession to churches, cvii.; in tribe families, ib.; of offices, cviii. n. Hungus, the Pictish king, his grant to the church of St. Andrews, lxvi.; with freedoms, ib.; ceremonial attending, ib.

IDDON, King, his grant to the church of Llandaff, lxvii.

sons in, lxxx.; grants of, with freedoms, and with consent of clergy and people, ib. n.

Lands conveyed by verbal grants and symbols, lxv.; in Brittany, lxviii. Lands, early boundaries of, lxxxii. n., lxxxiii. lxxxv.; growth of fixed rights in, ib.

Lany, sword of investiture of lands of, lxvi.

Lay abbots, cviii.

Leot, Abbot of Brechin, liv.
Lismore, Culdees at, cxx.
Llandaff, Register of, grants in, lxvii. lxviii.
Lochleven, monastery of, founded by King
Brude, lxviii.

Lothian called "Saxony" by the Celtic chroniclers, lxxii.

Lulach, king of Moray, lii.

Inverboyndie dedicated to St. Brandan, Lungley (or St. Fergus), church of, dedi

CXXXV.

Invergowrie, church of St. Boniface at, x. Insch, church of, dedicated to St. Drostan,

V. n.

Iona, Culdees at, cxxi.

Irish church, early corruptions of, cvi.

KAER, meaning of word, cxlv. Keith, family of, Great Marischals of Scotland, xii.; their power, xii.; legend as to their downfall, xiv. Keith, Robert, Commendator of Deer, xiii.; gets the lands of the abbey erected into a temporal lordship, xiii.; a lukewarm reformer, xiii. n.

Kells, Book of, grants recorded in, lxviii. Kill-mac-duach, See of, its origin, cxxviii. n. King's "share" of lands granted to Deer, lxxx.

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Malcolm Canmore, his gifts to Edgar the

Saxon king, cxii.

Malcolm, mormaer of Moray, li.

Mos Romanus, meaning of term, clv.
"Mos Scottorum," meaning of term as
applied to mode of building, cl.

Malcolm, son of Kenneth (the king), grant | Muthil, Culdees at, cxxi.

by, li.

Malcolm, son of Malbride, li.

Malcoluim, son of Culeon, li.

Malechi, lvi.

Maledonn, son of Mac Bethad, liv.

Malmore of Athol, lx.

Malsnecte, son of Luloeg, grant by, li.

Manuscripts, early, of Irish scribes, xxi.;

of St. Columba's monasteries, xxi.

NECHTAN, King of the Picts, his letter to

the Abbot of Wearmouth, xxii.

Nectan, Bishop of Aberdeen, liv.

"OLD EXTENT" of land, civ.

Oppida of the Armorican tribes, cxlvi. Opus Gallicum, meaning of term, clvi.; comments on, clvii, n.

Margaret, Queen, her dealings with the Opus Scoticum, meaning of term, cxlix. Scotch clergy, cxi.

Marischals of Scotland, growth of the
family, xii.; legend as to its downfall,
xiv.

Marjory, Countess of Buchan, x.
Matadin the brehon, liv.

Matan, son of Caerill, grant by, l.
Matne, son of, lvii.

Memoranda of grants, vii.; origin of, vii.
Memoranda of grants previous to charters,
lxvii.; examples in chartulary of St.
Andrews, lxviii.; in Book of Deer, lxix.
Monastic bodies, fights between, cvii. n.
Monikie parish, common pasturage of,
granted, lxxxvi. n.

PARISH in Saxon England, its origin, cxxx.
Parishes, origin of, cxxvi.
Perambulations of land by David I.,
lxxxvi. n.

Pet, a topographical prefix, meaning of,
lxxxiv.

Pett-in-Mulenn granted to Deer, 1.
Pett Malduib, li.

Pett meic Gobroig, li. liv.

Pett meic Garnait granted to Deer, xlix. Pictish church, peculiarities of, cv.; its clan system, cvi.; errors of, cxii. n. Pictish kings, their residences in Duns, cxlvii.

Montalembert, Count, his Monks of the Pictish monasteries, their territories be

West referred to, xv.

Monyfieth, Culdees at, cxxi.

Monymusk, Culdee monastery of, cxviii. Moray, southern boundary of province, lii.

Morgunn, son of Donnchad, lvii.

Moridach, son of Morcunn, grant by, xlix. Mormaers in Alba, their office, lxxviii.; grants of lands by, lxxix.; of their share or interest in lands, ib.; joint right with toisechs in lands, lxxx.; styled Earls, lxxii.

Mortlach, monastery at, ix.; founded by St. Moloc, ix.; apparently a "chief" monastery, ix.

come parishes, cxxxii.

Pictish scribe, notice of, xxi.

Pictland, sculptured crosses of, xxiii.; ornamental designs the same as of early MSS., ib.

Picts, their polity, lxxv. lxxvi. ; the name
dies out, lxxv.

Plou of Brittany, cxxix.; origin of, cxxx.
Poll-tax exigible in Celtic times, lxxxvii. n.

REEVES, Rev. Dr. Wm., his works quoted,
ci. civ. cvii. cxv. cxxi.
Refection, right of, in Ireland, xciv. ; origin
of, ci. n.

Rents mostly payable in kind, lxxxvii.

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