Glenluce Abbey: Difference between revisions

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|mother=Dundrennan Abbey
|mother=Dundrennan Abbey
|disestablished=1602
|disestablished=1602
|people=
|ownership=Historic Environment Scotland
|website={{HES link}}
}}
}}
'''Glenluce Abbey''' near [[Glenluce]] in [[Wigtownshire]], was a Cistercian monastery, now lying in ruins.  It was also called also the ''Abbey of Luce'' or ''Vallis Lucis''.<ref>[http://books.google.it/books?id=8TawqVMA5WIC&pg=PA12 Richard Pococke, Daniel William Kemp, ''Tours in Scotland: 1747, 1750, 1760'', Vol. 1, Scottish History Society, Heritage Books, 2003, p. 12.]</ref>
'''Glenluce Abbey''' near [[Glenluce]] in [[Wigtownshire]], was a Cistercian monastery, now lying in ruins.  It was also called also the ''Abbey of Luce'' or ''Vallis Lucis''.<ref>[http://books.google.it/books?id=8TawqVMA5WIC&pg=PA12 Richard Pococke, Daniel William Kemp, ''Tours in Scotland: 1747, 1750, 1760'', Vol. 1, Scottish History Society, Heritage Books, 2003, p. 12.]</ref>
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==Outside links==
==Outside links==
{{Commons}}
{{Commons}}
*{{historic-scotland-link|143}}
*{{HES link}} - Historic Environment Scotland
*Undiscovered Scotland:
*Undiscovered Scotland:
**[http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/glenluce/glenluceabbey/ Glenluce Abbey]
**[http://www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk/glenluce/glenluceabbey/ Glenluce Abbey]

Latest revision as of 13:32, 15 May 2016

Glenluce Abbey

Wigtownshire

Location
Order: Cistercian
History
Established: 1192
Mother house: Dundrennan Abbey
Founder: Lochlann, Lord of Galloway
Disestablished: 1602
Information
Owned by: Historic Scotland
Website: Glenluce Abbey

Glenluce Abbey near Glenluce in Wigtownshire, was a Cistercian monastery, now lying in ruins. It was also called also the Abbey of Luce or Vallis Lucis.[1]

The abbey was founded around 1190 by Rolland or Lochlann, Lord of Galloway and Constable of Scotland. Following the Reformation in 1560, the abbey fell into disuse.

Glenluce and the Kennedy family

Pl.2. The abbey ruins in 1789

Gilbert, Earl of Cassillis obtained control of Glenluce during the reign of Mary, Queen of Scots. The Earl persuaded one of the monks of the abbey to counterfeit the necessary signatures to a deed conveying the lands of the abbey to him and his heirs. To ensure that the forgery was not discovered he employed a man to murder the monk and then persuaded his uncle, the laird of Bargany to hang his paid assassin on a trumped up charge of theft. The success of these actions encouraged him to obtain the lands of Crossraguel Abbey through the torturing of Allan Stewart, the commendator at his castle of Dunure.[2]

Glenluce Abbey ruins

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Glenluce Abbey)

References

  1. Richard Pococke, Daniel William Kemp, Tours in Scotland: 1747, 1750, 1760, Vol. 1, Scottish History Society, Heritage Books, 2003, p. 12.
  2. MacGibbon, T. and Ross, D. (1887 - 92). The castellated and domestic architecture of Scotland from the twelfth to the eighteenth centuries, V3, Edinburgh. p. 341.