Stichill: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "{{Infobox town |county=Roxburghshire |picture= Stichill.jpg |picture caption= Stichill |latitude= 55.639 |longitude= -2.458 |os grid ref= NT712384 |LG district=Scottish Border..."
 
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|longitude= -2.458
|longitude= -2.458
|os grid ref= NT712384
|os grid ref= NT712384
|population=239
|LG district=Scottish Borders
|LG district=Scottish Borders
|constituency=Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk
|constituency=Berwickshire, Roxburgh and Selkirk
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|postcode=TD5   
|postcode=TD5   
}}
}}
'''Stichill''' is a village and parish in [[Roxburghshire]]. Situated two miles north of the burgh of [[Kelso]], Stichill lies north of the [[Eden Water]] and five miles from the border with [[Northumberland]] at [[Coldstream]].
'''Stichill''' is a village and parish in north-eastern  [[Roxburghshire]] adjacent to the border with [[Berwickshire]]. Situated two miles north of the burgh of [[Kelso]], Stichill lies north of the [[Eden Water]] and five miles from the border with [[Northumberland]] at [[Coldstream]]. The parish is surrounded on three sides by the Berwickshire parishes of [[Eccles, Berwickshire|Eccles]], [[Hume]] and [[Nenthorn]], with [[Ednam]] in its own county to the south-east.


Stichill is mentioned as a manor of Sir Thomas Randolph, later the Earl of Moray, when in 1308 it was considered forfeited to Edward I and granted to Adam Gordon.<ref>Balfour Paul, ''Scots Peerage Vol V'' pp291-2</ref>
Stichill is mentioned as a manor of Sir Thomas Randolph, later the Earl of Moray, when in 1308 it was considered forfeited to Edward I and granted to Adam Gordon.<ref>Balfour Paul, ''Scots Peerage Vol V'' pp291-2</ref>

Latest revision as of 09:03, 14 May 2016

Stichill
Roxburghshire

Stichill
Location
Grid reference: NT712384
Location: 55°38’20"N, 2°27’29"W
Data
Population: 239
Post town: Kelso
Postcode: TD5
Local Government
Council: Scottish Borders
Parliamentary
constituency:
Berwickshire,
Roxburgh and Selkirk

Stichill is a village and parish in north-eastern Roxburghshire adjacent to the border with Berwickshire. Situated two miles north of the burgh of Kelso, Stichill lies north of the Eden Water and five miles from the border with Northumberland at Coldstream. The parish is surrounded on three sides by the Berwickshire parishes of Eccles, Hume and Nenthorn, with Ednam in its own county to the south-east.

Stichill is mentioned as a manor of Sir Thomas Randolph, later the Earl of Moray, when in 1308 it was considered forfeited to Edward I and granted to Adam Gordon.[1]

Pringles

The village lies in the historic territory of the Pringles, a notorious Riding family of Border Reivers. The Pringles of Stichill are a cadet branch of the Pringles of Smailholm. Robert Pringle of Bartingbush purchased the lands of Stichill in 1628, and his grandson, another Robert Pringle, was created 1st Pringle Baronet of Stichill, in the Baronetcy of Nova Scotia, in 1683. Most recently, the laird was Lt-Gen Sir Steuart Robert Pringle, KCB, 10th Baronet, who died in 2013 and whose succession is disputed.

References

Notes

  1. Balfour Paul, Scots Peerage Vol V pp291-2

Sources

  • Balfour Paul, Sir James, The Scots Peerage IX Vols. Edinburgh 1907

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Stichill)

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