Difference between revisions of "Dalziel"

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(Created page with "{{county|Lanarkshire}} '''Dalziel''' is a parish in the Middle ward of Lanarkshire encompassing the town of Motherwell. The parish of Dalziel is by some writers suppo...")
 
 
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{{county|Lanarkshire}}
 
{{county|Lanarkshire}}
'''Dalziel''' is a parish in the Middle ward of [[Lanarkshire]] encompassing the town of [[Motherwell]].  The parish of Dalziel is by some writers supposed to have derived that appellation, signifying "the white meadow," from the peculiar appearance of the lands before they were brought into cultivation. The parish is bounded on the north and west by the [[South Calder Water]], and on the south-west by the [[River Clyde]]. The twelfth-century parish church, dedicated to St Patrick was taken down about 1799.
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[[File:Dalzell House.JPG|thumb|250px|Dalzell House]]
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'''Dalziel''' is a parish in the [[Middle Ward]] of [[Lanarkshire]] encompassing the town of [[Motherwell]].  The parish of Dalziel is by some writers supposed to have derived that appellation, signifying "the white meadow," from the peculiar appearance of the lands before they were brought into cultivation. The parish is bounded on the north and west by the [[South Calder Water]], and on the south-west by the [[River Clyde]]. The twelfth-century parish church, dedicated to St Patrick was taken down about 1799.
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==Outside links==
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*Location map: {{wmap|55.7875|-3.9859|zoom=14}}
  
 
[[Category:Towns and villages in Lanarkshire]]
 
[[Category:Towns and villages in Lanarkshire]]
 
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Latest revision as of 13:45, 24 May 2020

Dalzell House

Dalziel is a parish in the Middle Ward of Lanarkshire encompassing the town of Motherwell. The parish of Dalziel is by some writers supposed to have derived that appellation, signifying "the white meadow," from the peculiar appearance of the lands before they were brought into cultivation. The parish is bounded on the north and west by the South Calder Water, and on the south-west by the River Clyde. The twelfth-century parish church, dedicated to St Patrick was taken down about 1799.

Outside links

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