Old photograph of shops, houses and people in Lauder, Scotland. A town in the Scottish Borders 27 miles south east of Edinburgh. It lies on the edge of the Lammermuir Hills, on the Southern Upland Way.
Recorded in the spellings of Lauder and Lauderdale, this is a famous Scottish locational surname. As Lauder it originates from the village of Lauder in the county of Berwickshire, and as Lauderdale from a name for the western district of the same county of Berwickshire. The surname is one of the first recorded in Scotland, and early examples taken from rolls and registers of the medieval period include: William de Lawedre, the sheriff of Perthshire in the reign of King Alexander III of Scotland, Alan de Lawadyr, who witnessed a charter by Stephen Fleming, master of the hospital of Soltre in 1426, and Johannes Lathirdale, a notary public, in the city of Glasgow in 1472. Other recordings include Sir David Luthirdale, archdeacon of Dunkeld, Perthshire, in 1477, whilst William Lauder, given as being a literary forger, died in 1771. The first recorded spelling of the family name is shown to be that of Sir Robert de Lauedre. This was dated 1250, in the register of the Abbey of Dryburgh.
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