Showing posts with label Tour Scotland Leslie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tour Scotland Leslie. Show all posts

Tour Scotland Photograph Christ's Church Leslie Fife


Tour Scotland photograph of Christ's Church on the Green in Leslie, Fife, Scotland. This Gothic revival church was constructed in 1819 by builder Thomas Barclay, Alexander Leslie was the Inspector of Works and possibly the designer. In 1868 the church was extended to the South by James Maitland Wardrop; subsequently it was doubled in size. This church is on the village green in Leslie, with a surviving graveyard cemetery to the north. The building was converted into residential use in 1994. Originally there was a medieval T-plan church on this site; it was demolished to make way for the new church building in 1819.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Leslie House Fife


Tour Scotland photograph of Leslie House, Fife, Scotland. In 1283, Norman de Leslie, was granted lands from Alexander III known as Fettykill or Fythkill. The Leslie family, had been descendents of Bartolf or Bartholowmew, a Hungarian nobleman who arrived in Scotland on the reign of Edgar the Aetheing. Finding favour with Malcolm III, Bartolf became the governor of Edinburgh Castle and was both knighted and granted with lands in Aberdeenshire. This is where the name of Leslie which meant 'pleasant field or pasture' was adopted by Bartolf. A settlement known as Fettykill grew around these lands. Burgh of barony status was awarded by James II to the settlement which was renamed Leslie after Sir George Leslie who became 1st Earl of Rothes in 1458. During this time, the family started to become prominent in Scottish affairs. John Leslie, the then Earl of Rothes, was awarded the title of Lord High Chancellor to Charles II in 1667 and then became known as the Duke of Rothes in 1680. During this time, Leslie House was built for the Duke of Rothes between 1667 and 1674 and this became the seat of the Rothes family. The house which was dubbed Villa De Rothes was the centre of life in the village and once rivalled Holyrood Palace for both size and glamour. When a fire destroyed the building in 1743, the north, east and south wings were demolished. Only the west wing was retained and this was reconstructed between 1745 and 1747. More recently a fire has devastated the historic Leslie building, leaving nothing more than an empty shell.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Photograph William Livingston Gravestone


Tour Scotland photograph of the William Livingston gravestone in the old graveyard cemetery in Leslie, Fife, Scotland. Livingston is a surname with several different origins. The name itself originates in Scotland as a habitational name derived from Livingston in Lothian which was originally named in Middle English Levingston. This place name was originally named after a man named Levin who appears in several 12th century charters. In Ireland, and in some cases Scotland, the name was adopted by people bearing the Gaelic surnames Ó Duinnshléibhe and Mac Duinnshléibhe. Livingston can also be an Americanized form of Lowenstein, a Jewish surname.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Old Graveyard Leslie Fife


Tour Scotland photograph of the old graveyard cemetery in Leslie, Fife, Scotland. Little is known about the history of Leslie before 1300. The village which bears the name of the Leslie family area descended from Bartolf or Bartholomew who was a Hungarian or maybe Flemish tradesman, who according to legend arrived in Scotland with Queen Margaret, the sister of Edgar the Ætheling in 1057. Finding favour with Queen Margaret's husband, King Malcolm III, Bartolf became the governor of Edinburgh Castle and was knighted and granted with lands in the Garioch in Aberdeenshire, making his residence at Leslie.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Old Gravestone Churchyard Leslie Fife


Tour Scotland photograph of an old gravestone in the old churchyard in Leslie, Leslie, Fife, Scotland.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Norman Evelyn Leslie Memorial


Tour Scotland photograph of the Norman Evelyn Leslie Memorial in the graveyard cemetery in Leslie, Fife, Scotland. Colonel Norman Evelyn Leslie, 19th Earl of Rothes, was born on the 13th of July 1877, and died on the 29th of March 1927. He was commissioned into a Militia battalion of the Devonshire Regiment in England in 1895. He was promoted Lieutenant in 1897 and resigned his commission in 1899. In 1905 he was appointed Captain in the Fife Royal Garrison Artillery, another Militia regiment. He resigned his commission in 1909. In 1911 he was appointed Lieutenant Colonel commanding the Highland Cyclist Battalion, which was badged to the Black Watch from Perthshire. During the First World War he fought gallantly, and Leslie House, the ancestral head seat of his family, became a hospital for the injured. His wife worked ceaselessly during the wartime, both at Leslie House and elsewhere, acting as nurse. Rothes was promoted Colonel in 1918. He sustained injuries during the war from which he never fully recovered. He sold the House in 1919. In 1927 he died, leaving behind the earldom to his eldest son.



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Tour Scotland Photograph David Grant Gravestone Leslie Fife


Tour Scotland photograph of the David Grant gravestone in the old graveyard cemetery in Leslie, Fife, Scotland. In memory of David Grant, son of the Reverend Andrew Grant, born 1784, died 1800. Grant can be both a surname and a given name. The name is of English and Scottish origin. The surname may also be an alternate spelling of the German Grandt or Grand.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Interesting Gravestone Churchyard Leslie


Tour Scotland photograph of an interesting old graveston in the old graveyard cemetery in Leslie, Fife, Scotland. Leslie is a surname and given name, derived the name of Clan Leslie, ultimately from the placename of Castle Leslie, the clan's historical seat. The name of the castle is probably an anglicization of an originally Gaelic name, perhaps leas celyn meaning "holly garden. "



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Tour Scotland Photograph Burial Aisles Leslie


Tour Scotland photograph of two burial aisles in the old graveyard cemetery in Leslie, Fife, Scotland. There are no identifiable remains of the medieval church in Leslie, but its location is indicated by the survival of two post medieval aisles that were evidently added against its northern flank. These aisles were built for the Earls of Rothes and the Douglas of Strathendry family.



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