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The Debatable Land

Page 35

by Graham Robb

Lady’s Well, Liddesdale ref1

  Lake District ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7

  Lanarkshire ref1

  Lancashire ref1

  Lancaster see also Vinnovium ref1

  Lanercost Priory ref1, ref2

  Langholm ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12

  Buccleuch Hall ref1

  Langholm Hills ref1, ref2

  Langtoon see Longtown

  Leith, Edinburgh ref1

  Lewis, Isle of ref1

  Lidalia (Liddesdale) ref1

  Liddel, Barony of ref1

  Liddel, Church of (Canonbie) ref1

  Liddel Moat (or Liddel Strength) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Liddel Water ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16, ref17, ref18, ref19, ref20, ref21, ref22, ref23, ref24, ref25, ref26

  as boundary of DL ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9

  confluences ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10

  Liddelbank (Cumbria) ref1

  Liddesdale ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16, ref17

  as March ref1, ref2, ref3

  geography ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7

  present-day ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16

  Lincolnshire ref1

  Lindesey region ref1

  Lindum (Castledykes) ref1, ref2

  Lindum (Lincoln) ref1

  Linnuis region ref1

  Lochmaben (Dumfries & Galloway) ref1

  Lochmaben Stone (DL) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5

  Londinium ref1, ref2, ref3

  London ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11

  Longtown (Cumbria) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11

  Longtown Mart ref1, ref2

  Low Borrowbridge Roman fort (Epiacum) ref1

  Lowlands, Scottish ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7

  Luguvalium (Carlisle) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5

  Lune river and valley ref1

  Lyne river ref1, ref2, ref3

  Macdonald clan ref1

  Manchester ref1

  Mangerton, Newcastleton ref1

  March Bank see Scots’ Dike

  March Bank Hotel ref1

  Marche, French province ref1

  Marches, English and Scottish ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5

  boundaries ref1, ref2, ref3

  Marches, Welsh ref1

  Massilia (Marseille) ref1

  Mecca ref1

  Mediolanum (Whitchurch) ref1

  Melrose (Scottish Borders) ref1

  Mere Burn see Muir Burn

  Mexico ref1

  Middle Shires ref1, ref2

  Milnholm Cross, Newcastleton ref1

  Moat (Cumbria) ref1, ref2

  Monke Rilande Burn (DL) ref1

  Mons Graupius, Battle of (AD 83?) ref1

  Morton see Tower of Sark

  Moss Patrick Swire, Liddesdale ref1

  Mother Goddesses of Every Nation temple ref1

  Mountain View, Liddesdale ref1

  Muir Burn / Mere Burn (DL) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Nantes, France ref1

  Nashville, Tennessee ref1

  Netherby (Cumbria) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10

  Netherby Estate ref1, ref2, ref3

  Netherby Hall ref1, ref2, ref3

  Netherby Roman fort and town see Castra Exploratorum

  Netherlands ref1, ref2, ref3

  New Woodhead Farm (DL) ref1

  New York City ref1

  Newcastle upon Tyne ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  Newcastleton Forest ref1

  Newcastleton (Scottish Borders) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14

  as Copshawholm ref1, ref2

  school ref1

  Newstead Roman fort ref1, ref2, ref3

  Nicholforest church (St Nicholas) ref1

  Nicholforest parish ref1, ref2

  Normandy ref1, ref2

  Norse Lands ref1

  North Pole ref1

  North Sea ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  Northern Ireland ref1, ref2

  Northumberland, county ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5

  Northumbria, kingdom ref1, ref2

  Note o’ the Gate pass (Scottish Borders) ref1

  Notebery Hill (DL) ref1

  Old Graitney, Gretna ref1

  The Old North (Yr Hen Ogledd) ref1

  Old Toll Bar tearoom, Gretna ref1

  Orkney ref1

  Otterburn, Battle of (1388) ref1

  Oxenholme Station ref1

  Oxford ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5

  Paris ref1, ref2

  Pennine Hills ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Penrith (Cumbria) ref1, ref2

  Penrith Station ref1

  Pentland Hills ref1

  Penton (Cumbria) ref1, ref2

  Penton Bridge ref1, ref2

  Penton Wood ref1

  Perthshire ref1, ref2

  Peter’s Crook (Cumbria) ref1

  Petmen Hill (DL) ref1

  Plumpe (DL) ref1

  Portsmouth (Hampshire) ref1

  Priesthaugh, Hawick ref1

  Pyngilburne (DL) ref1

  Pyngilburne Know (or Pyngilknow) (DL) ref1

  Queen’s Mire, Eskdale ref1

  Queen’s Mire, Liddesdale ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  Raegill Burn (DL) ref1

  Reamy Rigg (DL) ref1

  Reddenburn (Redden Burn) ref1

  Redesdale (Northumberland) ref1, ref2, ref3

  Reims, France ref1

  ‘Reiver Trail’ ref1

  Rheged, kingdom ref1, ref2

  Rheged, visitor centre ref1

  Rhine river ref1

  Ribchester (Lancashire) ref1

  Riccarton Farm, Liddesdale ref1

  Riccarton (Scottish Borders) ref1

  Righeades (DL) ref1

  Rio Grande ref1

  Riverview Holiday Park, Mangerton ref1

  Roadhead (Cumbria) ref1

  Rockcliffe (or Rocley) (Cumbria) ref1

  Roman Wall see Hadrian’s Wall

  Rome ref1, ref2, ref3

  Roscommon, Ireland ref1

  Rowanburn (Dumfries & Galloway) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  Roxburghshire ref1

  Rutterford (DL) ref1, ref2

  Sanquhar (Dumfries & Galloway) ref1

  Sark see Tower of Sark

  Sark, Battle of (or Battle of Lochmaben Stone) (1448) ref1

  Sark Bridge, Gretna ref1

  Sark river ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10

  Sarkfoot (Cumbria) ref1

  Saughtree, Liddesdale ref1

  Scotch Dyke Station ref1

  Scots’ Dike / March Bank ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8

  Scottish Borders, region ref1, ref2

  Shap (Cumbria) ref1, ref2

  Signal Box Cottage, nr Hawick ref1

  Skurrlywarble Wood (Cumbria) ref1, ref2, ref3

  Skye, Isle of ref1

  Soleme Moss see Solway Moss

  Solewath / Sulwath see Solway Firth

  Solway Firth ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7, ref8, ref9, ref10, ref11, ref12, ref13, ref14, ref15, ref16

  as DL boundary ref1, ref2

  as national border ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  Solway Moss ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5

  eruption (1771) ref1

  Solway Moss, Battle of (1542) ref1, ref2

  Solway Plain ref1, ref2, ref3

  Solwaybank, edge of DL ref1

  Sorbonne, Paris ref1

  Sorbytrees Farm, Liddesdale ref1

  South Shields (Tyneside) ref1, ref2

/>   South Tyne Valley ref1

  Southern Uplands, Scotland ref1

  Spain ref1, ref2, ref3

  Standing Stone, Tinnis Hill (DL) ref1, ref2, ref3

  Stanwix, Carlisle ref1, ref2, ref3

  Staplegordon (Dumfries & Galloway) ref1

  Steele Road End Cottage, Liddesdale ref1

  Stonegarthside Hall, Liddesdale ref1

  Strathclyde, kingdom ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Sussex ref1

  Syria ref1

  Tardwoth (Torduff) (Dumfries & Galloway) ref1

  Tarras Moss ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  siege of (1601) ref1

  Tarras Water (DL) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Tassies Height / Tassies Holm Roman fort and camps ref1

  Teviotdale ref1, ref2, ref3

  Thames river ref1

  Thorniewhats / Ye Thornwhate (DL) ref1

  Tinnis Hill (Scottish Borders) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6, ref7

  Tinnisburn Forest ref1, ref2

  Tophous (DL) ref1

  Toplyff Hill (DL) ref1, ref2

  Torback Hills (DL) ref1

  Torbrack Hill (Torbeck Hill) (DL) ref1

  Tower of Sark (Morton Tower) (DL) ref1, ref2, ref3

  Trent river ref1

  Tres Karras, unidentified place on border ref1

  Tribruit river or estuary ref1, ref2, ref3

  Trimontium (Newstead) ref1

  Trimontium (Whitley Castle) ref1, ref2

  Tweed Basin ref1

  Tweed river ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5

  Tweedmouth, Berwick upon Tweed ref1

  Tyne river ref1, ref2, ref3

  Tynedale ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5, ref6

  United Kingdom ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4, ref5

  United States of America ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Unthank Hall, Haltwhistle ref1

  Uxellodunum / Uxellum (Stanwix) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Vindogara, bay ref1

  Vindogara (Ayr or Patna) ref1

  Vinnovium (Lancaster) ref1

  Wales ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Walton Moss (Cumbria) ref1, ref2, ref3

  Warb Law, Langholm ref1

  Washington DC ref1

  ‘The Watergate’, Liddesdale ref1

  West Country, England ref1

  Westminster ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Westmorland, county ref1

  Whisgills (Scottish Borders) ref1

  White Law, Cheviots ref1, ref2

  White Sark river see Sark

  Whitehall, London ref1

  Whithaugh, Newcastleton ref1, ref2

  Whitlawside (DL) ref1

  Whitley Castle Roman fort (Trimontium) ref1, ref2, ref3, ref4

  Whitrope Hass (‘the Edge’) ref1

  Widdrington (Northumberland) ref1

  Wigan (Lancashire) ref1

  Winchester (Hampshire) ref1

  Windgate Fell, Cheviots ref1

  Windy Edge (DL) ref1, ref2

  Windy Gyle, Cheviots ref1

  Windy Swire, Liddesdale ref1

  Windyhill (DL) ref1

  Wobrethills (DL) ref1, ref2

  Workington (Cumbria) ref1, ref2

  Yetholm Common, Anglo-Scottish border ref1

  York ref1, ref2, ref3

  York Castle ref1

  Yorkshire ref1, ref2

  1. ‘North East View of the City of Carlisle’, by Robert Carlyle (1791): the cathedral, the castle and the Eden bridges, from the vallum of Hadrian’s Wall, looking south to the Lake District.

  2. A Northbound freight train on the Waverley Line near Riccarton Junction, in June 1965, climbing to ‘the Edge’ (the northern limit of Liddesdale). Photograph by Maurice Burns.

  3. Joan Blaeu’s map of ‘Lidalia’ (Liddesdale), 1654, based on Timothy Pont’s survey, conducted c.1590.

  4. Part of the Debatable Land on Blaeu’s ‘Lidalia’. Right: Tinnis Hill and Mere Burn descending to the Liddel. Bottom left: the Scots’ Dike.

  5. Liddel Water in early December 2010: England on the right, the former Debatable Land (now part of Scotland) on the left.

  6. The Solway Firth near the Lochmaben Stone, looking south to the Lake District, August 2014.

  7. Statue of King Edward I in Burgh by Sands, commemorating the seven hundredth anniversary of his death on the Solway Sands in 1307.

  8. ‘Gilnockie [sic] – or Johnny Armstrong’s Tower (Dumfries-shire)’ by Henry Adlard from an original study by Thomas Allom, 1837. The true name of Armstrong’s home above the Esk is Hollows Tower. Both banks of the river lie in the former Debatable Land.

  9. Statue of ‘Lang Sandy’ in Rowanburn. ‘Lang Sandy’ (Alexander Armstrong) was hanged in 1606 for the murder of Sir John Carmichael, Warden of the Scottish West March.

  10. Hermitage Castle, seen from the ruins of its fourteenth-century chapel, April 2016.

  11. ‘A Platt of the opposete Borders of Scotland to ye west marches of England’, drawn by an anonymous cartographer for William Cecil, Lord High Treasurer of England, in December 1590. The map shows the towers and bastles of the clans or surnames of Liddesdale, Eskdale and the Debatable Land.

  12. ‘Walter Scott Esqr’. Engraving by Charles Turner after Henry Raeburn, 1810. The ruin in the background is Hermitage Castle.

  13. The Lochmaben Stone near Gretna, the ancient, wordless monument to inter-tribal and Anglo-Scottish relations at the south-western tip of the Debatable Land.

  14. Henry Bullock’s map of the Debatable Land, drawn in the spring of 1552.

  15. ‘Mile-Castle near Caw-Fields’, on a reivers’ route from Liddesdale to Tynedale. From The Roman Wall by the Rev. John Collingwood Bruce (1851).

  16. The Scots’ Dike (in England) or March Bank (in Scotland), built to mark the partition of the Debatable Land in 1552.

  17. Thomas Scrape, tenth Baron Scrape of Bolton, and his mother Margaret Howard, shortly before his appointment as Warden of the English West March in 1593 at the age of twenty-six. Anonymous portrait.

  18. Scrope’s deputy, Robert Carey, first Earl of Monmouth. Anonymous portrait, c. 1591.

  19. Richard Beavis, ‘The Rescue of Kinmont Willie’, 1872. No contemporary portraits survive of ‘Kinmont Willie’ and ‘the Bold Buccleuch’, who rescued him from Carlisle Castle in 1596. The horses and the armour belong to a slightly later period.

  20. Kirkandrews church and graveyard, looking towards the Grahams’ pele tower and the Scots’ Dike, March 2016.

  21. Hills Tower, Lochfoot, four miles south-west of Dumfries: a tower house or bastle with gatehouse and barmkin built c. 1530 for the Maxwell family, many of whom served as wardens of the Scottish West March. The more comfortable house on the left was added in 1721. Photographed from the south-west in 1911.

  22. A farm track on the line of the lost Roman road leading north from the Debatable Land into Tarras Moss, September 2013.

  23. The British Isles according to Ptolemy’s coordinates (c. AD 150), plotted by Jacob d’Angelo in Cosmographia Claudii Ptolomaei Alexandrini (1467).

  24. A Roman cavalryman trampling a British barbarian, first century AD. In Hexham Abbey, probably removed from the Roman fort at Corbridge. A similar tombstone was discovered in 1787 in the wall of Stanwix church (Carlisle).

  25. The ‘Border Reiver’ statue (2003) on Kingstown Road, Carlisle.

  Acknowledgements

  It will be obvious how much this book owes to Margaret, but not how much of the Border world was illuminated by her work for North Cumbria Magistrates’ Court, Cumbria NHS, the Corporation Board of Carlisle College, the School Admission Appeals Panel, the Society of Friends, the Liddesdale Heritage Centre (Newcastleton) and the rural library Book Drop with its vast and undervalued constituency. Crucially, she was instrumental in saving the cross-border 127A bus service, for which I and many others also have to thank Cllr Val Tarbitt, Rory Stewart MP and the parish councils of Kirkandrews-on-Esk and Nicholforest.

  Several people who should have been named on this page would prefer
not to be publicly thanked. I kept a list of their names and realized, when I came to write these acknowledgements, that it looked like one of the medieval wardens’ lists of reiving families. Each surname is sufficiently well represented in the modern population for the list to be properly impersonal: Calvert, Carlyle, Davidson, Dixon, Dunn, Elliot, Forster, Little, Nichol, Ridley, Robson and Storey.

  For documentary help, I am grateful to the British Library, the Bodleian Library, the National Library of Scotland, Historic Environment Scotland, Cumbria Archive Centre, Carlisle Public Library, Tullie House Museum, the Clan Armstrong Trust and, for equally vital assistance, to Bikeseven, Cumbria Woodlands, the Graham Arms, Joan’s Cars, Telford’s Coaches, and the postmen and postwoman of Longtown.

  Alison Robb and Stephen Roberts kindly scrutinized the almost-finished text.

  I was privileged to have as my editor Kris Doyle at Picador. I am also grateful to Starling Lawrence, to everyone at W. W. Norton and to Melanie Jackson. I enjoyed the unstinting support of Paul Baggaley, Nicholas Blake, Wilf Dickie, Camilla Elworthy, Gillian Fitzgerald-Kelly and the whole Picador team. On expeditions to that remote capital of the far South, Rogers, Coleridge & White was a home from home.

  GRAHAM ROBB was born in Manchester in 1958 and is a former Fellow of Exeter College, Oxford. He is an acclaimed historian and biographer, a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and a Chevalier dans l’Ordre des Arts et des Lettres. He has won the Whitbread Biography Prize and the Heinemann Award for Victor Hugo, as well as the Ondaatje Prize and Duff Cooper Prize for The Discovery of France. His book Parisians was a Sunday Times top ten bestseller in hardback and paperback. He lives on the Anglo-Scottish border.

  Also by Graham Robb in Picador

  BALZAC

  VICTOR HUGO

  RIMBAUD

  STRANGERS

  Homosexual Love in the Nineteenth Century

  THE DISCOVERY OF FRANCE

  PARISIANS

  An Adventure History of Paris

 

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