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*[http://www.baltersan.com/events_and_visitor_attractions/crossraguel_abbey Crossraguel Abbey] - at Baltersan Castle website
*[http://www.baltersan.com/events_and_visitor_attractions/crossraguel_abbey Crossraguel Abbey] - at Baltersan Castle website
*[http://www.ruleworks.co.uk/Ayrshire/crossraguel-abbey.asp Pictures of Crossraguel Abbey]
*[http://www.ruleworks.co.uk/Ayrshire/crossraguel-abbey.asp Pictures of Crossraguel Abbey]

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[[Category:1244 establishments]]
[[Category:1244 establishments]]

Revision as of 13:28, 8 May 2009

Crossraguel Abbey
Monastery information
OrderCluniac
Established1260s
Disestablished1617
Mother housePaisley Abbey
DioceseDiocese of Glasgow
Controlled churchesDailly; Girvan; Inchmarnock; Kirkudbright-Innertig; Kirkoswald; Straiton
People
Founder(s)Donnchadh, Earl of Carrick
Crossraguel Abbey ruins
Crossraguel prior to its destruction.[1]

The Abbey of Saint Mary of Crossraguel[2] is a ruin of a former abbey near the town of Maybole, South Ayrshire, Scotland.

Foundation

Founded in 1244 by Donnchadh, Earl of Carrick, following an earlier donation of 1225, to the monks of Paisley Abbey for that purpose. They reputedly built nothing more than a small chapel and kept the balance for themselves. The Earl took the matter to the Bishop of Glasgow for arbitration and, winning his case, forced the monks to build a proper abbey.[3]

Name

The origin of the abbey's name is unclear but may refer to the ancient Cross of Riaghail (Latin form St Regulus) that stood on the spot. Crossraguel was a Cluniac abbey and the monks - members of a branch of the Benedictines - were known as the "Black monks" after the colour of their clothes.

History

Crossraguel was sacked in 1307 by the army of Edward I. It was rebuilt on a larger scale and remained a monastery until 1560, when the Reformation ended monastic institutions in Scotland. Some of the stone has been removed for local construction, but the Abbey ruins remain some of the most complete of any medieval religious house to survive in Scotland. The site is looked after by Historic Scotland and is open to the public with an entrance charge.

The Kennedy family, Earls of Cassillis famously obtained the lands of Crossraguel Abbey through the torturing of Allan Stewart, the commendator at his castle of Dunure.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ Howie, James (1864). The Scots Worthies. Blackie & son.
  2. ^ Charters of Crossraguel Abbey, Intro lxii
  3. ^ ibidem pp. 1-6
  4. ^ MacGibbon, T. and Ross, D. (1887 - 92). The castellated and domestic architecture of Scotland from the twelfth to the eighteenth centuries, V3, Edinburgh. p. 341.

Notes

Sources

  • Ayrshire and Galloway Archaeological Association,Charters of Crossraguel Abbey, II Vols. Edinburgh 1886 [1]