Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Barbara_Gilmour> ?p ?o }
- Barbara_Gilmour abstract "Barbara Gilmour (married name Barbara Dunlop; died 1732) was a significant figure in 17th century Ayrshire having introduced a method of cheese making which became common throughout Ayrshire and beyond, providing employment and extra income for farmers and others. She lived near Dunlop, a village in East Ayrshire, Scotland, lying between the village of Lugton and the town of Stewarton on the old turnpike road to Glasgow. Cheese made by her method became known as \"Dunlop cheese\".Barbara Gilmour was a woman whose wits had been sharpened by her exile as a presbyterian in Ireland around 1660, during Scotland's troubles between the Restoration of Charles II and the dirk & drublie dayis after the revolution. In Ireland she is thought to have learned the art of making whole milk cheese. She may have been in the Bantry Bay area, County Cork, where James Hamilton, 1st Viscount Claneboye was at one time based. Hamilton was a strong presbyterian adherent and son of Hans Hamilton the first Protestant minister of Dunlop Kirk. McMichael states that she was in County Down, Northern Ireland.It is not known precisely where she came from, however 'Gilmore' or 'Gilmour' is a common local name, with for example a family of that name living in the 'Lands of Chapeltoun' at around the start of the 18th century.Eventually, according to the Rev. Brisbane (1793), she returned to Dunlop, East Ayrshire, after the Revolution of 1688, bringing the recipe for the cheese with her; McMichael has it that she combined the best of Scottish and Irish cheese making methods to produce Dunlop cheese. Paterson records that she was the wife of John Dunlop, the farmer of Overhill Farm, now known as 'The Hill'. Introducing a new style of cheese was not straightforward and, \"knowing\" that cheese could not be made from whole milk, some of the locals came close to accusing her of witchcraft which could have resulted in her being burned to death at the Cross of Irvine.Another source states that she was a pious young woman – a devout Covenanter – and, hearing of the martyrdom of Margaret Wilson (in 1684 or 1685) on Wigtown Sands, and being determined not to renounce the Covenant, she fled, like many others, from her home in Ayrshire to Ireland, and found employment in the county Down, where she acquired a knowledge of the Irish process of cheese making. The persecution of females having abated after the horrible event of Wigtown Sands, Miss Gilmour returned to her home in Dunlop, and became a farmer’s wife.Some others accused her of copying their recipes and indeed a farmer, Mr W. Aiton of Strathaven, pointed out that practical cheese makers were already aware of the benefit of adding cream to cheese before Barbara's time, and in his opinion Dunlop cheese was so named from a trader who took these cheeses from the parish up to Glasgow; others have cast doubt on the Irish origin of the 'recipe' without disputing Barbara Gilmour's introduction of Dunlop cheese.".
- Barbara_Gilmour deathDate "1732".
- Barbara_Gilmour deathPlace Dunlop,_East_Ayrshire.
- Barbara_Gilmour deathPlace East_Ayrshire.
- Barbara_Gilmour deathYear "1732".
- Barbara_Gilmour restingPlace Dunlop,_East_Ayrshire.
- Barbara_Gilmour thumbnail Gilmoursgrave3.JPG?width=300.
- Barbara_Gilmour title "Barbra Gilmor".
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageExternalLink A_Researchers_Guide_to_Local_History_Terminology.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageExternalLink encyclo_entry.php?item=1692.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageExternalLink village.htm.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageExternalLink basics_of_making_cheese.htm.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageExternalLink townhistory2903.html.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageID "19951064".
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageLength "19838".
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageOutDegree "48".
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageRevisionID "700610628".
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Ayrshire.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Ayrshire_cattle.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Bantry_Bay.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Barony_and_Castle_of_Corsehill.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Category:1732_deaths.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Category:People_from_North_Ayrshire.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Category:Scottish_businesspeople.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Category:Scottish_cheeses.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Category:Scottish_inventors.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Category:Year_of_birth_unknown.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Chapeltoun.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Charles_II_of_England.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink County_Cork.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink County_Down.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Dalgarven_Mill_–_Museum_of_Ayrshire_Country_Life_and_Costume.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Duke_of_Argyll.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Dunlop,_East_Ayrshire.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Dunlop_cheese.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink East_Ayrshire.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink File:Robertsonscunn2.jpg.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Glorious_Revolution.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Irvine,_North_Ayrshire.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink James_Hamilton,_1st_Viscount_Claneboye.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Levee.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Lugton.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Margaret_Wilson_(Scottish_martyr).
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Marriage_stone.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Midlothian.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Robert_Burns.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Stewarton.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Timothy_Pont.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Walter_Scott.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink Wigtown.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink File:Cheesepressdalgarven.JPG.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink File:Clerkland_Burn_West.jpg.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink File:Clerklandburnsouth.JPG.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink File:Cromdale_Cheese_Press.JPG.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink File:Hillstile.JPG.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLink File:Thehill1.JPG.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageWikiLinkText "Barbara Gilmour".
- Barbara_Gilmour caption "Barbara Gilmour's Gravestone".
- Barbara_Gilmour consort "yes".
- Barbara_Gilmour dateOfDeath "1732".
- Barbara_Gilmour deathDate "1732".
- Barbara_Gilmour deathPlace "Dunlop, East Ayrshire".
- Barbara_Gilmour fullName "Barbara Gilmour".
- Barbara_Gilmour imageSize "240".
- Barbara_Gilmour issue "Mary Dunlop".
- Barbara_Gilmour issueLink "#Issue".
- Barbara_Gilmour issuePipe "More".
- Barbara_Gilmour name "Gilmour, Barbara".
- Barbara_Gilmour placeOfBurial "Dunlop".
- Barbara_Gilmour placeOfDeath "Dunlop, East Ayrshire".
- Barbara_Gilmour shortDescription "British businessman".
- Barbara_Gilmour spouse "John Dunlop".
- Barbara_Gilmour title "Barbra Gilmor".
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Clear.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_royalty.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Persondata.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Barbara_Gilmour wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Use_dmy_dates.
- Barbara_Gilmour description "British businessman".
- Barbara_Gilmour description "British businessman".
- Barbara_Gilmour subject Category:1732_deaths.
- Barbara_Gilmour subject Category:People_from_North_Ayrshire.
- Barbara_Gilmour subject Category:Scottish_businesspeople.
- Barbara_Gilmour subject Category:Scottish_cheeses.
- Barbara_Gilmour subject Category:Scottish_inventors.
- Barbara_Gilmour subject Category:Year_of_birth_unknown.
- Barbara_Gilmour hypernym Figure.
- Barbara_Gilmour type Agent.
- Barbara_Gilmour type Person.
- Barbara_Gilmour type Royalty.
- Barbara_Gilmour type Person.
- Barbara_Gilmour type Agent.
- Barbara_Gilmour type NaturalPerson.
- Barbara_Gilmour type Thing.
- Barbara_Gilmour type Q215627.
- Barbara_Gilmour type Q5.
- Barbara_Gilmour type Person.
- Barbara_Gilmour comment "Barbara Gilmour (married name Barbara Dunlop; died 1732) was a significant figure in 17th century Ayrshire having introduced a method of cheese making which became common throughout Ayrshire and beyond, providing employment and extra income for farmers and others. She lived near Dunlop, a village in East Ayrshire, Scotland, lying between the village of Lugton and the town of Stewarton on the old turnpike road to Glasgow.".
- Barbara_Gilmour label "Barbara Gilmour".