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- Q2614230 subject Q13251573.
- Q2614230 subject Q13296919.
- Q2614230 subject Q13302397.
- Q2614230 subject Q16808875.
- Q2614230 subject Q8349469.
- Q2614230 subject Q8366350.
- Q2614230 subject Q8518082.
- Q2614230 subject Q8595021.
- Q2614230 subject Q8595078.
- Q2614230 subject Q8647760.
- Q2614230 subject Q8688723.
- Q2614230 subject Q8707109.
- Q2614230 abstract "Lindores Abbey was a Tironensian abbey on the outskirts of Newburgh in Fife, Scotland. Now a much reduced and overgrown ruin, it lies on the southern banks of the River Tay, about 1-mile (1.6 km) north of the village of Lindores.The abbey was founded as a daughter house of Kelso Abbey about 1191 (some sources say 1178), by David, Earl of Huntingdon, brother of William the Lion. The first abbot was Guido, Prior of Kelso, under whom the buildings were mostly completed. The church, dedicated to the Blessed Virgin and St. Andrew, was 195 feet (59 m) long, with transepts 110 feet (34 m) long. Edward I of England, John Balliol, David II, and James III were among the monarchs who visited Lindores at different times.The earliest record of scotch whisky cited by the exchequer roll for 1494 is a commission from King James IV to Friar John Cor of Lindores Abbey to make about ‘eight bols of malt’ or 580 kg of aquavitae.The abbey was sacked by a mob from Dundee in 1543, and again by John Knox and his supporters in 1559. In the following years the Abbey buildings were quarried as a source of building stone for Newburgh, and a number of architectural fragments are visible built into later structures in the town. The main upstanding remains of the Abbey are: one of the gateways leading into the monastic enclosure; the groin-vaulted slype, leading from the cloister garth to the exterior of the Abbey; and parts of the chancel walls and western tower of the church, although the ground plan of the whole structure can still be traced. Sections of the imposing precinct wall which once enclosed the abbey can also be seen in fields to the south.Wooden panels of the early 16th century survive from the Abbey in the Laing Museum, Newburgh and, reset in a 19th-century cabinet, in St. Paul's Episcopal Cathedral, Dundee.".
- Q2614230 thumbnail Lindores_abbey_01.jpg?width=300.
- Q2614230 wikiPageExternalLink lindores-abbey.
- Q2614230 wikiPageExternalLink s2.cfm?id=87282004.
- Q2614230 wikiPageExternalLink lindores-abbey2.htm.
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- Q2614230 wikiPageWikiLink Q8518082.
- Q2614230 wikiPageWikiLink Q8595021.
- Q2614230 wikiPageWikiLink Q8595078.
- Q2614230 wikiPageWikiLink Q8647760.
- Q2614230 wikiPageWikiLink Q8688723.
- Q2614230 wikiPageWikiLink Q8707109.
- Q2614230 point "56.35274 -3.22816".
- Q2614230 type SpatialThing.
- Q2614230 comment "Lindores Abbey was a Tironensian abbey on the outskirts of Newburgh in Fife, Scotland. Now a much reduced and overgrown ruin, it lies on the southern banks of the River Tay, about 1-mile (1.6 km) north of the village of Lindores.The abbey was founded as a daughter house of Kelso Abbey about 1191 (some sources say 1178), by David, Earl of Huntingdon, brother of William the Lion. The first abbot was Guido, Prior of Kelso, under whom the buildings were mostly completed.".
- Q2614230 label "Lindores Abbey".
- Q2614230 lat "56.35274".
- Q2614230 long "-3.22816".
- Q2614230 depiction Lindores_abbey_01.jpg.