Gowrie ( ) is a region and
ancient province of Scotland, covering most of the eastern part of
what became Perthshire
. The province is the home of such ancient
Scottish royal sites as Scone
and perhaps
Forteviot
.
Its chief
settlement is the town of Perth
.
Today it
is most often associated with the Carse of Gowrie
, the part of Gowrie south of the Sidlaw Hills
running east of Perth to Dundee
.
Etymology
It is usually written as
Goverin or
Gouerin in
the Latin of the Middle Ages.
The Old Gaelic terms Circinn and
Mag Gerghinn (and variants), may be related; but Circinn
is often identified with the Mearns
because
Fordoun
, Mearns, was said to have been in this area.
Alex Woolf and
William J. Watson both implied that the name derived
from the
Cenél nGabraín.
The modern Gaelic for the province is
Gobharaidh; unless
it is derived from Gerghinn or Circinn, the earlier Gaelic form is
not recorded in Gaelic orthography.
Geography
Gowrie contains some of the best farmland in the whole of Scotland,
a key to explaining its importance in Scottish history.
The
Carse of
Gowrie
, the southern part of the region, has traditionally
been called the "Garden of Scotland".
Coupar
, the location of Coupar Angus Abbey
, lay at the borders of Angus
with Gowrie,
originally on the Gowrie side. Blairgowrie, "Plain of Gowrie", was recorded as
"Blair in Gowrie" in 1604, and presumably the
Blair
("plain") element has
-gowrie attached to it to
distinguish it from
Blair in
Atholl,
i.e.
Blair Atholl
. Abernethy
, where the cross of MacDuff marked the boundary of
the kindred, was probably the boundary between Fothriff and Gowrie.
The following is a list of modern settlements and places of
interest in the province:
It should
be noted that Forteviot
, physically in Strathearn, was included in the St Andrews
deanery of Gowrie. It is unclear if Gowrie was thought to
include places such as Dunkeld
or the province of Stormont; it is likely that Gowrie's
boundaries may have conceptually fluctuated according to various
political changes over time.
History
The
Scottish royal coronation site was located in this province, at
Scone
.
Containing sites such as Scone and Forteviot, and perhaps
originally Abernethy, it was clearly the core province of the early
Kingdom of Scotland. In the 12th
century, when detailed records begin, the king possessed four royal
manors in the province; these manors were Scone, Strathardle,
Longforgan, and Coupar. Those four royal manors were held by the
crown in addition to the rest of the province, which the king held
as
mormaer ("earl").
In either
the reign of Alexander I or
David I a burgh was founded in the province, located at Perth
. It
also had a sheriff, called the "Sheriff of Gowrie" or "Sheriff of
Scone", from the 1130s until at least 1228. It is not clear if this
sheriff was originally distinct from the "Sheriff of Perth", as
Perth and Scone were often thought of as the same location, being
only two miles apart; if they were originally distinct, they were
not so by the following century.
There are
judices, "Brehons", of the province of Gowrie
recorded from the 12th century into the 14th century. These men
were the specialist lawmen for the province, who preserved legal
knowledge relevant to the provincial community, and it is likely
that every province of Scotland had lawmen designated for such
purposes.Barrow, "The Judex<", pp.=""
57-67.<=""></",>ref>
Ecclesiastically, Gowrie was largely controlled by the
Bishop of St Andrews; a Dean of Gowrie
existed under the said bishop.
Half a dozen or so of the parish churches in Gowrie were under the
control of the bishops of Dunblane and Dunkeld; this meant that
Deans of Gowrie also existed for these two dioceses, though no Dean
of Gowrie was recorded for the diocese of Dunblane
.
Gowrie was recreated as an earldom for
William Ruthven, Lord
Ruthven in 1581.
John Ruthven, 3rd Earl of
Gowrie, the second son of William Ruthven, was involved in the
famous
Gowrie Conspiracy of 1600,
which led to the forfeiture of the earldom.
Notes
- See Watson, Celtic Place-Names, pp. 108-9.
- Watson, Celtic Place-Names, pp. 112-3; Woolf, From
Pictland to Alba, pp. 227-8.
- McNeill & MacQueen (eds.), Atlas, p. 15.
- MacGregor & Oram, Atholl and Gowrie, p. xv.
- Grant', "Thanes and Thanages", p78.
- Ross, Scottish Place-Names, p30.
- http://www.visitrannoch.com/perthshire2.htm
- Barrow, Acts of Malcolm IV, p. 266; Grant, "Thanes and
Thanages", p. 46.
- Grant, "Thanes and Thanages", p. 54.
- Duncan, Kingship, p. 83; Duncan, Making, pp.
168-9.
- Reid & Barrow, Sheriffs of Scotland, p. 33.
- Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, pp. 409-10.
- McNeill & MacQueen (eds.), Atlas, pp. 348-9, 352,
353; Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 106.
- Juhala, "Ruthven, John".
References
- Barrow, G. W. S. (ed.),
The Acts of Malcolm IV, (Regesta Regum Scottorum, Volume
I, Edinburgh, 1960)
- Barrow, G.W.S., "The Judex", in G. W. S. Barrow (ed.)
The Kingdom of the Scots, (Edinburgh, 2003), pp.
57–67
- Duncan, A. A. M.,
The Kingship of the Scots 842–1292: Succession and
Independence, (Edinburgh, 2002)
- Duncan, A. A. M., Scotland: The Making of the Kingdom,
(Edinburgh, 1975)
- Grant, Alexander, "Thanes and Thanages, from the eleventh to
the Fourteenth Centuries" in A. Grant & K. Stringer (eds.),
Medieval Scotland: Crown, Lordship and Community, Essays
Presented to G.W.S. Barrow, (Edinburgh, 1993), pp.
39-81
- Juhala, Amy L., "Ruthven, John, third earl of Gowrie
(1577/8–1600)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography,
Oxford University Press, 2004 ,
accessed 11 Nov 2007
- MacGregor, Lindsay J., & Oram,
Richard, Atholl and Gowrie: North Perthshire, A Historical
Guide, (Edinburgh, 2000)
- Reid, N. H., & Barrow, G.
W. S., The Sheriffs of Scotland: An Interim
List to C.1306, (St. Andrews, 2002)
- Ross, David, Scottish Place-Names, (Edinburgh,
2001)
- Watson, W.J., The Celtic
Place-Names of Scotland, (Edinburgh, 1926) reprinted, with an
Introduction, full Watson bibliography and corrigenda by Simon
Taylor (Edinburgh, 2004)
- Woolf, Alex, From Pictland to
Alba, 789-1070, (Edinburgh, 2007)