Proc Soc Antiq Scot, 126 (1996), 881-8 Blackfriars
882 I SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES OF SCOTLAND, 1996 immediately after the Reformation, and why the Council had to buy back the lands to which they were supposed
PAGE & PAGE: BLACKFRIARS OF STIRLING I 883 In ILLUS 1 Part of a map of Stirling, from 'Reports upon the boundaries of Several Cities, Burghs and Towns in Scotland. 1832', showing some of the surving features of the medieval town, and the extent of Mill Lane
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reported that 'the rascall multitude PAGE & PAGE: BLACKFRIARS OF STIRLING I 887
888 I SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES OF SCOTLAND, 1996 A dispute of this importance was unlikely to be settled quickly. It would seem, however, that the town, in adding to the widespread pressure to gain possession of the property earlier held by the unreformed Church,
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892 I SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES OF SCOTLAND, 1996 presumably obtained
PAGE & PAGE: BLACKFRIARS OF STIRLING I 893 Neish, on the east and south, the road to the mill on the north and the lands previously belonging to William Leslie,
8 Writ of 7 March 1296/7, Rot. Scot. i.39. 9 Tytler 1829, vol 1, 146, 383. 10 Burgh Chart, 16. 11 Exch Rolls. 1327, quoted in Burgh Chart, 16. 12 MoirBryce 1911,34. 13 PAGE & PAGE: BLACKFRIARS OF STIRLING I 895
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898 I SOCIETY OF ANTIQUARIES OF SCOTLAND, 1996 Ronald,