Everything about Roxburghshire totally explained
Roxburghshire or the
County of Roxburgh is a
registration county of
Scotland. It borders
Dumfries to the west,
Selkirk to the north-west, and
Berwick to the north. To the south-east it borders
Cumbria and
Northumberland in
England.
It was named after the
Royal Burgh of
Roxburgh. Roxburghshire is now within the
Scottish Borders council area.
Former status
County
Until
1975, Roxburghshire was one of the
counties of Scotland, governed by a
county council from
1890. The county council was based in
Newtown St Boswells. At the time of the county's abolition in it contained four
burghs and four districts:
- The royal burgh of Jedburgh
- The burghs of Hawick, Kelso and Melrose
- The County of Roxburgh Hawick, Jedburgh, Kelso and Melrose Districts.
The ancient royal burgh of Roxburgh, from which the county had taken its name, had fallen into decay by the fifteenth century.
District
The
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973 abolished the county and incorporated its area into the
Borders Region. Borders was divided into four districts, one of which was named Roxburgh. Roxburgh District consisted of the former county less the Melrose area (which was included in Ettrick and Lauderdale District), plus the parish of Nenthorn from Berwickshire. The regional and four district councils were abolished in
1996, merging to form the present
Scottish Borders council area.
Coat of arms
The County of Roxburgh was the first Scottish county to receive a grant of arms. This was made by
Lord Lyon King of Arms on
July 9,
1798. The
coat of arms seem to have been granted for the use of the volunteer and militia units then being organised under the authority of the county's
lord lieutenant. When the county council was formed in
1890, the arms passed to them.
The shield depicted a unicorn: this is a national symbol of Scotland. At the top of the shield was a hunting horn between two helmets: probably a reference to the border
reivers, one of whom featured in the arms of the royal burgh of Jedburgh. The crest above the shield was an armoured arm brandishing a scimitar. The
Latin motto was
Ne Cede Malis Sed Contra Audentior Ito or
Yield not to misfortunes (evil things) but go on more boldly against them., it was a quotation from
Virgil's
Aeneid 6, 95.
On
May 6,
1975 the coat of arms was regranted to Roxburgh District Council, without the crest. When the district council was abolished in
1996, the arms reverted to the Crown.
Civil parishes
Following the boundary changes carried out under the
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1889, the county of Roxburgh contained 30 civil parishes:
Ancrum (No.12 on map)
Bedrule (22)
Bowden (6)
Castleton (2)
Cavers (28)
Crailing (15)
Eckford (16)
Ednam (5)
Hawick (19)
Hobkirk (29)
Hownam (25)
Jedburgh (23)
Kelso (9)
Lilliesleaf (11)
Linton (17)
Makerstoun (8)
Maxton (13)
Melrose (1)
Minto (20)
Morebattle (26)
Oxnam (24)
Roberton (18)
Roxburgh (14)
Smailholm (3)
Southdean (30)
Sprouston (10)
St Boswells (7)
Stichill (4)
Teviothead (27)
Yetholm (21)
Notable residents
Robert Livingston the Elder, (1654-1728), born in Ancrum, was the Secretary for Indian affairs of the New York Province and the first lord of Livingston Manor.
Thomas Pringle the nineteenth century Scotttish writer, poet and abolitionist was born at Blakelaw, a 500 acre farmstead four miles to the south of the town of Kelso where his father was the tenant.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Roxburghshire'.
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