Inverurie and the earldom of the Garioch; a topographical and historical account of the Garioch from the earliest times to the revolution settlement, with a genealogical appendix of Garioch families flourishing at the period of the revolution settlement and still represented . the property about 1810. The contract of teinds is so far associated with the erection of Jlonkegy into aparish separate from Inverurie. Sir George Johnston of Caskieben became proprietorof his part of the Lindores teinds, a little before the Inverurie teinds were conveyed; andthe Presbytery and Synod minutes, of a later


Inverurie and the earldom of the Garioch; a topographical and historical account of the Garioch from the earliest times to the revolution settlement, with a genealogical appendix of Garioch families flourishing at the period of the revolution settlement and still represented . the property about 1810. The contract of teinds is so far associated with the erection of Jlonkegy into aparish separate from Inverurie. Sir George Johnston of Caskieben became proprietorof his part of the Lindores teinds, a little before the Inverurie teinds were conveyed; andthe Presbytery and Synod minutes, of a later date, contain references to his having pro- 260 Inverurie and the Earldom of ilie Garioch. mised the small teinds of Monkegy for provision to a minister there. The first minister,]\Ir. Samuel Waloar, -n^as appointed about 1630; and was one of the earliest clericalvictims of the Covenant, which he had characterised, after Montrose won the battle ofKilsyth, in terms so contumelious as were not to be forgotten when the Covenant wasall powerful again, but cost him his place, and the humiliating submission requiredin those days, and a life of privation afterwards, until the second Episcopacy restoredhim—a martyr to the truth—to a new lease of life as Parson of Chapter AIII. THE TEOUBLES IX THE GAEIOCH. The Solemn League and Covenant.—Power of the Gordons Broken—The Second Marquis of Appeal to k^^s.— 1639—The Committee at Turriff—The Earl of Montrose andGeneral Leslie in the North—Suntlys Commission Published—Inverurie the Seen^ of the FirstMuster—Covenanting Army at Kinlore—Cmiferenet at Inverurie, the Marquis Overreached—Kemnays Gimal Plundered—Temporary of Catholic Zairds—Lord Aboyne Compelledto Mise—Vacillation of Covcrmnting Chiefs—Ahoync Deserts—Croumer Johnston—The Trot ofTurriff—The Local Chiefs of the Two Parties—Plundering—Prompt Action of the Tables-Flight and Return of the Eoyalist Barons. L


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1800, bookdecade1870, bookpublisheredinburghdaviddoug