. The baronial and ecclesiastical antiquities of Scotland. re, the Earl of Dunbar, from 1166 to 1182,to the monks of Dunfermline, which was witnessed by Helia de Dundas andRobert Avenel the parson of Dumanie. During the reign of William orAlexander II., the church of this parish was granted to the monks ofJedworth ; and was confirmed by the Diocesan. The Church thus appearsto have been a parsonage, and the tithes continued to be drawn by themonks of Jedburgh down to the Reformation, the cure being served by avicar. During the fifteenth century the tithes seem to have been leased tothe holders


. The baronial and ecclesiastical antiquities of Scotland. re, the Earl of Dunbar, from 1166 to 1182,to the monks of Dunfermline, which was witnessed by Helia de Dundas andRobert Avenel the parson of Dumanie. During the reign of William orAlexander II., the church of this parish was granted to the monks ofJedworth ; and was confirmed by the Diocesan. The Church thus appearsto have been a parsonage, and the tithes continued to be drawn by themonks of Jedburgh down to the Reformation, the cure being served by avicar. During the fifteenth century the tithes seem to have been leased tothe holders of the land, or compounded for, as in May 1471, the LordsAuditors assigned a day to the Lairds of Dundas, Barnbugle and Craigie, toprove that Robert, late Lord Boyd, had a sufficient lease from the Abbot ofJedworth, of the tithes of this Church.* Several altarages appear to have been established ; one was dedicated toSt. Cuthbert, another to St. Brigid, and a third to St. * Chalmers Caledonia, II. p. 882. + New Stat. Account, Linlithgow, p.


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