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Glenluce Abbey

Coordinates: 54°53′21″N 4°49′53″W / 54.88917°N 4.83139°W / 54.88917; -4.83139
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Glenluce Abbey
Monastery information
Full nameComune Monasterii Beate Maeri de Valle Lucis
Other namesAbbey of Luce
OrderCistercian
Established1192
Disestablished1602
Mother houseDundrennan Abbey
DioceseDiocese of Galloway
Controlled churchesGlenluce
People
Founder(s)Lochlann, Lord of Galloway

Glenluce Abbey,[1] near to Glenluce, Scotland, was a Cistercian monastery called also Abbey of Luce or Vallis Lucis [2] and founded around 1190 by Rolland or Lochlann, Lord of Galloway and Constable of Scotland. Following the Scottish Reformation in 1560, the abbey fell into disuse.

Ballinclach

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On 23 January 1497, James IV erected "Ballinclach in Glenluce" into a burgh of barony in favour of the abbey, although there is no record of the burgh operating.[3]

Glenluce and the Kennedy family

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Pl.2. The abbey ruins in 1789

In 1560, after the Scottish Reformation, John Gordon of Lochinvar took possession of Glenluce Abbey. His servant Cuthbert Kirkpatrick refused entry to the abbot, Thomas Hay. Lochinvar removed himself and his servants in November 1561, and gave the key to Gilbert Kennedy, 4th Earl of Cassilis.[4]

Gilbert Kennedy, 4th Earl of Cassilis persuaded one of the monks of the abbey to counterfeit the necessary signatures to a deed conveying the lands of the abbey to him and his heirs. To ensure that the forgery was not discovered he employed a man to murder the monk and then persuaded his uncle, the laird of Bargany, to hang his paid assassin on a trumped up charge of theft. The success of these actions encouraged him to obtain the lands of Crossraguel Abbey through the torturing of Allan Stewart, the commendator at his castle of Dunure.[5]

In March 1587 the king's tutor Peter Young tried to find manuscripts of Caesar's Commentary and a Greek "Hegisippus" that the last Abbot of Glenluce had promised to him.[6]

The ruins were consolidated and partly restored in 1898 by the Glasgow architect, Peter MacGregor Chalmers.[7] They are a scheduled ancient monument.[8]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ otherwise Abbey of Luce, Latin: Comune Monasterii Beate Maeri de Valle Lucis [1]
  2. ^ Pococke, Richard; Kemp, Daniel William (23 May 2003). Tours in Scotland: 1747, 1750, 1760. Heritage Books. ISBN 978-0-7884-2304-8 – via Google Books.
  3. ^ Bute, Marquess of, John Patrick Crichton-Stuart; Stevenson, John Horne; Lonsdale, H. W. (1903). "Ballinclach". The arms of the baronial and police burghs of Scotland. Edinburgh: Blackwood. p. 45.
  4. ^ HMC 5th Report: Marquis of Ailsa (London, 1876), p. 615.
  5. ^ MacGibbon, T. and Ross, D. (1887 - 92). The castellated and domestic architecture of Scotland from the twelfth to the eighteenth centuries, vol. 3, Edinburgh. p. 341.
  6. ^ Robert Vans Agnew, Correspondence of Sir Patrick Vaus of Barnbarroch, vol. 2 (Edinburgh, 1887), p. 383.
  7. ^ "Dictionary of Scottish Architects - DSA Architect Biography Report (May 23, 2020, 8:56 pm)". www.scottisharchitects.org.uk. Archived from the original on 10 August 2020. Retrieved 6 June 2017.
  8. ^ Historic Environment Scotland. "Glenluce Abbey (SM90153)". Retrieved 27 February 2019.
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54°53′21″N 4°49′53″W / 54.88917°N 4.83139°W / 54.88917; -4.83139