Na Seannachaidh Stiùbhardaich – “The Stewarts’ Storyteller”

The Stewarts of Balquhidder Blog

Callander via the Braes of Doune, Kilmadock

by | Dec 12, 2020 | Gallery, General Interest, Shuna's Gallery | 0 comments

Ailsa Gray has some photos from yesterday but here is a visual idea of what we were looking for in our quest for an old road or route. Callander had a Roman camp. You can see its High Street is orientated in a certain direction. Looking at the modern OS, if you follow that orientation there are two relatively straight lines to the south east. This corresponds with the firebreak in the plantation woodland in the second photograph.

The second one of these due north of “Wester Coillechat” on the map, still looks classic Roman – ditches either side, five metres wide and convex. One of the obvious signs, Ailsa tells me, is the marked difference in vegetation either side of the road (see photo below) . I have marked Colvey/Heads in blue and Craigton in red. It may well be (and we saw evidence of this perhaps yesterday) that medieval routes used the old Roman road as a baseline and then diverged as time went on. The copse of trees on the right photograph is the site of the medieval castle of Craigton (photograph taken from the “Roman” road).

However on looking at the map today I noticed the word “Sraid” near Ballachallan and this, as a Welsh person is significant, as Stryd is Street and within my area of Wales much of the Roman road nearby was referred to as “street”. So I went hunting in one of those mammoth long place names theses that I have signposted previously.

http://theses.gla.ac.uk/2685/1/2011mcnivenphd.pdf and found a definition of Sraid in there. Not only that but I got completely sidetracked by looking at the “first mentions” of some of the place names around Balquhidder (the thesis focuses on Menteith but includes Kilmadock in there).

A sample of a few:

Argaty 1451

Ballachallan 1565

Annat 1508

Calzibohalzie 1451

Milton of Cambus (formerly Cambus of Edward) 1451

Lanrick 1317

Torrie 1317

Coillechat 1508

Doune 1317

Would love to know more about a place called Eglisdisdane too.

Author

  • Shuna Mayes lives in Dunblane, Scotland well within hiking, biking or kayaking distance of every locale where a Stewart of Balquhidder once lived. She enjoys getting outside with her camera and capturing sights that we would never have access to without her generosity and enthusiasm. Shuna has traced her ancestry to an 18th century soldier named James Stewart, who is genetically linked to our clan, but remains frustratingly elusive in his exact relationship.

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Shu Shee

Shu Shee

Contributing writer

Shuna Mayes lives in Dunblane, Scotland well within hiking, biking or kayaking distance of every locale where a Stewart of Balquhidder once lived. She enjoys getting outside with her camera and capturing sights that we would never have access to without her generosity and enthusiasm. Shuna has traced her ancestry to an 18th century soldier named James Stewart, who is genetically linked to our clan, but remains frustratingly elusive in his exact relationship.

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