GENERAL INDEX.
- Abduction, cases of, i. 222, 419, 469; ii. 251, 319, 390.
- Abercorn, Lady, her persecution of Boyd of Trochrig, ii. 7, 8;
- imprisonment in the Tolbooth, 25, 26.
- Aberdeen, its relation to the Highlands of the Dee, i. 251;
- remarkable trials for witchcraft in, 278-285;
- election prayer of, 341;
- frequent clan-combats and riots at, 384;
- banqueting at baptisms forbidden, 541.
- Threatened bar at mouth of harbour of, ii. 115;
- its doctors, 119-121, 123-126.
- Accidents, Presbyterian historian’s notes of rare, i. 444.
- Acheson and Aslowan, adventurers in gold-seeking, i. 18.
- Actors, companies of, in Perth and Edinburgh, i. 306;
- at Aberdeen, 357.
- A company at Edinburgh, ii. 404.
- Acus marinus, or sea-needle, ii. 463.
- Adair, John, his maps of the counties of Scotland, &c., ii. 483-485.
- Adulteration by Edinburgh traders, ii. 240.
- Aiken, Margaret, ‘the great witch of Balwery,’ i. 291.
- Aikenhead, James, charged with selling amorous drugs, ii. 227.
- Aird, Robert, a distinguished Episcopalian clergyman, petition of, ii. 281.
- Airth, Earl of, remark of, on a Presbyterian prophetess, ii. 122;
- his encounter with Graham of Duchrae, 309.
- Ale, impost-duty on, ii. 253.
- Algiers and Africa, collection for Scottish prisoners in, i. 124, 125, 471.
- Petitions for Scottish mariners taken by pirates, ii. 93.
- Anabaptists, dipping of the, ii. 213.
- Anderson, Andrew, a trafficking papist, dies in the Tolbooth, ii. 60.
- Anderson, Dr Patrick, his tract on Cold Spring of Kinghorn, i. 506.
- Anderson, Father, banished from Scotland, i. 514.
- Anderson, Walter, kills Archbishop Gladstanes’s cook, i. 431.
- Anderson, Widow, the king’s printer, her petition, ii. 450.
- Angus, Earl of, a papist, commissioned to pacify the north, i. 234;
- craves permission to go into exile, 402, 403.
- Angus, the Good Earl of; anecdote of his last illness, i. 235.
- Apology for the Quakers, Barclay of Urie’s, ii. 344.
- Apostates, punished as adulterers, i. 140.
- Apparitions, frequent, ii. 435.
- Apprentices, restriction of, ii. 41.
- Ardkinlas, Laird of, his narrow escape, i. 246, 247.
- Ardvoirlich, his dispute with Lord Kilpont, ii. 154-156.
- Ardvoirlich, Lady of, Macgregors’ barbarous conduct to, i. 195.
- Argyle, sixth Earl of, Lord Boyd, and other nobles, forsake Queen Mary, i. 76.
- Argyle, seventh Earl of, becomes a papist, i. 504.
- Argyle, ninth Earl of, tried for qualifying the test, ii. 354;
- his letter of fire and sword against the Macleans, 370-372;
- his expedition and death, 469.
- Argyle, Marquis of, beheaded, ii. 274, 275.
- Arminianism, alarm for it in Scotland, ii. 1;
- spread of, in England, 60.
- Army, old mode of raising an, i. 36.
- Arthur, Sir John, a priest, prosecuted, i. 23.
- Atheism, Antidote against, Dr More’s, ii. 475.
- Athole, John Stewart, Earl of, entertains Queen Mary at a hunt, i. 29;
- his suspicious death, 123, 124.
- Athole, Marquis of, his dispute with Laird of Struan, ii. 423.
- Athole, witches of, warm friends of Queen Mary, i. 70;
- sad account of country of, 405.
- Atkinson, Stephen, a speculator in gold-mines, i. 50, 474.
- Auchinleck, George, of Balmanno, stabs Captain Nisbet, i. 141.
- Auchmuty, a barber, beheaded for killing James Wauchope, i. 314.
- Awin, M., a French surgeon, complaint against, by his Edinburgh brethren, i. 260.
- Baillie, Memoirs of Lady Grizzel, quoted, ii. 465-467.
- Balbegno’s ghost appears to General Middleton, ii. 364.
- Balcanquel, of that Ilk, fined for his wife’s non-attendance at parish church, ii. 463.
- Balcarres, Earl of, his death, ii. 296.
- Balfour, John, a discoverer of witches, ii. 61.
- ——, William, a papist, his violence in St Giles’ Kirk, i. 14, 15.
- Ballindalloch and Carron, Grants of, feud between, ii. 50-54.
- Band of Friendship entered into by Earl of Eglintoun, Earl of Glencairn, and others, i. 118, 119.
- Bankrupt or dyvour, curious proceeding regarding, i. 236.
- Bankrupts, severities against, i. 392.
- Bannatyne, George, transcribes Scottish poetry, i. 57;
- his arms and initials, 58.
- Banner of Revenge, followed by a thousand mounted gentlemen, i. 363.
- Baptisms, order against extravagance at, i. 541.
- Bar, backing of parties to the, proclamation against, i. 403.
- An example of it, ii. 30.
- Barbadoes, white population of, ii. 305;
- religionists transported as slaves to, 397.
- Barclay, Margaret, tried for witchcraft, i. 488, 489.
- Barclay of Collerine, his uncle’s petition, ii. 436.
- Bards and minstrels, act against; two poets hanged, i. 131.
- Bargeny, Laird of, his death and character, i. 293;
- another Laird of, collision with the Earl of Cassillis, 311;
- killed in a fight near Brig of Doon, 360.
- Barnacles, their development into sea-birds, Sir Robert Murray’s account of, ii. 356.
- Bartas, Sieur du, a French poet, visits Scotland, i. 173-175.
- Bass, Lauder of the, and his mother, hold out against their creditors, ii. 20.
- Battle-visions, and ominous sights and sounds, superstitious feelings regarding, ii. 146-148.
- Beacons for shipping, introduction of; Isle of May light-house, i. 522, 523.
- Beardie, great-grandfather of Sir Walter Scott, ii. 312.
- Beaver hats, Captain Hamilton’s petition for liberty to manufacture, ii. 453.
- Bedesmen, the King’s, ancient custom regarding, i. 405.
- Bedford, Earl of, ambassador to Scotland at baptism of King James VI., i. 39.
- Bee-house, John Geddie’s novel, ii. 323.
- Beggars, strong and idle, act against, i. 131, 478.
- Belhaven, Lord, anecdote of the blind, ii. 7.
- ——, Lord, curious incident in life of, ii. 249.
- Bellman, formula used by the Edinburgh, ii. n. 202.
- Bessie Bell and Mary Gray, tale of, ii. 166, 167.
- Bible, first edition of the, printed in Scotland, by Arbuthnot and Bassendyne, Edinburgh burgesses, i. 100;
- difficulties of its progress through the press, 106, 107;
- gratification of clergy at its completion, 131.
- Birnie, Walter, preacher, the Privy Council’s kindness to, ii. 338.
- Birthday, anniversary of Charles II.’s, held as a holiday all over Scotland, ii. 291.
- Bisset, Abacuck, maimed; anecdote of Queen Mary concerning, i. 180, 181.
- Black Band, a conspiracy formed against Home of Wedderburn, i. 96, 97.
- Black Saturday, why so called, i. 523.
- Blackadder of Tulliallan, his case with Balfour of Burleigh, i. 386, 387.
- Blackburn, Peter, Bishop of Aberdeen, his death, i. 475.
- Blackhall, Father, narrative of his career as a priest in Scotland, ii. 129-134.
- Blair, Alexander, of Freirton, gives surety for improved conduct to his wife, i. 48.
- Bleeding heart prophecy, i. 145.
- Blood-showers, their probable origin, ii. 199, 488, 489.
- Bog an Gicht Castle, illustration, ii. 48.
- Bohemian army, from 3000 to 4400 men raised in Scotland for the, ii. 9-11.
- Bond of Association between Sir Walter Scott of Branxholm and fifty of his clan, i. 190.
- Books imported from Germany duty-free, i. 194, 195.
- Borbrieffs, or birth-letters, petitions for, ii. 325.
- Border Thieves, Regent Moray’s raid against, i. 60;
- Regent Morton’s raid, 88;
- their immunity from the pest, 158;
- James VI.’s punishment of, 293, 294;
- above 140 hanged by Earl of Dunbar, 400, 422, 423;
- strong effort for suppression of, 443;
- 120 sent to Bohemian wars, 488;
- Earl of Traquair’s rigorous measures with at Jedburgh, ii. 100.
- Borrowing Days, storm of, i. 552, 553.
- Borrowstounness, curious witch-trial at, ii. 405, 406;
- Sweet Singers of, 414-416.
- Bothwell, Adam, Bishop of Orkney, letter of, on plague, i. 55;
- his character, 145.
- Bothwell, Countess of, her humble supplication to James VI., i. 243;
- inconstancy of James’s favour to, 264.
- Bothwell, Hepburn, Earl of, his abduction of Queen Mary, i. 41.
- Bothwell, Stuart, Earl of, demands 5000 merks from city of Edinburgh, i. 189;
- his attempt to seize James VI. at Holyroodhouse, 229;
- second attempt at Falkland Palace, 237;
- third attempt at Dalkeith Castle, 238;
- scene in James VI.’s chamber at Holyrood, 250;
- his encounter with Laird of Cessford, 251;
- his encounter with Lord Home, 255;
- joins the papist lords, 255.
- Bothwell Moor, harrying of, i. 71.
- Bowmen, Charles I. raises a small troop of Highland, ii. 14.
- Boyd, Janet, tried for witchcraft, ii. 31.
- ——, Robert, Lord, deserts the Queen’s party, i. 76;
- bond of manred with William Fairly, 77.
- Boyd of Trochrig, suffers great persecution in Paisley, ii. 8.
- Boys, Society of the, i. 403, 404.
- Brackla, Laird of, murdered, i. 233.
- Braidhead, Janet, the witch, extracts from her confession, ii. 285-291.
- Brand, John, beheaded for murder, i. 467.
- Brandy, its importation restricted, ii. 332.
- Branks, an instrument of punishment, i. 47.
- Brazen Wall, a party of this regiment surprised by Captain Wogan, ii. 224.
- Brechin, a keeper of a hotel in, apprehended for murdering his guests in bed, i. 78.
- Bride of Baldoon, original of the Bride of Lammermuir, story of, ii. 326-328.
- Bridges and roads, ruinous state of, ii. 409.
- Brimstone, vitriol, and alum, privilege of making, granted, i. 443.
- Bronkhorst, a Fleming, tries to get a patent for the gold-mines of Lanarkshire, i. 138;
- acts as portrait-painter to the king, 139.
- Brown, Gilbert, ex-abbot of New Abbey, imprisoned, i. 389;
- his books, &c., burnt, 422.
- Brown of Hartree, his duel with Hay of Smithfield, i. 264, 265.
- Brown, Robert, a Cambridge student; his peculiar religious doctrines, i. 153.
- Brownism, a tendency towards, rebuked, ii. 127, 145.
- Browster-wife, origin of the term, i. 328.
- Comic race by twelve brewster-wives, ii. 273.
- Bruce and Forester, of Stirlingshire, their dispute, i. 260.
- Bruce, Edward Lord, of Kinloss, his duel with Sir Edward Sackville, i. 447-451.
- Bruce of Clackmannan, patents a coal-mine water-engine, ii. 408.
- Bruce, Peter, his patents for various machines, ii. 408;
- his patent for playing-cards, 432.
- Bruce, Robert, of Clackmannan; an incident in his life, i. 240, 241.
- Bruce, Sir George, anecdote of James VI.’s visit to, at Culross, i. 485.
- Bruits, rumours so called: their effects, ii. 4, 5.
- Bruntfield, Adam, slays James Carmichael in single combat, i. 286.
- Buccleuch, Countess of, her early marriage and death, ii. 250.
- Buccleuch, first Earl of, his burial-procession, ii. 73, 74.
- Buchanan, George, tutor to James VI., i. 83;
- his death and character, 149, 150.
- Bulmer, on Englishman, works the gold-mines in Scotland, i. 254, 255, 290.
- Burgess, Dr, his specific for the plague, ii. 164.
- Burnet, Rev. John, death of, ii. 363.
- Burntisland, extraordinary riot in, i. 466.
- Shipping at, in time of Commonwealth, ii. 249;
- Dutch ships attack, 318.
- Burton, John, his brother’s complaint against him, ii. 424.
- Butchers and Vintners, outcry against extortion of, ii. 489, 490.
- Cabinet-making, James Turner’s petition, ii. 396.
- Caithness, Earl of, beheads Alister Mac William Mor, i. 387, 388;
- strife between, and Gordon and Mackay, 440-443;
- his unruly conduct checked, 536-538.
- Calder, Laird of, three gentlemen receive and die of poison meant for, ii. 146.
- Caligraphy, Esther Inglis, a Frenchwoman, her MS. volumes, i. 550-552.
- Camel, exhibition of a, ii. 69.
- Camerons’ raid against Struan of Kinloch, ii. 308.
- Campbell and Smith, a combat between, in Edinburgh, i. 72, 73.
- Campbell, Colin, of Glenurchy, a patron of the fine arts, ii. 62.
- Campbell, John, of Calder, shot by Mac Ellar, i. 246.
- Campbell of Moy, M‘Ranald of Glengarach’s attack on house of, i. 364.
- Campbell, Sir Duncan, Laird of Glenurchy, his style of living, i. 207.
- Campbell, Sir James, of Lawers, his thief-taking commission, ii. 381, 382.
- Canongate, inhabitants of, infected by the pest, i. 56;
- tavern arrangements in, 59.
- Cant, Andrew, his moderatorship, ii, 181;
- anecdote of, 182, 183.
- Cape of Good Hope, the devil appears on board of a ship so called, ii. 347.
- Cappers, Scotch privateer vessels so called, ii. 317.
- Caravan betwixt Edinburgh and Glasgow, ii. 393.
- Cardiness, Lady, Sir Alexander M‘Culloch’s assaults on, ii. 321.
- Cargill, Donald, his predictions, ii. 372.
- Carmichael, James, kills Stephen Bruntfield in a duel, i. 286.
- Carnegie and Lithgow, Lords, duel of, ii. 305.
- Carruthers, Marion, an heiress, i. 25.
- Carstairs, Cardinal, anecdote of the thumbikens, ii. 460.
- Cart, Hamilton’s patent for a new, i. 550.
- Carvet, a Romish priest, pilloried, i. 33.
- Cashielaws, an instrument of torture, i. 273.
- Cashogle and Drumlanrig, private war between, i. 520, 521.
- Cassillis and Wigton, Earls of, dispute between, ii. 30.
- Cassillis, Earl of, and Kennedy of Bargeny, dispute between, i. 310, 363-366.
- Cassillis, Earl of, marries widow of Lord Thirlstane; unmeetness of the match, i. 293.
- Cassillis, Gilbert, Earl of, sometimes called King of Carrick, his extraordinary torture of Master Allan Stewart, i. 65-68.
- Castle-Kennedy, anecdote of a thunder-clap at, ii. 28.
- Catastrophe Mundi, a treatise on comets, ii. 456.
- Cathcart, James, a pretended astrologer, ii. 467.
- Cathkin and Lawson, oppose Episcopalian principles, i. 512.
- Catholic missionaries, success in Switzerland, i. 515.
- Catholics, see Papists.
- Catholic nobles, driven to extremities, i. 219;
- their treasonable correspondence with Spain, 244;
- their sons placed under care of reformed ministers, 351;
- progress of persecution against, 415-417, 421, 422, 429.
- Further persecutions of, ii. 57-60, 335-338.
- Chalmers, James, his list of papists and seminary priests, ii. 283, 284.
- Chancellor, Susanna, accused of consulting charmers, ii. 44.
- Change-houses, Kirke’s description of Scotch, ii. 407.
- Chapel of Grace, pilgrimages to, i. 325.
- Charles I., his baptism, i. 321.
- His marriage, ii. 4;
- proclamation against popery, 4;
- raises troop of Highland bowmen, 14;
- letter to the Scottish Council, 25;
- grants commission to Lord Gordon against papists, 36-41;
- his interference on behalf of papists, 57-60;
- his visit to Edinburgh, 63-69;
- proclamation against communion stragglers, 81;
- his expeditions against Scottish Covenanters, 106;
- commences the civil war, 109;
- rendered up by Scottish army, 112;
- his remark on death of Earl of Haddington, 137;
- anecdote of Irish rebellion, 141;
- his execution creates enmity between ruling powers of England and Scotland, 174.
- Charles II., demonstrations on birth of, ii. 41;
- invited to Scotland and proceedings there, 174;
- his restoration, 255;
- remark on inhumane laws, 260;
- joy at restoration of, 261, 266;
- anecdote of his visit to James Guthrie, 276;
- extraordinary demonstration at Linlithgow on his birthday, 291, 292;
- his fondness for bees, 323, 324;
- evils of his reign, 330, 332;
- his equestrian statue in Parliament Close, 477.
- Charms for healing sores, &c., i. 324.
- Specimen of, ii. 153.
- Chattan or Macintosh, Clan, Earl of Moray’s expedition against, i. 542, 543.
- Cheviot, order against hunting in, i. 453.
- Chiesley of Dalry shoots Sir George Lockhart, ii. 495.
- Chiesley, William, writer in Edinburgh, punished for a cheat, ii. 445.
- Child-murder, hanging of women for, &c., ii. 414.
- Chisholms prosecute M‘Leans for witchcraft, ii. 293, 294.
- Christie’s Well, pilgrimages to, i. 323.
- Christmas-day, James VI. orders keeping of, i. 426;
- general disregard of, 506.
- Its observance in Edinburgh, ii. 297.
- Church-discipline, severity of, i. 336; ii. 196-199.
- Church-lands, convention for revocation of, ii. 6.
- Church matters, meeting for deliberation on, ii. 12.
- Citadels, order for destroying those raised during the Commonwealth, ii. 279.
- Clairvoyance, quasi case of, ii. 394.
- Clark, Alexander, provost of Edinburgh, his reception of Charles I., ii. 63-65.
- Clark and Ramsay, hanged for poisoning their master, ii. 373.
- Clergy, their zeal and self-denying poverty, i. 132;
- collisions with Edinburgh merchants, 241, 242;
- their intolerance, 244;
- their admonitions of James VI., and general denunciations against common corruption of all estates of the realm, 267.
- Perfect accord with the Estates, ii. 179-181.
- Clothing and cloth-works in Scotland, anecdotes connected with, ii. 416-422.
- Cloth-manufacture, seven Flemings engaged to set agoing; result, i. 362;
- encouraged by James VI., 425.
- At Newmills, near Haddington, ii. 418.
- Coaches, early examples of, i. 19;
- first hint at public coaches and wagons in Scotland, 431.
- Street coaches, ii. 358;
- stage-coaches, 218, 247, 391, 476.
- Coal, early digging of, i. 24;
- Countess of Sutherland first works coal of Brora, 302;
- coal-works at Culross, 485;
- price of coal fixed, 519;
- Johnston’s licence to export, 520.
- Cochrane of Ochiltree, saved by his heroic daughter Grizzel, ii. 479.
- Cockburn, the executioner, hanged, ii. 433.
- Cockie, Isobel, burned for witchcraft, i. 280.
- Cockpool, inundation of house of Old, anecdote of, ii. 17.
- Coffee-houses, first known in Edinburgh and Glasgow, ii. 359-361.
- Coin, attempt to raise the value of, i. 122.
- Coke, William, burned for sorcery;
- bill of expenses, ii. 70, 71.
- Collace, Mr William, first regent in St Leonard’s College, i. 73.
- College of Physicians, proposed in Edinburgh, i. 521.
- Colquhouns and Macgregors, battle between, i. 377, 378.
- Colville, Lady, imprisoned for educating her son in disloyal principles, ii. 467.
- Colville, Lord, mission to France concerning the Scots Guard, i. 535.
- Combat, a remarkable, i. 285;
- among the last attempts to settle a dispute by, 414.
- Comets, early ideas about, i. 112, 113;
- appearance of a remarkable, in 1618, 505.
- Appearance of one during the day, ii. 185;
- in 1664 and 1665, 300-302;
- in 1676, 376;
- in 1680, curious notions regarding, 410-412;
- Halley’s, in 1682, 444.
- Communion Tuesday meetings; their object, i. 508.
- Communion administered in Edinburgh after an interval of six years, ii. 235.
- Con of Achry, a papist, excommunicated by presbytery of Aberdeen, ii. 59.
- Confession of Faith, commonly called the King’s Confession, i. 142.
- Conventicles, various persons fined for attending, ii. 334.
- Copper-mine in parish of Currie, ii. 453.
- Corn, great dearth of in 1567, i. 52.
- Cornwall, Archibald, hanged for poinding the king and queen’s portraits, i. 349.
- Corstorphine, frightful tragedy at village of, ii. 401-403.
- Costume, court order of, i. 426.
- Court of Session, suspension of, ii. 128.
- Couts, Janet, accuses eleven women of witchcraft, ii. 194, 195.
- Covenant, National, signed, ii. 105, 116;
- forced on people at Aberdeen, 120, 123.
- Covenant, Solemn League and, made, ii. 109;
- character and consequences of, 111;
- forced on Lady Frendraught, 159;
- opinion of royalists regarding rule of, 160, 161;
- taken by Charles II., 175;
- forced on Marquis and Marchioness of Douglas, 191, 193;
- burned at Linlithgow, 291.
- Covenanters, proceedings of the, ii. 106-113, 119-121, 123-126.
- Covenanter’s Ribbon, ii. 124.
- Cowdothe, an epidemic so called, i. 117.
- Cowper, William, bishop of Galloway, a libel against, i. 372;
- his sudden death, 507, 508.
- Craig, Marjory, hanged as a witch, ii. 377-379.
- Crawford and Glammis, feud between, i. 117, 118.
- Crawford, Earl of, confined in the Tower, ii. 218;
- appointed Lord Treasurer, 255.
- Crawford, Master of, young Edzell’s attack on, i. 405, 406.
- Crawford gold-field, i. 17, 51, 253, 290, 474.
- Creditors, supposed power of, over interment of the dead, ii. 328, 329.
- Crichton of Frendraught and Gordon of Rothiemay, dispute between ii. 45-50, 76-79,
84.
- Crichton, Sir Robert, of Cluny, a caption used against him in church, i. 474.
- Crombie, Thomas, summoned for slaughter of William Blair, ii. 4.
- Cromwell, Oliver, his first visit to Edinburgh, ii. 170, 171;
- crosses the Tweed with an English army, 201-207;
- anecdotes of, 203, 204;
- his law-commissioners for Scotland, 219;
- breaks up the General Assembly, 221;
- proclaimed protector, 242-244.
- Crossford visions, Walker’s account of the, ii. 485-487.
- Cultmalindy and Monyvaird, feud between, i. 490.
- Cumming, Isobel, a teacher of young ladies, her petition, ii. 482.
- Cunningham and Crawford, Captains, harry Bothwell Moor, i. 71.
- Cunningham of Robertland, murders Earl of Eglintoun, i. 161.
- Poinding of his goods, ii. 340.
- Cunyie-house, master of, visits England, i. 386.
- Cupar (Fife), great fire at, in 1668, ii. 321.
- Custom-officers and Edinburgh merchants, dispute between, ii. 299.
- Customs, i. 339-342;
- Spalding bewails suppression of old Christian, ii. 142.
- Daes, Alexander, introduces paper-making, ii. 398;
- favours the shewing of an elephant, 410;
- complaint from, 432.
- Dalkeith, James VI. residing at, i. 146.
- Dalry paper-mills, Daes’s petition for, ii. 398.
- Dalrymple, Janet, the unfortunate Bride of Baldoon, ii. 326-328.
- Dalrymple, William, murdered by Mures of Auchindrain, i. 435-437.
- Dancing, laws against, i. 338.
- Danish nobles and gentlemen entertained by Edinburgh magistrates, i. 199.
- Darnley, Lord, i. 35-37;
- his murder, 40.
- Davidson, William, an Edinburgh flesher, a monster-pig farrowed in his house, i. 76.
- Day of Law in the reign of James VI., i. 247.
- Dearths in Scotland, i. 59, 94, 99, 116, 117, 179,
180, 265, 271, 303, 304, 318,
444, 476, 530, 531, 538, 539;
ii. 74, 75, 85, 134, 144, 149, 156,
185, 207, 235.
- Deer slain with guns near the Border, i. 103.
- Deer-hunting, the Water-poet’s description of Highland, i. 497.
- Deil stick the Minister, anecdote of, ii. 453.
- Denmark, King of, 2000 men raised in Scotland for, i. 53.
- Devil of Glenluce, a house-infesting spirit, ii. 228-232.
- Devoe, Andrew, a dancing-master in Edinburgh, Bayne’s petition against, ii. 384;
- his complaint against the Fountains, 401.
- De Vois, Cornelius, a gold-seeking adventurer, i. 50.
- Dick, Alison, burnt for witchcraft; curious bill of expenses, ii. 70, 71.
- Dick, Sir William, wealth of, ii. 183;
- his history and death, 236-240.
- Dick’s house of Priestfield burnt, ii. 413.
- Dickison, Provost, murdered in Peebles, i. 81.
- Allusion to, ii. 480.
- Dickson, David, minister of Irvine, Stewarton Sickness takes its rise under, ii. 43;
- moderator of the General Assembly, 221.
- Dickson, John, an Englishman, hanged for slanderous speeches against James VI., i. 273.
- Dickson, John, of Belchester, broken on the rack for murder of his father, i. 224.
- Dissection, malefactors given for, ii. 96.
- Dissent, progress of Presbyterian, i. 543-545.
- Divines, Assembly of, at Westminster, ii. 111.
- Diving-bell, Maule of Melgum’s invention of the, ii. 387.
- Dog dispute, tragical issue of a, ii. 478.
- Dogs, acts against bringing to church, i. 342.
- Donaldson, Robert, murdered, ii. 329.
- Douglas, Andrew, minister of Dunkeld, tortured and hanged for rebuking Morton, i. 80.
- Douglas, Colonel, diligent training of his regiment, ii. 462.
- Douglas, Hon. George, his quarrel with John Corsehill, ii. 478.
- Douglas, Janet, a deaf and dumb girl, her deceptions as a witch-finder, ii. 376-381.
- Douglas, Marquis of, his difficulties with the presbytery of Lanark, ii. 190-194.
- Douglas, second Marquis of, his separation from Lady Barbara Erskine, ii. 340.
- Douglas, Mr Archibald, his mock-trial for concern in murder of Darnley, i. 163.
- Douglas of Lochleven, his hatred of the Hamiltons, i. 100.
- Douglas, Sir James, of Parkhead, slays James Stewart of Newton, i. 274.
- Douglas, William, beheaded for concern in duel with Home of Eccles, ii. 318.
- Douglas, William, stabs Thomas Lindsay, ii. 439-442.
- Downie, John, the pest breaks out in his ship, i. 139.
- Dowries or Tochers, examples of, ii. 35.
- Dragon-hole, near Perth, yearly procession to, i. 327.
- Dream regarding Dunnottar Castle, i. 210.
- Dress of clergymen and their wives, General Assembly’s regulations regarding, i. 102.
- Dresses of the sexes, prank of interchanging, i. 327.
- Drinking, Aberdeen town-council’s order against compulsory, ii. 4.
- Drinking-debauch, unfortunate issue of a, ii. 345, 346.
- Dromedary, exhibition of a travelling, ii. 249.
- Drumlanrig and Cashogle, private war between, i. 520, 521.
- Drummond, Lady Jean, her portion of 5000 merks, ii. 34, 35.
- Drummond of Hawthornden, Ben Jonson’s visit to, i. 500-503.
- Drummond, Robert, his exposure in the ‘stocks’ for adultery, i. 92.
- Drummond, Sir George, becomes bankrupt, ii. 479.
- Drummonds and Oliver Young, dispute between servants of the, i. 293.
- Drury, Sir William, threatens to destroy the town of Linlithgow, i. 63.
- Dryfe’s Sands, clan-battle of, i. 252.
- Duddingston Loch, legal case about swans on, ii. 492.
- Duff, David, outrages committed by, in a dispute about land, i. 348.
- Dumbarton, Castle of, taken by surprise by the king’s party, i. 73.
- Its ruinous state for national defence, ii. 18.
- Dumbarton, encroachments of the sea on, i. 400.
- Dumblane, four priests of, condemned to death for saying mass, i. 59.
- Dumfries, complaint against minister and reader of, i. 95;
- James VI. executes justice at, 294;
- anecdote of a mission to Wigtown to purchase cattle, 304.
- A papist priest taken at, ii. 11;
- papist marriage at, 72;
- case of poisoning at, 92;
- insecurity of its jail, 442.
- Dunbar, Earl of, hangs above 140 Border thieves, i. 400;
- his ecclesiastical mission to Scotland from James VI., 413;
- further proceedings against Border thieves, 422, 423.
- Dunbar, 300 fishermen perish at, i. 125.
- Battle of, ii. 176;
- the witch of, 493.
- Dundee, its quarrel with Perth, i. 48;
- coining at, 157;
- anecdote connected with the pest, 399;
- suffers under pest, 414.
- Sack of, by General Monk, ii. 207;
- witch case at, 330;
- a jail delivery by Graham of Claverhouse, 461.
- Dunfermline, great fire at, i. 542.
- Dunglass Castle, dismal accident at, ii. 136.
- Dunlop, Bessie, her trial for witchcraft, i. 107-110.
- Dunlop, Thomas, a poor Quaker, persecution of, ii. 443.
- Dunnottar Castle, dream regarding, i. 210.
- Siege of; anecdote of regalia of Scotland, ii. 213;
- Whigs confined in, 480.
- Dunse, possessed woman at, ii. 43.
- Dunse Law, magazine of pebbles at, ii. 126.
- Duntreath, deaf and dumb Laird of, his divinations, ii. 384, 385.
- Durie, Gibson of, story of his kidnapping, i. 355, 356.
- Durie, John, a minister of Edinburgh; his return from banishment, i. 148.
- Dutch invasion; fleet appears at mouth of Firth of Forth, ii. 318.
- Eagles, remarkable anecdotes of, ii. n. 268.
- ‘Earth-dogs,’ or terriers, James VI. writes to Earl of Mar for, i. 547.
- Earthquakes, i. 140, 292, 420, 454, 522; ii. 241.
- Easter Sunday, communion on, disinclination of the people to kneeling, i. 509.
- Ecclesiastical discipline, i. 336-338.
- Its bearing on the habits of the people, ii. 156-161.
- Echt, Barmkyn of, strange sounds heard at, ii. 115.
- Eclipses of the sun, i. 296; ii. 215.
- Economy, traits of the public, i. 345-347.
- Eddy-pool of Water of Brechin, drying up of, ii. 75.
- Edinburgh, effects of the civil war on, i. 79-81, 87, 88;
- spirited resistance to Earl of Bothwell, 189;
- filthiness of, in 1617, 486.
- Charles I.’s visit to; his reception, ii. 63-69;
- taxes, poverty, vanity, and debt of, 235, 236, 247;
- three fires at, on one Sunday, 487.
- See whole work passim.
- Edston-haugh, near Peebles, duel at, i. 265.
- Edzell, Laird of, his attack on Master of Crawford, i. 405, 406.
- Eels, thousands of dead, cast on banks of North Loch, ii. 234.
- Eggs, act against exporting, i. 467.
- Eglintoun and Glencairn, Earls of, feud between, i. 394, 395.
- Eglintoun, Earl of, murdered by Cunningham of Robertland, i. 161-163.
- Egyptians, Privy Council’s order against, ii. 54.
- Elder, James, a baker, tried for usury, ii. 298.
- Elephant, the first seen in Scotland, ii. 410.
- Elgin Cathedral, choir of, destroyed by a high wind, ii. 114;
- casting down of timber-screen of, 138.
- Elizabeth, Queen, sends a hostile army against Queen Mary’s friends in Scotland, i. 61;
- another, 85;
- intelligence of her death brought to King James, 381.
- Elphinstone, George, a Glasgow bailie, violent attacks against, i. 90.
- Elphinstone, Sir George, his dispute with Sir M. Stewart at Glasgow, i. 396-398.
- English judicature at Leith, impartiality of, ii. 215.
- English soldiers, their description of the Highlands, ii. 218;
- their contempt for stool of repentance, ibid.
- English, their jealousy of the Scotch in reign of James VI., i. 432-434.
- Entry-money at taking service, Privy Council’s proclamation against, i. 489.
- Episcopacy introduced by James VI., i. 379, 394, 415, 426, 428,
480, 523; ii. 1, 2;
- abrogated, 106;
- re-established, 256;
- finally abolished, 474.
- Equinoctial gale of 1606, devastating effects of, i. 392.
- Ericht, subscription for building a bridge over river, ii. 54.
- Errol, Earl of, makes his peace with Kirk of Aberdeen, i. 288;
- trait of his domestic circumstances, 466.
- His death, ii. 55.
- Erskine, Robert, with his three sisters, condemned to death for poisoning his two nephews, i. 452.
- Eskdale Muir denuded of sheep, ii. 367.
- Estates and Clergy, perfect accord between, ii. 179-181.
- Evelick, singular boy-murder near, ii. 439.
- Ewe and Lamb, a kidnapping ship so called, ii. 359.
- Excommunicated persons, Privy Council’s measures against, ii. 18, 20-28, 36-41.
- Excommunication, i. 336;
- pronounced against Marquis of Huntly, 417.
- Dealt out liberally, ii. 173;
- of a gardener revoked by James VII., 482.
- Faas, gipsies, a number of, executed, i. 476.
- Falkirk and Stirling, sixteen farms between, buried in moss, ii. 35.
- Falkland and Holyrood, improvement on the palaces of, for king’s visit, i. 476.
- Famine in 1563, i. 25;
- severity of, in 1623, 538, 539.
- See Dearths.
- Farquhar, Robert, a rich Aberdeen merchant, his loans to the state, ii. 181;
- story of, 182.
- Farquharson of Inverey, his fine of £4000 [Scots?], ii. 184.
- Fast-day in Old Aberdeen, in 1644, a reality, ii. 154.
- Faw, Moses, a gipsy, his petition granted, i. 426.
- Faws and the Shaws, battle between, ii. 388.
- Female Remonstrants in Parliament Close, strange scene with, ii. 369.
- Fenelon, Sieur de la Motte, a French ambassador, i. 151.
- Fiacre, origin of application of the term to hackney-coaches, i. 324.
- Fian, John, schoolmaster at Prestonpans, burnt as a wizard, i. 211, 212.
- Fielding, Beau, and two Scotch gentlemen, drink three horrid toasts, ii. 381.
- Fiery-cross, the Macleans raise 300 men by the, ii. n. 371.
- Fife and Kinross, enormous sacrifices made by counties of, to resist Cromwell’s invasion, ii. 206.
- Fines, Scottish Estates impose severe, ii. 183, 184;
- for attending conventicles, 334.
- Finnie, Agnes, burnt for witchcraft, ii. 149-153.
- Fire-engine for Glasgow, first, ii. 244.
- Fires on Midsummer and St Peter’s Eves, i. 326.
- Fish, white, destroyed by dog-fish; Spalding’s idea of, ii. 144.
- Fishermen, Earl of Errol’s petition against, ii. 458.
- Fishing Society, formation of a, ii. 330, 331.
- Fleck, George, reveals where the Earl of Morton’s treasure lay, i. 142.
- Fleming, Lord, his marriage celebrated, i. 29;
- sufferings in the civil war, 1570, 62.
- Flesh, use of, forbidden by Privy Council, i. 50.
- Fletcher, Christian, saves the regalia of Scotland, ii. 214.
- Flood in the Tay, remarkable, i. 525-527.
- Florida, one of the Spanish Armada vessels, blown up, ii. 386-388.
- Foot-race, curious, of twelve brewsterwives, and sixteen fishwives, ii. 273.
- Foot-soldiers, five companies raised by Charles II., ii. 296.
- Forbes, Dr, bishop of Edinburgh, i. 544.
- ——, of Corse, banishment of, ii. 146;
- his corpse refused burial in his own ground, 451.
- Forbes, Master of, and George Leslie, fight between, ii. 134.
- Forbes of Leslie, his prosecution of Farquharson of Inverey, ii. 184.
- Forbes of Tolquhoun and Ogilvie of Forglen, dispute between, ii. 477.
- Forester, a bailie of Stirling, rare form of his funeral, i. 260.
- Forrester, Lord, murdered by his mistress, ii. 401.
- Forth, Firth of, alarm of invasion from vessels appearing in, ii. 15.
- Foulis, Lady, extraordinary trial of, for witchcraft, i. 202-205.
- Foulis, Thomas, an Edinburgh goldsmith;
- his gold, silver, and lead mines, i. 252-254, 290;
- a creditor of James VI., 295, 296.
- Fountains, two brothers, their patent as Masters of the Revels, ii. 400, 459.
- France, differences between Great Britain and, ii. 12.
- Fraser, Helen, burnt for witchcraft, i. 280.
- ——, Janet, strange phenomenon on her Bible, ii. 488.
- Fraser, Lord, and Laird of Philorth, dispute between, ii. 99, 100.
- Fraser of Kirkhill, extracts from his diary, ii. 241.
- Fraser’s view of the customs of the Highlanders, ii. 383.
- French, Adam, of Thornydykes, his abduction, i. 469.
- French language, town-council of Edinburgh patronise the teaching of, i. 94.
- French Protestants, contributions for, i. 102;
- warmly entertained in England and Scotland, 163.
- Frendraught and Rothiemay, dispute between, ii. 45-50, 76-79, 84,
98.
- Frendraught, Lady, falls under discipline of presbytery of Strathbogie, ii. 158-160;
- persecution of, 335.
- Frolics and masqueradings, i. 327-329.
- Frosts, great, in 1570-1-2-3, i. 72, 84, 457;
- freezing of several rivers in Scotland; a fair held upon the ice on the Thames, 409.
- Frost of 1683, ii. 454.
- Gallow-lee, five phanatiques hanged at the, ii. 428.
- Geddes, Jenny, supposed heroine who cast the first stool at the bishop, ii. 103.
- Geddie, John, his novel bee-house, ii. 323.
- General Assembly, fasts for steerage from papists, i. 196;
- held in 1608, 416.
- Covenanting assembly at Glasgow, ii. 106;
- suppression of, by order of Cromwell, 221, 222.
- Ger, John Dhu, an outlaw, outrages of, ii. 121, 128, 135, 263.
- German legions, unscrupulous recruiting of, in Scotland, ii. 13.
- Gibb, Muckle John, chief of the Sweet Singers of Borrowstounness, ii. 415.
- Gibson, Alexander, kidnapped, i. 355.
- ——, Anna, abduction of, ii. 319.
- Gilderoy, with nine caterans, executed, ii. 96-98.
- Gillon, James, condemned for a riot, i. 9.
- Gipsies, their first appearance in Scotland; act against, i. 84;
- severities against, six hanged, 476;
- their harbourage at Roslin, 539.
- Edict against, ii. 54;
- some in Haddington jail, ordered to be hanged and drowned, 99.
- Girdle for baking invented in Culross, ii. 493.
- Girvanmains, Laird of, kills M‘Alexander of Drumachryne, i. 310, 311.
- Gladstanes, Archbishop, his cook killed, i. 431.
- Gladstanes, Marion, nearly poisons Nicolas Johnston, ii. 92.
- Glammis and Crawford, feud between, i. 117, 118.
- Glammis, Lords, and Lindsays of Forfarshire, feud between, i. 312, 313.
- Glanvil’s Saducismus Triumphatus, ii. 476.
- Glasgow, an earthquake in, i. 64;
- Smith’s excerpts from burgh records, 88-92;
- attempt to demolish its cathedral, 122, 123;
- tumult in 1606, 395-399.
- Great fire at, ii. 216;
- interesting incidents connected with, 244, 245, 247;
- another fire at, 389;
- a cloth manufactory set up in, 445;
- subscription for a fire at Kelso, 458.
- Glass-manufacture, patent granted for, i. 432.
- ——work in Wemyss, Fife, the first known in Scotland, i. 510, 511.
- Glen, James, fined for publishing the Root of Romish Ceremonies, ii. 490.
- Glencairn and Eglintoun, Earls of, feud between, i. 394, 395.
- Glengoner, gold-digging in, i. 18, 152, 253.
- Glenluce, Devil of, incidents in history of the, ii. 228-232.
- Gloucester frigate, shipwreck of the, ii. 405, 439.
- God and the King, a book so called, i. 474.
- God’s Blessing, a shaft of Hilderstone silver-mine so called, i. 412.
- Gogar, Miller, and Sangster, hanged, ii. 422.
- Gold and silver, licence to search for, i. 50.
- ——, exportation of, forbidden, i. 107.
- —— mines in Lanarkshire, i. 17, 50, 152, 253.
- Golden Assembly, why so called, i. 428.
- Goldsmiths, the Edinburgh, historic importance of, i. 253.
- Goodman’s Croft, the, act against, i. 324, 325.
- Gordon, Adam, sets fire to Alex. Forbes’s house, and burns his lady, children, and servants—twenty-seven in all, i. 75.
- Gordon, Adam, and Francis Hay, combat between, i. 468.
- Gordon and Mackay, strife between, and Earl of Caithness, i. 440-443.
- Gordon, Jean, divorcée of Bothwell; her coal and salt works at Brora, i. 302.
- Pleasing character of, ii. 30.
- Gordon, Lord, commander of French Scots Guards, i. 535, 536.
- His commission against excommunicated papists, ii. 36-41.
- Gordon, Mr James, a Jesuit, James VI. reasons with, i. 182.
- Gordon of Craig, banished for papistry, i. 545, 546.
- His petition to the Council, ii. 38;
- petitions Charles I., 59.
- Gordon of Dunkintie and his eldest son slain, ii. 69.
- Gordon of Enbo, his quarrel with Sutherland of Duffus, ii. 5, 6.
- Gordon of Gight, revenges his brother’s death, i. 468.
- Gordons of Gight, persecuted for papistry,
- i. 352, 353, 403, 404;
- outrage by, at Turriff, 354;
- strange act at Aberdeen, 468.
- Gordon of Rothiemay and Crichton of Frendraught, dispute between, ii. 45-50, 76-79,
84.
- Gordon, Sir Robert, sent against Earl of Caithness, i. 536-538.
- Gordon, William, his contempt of presbytery, ii. 160.
- Go-summer and go-har’st, definition of, ii. n. 79.
- Gould, Mr William, his representations to Council against papists, ii. 59, 60.
- Gourlay, Agnes, punished for charming the milk of kine, ii. 188.
- Gourlay, John, customer, i. 195.
- ——, Robert, punished for exporting grain, i. 93;
- Regent Morton confined in his house, 143;
- king lives in same house, 255;
- illustration, 554.
- Gowdie, Isobel, the witch, her confession, ii. 286-291.
- Gowrie, Earl of, arrives with his brother in Edinburgh from Padua, i. 313;
- their attempt on life of James VI., 319.
- Gowrie treason, anniversary of, a holiday, i. 408.
- Grace, Act of, its effects, ii. 225.
- Graham, Bessie, executed for witchcraft, ii. 187, 188.
- Graham, Helen, an heiress, abduction of, i. 470.
- Graham, Mr John, of Hallyards, and Sir James Sandilands, litigation between, i. 245.
- Graham of Claverhouse, imports cloth for his soldiers, ii. 419;
- entreats mild punishment for ordinary crimes, 461;
- his conduct at the Revolution, 473.
- Graham of Duchrae, his encounter with Earl of Airth, ii. 309.
- Graham of Inchbrakie, postmaster-general for Scotland, ii. 316, 317.
- Graham, Patrick, Captain of Town Guard of Edinburgh, ii. 420, 438.
- Graham, Richard, a wizard, worried and burnt at Cross of Edinburgh, i. 235.
- Grain and fruit, abundance of, ii. 293.
- Grainger, Mrs, saves the Scottish regalia, ii. 214.
- Grant, memoir of the family of; traditionary anecdote, i. n. 234.
- Grant of Carron and Grant of Ballindalloch, feud between, ii. 50-54.
- Grant, younger of Ballindalloch, presents M‘Grimmen’s head to the Council, ii. 85.
- Gray, James, his forcible abduction of the daughter of John Carnegie, i. 222.
- Gray, James, a lieutenant in the Midlothian Militia, beheaded, ii. 395.
- Greg, John, singular persecution of, ii. 99.
- Gregor, Clan, proclamation against, i. 524.
- Greybeard, a Dutchman, works valleys of Wanlock-head for gold, i. 51.
- Greyfriars, influence of, i. 3.
- Grieve, a maltman, murdered by his son, ii. 293.
- Grieve, Thomas, accused of curing disease by witchcraft, i. 540, 541.
- Gueldres, Mary de, re-interment of her supposed remains, i. n. 222.
- Guild, William, convicted of stealing, i. 14.
- Guinea, a gold coin so called, ii. 114.
- Gunpowder, manufacture of, ii. 11.
- —— Plot, general joy in Scotland at detection of, i. 391.
- Gustavus Adolphus, 6000 Scots go to assistance of, ii. 55-57.
- Guthrie, Bishop, preaches before Charles I., ii. 67.
- Guthrie, James,beheaded; anecdotes of, ii. 275-277.
- Guthrie, John, minister of Perth, marries a couple of thirteen, i. 505.
- Guthry, Helen, admonishes James VI. of his duty, i. 236, 237.
- Hackney-coach licensed between Leith and Edinburgh, ii. 264.
- Haitly of Mellerstanes, slain by his father-in-law, i. 372.
- Halkit Stirk, a Highland robber so called, apprehended by Laird of Grant, ii. 263;
- committed to the Tolbooth, 343.
- Halley’s Comet in 1682, ii. 414.
- Hallucinations, curious religious, ii. 313-315.
- Hamilton, a soldier, resolves to challenge Captain Bruce, i. 549.
- Hamilton, Alexander, a warlock, worried and burnt, ii. 32, 33.
- Hamilton, Archibald, a spy for Cromwell, hanged in chains, ii. 205.
- Hamilton, David, younger of Bothwell-haugh, complaint against, i. 347.
- Hamilton, James,of Bothwell-haugh, shoots the Regent Moray, i. 60.
- Hamilton, John, archbishop, keeps up the rites of the Catholic church, i. 23;
- hanged at Stirling, 73.
- Hamilton, Lords John and Claud; their conduct to old Carmichael and Laird of Westerhall, i. 99.
- Hamilton, Lord John, his narrow escape from town-guards’ volley of honour, i. 238.
- Hamilton, Marquis (subsequently Duke) of, raises 6000 Scots for Gustavus Adolphus, ii. 55-57;
- his expedition in 1648, 113, 170.
- Hamilton, Mr Robert, minister of St Andrews, writes down Knox’s prediction about Kirkaldy of Grange, i. 85.
- Hamilton, Patrick, his attack on Abacuck Bisset, i. 180.
- Hamiltons of Livingstone, lawless acts of, i. 258.
- Hammerman, an Edinburgh, 1555, illustration, i. 10.
- Hand-fasting, a custom so called, i. 335.
- Hardheads, base coin so called in Scotland, act against, i. 101.
- Hares, singular visit of, to city of Edinburgh, ii. 228.
- Hart and Norton, booksellers, petition for liberty to import German books duty-free, i. 194.
- Hart, Andro, printer of Napier’s Logarithms, i. 455.
- Hart, John, printer, his edition of the Bible, ii. 41.
- Harvests, plentiful, ii. 222, 226.
- Hawking, James VI.’s love of this sport, i. 391.
- Hay, Francis, and Adam Gordon, combat between, i. 468.
- Hay, Lord, of Yester, his conduct to Brown of Frosthill, i. 256.
- Hay, Lord, of Yester, brother of the preceding, his widow founds a church in Edinburgh, i. n. 264.
- Hay, Margaret, forcible abduction of, i. 223.
- Heiresses under twelve years, fines for marrying, ii. 251.
- Henderson, Robert, a baxter’s boy, burnt for fire-raising, i. 155.
- Henderson, Robert, his wonderful cures, i. 24.
- Hepburn, George, his duel with Brown of Hartree, i. 264, 265.
- Hepburn, Robert, a partisan of Queen Mary, i. 68.
- Hepburn, James, of Moreham, his duel with Birnie, a skinner in Edinburgh, i. 285.
- Hepburn, Thomas, murder of, ii. 284.
- Heraldry, Scottish touchiness regarding, i. 393.
- Heres, Peter Groot, a German, receives a licence for paper-making, i. 194.
- Heriot, George, founder of Heriot’s Hospital, i. 253.
- Heriot, William, becomes cautioner for repentance of George Heriot, i. 59.
- Heriot’s Hospital, solemn dedication of, ii. 253;
- barber-chirurgeon dispute, 342.
- Hermaphrodite, a, hanged at Edinburgh, ii. 220.
- Hertsyde, Margaret, her prosperity and adversity, i. 412.
- Hesse’s eldest son, Landgrave of, visits Edinburgh, i. 530.
- Higgins, an Englishman, reprints the Mercurius Politicus at Leith, ii. 272.
- High Commission Court established, i. 428.
- —— School boys of Edinburgh, mutiny of, i. 261-264.
- Illiberality of master of, to private teachers, ii. 426.
- Highland and Border incursions, i. 310.
- —— bowmen, Charles I. raises a small troop of, ii. 14.
- Highland spraichs, ii. 262.
- Highlanders, pure loyalty of the, ii. 178, 179.
- Highlands, rude condition of, i. 164, 378; ii. 306-311.
- Scarcity of schools in, 179.
- Hilderstone silver-mines, i. 411, 412.
- Hill, a musician, his abduction of Marion Foulis, ii. 227.
- Hirsel, tragical incident at the, ii. 455.
- Hogg, James, account of ‘Thirteen Drifty Days,’ ii. 366.
- Holidays and popular plays, i. 326, 327.
- Holland, war with, causes stagnation of trade, ii. 302.
- Holstein, Duke of, visits Scotland, i. 298.
- Holyrood and Falkland, improvements on the palaces of, for king’s visit, i. 476.
- Holyrood Palace, as before the Fire of 1650, illustration, ii. 205;
- a popish chapel, college, and printing-office in, 483.
- Home, David, of Wedderburn; his son’s portraiture of, i. 95-99.
- Home, Jean, of Ayton, her abduction and marriage to George Home, ii. 390.
- Home, Lady, of Manderston, tried for witchcraft, ii. 33.
- Home, Lord; slaughter of Bailie Lauder, i. 300.
- Home, Sir George, of Wedderburn; sketch of his character by David of Godscroft, i. 119-122.
- Home, William, stabs Johnston of Hilton, ii. 455.
- Hope, Sir Thomas, extracts from his Diary, ii. 148.
- Hoppringles and Elliots in Edinburgh, day of law between, i. 71.
- Horse, exhibition of a dancing, ii. 247.
- Horse-racing in Scotland, early practice of, i. 103, 410, 514.
- Every Saturday at Leith, ii. 273.
- Horses, act preventing exportation of, i. 47.
- House-painter craves permission to set up in Glasgow, ii. 247.
- Hume, Sir Patrick, of Polwarth, his remarkable hiding-place and escape, ii. 464-467.
- Huntingtower Well, supposed sanative qualities of, i. 322.
- Huntly, fifth Earl of, his mysterious death, i. 103-106.
- Huntly, sixth Earl (subsequently first Marquis) of, marriage to Lady Henrietta Stuart, i. 184;
- slaughter of Bonny Earl of Moray, 230-236;
- makes his peace with the kirk at Aberdeen, 288;
- his rental sheet, 315-317;
- excommunicated as an apostate papist, 417;
- relieved from excommunication, 429;
- Orders of Privy Council against, ii. 20-28, 36-41;
- his death and character, 89-92.
- Huntly, Marchioness of, her mourning procession to Charles I., ii. 69;
- persecuted and exiled as a Catholic, 139.
- Huntly, second Marquis of, marriages of his daughters, ii. 134;
- beheaded, 178.
- Huntly, fourth Marquis of, decree ordering him to be separated from his mother, ii. 311.
- Idolatry, act against, i. 147.
- Illusions of sight and sound, curious, ii. 313-315.
- Importation of goods, decree against, i. 458.
- ‘Incest,’ trials, and severe punishment of cases so called, ii. 28, 29.
- Independents in civil war, ii. 111.
- Indian Emperor, Dryden’s prologue to the, ii. 404.
- Inglis, Esther, her beautiful handwriting, i. 550.
- Innes, Alexander, slays Innes of Peithock; beheaded, i. 110-112.
- Innes, tragedy, the, i. 134-137.
- Insane, treatment of the, in past times, ii. 424.
- Interregnum, 1649-1660, ii. 174-254.
- Inundation and violent tempest, memorable, ii. 17.
- Invasion, alarm of, from vessels in Firth of Forth, ii. 15;
- fear of, 18;
- by the Dutch fleet, 318.
- Inverness-shire, sad account of, in 1666, ii. 308.
- Ireland, Alexander, minister of Kincleven, his complaint against Sir John Crichton, of Innernytie, i. 390.
- Irish Ague, an epidemic so called, ii. 199.
- Irish beggars, order against, ii. 34.
- —— rebellion, anecdote of Charles I., ii. 141.
- ‘Iron yetts’ of the Border thieves, i. 401.
- Irvine of Drum, his dispute with presbytery of Aberdeen, ii. 210-212.
- Irving, Francis, imprisoned in the Edinburgh Tolbooth for a papist riot, ii. 338-340.
- Islay and Kintyre, Lords of, tale of commotion between, i. 164-168.
- Jack, Robert, merchant, hanged for coining, i. 48.
- Jaffray, Alexander, an Aberdeen magistrate, ii. 96.
- Jaffray, Grizzel, executed for witchcraft; affecting anecdote of her son, ii. 330.
- James VI., his birthplace, i. 38;
- writes to lords of secret council, 122;
- his formal visit to Edinburgh, 126, 129-131;
- sets up the doctrine of the divine right of kings, 127;
- a guise or fence played before him at St Andrews, 138;
- his gay mood after Morton’s death, 146;
- policy with French ambassadors, 151;
- his Essayes of a Prentise in the Divine Art of Poesie, 154;
- his opinion of the pest, 154;
- anecdote of Bothwell-haugh, 163;
- orders prayers for his mother, 170;
- his grief at her death, 171;
- his visit to St Andrews with Du Bartas the French poet, and disputation with Andrew Melville, 173-175;
- his attempt to reconcile his nobles, 177, 178;
- writes to Denmark about grain, 179;
- reasons with Mr James Gordon, a Jesuit, 182;
- anecdote of Spanish Armada, 185;
- in expectation of his Danish bride, writes pressing letters for contributions, 192-200;
- sets sail for Denmark to bring her home, 193;
- his arrival with the queen at Leith, 196;
- her reception in Edinburgh, 196-199;
- supposed groundwork of his Demonology, 212,
- quoted, 306;
- his imbecility amidst his rude courtiers, 221;
- remonstrates with two Edinburgh ministers, 224;
- admonished by James Davidson, minister, for failures in king-craft, 227;
- his grudge against the ministers, 236;
- admonished by Helen Guthry, 236;
- Earl of Bothwell’s first, second, and third attempts to seize his person, 229, 237, 238;
- commissions Lord Ochiltree to seize the house of Row as a manufactory of false coin, 239;
- anecdote of courtship of Earl of Mar, 243;
- again in bad odour with clergy, 243-245;
- scene with Bothwell in his chamber at Holyrood, 250, 251;
- Thomas Foulis his Bank of England, 253;
- his queen delivered of a prince, 255;
- his fear of Bothwell, 255;
- inconstancy of his favour to Countess of Bothwell, 264;
- his proclamation against forestallers, 266;
- attempts to reconcile his hostile nobles, 266, 267;
- admonitions from clergy, 267, 268;
- his edict against, 275;
- its consequences, 276, 277;
- revokes commissions against witchcraft, 291;
- Melville’s Dix-huitaine, 291;
- hangs a number of Border thieves, 293;
- his debts to Edinburgh goldsmiths, 294, 95;
- nearly drowned on returning to Falkland from a General Assembly, 314;
- Gowrie conspiracy, 319;
- his restriction on number of persons entering Stirling Castle, 320;
- letter to laird of Dundas, 322;
- made a burgess of Perth, 348;
- poinding of his and the queen’s portraits, 349;
- his proclamation at Dumfries, 368;
- death of Queen Elizabeth, 381;
- his fondness of hawking, 391, 392;
- his unfortunate silver-mine adventure, 411, 412;
- his episcopal innovations, 415-417;
- persecution of Catholics, 421, 422;
- encourages cloth-making, 425;
- orders keeping of Christmas-day, 426;
- acknowledged head of the Kirk, 428;
- his reply about ‘beggarly Scots,’ 433;
- unrelenting towards satirists, 453;
- his ideas of free-trade, 459;
- Lord Melville’s letter to, 473;
- his visit to Scotland, 479-486;
- his disputations with Edinburgh professors, 483-485;
- anecdote of visit to Culross coal-mines, 485;
- his declaration regarding Sunday sports, 491;
- his interest in the pearl-fishery, 518;
- his Counterblast to Tobacco, 532;
- his letter to his Scottish councillors about liberty of conscience, 533;
- his picture falls from hall of Linlithgow Palace, 536;
- his death, 552.
- James VII., his residence at Holyroodhouse, ii. 403;
- gives balls, plays, and masquerades, 404;
- plays golf on Leith Links, 405;
- Mons Meg fired in honour of, 409;
- his act for encouragement of trade and manufactures, 417;
- Earl of Roscommon’s prologue to, 429;
- nearly drowned, 439;
- flies to France, 494.
- Jameson, George, the Scottish portrait-painter, ii. 62, 63.
- Jedburgh, attempt made to proclaim Queen Mary at, i. 75.
- Jesuits in Scotland, i. 182;
- fast held for discovery of, 465, 466.
- Johnston, Agnes, executed for murder of her grand-niece, ii. 367.
- Johnston, Janet, excommunicated; anecdote of her accouchement, ii. 19.
- Johnston, Laird of, and Lord John Maxwell, feud between, i. 155, 251, 301.
- Johnston, Laird of, shot by Lord Maxwell, i. 410.
- Johnston, Nicolas, Marion Gladstanes nearly poisons, ii. 92.
- Johnston of Hilton, stabbed by William Home, ii. 455.
- Johnston, Sir Archibald, his prayers, ii. 148;
- executed, 256.
- Jonson, Ben, his visit to Scotland, i. 499-503.
- Jop, Peter, a sailor, his petition to Privy Council on behalf of his papist wife, ii. 140.
- Jougs, James Middleton threatened with the, ii. 160;
- illustration, 501.
- Jugglers and the steeple-trick, i. 303.
- Kate the Witch assails Sir F. Walsingham, i. 152.
- Keith, Robert, attempts to take forcible possession of the Abbey of Deir, i. 209.
- Kello, John, minister of Spott, executed for the murder of his wife, i. 68.
- Kelso burnt down in 1645, ii. 163;
- again in 1684, 457.
- Kenmure, Lord, a partisan of Charles II., ii. 222.
- Kennedy, a notary in Galloway, mysterious circumstance regarding, i. 492.
- Kennedy of Bargeny and Earl of Cassillis, dispute between, i. 311, 360-363.
- Kennedy, Quentin, disputation with John Knox at Maybole, i. 21.
- Kennedy, Sir Thomas, of Colzean, his feud with Mure of Auchindrain, i. 277, 360-363, 366-368, 435-437.
- Ker, James, a barber, his petition, ii. 399.
- —— of Kersland, leader of an Edinburgh mob for burning popish relics, ii. 500.
- Kerr, a blacksmith, hanged, i. 385.
- —— of Cessford, act of penitence for murder of Scott of Buccleuch, i. 27.
- Kerr, Robert, younger of Cessford, his encounter with Earl of Bothwell, i. 251.
- Kerr, Thomas, killed by Turnbull at Jedburgh, i. 320.
- Kilbirnie, Lady, and her husband, die of a pestilential fever, ii. 409.
- Kilmarnock completely destroyed by fire in 1668, ii. 321.
- Kilpont, Lord, his dispute with Ardvoirlich, ii. 154-156.
- Kincaid, John, of Craig House, fined 2500 merks for abduction of Isobel Hutcheon, i. 223.
- Kincaid, John, a pricker of witches, ii. 278, 285.
- Kincaid of Warriston, murdered at instigation of his wife, i. 317.
- Kindness, a sickness so called, i. 137.
- King, clergy cease praying for the, ii. 235.
- Kingdom’s Intelligencer, remarkable advertisement in the, ii. 272.
- King’s evil, Charles I. touches 100 persons for, ii. 67.
- Kinmont Willie, Buccleuch’s gallant relief of, i. 269-271.
- Kinnoul, first Earl of, his funeral-procession, ii. 88.
- Kintail, Mackenzie (subsequently Lord) of, a royal commission given to him and retracted, i. 256;
- bond of friendship with Earl of Huntly, 316;
- his quarrel with Macdonald of Glengarry, 369-372;
- his dispute with Macleod of Raasay, 437-439;
- obtains possession of island of Lewis, 424.
- Kintyre and Islay, Lords, tale of commotion between, i. 164-170.
- Kirk, Robert, minister of Aberfoyle, his translations and Essay on Fairies, &c., ii. 361-363.
- Kirkaldy of Grange, his defence of Edinburgh Castle, i. 82;
- hanged by Regent Morton, 85-87.
- Kirke, Thomas, account of Scotland by, ii. 407.
- Kirkpatrick, younger, of Closeburn, Lady Amisfìeld contrives his escape from prison, i. 427.
- Kirkton, Rev. James, his praise of the morals of Scotland in 1650, ii. 197.
- Knox, John—disputation at Maybole, i. 21;
- his second marriage, 28;
- ridiculous rumours about, 69;
- Melville’s recollections of, 74;
- his prediction of Kirkaldy of Grange’s death, 85-87.
- Lamb, its use forbidden by Privy Council, i. 458.
- Lamentation of Lady Scotland, i. 79.
- Lammie, Captain, his ensign of white taffety, i. n. 155.
- Lanark, presbytery of, its severity with the Douglas family, ii. 191;
- deals with eleven witches, 194, 195.
- Largo, expense of building a hospital at kirk-town of, ii. 302, 303.
- Lascary, a Grecian priest, visits Scotland, ii. 395.
- Latin, a licence required to teach, ii. 426.
- Lauder, William, murder of, i. 300.
- Lauderdale, Earl (subsequently Duke) of, his account of the possessed woman of Dunse, ii. 43, 44;
- great influence of, 348;
- a beggar stabbed at his funeral, 447.
- Lawson and Cathkin oppose Episcopalian principles, i. 512.
- Lawson, Sir James, of Humbie, drowned, i. 439.
- Lawsuits, curious custom regarding, i. 434.
- Lawtie, David, writer, attacked by Thomas Douglas, i. 72.
- Lead-mines of Lanarkshire, i. 254, 290.
- Learmont of Balcomie, anecdote of, i. n. 309.
- Leather, tanning of, its introduction, i. 516.
- Ornamental, ii. 427.
- Lee Penny or curing-stone, of Lockhart of Lee, ii. 31.
- Lees, Thomas, burnt as a wizard, i. 280.
- Legend of Montrose, original story of, ii. 154-156.
- Leitch, Andrew, minister of Ellon, strange visions of, ii. 147.
- Leith, English judicature at, ii. 215;
- a whale at, 218;
- revenue of port in 1656, 248.
- Leith Roads, sea-fight between a Spanish ship and two Dutch waughters in, i. 529.
- Lennox and Mar, Regents; Lennox’s oration to the nobility at the parliament of Stirling, i. 76;
- death of Mar, 81.
- Lennox, Duke of, forced to leave the kingdom, i. 148.
- Lennox, young Duke of, his abduction of Lady Sophia Ruthven, i. 222.
- Leprosy, its early prevalence in Scotland, i. 226.
- Leslie and M‘Kay raise men for Bohemian army, ii. 9-11.
- Leslie, Capuchin, called the ‘Archangel,’ his character, ii. 40, 41.
- Leslie, George, and Master of Forbes, fight between, ii. 134.
- Leslie, George, sheriff-clerk of Inverness-shire, his petition, ii. 307, 308.
- Letter-post, establishment in Scotland of a regular, ii. 85-87.
- Leven, Earl of, a funeral-sermon preached for, ii. 299.
- Lewis, attempts to plant Lowlanders in, i. 308, 309, 388, 389, 424.
- Leys, Tutor of, a Quaker, his nephew restored to him, ii. 313.
- Libel, repentance made in church for, i. 372.
- Licentious conduct, church-discipline with, i. 334-336.
- Liddell, Katharine, persecuted as a witch, ii. 396.
- Liddesdale, thieves of, i. 43-45.
- Life-guard, a royal, embodied under the command of Earl of Newburgh, ii. 274.
- Light-house on Isle of May established, i. 522.
- Lime used for manure in East-Lothian, ii. 398.
- Lincluden Church, popish service in, in 1587, i. 172.
- Lindsay, Mr David, minister of Leith; his mission from Knox to Kirkaldy of Grange, i. 86, 87.
- Lindsay, Skipper, warns Morton of his doom, i. 138.
- Lindsay, Thomas, stabbed by William Douglas, ii. 439-442.
- Lindsays of Forfarshire and Lords Glammis, feud between, i. 312, 313.
- Linen manufacture of Scotland, ii. 421, 427.
- Linlithgow, extraordinary demonstration at, on Charles II.’s birthday, ii. 291, 292.
- Linton, Lord, fined £5000 Scots for marrying an excommunicated papist, ii. 189.
- Lioness and lamb, exhibited in Edinburgh, ii. 298.
- Lithgow and Carnegie, Lords, duel of, ii. 305.
- Livingston and Carse, Lairds of, strange appearance seen on their lands, i. 431.
- Livingston, Jean, beheaded by the Maiden for murder of her husband, i. 317.
- Livingstone, John, of Belstane, a barbarous assault upon, i. 156.
- Livingstone, John; remarkable administration of the communion, ii. 41, 42;
- his courtship, 79, 80;
- banishment of, 281.
- Lochnell, Laird of, shot by Duncan Macgregor, ii. 310.
- Lockhart, John, of Bar, outlawed for breaking images in kirk of Ayr, &c., i. 49.
- Lockhart, Sir George, murdered by Chiesley of Dalry, ii. 495.
- Logan, Robert, of Restalrig, his contract with Napier of Merchiston, i. 257.
- Logie, Laird of, assaulted in presence of James VI., i. 221.
- Lord’s Supper, repugnance of the people to kneeling at the, ii. 19.
- Lorn, Thomas, accused of wandering from his family, i. 305.
- Lottery-adventure authorised in 1671, ii. 341.
- Lovat, Lord, liberal hospitality of, i. 208.
- Love-philters, supposed effects of, ii. 227.
- Low, Elizabeth, an excrescence eleven inches long cut from her forehead, ii. 342.
- Lumsden, Margaret, the possessed woman of Dunse, ii. 43, 44.
- Lundie, Laird of, his funeral-procession, ii. 300.
- M‘Alexander of Drumachryne, killed by Laird of Girvanmains, i. 310, 311.
- Mac-Allister, a cateran, anecdote of his attack on church of Thurso, ii. 190.
- M‘Birnie, John, his character, i. 457.
- M‘Call, Marion, tried for drinking the devil’s health, ii. 345.
- M‘Calyean, Eupham, charge against her, i. 39;
- burned for witchcraft, 217.
- Mac Connel, Sir James, a great man in Ireland, visits Scotland, i. 286.
- M‘Culloch, Sir Alexander, his assaults on Lady Cardiness, ii. 321.
- Macdonald, Lord, his thief-taking commission, ii. 382.
- Macdonald of Glengarry and Kenneth Mackenzie of Kintail, quarrel between, i. 369-372.
- M‘Gie, a mirror-maker, his petition, ii. 396.
- M‘Gill of Rankeillour, exiled for murder, petition of, ii. 424-426.
- Macgregor of Glenstrae, with twelve of his clan, hanged on one gallows, i. 383.
- Macgregor, Patrick Roy, and his band, executed, ii. 306, 307.
- Macgregor, Robin Abroch, anecdote of, i. 444, 445.
- Macgregors, their barbarous slaughter of Drummond-ernoch, i. 195;
- battle with Colquhouns, 377;
- proclamation against, 524.
- Mackay and Gordon, strife between, and Earl of Caithness, i. 440-443.
- M‘Kay and Leslie raise men for Bohemian army, ii. 9-11.
- Mackenzie, John, of Kintail, i. 20.
- ——, Kenneth. See Kintail, Mackenzie of.
- Macker, Alexander, and six others, drowned for piracy, i. 52.
- Mackintosh, chief of the Clan; his zeal in behalf of clergy, i. 289.
- M‘Leans and others, tortured for witchcraft, ii. 293, 294.
- Macleans, Argyle’s letter of fire and sword against the, ii. 370, 372.
- M‘Leod of Assynt, petition of, ii. 271.
- Macleod of the Lewis, banished to Holland, i. 389.
- Macleod of Raasay, his dispute with Mackenzie of Kintail, i. 437-439.
- Macmoran, Bailie John, shot by Sinclair, son of the Chancellor of Caithness, i. 262;
- illustration of his house, 263.
- M‘Queen, John, an Edinburgh minister, scandal against, ii. 454.
- M‘Ronald of Gargarach, outrages of, i. 503.
- Machar Kirk, removal of memorials of ancient worship from, ii. 136.
- Machines, Peter Bruce receives patents for various, ii. 408.
- Maiden, the, illustration of, i. 144, 145.
- Maitland, Sir Richard, of Lethington, his description of thieves of Liddesdale, i. 44.
- Malignants, persecution of, ii. 108, 173.
- Man, Andrew, convicted of warlockry, i. 281.
- Man, Lawrence, a boy of sixteen, beheaded, i. 386.
- Manatus, supposed appearance of one in Water of Don, ii. 87.
- Manners, traits of, i. 342-345.
- Manred, definition of the term, i. 77;
- many connected with Huntly family, 315.
- Maps and charts of Scotland, Adair’s, ii. 483-485.
- Mar and Lennox, Regencies of, 1570-2.
- See Lennox and Mar.
- Mar, Dowager-countess of, extracts from her household book, ii. 117-119.
- Mar, seventh Earl of, his marriage to Mary, daughter of Duke of Lennox, i. 243.
- His death, ii. 83.
- Marentini, a travelling quack-doctor, his petition, ii. 383.
- Marischal, George, fourth Earl of, extent of his lands, i. 209;
- death of his lady, 301.
- Market-cross, marriage-parties dance round, i. 337.
- Market-cross of Edinburgh, foundation of new, i. 479.
- Markets, interference with, i. 94, 241, 265, 303, 345, 458;
ii. 489.
- Marroco, the wonderful horse, i. 271.
- Mary de Guise, i. 7.
- ——, Queen, her early reign, i. 7;
- arrival of at Leith, 11;
- a conspiracy against her, 19;
- hunting visit to Athole, 29;
- her harp, 31;
- progress in Fife, 32;
- her marriage to Darnley, 35;
- her abduction, 36, 41;
- her death, 170;
- a pleasant anecdote of, 180.
- Masqueradings and frolics, i. 327-329.
- Mass, General Assembly exhort the suppression of, i. 172;
- William Barclay and others, banished for attending, 349;
- denounced as rebels, 359, 360;
- mass performed in Edinburgh, 451.
- Fourteen wives of Dumfries tradesmen imprisoned for hearing, ii. 72, 73.
- Mathie, Janet, burned as a witch, ii. 377-379.
- Mauld, Patrick, gets a patent for making soap, ii. 80.
- Maxwell, John, minister of Edinburgh, ii. 66, 67.
- Maxwell, Lord John, and Laird of Johnston, feud between, i. 155, 252, 296.
- Maxwell of Garrarie and his son, beheaded for treason, i. 510.
- Maxwell of Pollock, witch-conspiracy against, ii. 376-379.
- Maxwell, young Lord, his escape from Edinburgh Castle, i. 409;
- kills Laird of Johnston, 410;
- beheaded, 446, 447.
- Maxwell’s, Lord, Handfasting, i. 78, 79.
- May-pole dancing in Scotland, i. 491, 492.
- Mean, John, a zealous Presbyterian, i. 506, 544, 545, 549.
- His wife supposed to cast the first stool at the bishop, ii. 103;
- becomes master of the Edinburgh Post-office, 189;
- his son condemned as a spy for Cromwell, 206.
- Mean, Robert, appointed post-master at Edinburgh on Restoration, ii. 263, 264;
- his weekly diurnal, 284;
- complaint against, 316, 317;
- sent to the Tolbooth, 399;
- his false report, 476.
- Meldrum, John, executed on suspicion of setting fire to tower of Frendraught Castle, ii. 46-50.
- Meldrum of Haltoun, his conduct under ban of the horn, i. 527.
- Meldrum, younger, of Dumbreck; his capture of Gibson of Durie, i. 355-357.
- Melgum, Viscount, burnt in tower of Frendraught Castle, ii. 47-50.
- Melgum, Viscountess, attack of the Clan Cameron on her Castle of Aboyne, ii. 128-134.
- Melville, Andrew, his courageous conduct in protesting against Episcopacy, i. 128;
- his nephew’s picture of, 133;
- his disputes with James VI. at St Andrews, 175-177, 290;
- disputation on witch-transportation, 305;
- his tirade against Balcomie, n. 309.
- Melville, James; his recollections of Knox, Collace, &c., i. 73-75, 87;
- his picture of four Edinburgh ministers, 132;
- picture of his uncle, 133;
- description of Regent Morton’s last days, 143, 144;
- reception by, of mariners of Spanish Armada, 186-189;
- his Dix-huitaine on James VI., 292;
- his notice of a fiery globe, 386.
- Melville, Lady, of Garvock, drowned, i. 193.
- ——, Sir Robert, congratulates James VI. on improvement in the social state of Scotland, i. 473.
- Menainville, De, a French ambassador, i. 150, 151.
- Menzies of Culdares, his dispute with Earl of Argyle, ii. 310.
- Menzies, Thomas, a papist, his petition, ii. 72.
- Mercurius Caledonius, first original newspaper attempted in Scotland, notices from, ii. 267, 271.
- Mermaids seen at Pitsligo, ii. 88.
- Meteors—Battles in the air, i. 26.
- Methven, Paul, his strange act of penitence, i. 38.
- Middleton, Earl of, his administration, ii. 255;
- his death and character, 364.
- Militia in Scotland, list of, raised by counties and burghs, ii. 162, 163.
- Miller, Gogar, & Sangster, hanged, ii. 422.
- Mills, great destruction of water-, ii. 253.
- Milne, Thomas, maker of virginals, i. 507.
- Mining by Stewart of Tarlair, i. 28.
- Ministers, deposition of, remarks on, ii. 280-282.
- Ministers’ stipend, discontent about, i. 552.
- Minstrels in Glasgow, i. 90.
- Mirk Mononday, why so called, ii. 215.
- Mitchell, David, Bishop of Aberdeen, his vicissitudes of fortune, ii. 297.
- Mitchell, James, shoots Bishop of Orkney, ii. 322;
- hanged, 374.
- Mitchelson, a prophetess of the Covenant, ii. 122.
- Mithridates, King of Pontus,a comedy, acted at Holyroodhouse, ii. 429.
- Monas Prodigiosa, an animalcule so called, ii. 489.
- Money, a restriction to 10 per cent. on, i. 287.
- Monk, General, his reception at Edinburgh, ii. 225.
- Monmouth, Duke of, re-stocks his Scotch estates, ii. 367.
- Monro, Hector, of Foulis, extraordinary trial of, i. 205, 206.
- Monro, his Expeditions, ii. 10.
- Monro, the Edinburgh hangman, deposed; George Ormiston succeeds, ii. 461.
- Monro’s list of Scottish officers under command of Gustavus Adolphus, ii. 56, 57.
- Mons Meg, the Water-poet’s notice of, i. 493.
- Bursting of, ii. 409;
- illustration of, 468.
- Monster, an Italian, travels in Scotland, ii. 143.
- Monteath, Robert, minister of Duddingston, indicted for adultery, ii. 70;
- note on, 501.
- Montgomery, Isobel, kept in durance by her sister, i. 471.
- Montgomery, Mr Robert, excommunicated, i. 148.
- Montrose, Earl of, and Sir James Sandilands, street-combat between, i. 258.
- Montrose, Marquis of, ii. 109;
- heads a Covenanting deputation to Aberdeen, 119;
- enforces the signing of the Covenant, 123;
- lamentable incident after battle of Tippermuir, 154-156;
- demands liberation of Earl of Crawford and Lord Ogilvie, 163, 164;
- his death, 200;
- his ceremonial funeral at Restoration, 269-271.
- Montrose, strange events occur there on the death of the Earl of Mar, i. 81.
- Monyvaird and Cultmalindy, feud between, i. 490.
- Moodie’s legacy, attempted perversion of, ii. 397.
- Moon, strange irregularity imputed to the, ii. 61.
- Moray, Bonny Earl of, slaughter of the, i. 230-235;
- order for burial of, 296.
- Moray, James, Earl of, his marriage, i. 18;
- his difficulty in quieting towns of Perth and Dundee, 48;
- diminishes value of hardheads, 48;
- his gold and silver licence to De Vois, 50;
- his ‘justiceaire,’ 52;
- his raid to Jedburgh, 52;
- expedition against Border thieves, 60;
- his death, 60.
- Morphie, James, tailor, his letter to Earl of Airly, ii. 168.
- Mortimer, George, a trafficking Jesuit, imprisoned, i. 533.
- Morton, Regent, effects of his rule, i. 82;
- takes Edinburgh Castle, 85;
- his money-grasping spirit, 87, 88, 99;
- his raid against the Border-men, 88;
- his act against exporting grain, 93;
- no friend to the press, 94;
- proclamation against base coin, erects a new mint, and magnificent palace at Dalkeith, 101;
- pungent jest by his fool, Patrick Bonny, 102;
- holds justice-courts at Dumfries, 103;
- beheads Alexander Innes of that Ilk, 111;
- suspends the act against exporting corn, 112;
- bribed by Lord Somerville, 114-116;
- his fall, 125, 128;
- his last days, 143-145;
- his head taken down from the Tolbooth, 150.
- Moryson, Fynes, an Englishman, visits Scotland, his observations, i. 298, 299.
- Moscrop, Patrick, and Eupham M‘Calyean, marry without permission of the Kirk, i. 72;
- Eupham M‘Calyean burned for witchcraft, 217.
- Mosman, James, an Edinburgh goldsmith, and others, hanged, i. 85.
- Moss, between Falkirk and Stirling, slides over sixteen farms, ii. 35.
- Mountebank, German, receives a licence to erect a stage in Edinburgh, ii. 458.
- Mowbray, Francis, killed in his endeavour to escape over wall of Edinburgh Castle, i. 372.
- Mudie, Lizzy, burned for witchcraft, ii. 385.
- Mungo, Murray, his attack on Thomas Sydserf, ii. 324.
- Munro, General, his attack on Strathbogie, ii. 135.
- Murchison, Sir Roderick, quoted, i. 51.
- Mure, John, of Auchindrain, his feud with Sir Thomas Kennedy of Colzean, i. 277, 360-363, 366-368;
- trial for murder, 435-437.
- Mure of Gledstanes, personated by Thomas Bell, ii. 445.
- Murrain amongst cattle, severe, ii. 437.
- Murray of Philiphaugh, his complaint against James Murray, ii. 101.
- Murray, Sir Robert, of Craigie, founder of the Royal Society, ii. 355-357.
- Murray, Touran, and six others, shot by Wood [Mad] Andrew Murray and his confederates, i. 53.
- Musgrave of Bewcastle’s combat with Lancelot Carleton, i. 365.
- Naismith, James, his sermon, preached before Duke of Hamilton, ii. 170.
- Napier, Archibald; his manure patent, i. 301.
- Napier, Barbara, an Edinburgh citizen’s wife, tried for witchcraft, i. 216.
- Napier, John, of Merchiston, his contract with Logan of Restalrig, i. 257;
- his war inventions, 272;
- his complaint to Privy Council, 359;
- his dispute with Napiers of Edinbellie, 417;
- publication of his work on the logarithms, 455;
- visit of Henry Briggs to, 456.
- Napier, Sir Archibald, of Merchiston, Bishop of Orkney’s letter to, regarding the plague, i. 55.
- Napier, William, a Quaker, imprisoned, ii. 344.
- National Covenant, the, ii. 105-113;
- signing of, 116.
- National defences, proposal to fortify Leith, &c., ii. 18.
- Naval victory over the Dutch, rejoicings at the great, ii. 303.
- Neill, John, tried for sorcery, ii. 34.
- Nest Egg, Mr Robert Lowrie so called, ii. 296.
- Neville, Nic, a sorcerer, burnt, i. 60.
- New Acquaintance, a disease so called, i. 22.
- Newcastle, pitiful state of, after siege, ii. n. 156.
- Newcomb’s Mercurius Politicus, started, ii. 272.
- Newmills, cloth-works at, ii. 416-421.
- Newspapers overlook Scotland till 1637, ii. 113;
- one ordered from London for Glasgow, 245;
- an early one (Mercurius Caledonius) quoted, 267, 273;
- history of, 271;
- diurnal of John Mean, 284.
- New-year’s Day, act appointing first of January as, i. 309.
- Nicol, George, punished for leasing-making, ii. 61, 62.
- Night-walkers, Privy Council acts against, i. 440.
- Nimmo, Mrs, beheaded for murder of Lord Forrester, ii. 402.
- Nisbet, Alie, worried and burnt as a witch, ii. 33.
- Nisbet of Craigentinny, his duel with Macdougall of Makerston, ii. 446.
- Nithsdale, Earl of, commissioner for revocation of church-lands, ii. 6, 7;
- his domestic arrangements interfered with, 59.
- Niven, a musician, punished with the pillory, ii. 493.
- Noises heard in the air before the civil war, ii. 115.
- North Loch, three men drowned in, ii. 434.
- Nova Scotia, first colonised by men of Sutherland, i. 525.
- Order of baronets, ii. 3.
- Ochiltree, Lord, grudge of Lord Torthorald against, i. 425.
- Ochiltree, Lord, warden of west Border, i. 294.
- Offences in the King’s House, i. 268.
- Ogilvie, John, a Jesuit, hanged, i. 462-465.
- ——, Lord, of Airly, his complaint against Earl of Argyle, i. 225.
- Ogilvie of Barras, defends the Castle of Dunnottar against the English, ii. 213.
- Ogilvie of Forglen and Forbes of Tolquhoun, dispute between, ii. 477.
- Ogilvy of Craig, his persecution as a papist, ii. 58.
- Ogle and Pitarrow, younger, Lairds of, combat between, i. 387, 406.
- Oliphant and Ruthven, Lords, feud between, i. 140.
- Ominous sounds heard in a seaman’s house in Peterhead, ii. 145.
- Orkney, Bishop of, shot, ii. 322.
- ——, Earl of, visits Earl of Sutherland, i. 385.
- Orkney, John, Master of, tried for alleged attempt on life of Earl of Orkney, by witchcraft, &c., i. 273.
- Orkney, Patrick Earl of, beheaded, i. 459-462;
- sketch of his style of living, 460.
- Oswald, Katherine, burnt as a witch, ii. 32.
- Paisley, horse-races at, i. 513.
- Opposition to a clergyman at, ii. 8.
- Paper, first manufacture of, designed in Scotland, i. 194.
- First established at Dalry, ii. 398.
- Papes, family of the, in Sutherland, prosperity and adversity of, i. 406-408.
- Papistry, Presbyterian measures against, i. 336, 337, 343.
- Papists, thought to be regaining confidence, i. 172;
- papist nobles driven to extremities, 218;
- papists perform mass in Edinburgh, 349;
- persecutions of, 353, 359, 389, 403, 415, 421;
- ii. 20-28, 36-41, 57-60, 145, 211, 335, 499.
- Paris butchers of 1856 and Edinburgh poultrymen of 1599, parallel between, i. 304.
- Parliament, riding of, i. 48, 394; ii. 65;
- rejoicings at first Scottish, after Restoration, 266-269.
- Parturition pains, superstitious belief regarding, i. 39.
- Pasch-day, sale of flesh forbidden in Aberdeen on, ii. 144.
- Pearl, a large one found in the Ythan, i. 517;
- proclamation for preservation of the fishery, 518.
- Peebles, assassination at, i. 81;
- host assembled at, against Border thieves, 88;
- provostry of, usurped by Master of Yester, 168;
- James VI. visits, 170;
- holds justice-court at, 368;
- horse-races at, 410;
- street-fight at, 418.
- Council books of, quoted, as to solar eclipse, ii. 215;
- as to snow-storm, 366;
- petition on account of test-act, 429;
- mob of women at, 430;
- popish furniture and trinkets burned at, 501.
- Peebles, Thomas, a goldsmith, hanged for coining, i. 26.
- Peirson, Alison, in Byrehill, burnt for witchcraft, i. 183.
- Penny Bridals, i. 337;
- General Assembly’s act against, ii. 161, 162;
- increase of, 305.
- Periwigs in vogue in 1688, ii. 491.
- Perth Kirk-session Records, quoted, i. 306, 322-347.
- Perth, quarrel with Dundee, i. 48;
- pest at, 154;
- Gowrie treason at, 222, 319;
- troubles with Bruce of Clackmannan, 240;
- strange frolic at, 328;
- holiday amusements at, 326;
- Sunday observance at, 331;
- king made a burgess of, 348;
- 1400 armed men raised in, 385;
- parliament at, 394;
- flood at, 525.
- Pest, said to be brought into Edinburgh by James Dalgliesh, a merchant, i. 53;
- regulations regarding, 54;
- Dr Skeyne’s treatise on, 54;
- 2500 persons die of, 56;
- remarks regarding cause of, 57;
- kirk-session of Edinburgh appoint a fast for, 94;
- John Downie’s plague-ship, 139;
- James VI.’s inconsistency regarding, 154, 157;
- town-council of Edinburgh’s sanitary measure, 155;
- breaks out in Edinburgh and Perth, &c.; one-sixth of the entire population perish by, 157-159;
- Melville’s remarkable anecdote of, 159;
- days of humiliation for, 182;
- plague among the bestial, 218;
- 17,890 persons die of, in London, 292;
- breaks out in Aberdeen and Findhorn, 319;
- precautions of Aberdeen council against, 346;
- its reappearance in various quarters, 358, 359;
- in south of Scotland, 382;
- alleged case of, 385;
- Chancellor of Dunfermline’s eldest son and niece die of, 388;
- general spread and curious treatment of, 399, 400;
- in Dundee, Perth, &c., 404, 414, 417;
- a vessel from London ordered to discharge cargo at Inchkeith for fear of, 426;
- it again breaks out in Edinburgh, 548.
- 40,000 persons die of, in London, ii. 4;
- breaks out in Cramond, 89;
- its appearance after siege of Newcastle, 156;
- anecdotes and regulations regarding, 165-168;
- great London plague, 303.
- Petards, proclamation against, i. 372.
- Phanatiques, five of them hanged, ii. 427.
- Philip, Robert, banished for performing mass, i. 451.
- Philo, Joannes Michael, a quack-doctor, miraculous cures of, ii. 347.
- Philorth, Laird of, and Lord Fraser, dispute between, ii. 99, 100.
- Philotus, a comedy, first known effort of Scottish muse in this department of literature, quoted, i. 374-377.
- Phin, Marion, her petition refused, ii. 386.
- Pig, monster, farrowed in Edinburgh, i. 76.
- Pilniewinks, a screw for the fingers, i. 210.
- Pirates, Melville’s account of an affair at Anstruther with English, i. 175, 176;
- execution of twenty-seven, 429, 430.
- Pitarrow and Ogle, younger, Lairds of, combat between, i. 387.
- Pittathrow, Lady, accused of witchcraft, ii. 186.
- Plague of London in 1665, Wodrow’s notice of, ii. 303.
- See Pest.
- Plaiden stuffs and fingrams, manufacture of, ii. 416.
- Plaids, town-council of Edinburgh’s order against ladies wearing, ii. 54.
- Players, an Irish company of, ii. 405.
- Playhouse in Edinburgh, the first, ii. 400.
- Plays, popular, and holidays, i. 326, 327.
- Pledge chalmer at Dumfries, i. 294.
- Plumbers, curious trait regarding, ii. 408.
- Poland, Lord Cranstoun raises a regiment for king of, ii. 240, 241.
- Poland, Scotch merchants threatened with expulsion from, i. 547.
- Police of Edinburgh, proclamation against two abuses in, i. 486;
- order for cleaning the city, 487.
- Improvement of regulations, ii. 212.
- Poltergeist, a German spirit, ii. 232.
- Pontius, Doctor, a quack, his visit to Aberdeen, ii. 149;
- his exhibitions, 295.
- Poor, weekly collections for, i. 346.
- Falling off of collections in Glasgow churches, ii. 305.
- Pope, Edinburgh apprentices burn him in effigy, ii. 412, 433.
- Popery, Privy Council’s orders against persons professing, ii. 20-28.
- Popish relics and furniture burnt by an Edinburgh mob, ii. 499-501.
- Porpoises, or pellochs, thrown ashore on coast of Fife, ii. 220.
- Post, the Aberdeen common, i. 346.
- From Edinburgh to London, established, ii. 85-87;
- between Port-Patrick, Edinburgh, and Carlisle, 142;
- arrangements in 1649, 189;
- improvement of, at Restoration, 263, 264;
- between Edinburgh, Aberdeen, and Inverness, rates of, &c., 315-317.
- Powder of Sympathy, receipt for, ii. 228.
- Prap, Sir Robert’s, a cairn so called, ii. 425.
- Presbyterian ministers, the banishment of six, i. 401, 402.
- Presbyterian party in civil war, ii. 110.
- Presbyterians, their severe discipline in time of the civil war, ii. 156;
- their inconsiderate rigours, 174, 181-185, 190-194;
- conduct when paramount in 1650, 196;
- extreme rigours with opponents, 209-212, 257, 258, 281, 451,
452, 460, 463-467;
- humbled by Cromwell, 221;
- severities against them, 280, 349, 353, 427, 448;
- act of grace in favour of, its effects, 368.
- Presbytery, claim of independence by, its serious consequences, i. 127.
- How disposed of at the Restoration, ii. 256.
- Press, the Regent Morton’s edict against, i. 93.
- Primrose, Patrick, a popish priest, his death, ii. 335-337.
- Pringle, David, barber-chirurgeon to Heriot’s Hospital, ii. 342.
- Pringle, Jonet, her marriage with her boy-cousin of thirteen, ii. 481.
- Pringle, Thomas, his assault on Gavin Thomson, i. 418.
- Printing-offices in Edinburgh in 1763, 1790, and 1858, ii. 447.
- Printing, rule against unlicensed, enforced, ii. 490.
- Privateering against the Dutch, ii. 317, 318.
- Privy Council, book of, a review of the nobility and gentry of Scotland, i. 229;
- acts of, against murder, &c., 248;
- furious edict of, 274.
- Its occasional humanity, ii. 338.
- Privy Seal record, strange adventure of, ii. 266.
- Proclamation against penny-weddings, &c., ii. 459.
- Prophecies regarding Queen Mary, i. 16;
- regarding Scots king’s succession to England, 381.
- Protections against creditors, Council grants, ii. 341.
- Protestant and Papist, supersession of the names, ii. 205.
- Protestants expelled from the Palatinate, subscription for 700, ii. 55.
- Protesters or Remonstrators of the kirk, ii. 216, 217.
- Provost’s ox, the, i. 37.
- Psalms, translation of the, introduced into Church of Scotland, ii 199;
- Kirk’s Irish and Gaelic, 361.
- Pulices arborescentes of Swammerdam, ii. 488.
- Purdie, Marion, imprisoned as a witch, ii. 462.
- Purple Fever, mortality of the, ii. 299.
- Purves, his death from extreme cold, ii. 368.
- Putters, or short pieces of ordnance, ii. 135.
- Quakers, their increase and strange doings, ii. 232-234;
- persecution of, 311;
- increase of, 343;
- the bishop’s complaint against, at Aberdeen, 447.
- Queen’s Chocolate House, in Edinburgh, Dryden’s play acted at the, ii. 404.
- Rain, great fall of, in Moray-land, ii. 113, 114.
- Ramsay and Clark, hanged for poisoning their master, ii. 373.
- Ramsay, Thomas, minister of Dumfries, his zeal against popery, ii. 11, 72, 73.
- Rats and mice, act favouring machines for catching, i. 429.
- Ray, John, the naturalist, his journey into Scotland, ii. 282, 283.
- Records of Scotland, interesting notices regarding, ii. 264-266.
- Red herrings, privilege of making, granted, i. 443.
- Red Parliament, Melville’s definition of, i. 394.
- Red-hand, a butcher taken, and instantly hanged, ii. 381.
- Redpath, George, author of Answer to the Scots Presbyterian Eloquence, ii. 413.
- Redshanks, Highlanders so called, i. 2.
- Reek Pennies, or hearth-money, ii. 212.
- Reformation, i. 2, 4.
- Regalia of Scotland, interesting anecdote ofthe, ii. 213, 214.
- Regals, or rigols, an ancient musical instrument, i. n., 198.
- Regiam Majestatem, dispute between author and printer of, i. 421.
- Reid, a mountebank, and his Tumbling Lassie, ii. 487.
- Reid, a sorcerer, strangled and burnt, i. 382.
- Reid and Moscow, two charlatans, pretend to cure the blind, ii. 483.
- Religious persecutions, remarks on, ii. 451.
- Remonstrance, presentation of the famous, ii. 108.
- Remonstrators or Protesters of the kirk, ii. 216, 217.
- Restoration, rejoicings in Edinburgh at the, ii. 261, 266.
- Revels, Masters of the, the Fountains’ patent as, ii. 400.
- Revenue of Scotland, let on lease, ii. 427.
- Revolutionary symptoms in Edinburgh, ii. 483.
- Riccio, David, murdered, i. 35, 38.
- Riddell, John, a broken merchant, petition of, ii. 431.
- Riding of the Parliament, i. 48.
- Increased splendour of, ii. 65, 66.
- Rig of Atherny, threatens the clergy, i. 544, 545, 549.
- Rig, Robert, imprisoned for marrying an excommunicated papist, ii. 72.
- Riot of 1682 in Edinburgh, ii. 437.
- Roads and bridges, ruinous state of, ii. 409.
- Robberies, their frequency in 1664, ii. 298.
- Robertson, Bailie John, erects a leper-house in Greenside, Edinburgh, i. 226.
- Robertson of Struan, quarrel with Marquis of Athole, ii. 423;
- his wood and saw mills in Rannoch, 447.
- Robin Hood games, i. 8.
- Robison, Alexander, a Jesuit, petitions of, ii. 16.
- Roche, Eustachius, contracts with James VI. for gold-mines, i. 151, 152;
- proposes to make a superior kind of salt, 189.
- Roman antiquities found at Inveresk, i. 33.
- Romanno, Murrays of, letters raised at the instance of the, i. 227-229.
- Gipsy-fight at, ii. 388.
- Ronaldson, Walter, his ‘familiarity with a spirit,’ i. 358.
- Rose, Hugh, of Kilravock; character of, i. 287, 288.
- Roslin, monster-calf at, i. 102;
- a grand resort for gipsies, 539, 540.
- Ross, Sinclair, Bishop of, afflicted with stone, i. 24.
- Young, Bishop of, afflicted with same disease, ii. 453.
- Ross, Thomas, his libel on the Scottish nation; beheaded and quartered, i. 504.
- Rosses, clergymen, crave compensation for losses incurred through persecution, ii. 451-453.
- Rothes, Earl (subsequently Duke) of, Lord High Commissioner, his progress through the west country, ii. 304;
- his funeral-procession, 426.
- Rothiemay and Frendraught, dispute between, ii. 45-50, 76-79, 84,
98.
- Roy, Bessie, tried for witchcraft, i. 206.
- Rutherford, Colonel, killed by the Moors, ii. 298.
- Rutherford, Lord, his engagement with
- the Bride of Baldoon, ii. 326-328;
- his prosecution of Captain Rutherford, 333.
- Ruthven and Oliphant, Lords, feud between, i. 140.
- Ruthven, Raid of, i. 128.
- Ruthven, Sophia, Duchess of Lennox, buried, i. 222.
- Ruthvens, their complaint against Baillie of Torwoodhead, ii. 403.
- Sackville, Sir Edward, his duel with Edward Lord Bruce of Kinloss, i. 447-451.
- St Andrew’s Day, kept as a holiday, ii. 297.
- St Fittich’s and St Wollok’s Wells, sickly children bathed at, i. 323, 324.
- Salt, Charles II.’s restrictions on making, ii. 332.
- Saltmarket of Glasgow, great fire in, ii. 389.
- Sampson, Agnes, burnt for witchcraft, i. 212-216.
- Sandeman, Charles, his obligations as a cook, i. 47.
- Sandilands, Sir James, and Mr John Graham of Hallyards, litigation between, i. 246.
- Sandilands, Sir James, and Earl of Montrose, street-combat between, i. 258.
- Sangster, Gogar, & Miller, hanged, ii. 422.
- Saw-mills, Robertson of Struan’s, ii. 447.
- Schaw, John, fined for burying his wife in parish-church of Galston, i. 425.
- School-discipline at Kirk of Dundonald, in Ayrshire, ii. 138.
- Schools, Privy Council order plantation of parish, i. 479.
- Scolding and slander, rigorous punishment of, i. 344, 345.
- Scotch, order against their going to England, i. 432.
- Nobles and entire community nearly ruined by the civil wars, ii. 225.
- Scotland, general sketch of, i. 1-6;
- factious state of, in 1571, 72.
- Indifference of England to, ii. 113;
- state of, after Cromwell’s invasion, 209, 212;
- concluding remarks on, 496.
- Scotland, Perfect Description of the People and Country of, a satire, i. 481.
- Scots, their supposed origin, i. 1.
- —— Guard of the French king, its re-establishment craved, i. 535, 536.
- Scott, Alexander, poet, his New-year Gift to Queen Mary, i. 15.
- Scott, Captain, beats Mr Gregory, ii. 478.
- ——, George, Walter, & Ingram, condemned to death for an atrocious crime, i. 472.
- Scott, George and William, their achievements, ii. 169.
- Scott, John, a Quaker, fined for brewing on Sunday, ii. 376.
- Scott of Pitlochie, story of his unfortunate voyage to East Jersey, ii. 479-481.
- Scott of Raeburn, a Quaker, his children ordered to be separated from him, ii. 311.
- Scott, Sir Walter, of Branxholm, Laird of Buccleuch, celebrated exploit of, i. 269-271.
- Scott, Thomas, hanged for murder of Robert Donaldson, ii. 329.
- Scott, Walter, of Harden, married to the Flower of Yarrow, i. 46.
- Sea-monsters, various appearances of;
- superstitions regarding, i. 64-66.
- Seaton, Thomas, his religions dissimulation, ii. 301.
- Semple, Lord, and his son, ii. 336.
- ——, Robert, his writings, i. 49.
- Service-book or Liturgy introduced into Scottish church; its reception, ii. 101-104.
- Seventeenth of December, tumult of the, i. 276-278.
- Shakspeare, surmised to have been in Aberdeen while the remarkable witch-trials were proceeding; quotations from Macbeth and Othello
strengthening this supposition, i. 283-285, 357.
- Sharpe, Archbishop, ii. 256;
- his cortège to St Andrews, 291;
- his land purchases, 300;
- attempt on his life, 322;
- assassination of, 350.
- Shaws and the Faws, battle between, ii. 388.
- Sheep and cattle, abundance of, ii. 371.
- Ship-of-war burnt in Leith Roads through the mad humour of an Englishman, i. 453.
- Shorter Catechism, General Assembly sanction, ii. 170.
- Shotts, Kirk of, communion at, ii. 41.
- Shrovetide customs, revival of, ii. 273, 274.
- Sieve, divination by the, strange story of, ii. 434.
- Sigget Well, dedicated to Virgin Mary, i. 324.
- Siller Gun at Dumfries, i. 294.
- Silver Heart in Culross Abbey Church, wood-cut of, i. 450.
- Silver lace and silk stuffs, law against wearing, ii. 357, 358.
- Sinclair, Colonel, with 900 Scotsmen, slain in Norway, i. 446.
- Sinclair, George, author of Satan’s Invisible World Discovered, ii. 387;
- his copyright of, 475.
- Sinclair, Henry, Bishop of Ross, dies of stone, i. 24.
- Sinclair, Sir William, of Mey, shoots Bailie Macmoran, i. 262, 263.
- Single-combats, edict against, i. 310.
- Skeyne, Dr, his treatise on the pest, i. 54.
- Slezer’s Theatrum Scotiæ, ii. 485.
- Small-pox, severe visitation of, in Aberdeen, i. 431.
- Great severity of, ii. 85;
- about 240 children die of, 140;
- upwards of 800 deaths in Glasgow from, 347.
- Smibert, William, his unbaptised child, i. 32.
- Smith, James, barters wheat for Norway timber, ii. 71.
- Smollett, George, an ancestor of the novelist, denounced as a rebel, i. 248.
- Spanish ship blown up by, ii. 387.
- Sneesh-box, fondness of the Scotch for the, ii. 494.
- Snow-storm, an enormous, i. 458, 459.
- Great, in 1633, ii. 61;
- in 1664-5, 302;
- in 1674, 365.
- Soap, first manufactured in Leith, by Nathaniel Uddart, i. 511, 512.
- Patent granted to Patrick Mauld for making, ii. 80, 81.
- Soldiers, Colonel Monro endeavours to erect hospital for Scottish, ii. 75.
- Somerville, James, younger of Drum and Cambusnethan, his marriage, ii. 207-209;
- his son’s death, 443.
- Somerville, Lord; his lawsuit with his cousin, and its success, i. 113-116.
- Somerville, Lord, sad accident in the family of, i. 190-192.
- Somerville of Drum, anecdote of, i. 491.
- Spanish and Dutch sea-fight on coast of Zetland, ii. 15.
- Spanish Armada, excitement in Scotland caused by, i. 185-189;
- vessels destroyed, 186; ii. 386.
- ‘Speat’ on the Water of Carron, ii. 98.
- Sports, James VI.’s declaration regarding, on Sundays and holidays, i. 491.
- Spynie, Lord, dies of wounds received in a street-fight, i. 406.
- Stage-coach, Countess of Crawford travels to England in a, ii. 218;
- advertised for various towns, 247;
- betwixt Edinburgh and Haddington, and Edinburgh and Glasgow, 391.
- Stair, Lord, ii. 370.
- Stalker, Andrew, a goldsmith, kills a servant of Earl of Angus, i. 294.
- Standing army in Scotland, commencement of a, ii. 313.
- Stanfield, Sir James, his son hanged for his murder, ii. 491, 492.
- Star, Melville’s notice of a brilliant, i. 386;
- appearance of a great fiery, 472; ii. 84.
- Star of Tycho, Holinshed’s notice of, i. 84.
- Stercovius, a Pole, beheaded for publishing his Legend of Reproaches against the Scottish nation, i. 452.
- Stewart, Alexander, an itinerant doctor, ii. 184.
- Stewart, Hercules, brother of the Earl of Bothwell, hanged at the Cross of Edinburgh, i. 259.
- Stewart, James, banished for performing mass, i. 451.
- Stewart, Janet, petition of, ii. 437.
- ——, John, a vagabond, hangs himself in prison, i. 488, 489.
- Stewart, John, hanged for witchcraft, ii. 377-379.
- Stewart, Margaret, abduction of her daughter, i. 419.
- Stewart, Master Allan, receives the revenues of the Abbey of Crossraguel; his torture by Earl of Cassillis, i. 65-68.
- Stewart of Minto, his dispute with Sir George Elphinstone, i. 396-398.
- Stewart of Tarlair, mining by, i. 28.
- ——, William, stabs Lord Torthorald, i. 415.
- Stewarts of Coltness; anecdote of the plague, ii. 165;
- Thomas of, his country-house, 245;
- his flight to Holland, 448-451.
- Stewarts of Traquair, and Hay of Yester, feud between, i. 168-170.
- Stewarton Sickness, a religious fervour so called, ii. 42, 43.
- Stirling, a parliament held by Regent Lennox at, i. 76;
- taking of, quick transmission of news to London, 159;
- strange sounds heard by four gentlemen of, 541.
- Sixteen farms between Falkirk and, buried in moss, ii. 35;
- the session sit at, 116.
- Stones, large, transported by a river, ii. 98.
- Stool of repentance, i. 334, 335.
- Storie, Richard, charged with murder, ii. 442.
- Strachan of Thornton, his alleged theft, i. 534, 535.
- Strathbogie, Presbytery Record of, extracts from, ii. 156-161.
- Street-carriages of Edinburgh, regular system of, ii. 358.
- Street-conflicts in Aberdeen, i. 343.
- —— fights, Edinburgh, the first of, i. 48.
- Struan, Laird of, his dispute with Marquis of Athole, ii. 423;
- his saw-mills, 447.
- Struthers, William, his sermon, i. 513.
- Stuart, Esme, usually called Monsieur D’Aubigné; his mission to Scotland, i. 126-128.
- Stuart, James (Earl of Arran), his rise, i. 126;
- influence over James VI., 128;
- his fall, 129;
- his marriage to the Countess of March, 146;
- his death, 275;
- his death avenged, 414.
- Stuart, Robert, natural son of the Earl of Orkney, beheaded, i. 461.
- Stuart, Sir William of Monkton, slain by Stuart Earl of Bothwell, i. 184, 185.
- Suffolk, Earl of, his journey of pleasure through Scotland, i. 454, 455.
- Sugar-works at Glasgow, ii. 455.
- Summaries:
- Reign of Mary, 1561-1565, i. 7;
- Regency of Moray, 1567-1570, 43;
- Regencies of Lennox and Mar, 1570-1572, 61, 62;
- Regency of Morton, 1572-1578, 82, 83;
- Reign of James VI. 1578-1585, 126-129;
- 1585-1590, 160, 161;
- 1591-1603, 219-221; 1603-1625, 379-381.
- Reign of Charles I., 1625-1637, ii. 1-3;
- 1637-1649, 105-113;
- Interregnum, 1649-1660, 174-177;
- Reign of Charles II., 1660-1673, 255-261;
- 1673-1685, 349-355;
- Reign of James VII., 469-475;
- concluding remarks, 496-499.
- Sun, total eclipse of the, i. 296.
- Celebrated eclipse of, ii. 215.
- Suns, curious appearance of three, ii. 9.
- Sunday, observance of, i. 329-333.
- Superstitions and superstitious practices, i. 322-326.
- Suppers, laudable custom of, revived, ii. 267.
- Surgeons exempted from serving as jury-men, i. 42.
- Sutherland, Earl of, overtaken by a snow-storm, i. 363;
- contributions of tenantry to, 517.
- Sutherland of Duffus, his quarrel with Gordon of Enbo, ii. 5, 6.
- Swans on Linlithgow Loch, anecdotes of, ii. 267, 268.
- Swearing, fines for, i. 342.
- Sweden, king of, troops levied in Scotland for, i. 445;
- unfortunate issue, 446.
- Sword-dance, description of the, ii. 67, 68.
- Sydserf, Thomas, editor of the Mercurius Caledonius, ii. 271;
- his theatre, 324.
- Tailiefeir, Bessie, sentenced to be brankit, i. 46.
- Tailors, petition against outlandish, ii. 253, 254.
- Tallow, laws against exporting, ii. 5.
- Tarugo’s Wiles, Sydserf’s play called, ii. 324.
- Taxes, allocation of, to various towns, ii. 7.
- Tay, remarkable flood in the, i. 525-527.
- Taylor, John the Water-poet, his visit to Scotland, i. 493-500.
- Tea, in Scotland, its first introduction, ii. 405.
- Tennant, Francis, hanged for his pasquils against the king and progenitors, i. 320.
- Tercel called for by James VI., i. 391.
- Test, magistrates of Peebles in a puzzle about the, ii. 429;
- burlesque of, 433.
- Thanksgiving-day, on settlement between King and Estates, ii. 140.
- Theatre, first, in Edinburgh established about 1679, ii. 400.
- Theatricals in Scotland, toleration of, i. 306, 307.
- Thirteen Drifty Days, Hogg’s account of the, ii. 365-367.
- Thomson, Annaple, and others, worried and burnt as witches, ii. 405, 406.
- Thomson, Gavin, assaulted by Thomas Pringle, i. 418.
- Thomson, Margaret, her complaint against Tutor of Calder, ii. 154.
- Thumbikens, an instrument of torture so called, ii. 460.
- Tide, remarkable swelling of the, at Leith, &c., i. 476.
- Tobacco, Murray’s patent for importing, i. 531, 532.
- Licence for sale of, ii. 74;
- tax on, 332;
- first practitioner of tobacco-spinning in Leith, 346.
- Toe-writing, singular instance of, ii. 253.
- Toleration, want of, in Scotland, i. 244;
- imputation of toleration indignantly repudiated by King James, 533.
- Declared against by the Presbyterian kirk, ii. 180;
- granted by James VII., 470;
- want of, at the Revolution, 498.
- Tories, first introduction of the word into Scotland, ii. 227.
- Torthorald, Lord, stabbed by William Stewart, i. 415.
- Town-guard of Edinburgh, origin of the, ii. 438.
- Trade, decree against freedom of, i. 458.
- Interesting particulars regarding, in Scotland, ii. 248, 249.
- Transmigration of witches to distant places, &c., disputation on, i. 305.
- Traquair, burning at Peebles of popish relics found at, ii. 499-501.
- Traquair, Countess of, and her son, ii. 336.
- ——, first Earl of, anecdote of, ii. n. 88;
- his death and character, 251, 252.
- Travelling, anecdotes of, i. 299, 381, 493; ii. 218, 247, 391,
476.
- Trembling Exies, a disease so called, ii. 222.
- Trough, Children of the (a singular anecdote), i. n. 234.
- Tulyies or combats in Edinburgh, i. 47, 185, 258, 318.
- Tumbling Lassie and Reid the mountebank, ii. 487.
- Turnbull and Scott, hanged for publishing a libel against Morton, i. 125.
- Turnbull, Andrew, beheaded, i. 320.
- —— of Airdrie, abduction of his daughter, i. 419.
- Turners, a base coin so called, ii. 128.
- Tweedies and Veitches, feud between, i. 200-202;
- James VI. endeavours to suppress, 432.
- Universities, order against receiving fugitive students at, i. 439.
- Urquhart of Craigston, singular fortunes of his grandson, ii. 81-83.
- Usher, Adie, a Border-thief, hanged; his son Willie, i. 546.
- Usury severely punished, ii. 298.
- Vallam, James and George, hanged for robbery, i. 364.
- Vautrollier, a French Protestant, prints a volume of poems for James VI., i. 154.
- Veitches and Tweedies, feud between, i. 200-202, 432.
- Victory, naval, over the Dutch, rejoicings at, ii. 303.
- Vintners and Butchers, outcry against extortion of, ii. 489, 490.
- Visions in the air, ii. 313-315.
- Vois, Cornelius de, his gold and silver licence, i. 50.
- Wages of skilled artisans in Scotland, ii. 235.
- Walden, Lord, his journey of pleasure in Scotland, i. 454, 455.
- Walker, Patrick, his account of illusive psalm-singing, ii. 314;
- of visions of bonnets and weapons at Crossford, 485.
- Wallace, Margaret, worried and burnt for witchcraft, i. 527-529.
- Walsingham, Sir Francis, a councillor of Queen Elizabeth, his mission to James VI., i. 152.
- Waly, waly! a popular ballad, composed on the Marchioness of Douglas, ii. 340.
- Wame-ill or land-ill, also called the Pestilence but Mercy, i. 57.
- Wappinshaw, why so called, i. 542.
- Watch, a body of men appointed to keep peace in the Highlands, ii. 306.
- Watson, William, minister of Burntisland, i. 467.
- Watt, John, shot dead on the Burgh-moor, i. 349.
- Waugh, Robert, hanged for rebuking the Regent Morton, i. 80.
- Weather, the, i. 107, 112, 259, 286, 421, 431,
457, 458, 523, 541; ii. 4, 12, 17,
28, 61, 79, 83, 113, 115, 122,
134, 149, 199, 217, 222, 224,
234-236, 240, 253, 298, 299, 305,
313, 319, 324, 358, 365-367, 371-373,
426, 454, 462.
- Weir, Bessie, hanged as a witch, ii. 377-379.
- ——, John, tried for ‘incest,’ for marrying the relict of his grand-uncle, ii. 28.
- Weir, Major, strangled and burnt, ii. 332.
- ——, of Cloburn, a boy of fourteen, taken to Ireland, and married to a daughter of Laird of Corehouse, i. 454.
- Wells of Edinburgh run dry, ii. 226.
- Wemyss, Countess of, death and extravagance of the, ii. 215.
- Wemyss of Logie, Mrs Margaret Twinstoun contrives his escape from confinement, i. 238.
- West Indies, deportation of poor people to the, ii. 304, 305.
- Westerhall, Laird of, slain by the Hamiltons, i. 99.
- Whale captured by the English at Leith, ii. 218.
- Whales, fourteen killed at Dornoch, i. 319.
- Wheat, Council grants licence for exporting 4000 bolls, ii. 54.
- Whig, origin of the term, ii. 171, 172.
- Whilliwha’s, swindlers so called, i. 468.
- Wigton and Cassillis, Earls of, dispute between, ii. 30.
- Wind, tremendous storm of, i. 421.
- Wine, its importation into Western Isles restricted, i. 531.
- Wirtemberg, Duke of, visits Scotland, i. 418.
- Wishart, Janet, burnt for witchcraft, i. 278, 279.
- Witchcraft, act against, i. 24;
- William Stewart, Lyon King-of-arms hanged for, 60;
- witches of Athole, 70;
- Bessie Dunlop, burnt for, 107-110;
- Alison Peirson, burnt for, 183;
- trials of Lady Foulis and Hector Monro, 202-206;
- Bessie Roy tried for, 206;
- extraordinary trials for, 210-218;
- devil preaching to witches, illustration, 215;
- numerous cases of, 257;
- barbarous legal procedure in cases of, 273;
- remarkable trials in Aberdeen, 278-285;
- ‘the great witch of Balwery,’ 291;
- wood-cut of a witch seated on the moon, 378;
- the Broughton witches, 420;
- Margaret Barclay, executed for, 488;
- John Stewart, tried for, 488;
- Margaret Wallace, worried and burnt for, 527-529;
- Bessie Smith, of Lesmahago, 539;
- Thomas Grieve, strangled and burnt, 540;
- Privy Council’s doubts regarding, 548.
- Various cases of, ii. 31-34;
- John Balfour, a discoverer of, 61;
- William Coke and Alison Dick, burnt for witchcraft, their bill of expenses, 70, 71;
- case of Agnes Finnie and others, 149-154;
- conference of ministers on, 180;
- several trials and burnings for, 186-189;
- presbytery of Lanark and the eleven witches, 194, 195;
- proceedings of Cromwell’s law-commissioners for Scotland, 219, 220;
- burnings for, 243, 244;
- numerous trials for, at the Restoration, 277-279;
- confessions of Isobel Gowdie and Janet Braidhead, 285-291;
- M‘Leans and others tortured for, 293-295;
- more cases of, 330;
- Jean Weir hanged, 333;
- curious cases of, 376-381;
- another witch-storm, 385, 386;
- anecdotes of, 393-395;
- Katherine Liddel persecuted for, 396;
- curious witch-trial at Borrowstounness, 405, 406;
- Marion Purdie imprisoned for, 462;
- books on, 475.
- Wogan, Captain, his daring march to the north, ii. 223;
- verses quoted from Waverley on his death, 224.
- Wood, George, threatened arrestment of his corpse, ii. 328, 329.
- Wood, James, heir of Bonnington, beheaded, i. 350.
- Wool, prohibition against exporting, &c., i. 475;
- Petition for dressing and refining of, ii. 346.
- Wreckers of Dunbar and Western Islands, Council’s proceedings against, ii. 94, 95.
- Writs, several persons hanged for making false, i. 260, 296.
- Yester, Master of, and Stewarts of Traquair, feud between, i. 168-170.
- York, James, Duke of. See James VII.
- Young, Isobel, burnt for witchcraft, ii. 31.
- ——, John, his attack on Richard Bannatyne, ii. 16.
- Young, Margaret, petitions Privy Council against false imprisonment, ii. 153.