306 MS. quoted in Wilde’s Table, Census of Ireland, 1851.

307 Notes to Fountainhall’s Chronological Notes of Scottish Affairs, p. 5.

308 A sugar-house was first set up in Glasgow in 1667.—Gibson’s Hist. Glasgow.

309 Sir Walter Scott relates this anecdote on the authority of Mrs Murray Keith.—Notes to Fountainhall’s Chron. Notes, &c., p. 33.

310 ‘These’ is always used for ‘those’ in Scottish documents of this age.

311 Fountainhall’s Decisions. Burnet’s History.

312 Statistical Account of Scotland, vol. v.

313 Letters to George Earl of Aberdeen (Spal. Club), p. 122.

314 Analecta, i. 114.

315 Memoirs of Lady Grizzel Baillie.

316 MS. in possession of Sir Hugh Purves Hume Campbell, Bart., Marchmont House.

317 Papers Relating to the Geographical Description, Maps, and Charts of Scotland, by John Adair. Bann. Club Misc., ii. 345.

318 Papers Relating to Slezer’s Theatrum Scotiæ, in Bann. Club Misc., ii. 307.

319 Scots Magazine, Obituary, 1791.

320 A Short Account of Scotland, &c. London, 1702.

321 Called the Old Bank Close, in the Lawnmarket, where Melbourne Place now is.

322 The earl’s first marriage to a daughter of the Marquis of Huntly—who, however, was not the mother of his children—is noticed in this volume under 1649.

323 [Mackie’s] Journey through Scotland, 1723, p. 18.

324 From an original inventory of the articles, read before the Society of the Antiquaries of Scotland by Sir David Laing, in 1857.

325Lamont’s Diary (Edinburgh, 1830), p. 212, foot-note.

GENERAL INDEX.