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19 September 2014
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³ÉÈË¿ìÊÖ - History

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The Border Abbeys
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Saint Columba
copyright Historic Scotland

See the remains of David I’s monastic revolution in the fantastic architectural remains of the Border Abbeys. Right from the start of his rule in southern Scotland, before he was King of Scots, David I imported the latest, most fashionable and austere monastic orders from Europe into his new realm. These monks built monasteries on an unprecedented scale that must have overawed all who saw them. Receiving grants of some of the richest farmlands in Scotland, the monastaries were akin to multinational corporations who improved the economy and established direct trading links to European markets. King David’s generosity must have come at a price for those farmers who found themselves unable to compete with these massive monastic foundations.

‘Clearly beloved of God, since immediately at the beginning of his reign he diligently practised the things that are of God in building Churches, in founding monasteries, which he also endowed with properties and riches according to the needs of each.’
Ailred of Rievaulx on King David I in Abbot Walter Bower’s Scotichronicon.

However, the borders became a centre of learning: producing figures like Michael Scott, Adam of Dryburgh and John Duns Scotus - one Scotland’s greatest philosophers.


more Jedburgh Abbey and Kelso Abbey
more Melrose Abbey Factsheet
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Dryburgh Abbey Factsheet




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