The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Million inscriptio­ns gathered in lockdown history project

- EMMA CRICHTON

Hi s t o r i c a l informatio­n dating back more than 1,000 years has been collected in a new online database revealing stories of those laid to rest in Scottish burial grounds.

Volunteers have been working with Dundeebase­d Findmypast throughout lockdown to gather more than one million epitaphs and memorial inscriptio­ns, all available to view via digital tours.

The collection is the end product of months of painstakin­g work by volunteers across the country who spent lockdown transcribi­ng memorials and gravestone­s from more than 800 burial grounds for the database.

Scotland Monumental Inscriptio­ns includes details of the country’s most notable figures, including kings and queens, and even Flora

Macdonald who helped Bonnie Prince C harlie evade government troops after the Battle of Culloden, and pioneer Adam Smith.

Interest in local history has spiked during lockdown but with travelling restrictio­ns still in place, Findmypast staff wanted to make the informatio­n, dating back to 1093, available online.

Users can virtually visit the final resting places of ancestors and famous Scots alike to read epitaphs from burial sites such as Dundee ’s Howff , Edinburgh’s Greyfriars and Canongate kirkyards, and Dunfermlin­e Abbey Churchyard.

Myko Clelland, regional licensing and outreach manager at Findmypast, said: “Scotland is a nation of stories, but so many lie forgotten in cemeteries.

“Through the tireless effor ts of local exper t volunteers, combined with new technolog y, these stories can be told for the first time online.

“What better way to bring these tales to life, than to let descendant­s tell these tales for themselves?”

The database details the lives and deaths of almost 1 .1 m i l l i o n people by merging almost 600,000 new records with existing documents already available on Findmypast, to create the largest single collection of its kind.

Notable individual­s and memorials include:

Alexander Stewart, known as the Wolf of Badenoch and “Scotland’s vilest man”. He is said to have died after a chess game with the devil.

David Rizzio, the murdered courtier of Mary Queen of Scots and rumoured secret father of King James VI.

Adam Smith, from Kirkcaldy, widely known as the “Father of Economics”.

Queen Victoria’s favourite servant, John Brown, the “best, truest heart that ever beat”.

The heart of Edward Bruce, Lord Kinloss, buried at Culross Abbey in a heartshape­d silver case clamped with iron between two stones, discovered in 1808 and reburied.

The highest paid magician of his time, Sigmund Neuberger, the “Great Lafayette”, and his dog Beauty. Beauty was given to him by Harry Houdini and they were laid to rest together after dying only a month apart.

The families and forebears of Scots including Robert Burns, Sir Walter Scott and Rob Roy MacGregor.

True life inspiratio­ns behind Robert Burns’ poems. Mary Campbell, known as “Highland Mary”, can be found along with the “Bonnie Wee Thing”, Deborah Davies.

 ??  ?? MAGICIAN: Sigmund Neuberger, known as the “Great Lafayette”, with his dog Beauty, who was given to him by Houdini.
MAGICIAN: Sigmund Neuberger, known as the “Great Lafayette”, with his dog Beauty, who was given to him by Houdini.
 ??  ?? Flora Macdonald helped Bonnie Prince Charlie escape.
Flora Macdonald helped Bonnie Prince Charlie escape.
 ??  ?? David Rizzio, Mary Queen of Scots’ murdered courtier.
David Rizzio, Mary Queen of Scots’ murdered courtier.
 ??  ?? One of the gravestone­s at Dundee’s Howff.
One of the gravestone­s at Dundee’s Howff.

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