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The Monklands area we will be
referring to is not the old "Monklands District Council"
area, but is based upon the original area owned by the
Monks. The towns in the list opposite are not representative of the
area.
The name of Monklands dates back to 1323
(the
name was first recorded in the Steward's
Charter of
the year) but there is evidence of
settlement by
hunter-gatherer tribes as far back as
the
Mesolithic
Age (c6500-4000 be).
Bronze Age remains have been
discovered in the area, and there is an
Iron Age
Crannog site in
Lochend
Loch.
The area roughly corresponding to the
old
Monklands District was gifted by Royal
Charter of
King Malcolm IV to the Cistercian Abbey
of Newbattle in 1162.
Over the years the monks leased their
land to private individuals and at the time of the
Reformation
the whole area passed into private
ownership.
In the year 1162 King Malcolm IV gifted, by Royal
Charter, to the Cistercian Abbey of Newbattle, all the land that was later to became
known as Munkland or Monklands. In
1224 this was confirmed but now also mentioned the land that lies along the
(Clud) Clyde
at Kermil or Kermyle (Carmyle).
The Monks of Newbattle farmed most of the area and used the western part of the area for
the cultivation of grain while the eastern part was largely used for pasture. They
set up a sheep grange at (Drumpeleder) Drumpelier
(see web page on
Drumpelier)- they built
corn mills at Kippsbyre, Gartlea, East Gartmillan, on Rosehall Estate near
Carnbroe. They
distributed their products along roads they created from Dumpelier to
Newbattle Abbey in the east.
The Monks Road entered the Monklands from
Torphichen, on
the Auchengray estate, passing to the north of the mansion house then along the
Hillhead of Eastfield and the estates of Caldercruix, Arden, and
Arbuckle, through
Browniesside Farm till it entered the lands of Colliertree, along Aitchison Street (the
Hogs Back), turned north at what is now Manor Drive (parallel to the aptly named
MonksCourt Avenue), past a small pond on the Airdrie estate, across "The Moss",
past Kippsbyre. Here the road is believed to have forked, the main route to
Drumpelier continued west, crossing the Northburn at Kippsbrig, along Burnbank Street,
Sunnyside, crossing the Luggie Burn at (old Coatbrig along Buchanan Street until it
entered the lands of Drumpelier at Langloan.
The other route went down Yetts Hole Road to the tithing
centre at Kipps. (Yetts Hole Road leads to the Cromlet farm and the locals always refer to
Yetts Hole Road as the "Cromlet"). The monks would have
also used a route which
forked at the Red Bridge, over Dunbeth Road, through High & Low Coates,
Coathill,
Shawhead on their way to/from other mills in Carnbruth (Carnbroe) and
Rosehall.
Over the years the monks leased out portions of their land
to private individuals. They set up a courthouse or chapel and a tithing centre at Kipps
(known at various times as Kyps, Kip or Kyp or Kippis), on the banks of Cullen's Burn
(named after the long gone Cullens Farm), not far from the Cromlet (on present day Kipps
Farm). (Note Cullen's Burn is formally called the Gartsherrie Burn.)
The chapel was used more for civil than religious matters and was last used in 1740.
In it they held, annually, three principal Baron Courts, at which they collected
the rents or tithes of such farms as were let by them to tenants. It assumed
extensive judicial rights, civil as well as criminal. Civil matters included
adjudication in matters of debt, prices, and work within the area. Criminal
matters included trials of all crimes committed in the area. The chapel was
destroyed in the late 1700's and the ruins were completely removed by an enterprising
farmer in the latter part of the nineteenth century to make way for a cornfield.
Most of the area around the north of Coatbridge and Airdrie
was known as Kip or Kyp or Kipps. It is believed that Kipps land extended to Coatdyke in
the south and to Whinhall in Airdrie. Around the time of the
reformation all the land passed into private ownership.
The Monks were the first to mine coal in the area. In
the 1400's a visiting dignitary witnessed "black stones" being distributed to
the poor as alms. In the 1500's these stones had become known as "black
gold".
Around 1650 the Barony of Monklands was split into two parishes:
New Monkland
which encompasses Airdrie and surrounding villages to Slammannan in the
east. The North Calder water forms its southern
boundary.
Old Monkland which encompasses Coatbridge and
surrounding villages. The western boundary of Old Monkland parish
reached to the Carmyle area of Glasgow.
Agriculture remained the main industry up until the late
1700's when the Monklands started mining. Coal and Ironstone were being found on almost
every farm. The Monklands Canal was developed to transport the minerals to suitable
markets. The Iron industry flourished with the availability of the coal and the Blackband
Ironstone. This created a boom in building and quarrying began to meet the demand
for the increasing population. Bricks were needed for housing, factories and
furnaces - brickworks sprang up in almost every area.
The Industrial Revolution had reached the Monklands.
Coatbridge was rapidly turning into the Iron Burgh.
Other villages devoted to mining or quarrying sprung up all over the area -
Annathill, Plains, Glenmavis, Longriggend, Baillieston,
MONKLAND PLACE-NAMES
Peter
Drummond, Airdrie, spoke of the research
he had done for his booklet of the same
title, stressing the importance of
linguistic context and early forms for
each name, the assistance given by
occurrences of similar names elsewhere,
and the theoretical and practical help
given by books like W.F.H. Nicolaisen's
Scottish Place-Names (1976) and by
professionals like Ian Fraser. The
Monklands is no more; the area
researched in the 1980s was swallowed up
into North Lanarkshire in the 1990s.
It includes Airdrie,
a Gaelic name (there are 3 other
Airdries in Scotland) and means either
ard ruighe 'height of (the) slope' or
ard ýirighe 'height of (the) sheiling',
both of which would apply, especially
the former, describing the slope down
from the Slamannan plateau, a reminder
of how important it is to fit a
name into its landscape-context. Being
Gaelic Airdrie represents c.25% of the
area's names. Most of the others are
Scots, with no Norse, Pictish or Anglian
names, and only a tiny number of Cumbric
ones, like Papperthill. Hence the
suggestion is unlikely that 'Airdrie' is
Cumbric, containing as its second
element Cumbric tref 'farm-stead'.
Coatbridge
Contextual clues also apply to the
attempt to find the meaning of
Coatbridge, first recorded in 1750.
Research has shown that from the 13th
century the land was owned by the Colt
family, sometimes known as Coats, and
the estate generated place-names such as
Coatdyke, Coathill, Coatbank and Nether
and Over Coats (!). So Coatbridge was
simply the bridge on the Coats estate.
Other points touched on included the
fact that Gaelic names here appear to be
the southern limit of the Central Belt's
Gaelic, since much of Lanarkshire
southwards has very few; that Gart-
('farm, enclosure for arable') names
(e.g. Gartsherrie) are very numerous;
that Drum-names are regularly applied to
low hills right across the Central Belt;
and that the area's farm-names, extant
and extinct, are a rich vein of Scots
names (e.g. Auldshiels, Palacerigg,
One's Mailling, Townhead and Laverock
Knowe).
He also gave example of myths about
local names: Bargeddie, a village on the
banks of the Monklands Canal, is not for
example named after a bargee named
Edward, but comes from earlier
Balgaddeis (1587). Balgedy (1654),
Gaelic baile 'farm' + gead 'strip of
arable land', and coined long before
there was a canal.
He concluded by looking at spoken,
unmapped names, like the long-gone tram
terminus in Airdrie still known as 'The
Terminus'.
Monklands, a former mining and
industrial area, had many of these
spoken names, such as pits called The
Hard Egg, The Wee Jean, and the Hoor in
the Park (respectively for the nature of
the rock, the intemperate foreman's
virago wife, and the improper name of
the colliery officially known as 'Lady
Anne', properly named after the wife of
Sir John Wilson!)
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