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Fife
Place Names
ABBOTSHALL:
(abbots-hawl) A hall or residence of the Abbot.(in this case of
Dunfermline).
ABDIE: (ab-di) Lands belonging to an Abbacy (of Lindores).
ABERDOUR: (aber-dower) Mouth of the Water.
ABERDOUR: 'mouth of the River Dour'; aber (Brittonic) mouth, confluence;
dobhar (Gaelic) water, stream.
ABERDOUR: Mouth (aber,Brythonic Gaelic) of the water.
ANSTRUTHER: (an-struther) (Locals call it enster) A place abounding
in streams.
ANSTRUTHER: 'the little stream' ; an (Gaelic) the; sruthair (Gaelic)
little stream.
ANSTRUTHER: 'The (an) rivulet (struthair)' .The mouth of the 'rivulet'
forms the town's harbour, effectively dividing the town in two.
ARNGASK: (arn-gask) Height of the pass.
AUCHTERDERRAN: (ock-ter-derr-an) Height of the oakwood.
AUCHTERDERRAN : 'Top (uachdar) blackthorns (draigheann)'.
AUCHTERMUCHTY: (ock-ter-muck-ti) Boar's height.
AUCHTERMUCHTY: 'upland for swine'; uachdar (Gaelic) upland; muc
(Gaelic) swine.
AUCHTERMUCHTY : 'Upper (uachdar) pig (muc) house (tigh)'.Some
would make muchty one element 'pig rearing'.
AUCHTERTOOL: (ock-ter-tool) Of the river Tiel. Tiel is derived
from tuil = torrent.
BALGEDIE : 'Settlement (baile) of the narrow strip of land (gead)'.
BALLINGRY: (bal-in-gray) Town of the garden.
BALMERINO: (bal-mereeno)(Locals call it ba'mirnie) Merinach's
town, Merinach was the name of a companion of St.Regulus of St
Andrews.
BEATH: (beeth) Birch Tree
BENARTY HILL : 'Mountain (beinn), high (ard),hill (Eng)
BLAIRADAM : Level clearing (blar) of (the) Adam (family) the family
that included the famous Scottish architects and interior designers.
The name was originally that of the estate; the village within
it, established by William, father of Robert, was initially called
Maryburgh (after William's wife).
BRUNTON : Stream (burna), community (tun)
BURNTISLAND: (burnt-eye-land) Where the lands were set on fire
for improvement.
BURNTISLAND: maybe 'Burnet's Land' ; The origin of this name is
obscure. There is a story which tells of a fire on a small island
close to the shore, but this is not confirmed.
CAMERON: (cam-e-ron) Crooked gap or pass.
CARDENDEN : Wooded (cardden, Brythonic gaelic) valley (denu)
CARNBEE: (car-in-bee) Cairn of the peek.
CARNOCK: (car-nok) Abounding in cairns.
CARR ROCKS : Boulder (carr, proto-Goidelic) rocks (Eng).The dangerous
rocks lie 3 miles off the ancient town of Crail.
CERES: ( seer-iss) Enclosure for swine.
CERES: obscure, but possibly 'black water' ; searach (Gaelic).
COLINSBURGH : Village founded and named by Colin Lindsay, 3rd
Earl of Balcarres, in 1705.
COLLESSIE: (cawl-less-i) Back of the garden ground.
COMRIE: 'confluence' ; comar (Gaelic) confluence.
COWDENBEATH: 'birch woods' ; coilltean (Gaelic) woods; beithe
(Gaelic) birch.
COWDENBEATH : Wooded (coilltean) (with)birch (beithe) The first
element of the name is shrouded in conjecture.
CRAIGROTHIE : Fell (creag) of the old fortification (rath)to the
north west there is a suitably ancient tower ,but to the south
are the better known remains of the once magnificent Struthers
Castle.
CRAIL: (cr-ale) Probably identical with the Irish name Cairill
and the family name O'Carroll. See ELIE
CRAIL: 'rock'; carr (Gaelic) rock; all (Gaelic) rock.
CRAIL : Ancient town with a name more ancient than most : Boulder
( carr, pro-Goidelic) rock (ail, pro-Goidelic).
CREICH: (cree-ik) Boundary or district.
CULTS: (kults) Plural of coille = Wood.
CULROSS : 'holly wood'; cuillenn (Gaelic) holly, ros (Brittonic)
wood, point.
CULROSS : A brythonic name; Holly (celyn) moorland (rhos)
CUPAR: ( coo-per) Back of the top.
CUPAR : 'common pasture'; comhpairt (Gaelic) common pasture; partnership.
CUPAR : the) Common (land) (comhpairt): that is pastureland held
in common by local villagers,some people would prefer an older
derivation.
DAIRSIE: (dare-say)
DALGETY: ( dal-getti) Field of spears.
DUNBOG: ( dun-bog) The word occurs in Dunbog(Dunbolg).In Gaelic
"bolg" means a sack,but the probability is that the
name is pre-Celtic.
DUNBOG : Fortified premises (dun) (on) a rise (builg).
DUNFERMLINE: (dun-ferm-lin) The hill or fort of the winding stream
or rivulet,and may refer to a small peninsulated hill in Pittencrieff
Glen.
DUNFERMLINE : possibly 'hill-land' ; dun (Gaelic) hill, fortress,
mound; lann (Gaelic) land.
The 'ferm' element may have something to do with tax exacted on
the land.
DUNINO: (dun-eeno) Fort on the uncultivated heath.
DYSART: (dye-sart) A place of retirement for religious purposes.
DYSART : Retreat (diseart)
ELIE: ( eel-i) (Formerly known as The Elie) Several tribes in
Ireland took name from an ancestor Eile,and the districts occupied
by them came to be known by the same name the same name,each being
distinguished by the addition of a family or clan name.
ELIE : 'tomb' ; ealadh (Gaelic) tomb; ayle (Scots) covered cemetery.
There was once such a cemetery at Elie. Some graves were filled
with precious items and from this sprang the Gaelic for treasure
ulaidh. Pronounced eely.
ELIE : Tomb (ealadh),The place is the site of a formerly well
known cemetery.
FALKLAND: (faw-kland) Land of falconry; the ancient name of the
parish is Kilgour.
FALKLAND : possibly 'land for falconry' ; falca (Old English)
falcon.
FERRY-PORT-ON-CRAIG: (ferry-port-on-craig) A Ferry Port by the
Craig (a Rock),Ferries used to run to Dundee.Now called Tayport.
Thanks to David Beattie (b Montrose Angus)
FIFE : Possibly 'Path' (fiamh)
FLISK: (flisk) Shore
FREUCHIE : Heathery (fraochach)
FORGAN: (for-gan)
GLENCRAIG : Glen (gleann) of the crag (creige)
GLENROTHES : 'fort of the glen' ; gleann (Gaelic) glen, valley;
rath (Gaelic) fort.
This is a new town with no glen.
GLENROTHES : A made up name 'Glen of the raths'Although there
are raths (circular stone forts) in the area, there is no glen
to speak of. In fact, even the raths are a red herring, for the
reference is actually to the Earls of Rothes, who were local landowners,
and thus also to the short lived Rothes Colliery in the vicinity.
GUARDBRIDGE : 'yard bridge'
GUARDBRIDGE : Enclosure (the same word as yard) Bridge (Eng),
the first bridge over the River Eden dates from around 1420.
INCHCOLM, ISLE OF : 'Columba's isle' ; innis (Gaelic) island.
INVERKEITHING: (inver-key-thing)
INVERKEITHING : 'mouth of the Keithing Burn' ; inbhir (Gaelic)
river-mouth, confluence.
KELTY : Hard (caled, Brythonic Gaelic) The name is said sometimes
to refer to water, although there are no major expanses of water
anywhere near.
KEMBACK: (kem-bak) Head of the Bend.
KENNOWAY: (ken-oh-way) Head of the plain.
KENNOWAY : Head (perhaps chief) (ceann) field (achadh) an earlier
form of Kennoway was 'Kennachy'.
KENNOWAY : possibly 'main field' ; ceann (Gaelic) head, chief,
main; achadh (Gaelic) field.
KETTLE: ( kett-il) Cital is a diminutive of the Irish personal
name Cet.
KILCONQUHAR: (kin-nuck-ir) Wood of Cunuchar or Cunchar.This was
the name of a thane of Angus.
KILCONQUHAR : 'Conchobar's church' ; eall (Gaelic) cell, church.
KILMANY: (kil-many) Wood of Maine.
KILRENNY: (kil-rennay) Ferny wood
KINCAPLE : Presumably 'Head(ceann) of the horse (capuill)'
KINCARDINE : Head (ceann) of the thicket (cardden, Brythonic Gaelic)
KINGHORN: ( king-horn) Head of the corner.
KINGHORN : 'at the head of the marsh' ; cinn (Gaelic) at the head;
gronn (Gaelic) mud, marsh.
The name has been erroneously connected with King Alexander III,
who died here after a fall in 1286.
KINGHORN : Head (ceann) of the boggy ground (gronn)
KINGLASSIE: ( king-lassay) Head of the stream.
KINGLASSIE : ' at the head of the stream' ; cinn (Gaelic) at the
head; glas (Brittonic) water.
KINGLASSIE : Head (ceann) of the stream (glas, Brythonic Gaelic)
The town was once known as Goatmilk.
KINGSBARNS: (kings-barrens) The Barns that King John had built
,close to his Castle.(thanks to KeithClark,South Australia)
KIRKCALDY: ( kir-kawdi) The fort of Calaten.The sons of Calaten
were famous magicians.
KIRKCALDY : 'castle on the hard hill' ; caer (Brittonic) fort,
castle; caled (Brittonic) hard; din (Brittonic) hill, fort.
KIRKCALDY : Apparently Fort (caer, Brythonic Gaelic) (of the )
hard (caled, Brythonic Gaelic) stronghold (din, Brythonic Gaelic)
LARGO: ( lar-go) Sunny,seaward slope.
LARGO, UPPER and LOWER : 'field' ; learg (Gaelic) field, plain.
Alexander Selkirk, upon whose experiences Daniel Defoe based his
story of Robinson Crusoe, was born in Lower Largo in 1676.
LARGO : Hillside (learg): the village is on a hillside of Largo
Law and is split into Upper and Lower Largo.
LESLIE: (leslie) Garden of the Pool.
LESLIE : 'garden of the pool' ; lios (Gaelic) garden; linn (Gaelic)
pool.
LESLIE : Court (leas) pool (linn)
LEUCHARS: ( look-ers) The great rushy place.
LEUCHARS : probably 'place of rushes' ; luachair (Gaelic) rushes.
LEUCHARS : Probably '(Of) Rushes (luachair): the place is not
far from the estuary of the River Eden.
LEVEN : The town takes its name from the river Leven.
LOCHGELLY : The town is named after the loch near which it stands:
the name may mean 'White (geal)'
LOCHORE : The town is named after the loch near which it stands:
the name may mean 'Gold (or).
LOGIE: (low-gay) Hollow.
LOGIE : Hollow (lagaidh)
LOMOND : Beacon from an old Brythonic Gaelic source (laomuinn)
MARKINCH: (marr-kinsh) A corruption of the name MARCHING.
MARKINCH : 'horse meadow' ; marc (Gaelic) horse; innis (Gaelic)
island,meadow.
MARKINCH : Horse (marc) water meadow (innis)
METHIL : 'boundary wood' ; maid (Brittonic) boundary; coille (Gaelic)
wood.
METHIL : Apparently Boundary (maid, Brythonic Gaelic) wood (choille)
but Old Scandinavian methal, 'middle', and note that the town
is directly between the other, partly older, urban areas of Buckhaven
and Leven.
MONIMAIL: (monn-i-mail) Shrubbery of honey.
MONIMAIL : Peat Bed (moine) of the rounded hill (mill)
MOONZIE: (moon-zay) Long,sedgy grass.
NEWBURGH: (new-burr-a)
NEWBURGH : 'new village' ; neowe (old English) new; burh (Old
English) village, hamlet.
NEWBURGH : New (neowe) stronghold (burh)
NEWBURN: (new-burn) Allied to the tribe Niduari.
PITTENWEEM: (pit-en-weem)
PITTENWEEM : 'cave land' ; pett (Brittonic) place, part, share
(of land); uamh (Gaelic) cave.
St Fillan's cave shrine is near Pittenweem harbour.
QUEENSFERRY, NORTH and SOUTH
The queen referred to is the 11th century Queen Margaret, King
Malcolm Canmore's wife.Ferries no longer cross here, and the traffic
goes by the Forth Road Bridge.Part of the action of Robert Louis
Stevenson's Kidnapped takes place here.
ROSYTH : 'cape of arrows' ; ros (Gaelic) cape, promontory; saighead
(Gaelic) arrow.
ROSYTH : Headland (ros) of arrows (saighead)
ST.ANDREWS & ST.LEONARDS: (saint-andrews & saint leonards)
ST.ANDREWS: (saint andrews)
ST ANDREWS : The town was first called Muckross (boar-wood), then
Kilrymont (church on the royal mount), then Kilrule (church of
St Regulus) and finally St Andrews after the church of St Andrew.
It is now most famous as the 'home' of golf.
ST.LEONARDS: (saint leonards)
ST.MONANS & ABERCROMBIE: (saint-moan-anz) (aber-crom-bay)Locals
call it saint minins) After the saint.
ST MONANS : The town is probably named after Moinenn, the sixth
century bishop of Clonfert.
SALINE: (sa-lin) A barn.
SCOONIE: (scoonay) Sconin
STRATHKINNESS : Wide valley (strath) (of the) Kinness (Burn).Kinness
Burn flows from minor uplands in the centre of Fife to the sea
at St Andrews.The stream name means at the head of the cape.
STRATHMIGLO: (strath-mig-low)The strath of the Miglo stream.
STRATHMIGLO : 'valley of the boggy loch' ; srath (Gaelic) valley;
mig (Gaelic) bog; and loch.
STRATHMIGLO : Said to be Wide Valley (strath) (of the) marsh (mig),
loch, although this presupposes the existence of a loch, where
none is at present.
A thought to ponder is that the Irish (michlu) means(of) evil
repute.
TORRYBURN: (taw-ray-burn) Torr means tower like hill.
WEMYSS: (weems) Cave.
WEMYSS, WEST and EAST : 'cave, hiding-place' ; uamh (Gaelic) cave.
There are many caves or weems on the coastline here.
Near East Wemyss stands the ruin of MacDuff's castle.
WORMIT : 'the serpent' ; worm (Norse) serpent, snake; and -et,
which is the article. This is said to be the first village in
Scotland with electricity.
WORMIT : Snake ([w]orm,), the (-et,)
Credited
to Tommy Manson of The Fife Post.
If
you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me at;
sandystevenson@thefreesite.com
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