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Ancrum Old Parish Church

Category B listed buildings in the Scottish BordersChurch ruins in ScotlandChurches in the Scottish BordersListed churches in ScotlandListed ruins in Scotland
Ruins in the Scottish BordersSource attribution
Ancrum Old Church
Ancrum Old Church

Ancrum Old Parish Church is situated just over half a mile north west of the village of Ancrum in the Scottish Borders area of Scotland, on the B4600 road leading off the A68. The village of Ancrum is four miles north west of Jedburgh. The churchyard contains the burial ground for the local area. The old church is situated at grid reference NT621248, and the remains are protected as a Category B listed building.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Ancrum Old Parish Church (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Ancrum Old Parish Church
B6400,

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 55.516252 ° E -2.600734 °
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Address

Ancrum Kirk

B6400
TD8 6UJ
Scotland, United Kingdom
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Ancrum Old Church
Ancrum Old Church
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Ancrum
Ancrum

Ancrum (Scottish Gaelic: Alan Crom) is a village in the Borders area of Scotland, 5 km (3.1 mi) northwest of Jedburgh. The village — which currently has a population of around 300 — is situated just off the A68 trunk road on the B6400, which runs through Ancrum. Lilliesleaf lies 7 miles (11 km) further along the B6400 and Denholm can be reached along the unclassified road which runs parallel to the River Teviot. The name of this place, anciently Alne-crumb, is derived from the situation of its village on a bend of the River Alne, now the Ale. There were formerly two villages distinguished by the appellations of Over Ancrum and Nether Ancrum, of the former of which nothing now remains. The principal event of historical importance is the Battle of Ancrum Moor, which originated in an attempt made in 1545, by Ralph Evers and Bryan Layton, to possess themselves of the lands of the Merse and Teviotdale, which had been conferred upon them by a grant of Henry VIII, king of England. Archibald Douglas, 6th Earl of Angus, who had considerable property in that district, determined to resist the attempt, and a battle between his forces and those of the English took place on a moor about a mile and a half north of the village, in which the latter were defeated with great loss. In this conflict, both the villages of Ancrum were burnt to the ground; the village of Nether Ancrum was soon afterwards rebuilt, but of the other nothing remains but the ruins of one or two dilapidated houses.