Scottish Myths and Legends

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Authors: Rodger Moffet, Amanda Moffet, Donald Cuthill, Tom Moss
Tags: Tales & Fables
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man, generally with a book and transverse or saltire cross. Sometimes the image may contain fish, a fishing net or rope or Andrew sitting in a boat.

St Ninian
     
By Donald Cuthill
     
Scotland welcomed Pope Benedict XVI for his first visit to Britain on 16 September 2010, on St Ninian's Day. The Pope began his visit in Edinburgh, where a St Ninian's Day parade welcomed him to the city. But who exactly was Saint Ninian, and what was his historical significance? The precise details of Ninian's life are disputed.
     
     
The Catholic Church described him as the man from south west Scotland "who first brought the Christian faith" to the country around 397AD, when he is said to have established a religious community at Whithorn in Galloway. The church said Ninian studied in Rome before being ordained a bishop. His monastery in the south of Scotland was known as Candida Casa, from the Latin meaning "White House". The name possibly refers to the stone used to construct it or the whitewash used to paint it, and has survived as the modern name, Whithorn. It was from this base that he is said to have set about proclaiming the Gospel to the southern Picts.
     
     
The first historical reference to Ninian of Whithorn came from the Northumbrian scholar and monk Bede, in his Ecclesiastical History of the English People, written around 731. He described him as a Briton who was instructed in Rome and noted that his church was made of stone, which was unusual at the time. Bede said Ninian named his episcopal see after Saint Martin of Tours, although other accounts claim he actually met the French patron saint on his return to Scotland.
     
     
The historian conceded he was only passing on "traditional" information in his brief reference to Ninian, and does not claim it is factual. In the 12th Century, Aelred, the abbot of Rievaulx in Yorkshire, wrote A Life of Saint Ninian - thought to be at the behest of one of the new bishops of Galloway, who was eager to promote their bishopric to the wider world. Aelred attributed 10 miracles to Ninian, six during the saint's lifetime and four after his death.
     
     
Whatever the truth of Ninian's life, over the centuries his tomb at Whithorn became one of the centres of Christian pilgrimage. It was also an important place of worship for the Scots royal family. In the 14th Century it is said a dying King Robert the Bruce went there to pray for a cure from leprosy.
     
     
Two centuries later, King James IV spent eight days walking to the shrine, and is said to have distributed money to the poor as he travelled.
     
     
When the visit of Pope Benedict was confirmed, Scotland's most senior Catholic, Cardinal Keith Patrick O'Brien, said he wanted to resurrect the festivities that used to surround St Ninian's Day. He suggested organising "a grand Scottish spectacle to welcome Benedict XVI".

The Font Stone of Abriachan
     
By Amanda Moffet
     
If you're walking through the Abriachan Gardens by the shores of loch Ness you will come across a heart-shape stone which is deeply embedded in the ground called the Font Stone. The flat rock has a hole in the middle which is filled with water.
     
     
The stone is within the Abriachan Community Gardens, if you follow the path up through the gardens to the left it's about 3/4 of the way up. The gardens here are definitely worth a visit if you're in the area.
     
     
There is some dispute over the origins of the stone; some associate it with St. Columba, others with St. Finian's monastic cell, whilst some claim it's just a post-hole from a normal house. However, what isn't disputed is the claim that the water hole is never dry, no matter what the weather is like, and if it's emptied then it will refill itself quickly. It is a mystery where the water comes from, but it is believed to have apotropaic as well as healing qualities.
     
     
As recently the 20th century, drops of water from the Font Stone were put in the baptismal bowls of newly born babies believing that

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