Kirkintilloch

Kirkintilloch is a Scottish burgh which lies on the line of the Roman Antonine Wall in East Dunbartonshire, about 8 miles east of Glasgow. The name is said to derive from the Celtic Caerpentalloch meaning 'Fort at the end of the ridge of hills', which probably refers to the Roman fort built in what is now Peel Park. The ridge of hills are the Campsie Fells, easily accessible from the town. Historically, Kirkintilloch owed much of its prosperity to the Forth and Clyde Canal, which enabled it to act as an inland port serving both coasts of Scotland. Kirkintilloch is the administrative centre of East Dunbartonshire Council: the Civic Centre is named in honour of Tom Johnston, a leading Scottish socialist politician who was born in the burgh. The Auld Aisle Churchyard houses a monument to the Scottish poet David Gray.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
list of religious leaders in 1986
list of religious leaders in 1985
list of religious leaders in 1984
list of religious leaders in 1983
ingestion
list of religious leaders in 1982
list of religious leaders in 1981
mississippi school for mathematics and science
list of religious leaders in 1980
rodion romanovich raskolnikov
antitribu
commodore sx 64
sting (wrestler)
mbini
amy ray
emily saliers
nr
portishead (album)
logical disk manager
toad (disambiguation)
dabber
mozambique (music)
jonathan king
grimmauld place
the tip sheet
bryan bell
nashville metropolitan area
peri peri
blomberg fritsch affair
dead drop
marion hutton
arctic sweet coltsfoot
pestilence wort
toram
list of newspaper writers
ramdisk
lee falk
george gair
otter island (fictional)
288 glauke
samsun
list of magazine writers
dukes of lorraine family tree
duchy of lorraine