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Borthwick and was
The architect of the Land Conservation Council was the newly appointed Minister of Lands, Conservation and Soldier Settlement, William Borthwick who supported retaining the area as a nature reserve.
In retaliation the Protestant leader, the Duke of Châtelherault, sent his son the Earl of Arran and the Master of Maxwell to seize Bothwell's home Crichton Castle and force the Earl, who was at Borthwick, to join them.
The first record of an armoury for the manufacture of guns occurs in 1474, and by 1498 the master gunner Robert Borthwick was casting bronze guns at Edinburgh.
( Although Cruden appears to have made an error in writing this, since his source, Holinshed, does not date Borthwick that early, and Caldwell agrees ) By 1511 Edinburgh was the principal foundry in Scotland, supplanting Stirling Castle, with Scottish and European smiths working under Borthwick, who by 1512 was appointed " master melter of the king's guns ".
Outgoing skipper Steve Borthwick led by example and was a tower of strength in the lineout on his way to becoming Fed Ex Man of the match.
Subsequently in April 1589, Huntly raised a rebellion in the north, but was obliged to surrender, and after a short imprisonment in Borthwick Castle was again freed.
When in 1458, James Douglas, lord Dalkeith, was to receive the name ' Morton ' for his intended earldom, a protest was presented against this creation, asserting correctly that the lands of Mortoun belonged heritably to his step-grandmother, Janet Borthwick, widow of Sir James Douglas, known as 1st Lord of Dalkeith, and to her son William Douglas ( progenitor of the Whittingehame branch of the Douglases ), to which the Chancellor answered that " Lord Dalkeith was not to receive his title in the Earldom for the lands of Mortoun lying in the Lordship of Niddisdale but for the lands of Mortoun in the territory of Caldercleir ".
Sir William de Borthwick of that Ilk was created a Lord of Parliament as Lord Borthwick, ( William Borthwick, 1st Lord Borthwick ), but it is unclear exactly when the title was created.
However, Alexander Nisbet, writing as far back as 1722 states: " this family was dignified with the title of Lord Borthwick in the beginning of the reign of King James II " which commenced in 1437, which is closer to Brown's assertion.
In the Parliament of 1469 held at Edinburgh by King James III of Scotland Lord Borthwick was ranked after the Lord Halyburton ( cr. 1441 ).

Borthwick and killed
He was succeeded by his son, the third Lord ( William Borthwick, 3rd Lord Borthwick ), who some say was one of the many Scottish noblemen killed at the Battle of Flodden in 1513 although the Complete Peerage cited by Pine stated " this is was unlikely ".

Borthwick and Charles
From his marriage with Nancy Barry, Munger has four children-physicist and Republican activist Charles T. Munger, Jr. Emilie Munger Ogden, Barry A. Munger, and Philip R. Munger, and two stepchildren-William Harold Borthwick and David Borthwick.
The ladies who formed the first committee were: Lady Borthwick ; the Dowager Duchess of Marlborough ( first lady president ); Lady Wimborne ; Lady Randolph Churchill ; Lady Charles Beresford ; the Dowager Marchioness of Waterford ; Julia, Marchioness of Tweeddale ; Julia, Countess of Jersey ; Mrs ( subsequently Lady ) Hardman ; Lady Dorothy Nevill ; the Honorable Lady Campbell ( later Lady Blythswood ); the Honorable Mrs Armitage ; Mrs Bischoffsheim ; Miss Meresia Nevill ( the first secretary of the Ladies Council ).

Borthwick and
The Régiment de Picardie stood their ground but were caught between Colonel Borthwick s Scots-Dutch regiment and the English reinforcements.
After appearing in the midweek sides, he won his first senior cap as a replacement for Steve Borthwick in the final 10 minutes of England s victory over the United States in San Francisco on 16 June 2001.

Borthwick and at
Borthwick and Moy have described the genre as diverse but "... characterised by a broad set of values that eschewed rock playing styles, rhythms and structures ", which were replaced by " synthetic textures " and " robotic rigidity ", often defined by the limitations of the new technology, including monophonic synthesizers ( only able to play one note at a time ).
In 1902 Thomas Borthwick and Sons ( Australasia ) Ltd, a subsidiary of a UK company, bought the Waitara Freezing and Cold Storage Company plant at Waitara.
The principal tributaries of the Teviot are the Allan Water which enters its right bank at Newmill, the Borthwick Water which enters its left bank between Branxholme and Hawick, the Slitrig Water which enters via the right bank in Hawick itself, the Ale Water entering via the left bank at Ancrum, the Jed Water on the right bank just downstream and the Kale Water which enters on the right bank between Crailing and Roxburgh.
The founder of the Ladies Grand Council was Lady Borthwick ( afterwards Lady Glenesk ), and the first meeting of the committee took place at her house in Piccadilly in March 1885.
The Borthwick Institute for Archives recommends that researchers looking at Yorkshire parishes between 1770 and 1812 should check both sources.
The Borthwick Institute for Archives at the University of York Library has an archive of Nouse editions that stretches back to the first edition 1964.
Robertson was born at the Manse of Borthwick, Midlothian, and educated at Borthwick Parish School, Dalkeith Grammar School, and at the University of Edinburgh ( 1733 – 41 ), where he studied divinity ( DD 1759 ).
He was buried on 31 Aug. in the family tomb at Borthwick.
In his latter years his eyesight failed, and after a short illness he died at his house in Adam's Square on 13 Dec. 1787, and was buried with great pomp at Borthwick on 18 Dec.
In January 2008, Borthwick announced that he would be leaving Bath at the end of the 2007 – 08 season for Saracens F. C ..
The DVD contains footage of Cat Power singing and playing electric guitar in a forest at West Kill Mountain, upstate New York, filmed by British photographer Mark Borthwick in essentially a single, nearly two-hour static shot.
The castle was built at the site of an earlier structure, and it remains the Borthwick family ancestral seat.

Borthwick and head
It runs from Robert's Linn (), a burn ( stream ) flowing into the Slitrig Water, westward and north-westward to the head of the Dean Burn (), a tributary of the Borthwick Water.

Borthwick and regiment
On General Ferguson's death, the colonelcy of the regiment passed to John Borthwick, the lieutenant-colonel, in October.
However, Borthwick chose to exchange his colonelcy for that of a Dutch regiment under Lord John Dalrymple, who became the regiment's colonel as of 1 January 1706.

Borthwick and .
* 25-Alastair Borthwick, 90, British author and broadcaster.
Other places in the vicinity include Borthwick Hall, Dewar, the Dewar Burn, the Gala Water, Garvald, Glentress and the Glentress Forest, the Heriot Water, and Stow.
After Flodden, Borthwick continued his work, producing an unknown number of guns, of which none survive.
Robert Borthwick and a Frenchman, Antoine d ' Arces, were involved in designing new artillery defences and fortifications in 1514, although little work appears to have been carried out.
* S. Borthwick and R. Moy ( 2004 ), Popular Music Genres: an Introduction, Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press
* Julian Borthwick, BA ( Bristol ), MA ( Oxon.
The Christian hymn " Be Still, My Soul ", written in German (" Stille meine Wille, dein Jesus hilft siegen ") in 1752 by Katharina Amalia Dorothea von Schlegel ( 1697 – 1768 ) and translated into English in 1855 by Jane Laurie Borthwick ( 1813 – 1897 ), is usually sung to this tune.
The Earl of Surrey captured the Scottish guns, including a group of culverins made in Edinburgh by Robert Borthwick called the ' seven sisters ,' which were dragged to Etal Castle.
Having been pardoned, Morton returned to Scotland early in 1567, and with 600 men appeared before Borthwick Castle, where the Queen had taken refuge after her marriage to Bothwell.
* Steve Borthwick – who is the current Saracens rugby captain lives in Harpenden.
Before embarkation he studied the Persian and Hindustani languages with success under John Borthwick Gilchrist.
Lord Borthwick is a title in the Peerage of Scotland.
A Thomas de Borthwick is mentioned in a charter of Sir Robert Lauder of Quarrelwood, in the reign of King Alexander II.
Borthwick Castle, the ancient seat of the Borthwick family.

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