English:
Identifier: oldglasgowplace00macg (find matches)
Title: Old Glasgow: the place and the people, from the Roman occupation to the eighteenth century
Year: 1888 (1880s)
Authors: MacGeorge, Andrew
Subjects:
Publisher: Glasgow, Blackie
Contributing Library: Robarts - University of Toronto
Digitizing Sponsor: University of Toronto
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n of Luss, and which was afterwards called the auld Pedagogy. It was situated in the Rottenrow, and is supposed by Professor Innes to have been in existence and used as a chapter-house before the papal foundation. It in-cluded a dwelling-place for students of arts, which was named Collegmin,in which they had chambers and a common hall. This old building remained till the middle of the present century. The accompanying view of the ruins is taken from the north. But the faculty did not long remain there. In 1459 they acquired from James, the first Lord Hamilton, a portion of the land in the High Street on which the present buildings were subsequently erected. Thegrant was in favour of Master Duncan Bunch, principal regent of the faculty of arts of the Stiidiinn of Glasgow, and it conveyed a tenement in the High Street, near the place of the Dominican Friars, together with four acres of land in the Dove Hill, contiguous to the Molendinar Munimenta Universitatis, vol. i. p. 120. ^ Laws Memorials.
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^ c ^ % w w o H ^ H m O W w ffi 63 H ^ «i ^ n 1—1 «; >^ tti rh H H O h (i «; «1 EH W P4 ^ «; Pf-1 O TJie Collcsrc Biiildinss. 125 Burn, on the condition that twice in every day, at the close of their noontide and evening meals, the regents and students should rise and pray for his own soul and that of Euphemia his wife, countess of Douglas and lady of Bothwell; and that if a chapel or oratory should be built in the college, the regents and students should also the reassemble, and on their bended knees sing an ave to the Virgin with
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