2012
NS4673 : Burial place of Stirling of Law
taken 14 years ago, near to Old Kilpatrick, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland

Burial place of Stirling of Law
This is the south-eastern corner of the kirkyard of NS4673 : Old Kilpatrick Parish Church. Although the wall on the right is in shadow, it should be possible to discern that it incorporates a mural tablet: NS4673 : Mural tablet (Stirling of Law burial place). Its inscription reads:
"THIS IS THE BURIAL PLACE
APOYNTED FOR WILLIAM
STIRLING OF LAW HIS
WYFE AND CHILDREIN
MAY 26 1658"
John Bruce, on pages 104-105 of his "History of the Parish of West or Old Kilpatrick" (1893), says that "a mural tablet in Stirling of Law's tomb gives the date of 1658 as time of erection, while over the doorway is carved the arms of Stirling and Maxwell per pale with the initials W S & M M 1659"; he also includes an illustration of the latter stone, which is located above an opening on the left side-wall of this area, and which is shown at NS4673 : Carved stone (Stirling of Law burial place).
(On the initials WS and MM that are carved into both stones, see below.)
An effigy of a knight, which is now attached to the church wall, had previously been located here, although it may earlier have been inside the church itself: NS4673 : Old Kilpatrick Parish Church: effigy of a knight.
The lands of Law (NS5173) adjoined those of Edenbarnet (or Edinbarnet) and Craigbanzeoch; "the adjoining lands of Law formed part of the lordship of Drumry and were acquired by William Stirling, first of Glorat, in 1528, from Sir James Hamilton of Finnart with consent of his spouse, Margaret Livingston, heiress of the Drumry and neighbouring lands, on 28th November, 1530" [John Bruce, on page 287 of his "History of the Parish of West or Old Kilpatrick" (1893)].
After giving the details of intervening generations of the family, the same work notes that William, fifth of Law, one of the commissioners of the county, married Margaret Maxwell of Dargavel (hence the WS and MM initials on the mural tablet). He left three daughters, but the direct line of male descent ended in him. At some time (a number of years before Bruce's book was written), there had been a Law Tower, but the stones from its ruins were carted away by the tenant of Law Farm, and some of them were used in making repairs at Old Edenbarnet House.
The Pont/Blaeu map of the Lennox, published in 1654, shows Law, with Edinbarnet marked nearby. Roy's Military Survey of Scotland (1740-50s) also includes it, as Lawes, near Inbarnett (Edinbarnet). Roy also shows a Muirlee nearby, which is depicted as a ruin (Muirlees) on the first-edition OS map (c.1860).
In the background, on the right, is Dumbarton Road, the main road through Old Kilpatrick.
"THIS IS THE BURIAL PLACE
APOYNTED FOR WILLIAM
STIRLING OF LAW HIS
WYFE AND CHILDREIN
MAY 26 1658"
John Bruce, on pages 104-105 of his "History of the Parish of West or Old Kilpatrick" (1893), says that "a mural tablet in Stirling of Law's tomb gives the date of 1658 as time of erection, while over the doorway is carved the arms of Stirling and Maxwell per pale with the initials W S & M M 1659"; he also includes an illustration of the latter stone, which is located above an opening on the left side-wall of this area, and which is shown at NS4673 : Carved stone (Stirling of Law burial place).
(On the initials WS and MM that are carved into both stones, see below.)
An effigy of a knight, which is now attached to the church wall, had previously been located here, although it may earlier have been inside the church itself: NS4673 : Old Kilpatrick Parish Church: effigy of a knight.
The lands of Law (NS5173) adjoined those of Edenbarnet (or Edinbarnet) and Craigbanzeoch; "the adjoining lands of Law formed part of the lordship of Drumry and were acquired by William Stirling, first of Glorat, in 1528, from Sir James Hamilton of Finnart with consent of his spouse, Margaret Livingston, heiress of the Drumry and neighbouring lands, on 28th November, 1530" [John Bruce, on page 287 of his "History of the Parish of West or Old Kilpatrick" (1893)].
After giving the details of intervening generations of the family, the same work notes that William, fifth of Law, one of the commissioners of the county, married Margaret Maxwell of Dargavel (hence the WS and MM initials on the mural tablet). He left three daughters, but the direct line of male descent ended in him. At some time (a number of years before Bruce's book was written), there had been a Law Tower, but the stones from its ruins were carted away by the tenant of Law Farm, and some of them were used in making repairs at Old Edenbarnet House.
The Pont/Blaeu map of the Lennox, published in 1654, shows Law, with Edinbarnet marked nearby. Roy's Military Survey of Scotland (1740-50s) also includes it, as Lawes, near Inbarnett (Edinbarnet). Roy also shows a Muirlee nearby, which is depicted as a ruin (Muirlees) on the first-edition OS map (c.1860).
In the background, on the right, is Dumbarton Road, the main road through Old Kilpatrick.
Old Kilpatrick Parish Church
The church was built in 1812 on more or less the same spot as its predecessor (the latter was a pre-Reformation church; it was of great age, although the precise period in which it was built is unknown).
