ABERNETHY, a burgh and parish, partly in the district of Cupar, county of Fife, but chiefly in the county of Perth, 3 miles (\r. S. W.) from Newburgh; containing, with the village of Aberdargie, 1920 inhabitants, of whom 827 are in the town of Abernethy. This place, originally called Abernethyn, is supposed by some to have derived its name from the small stream of the Nethy, flowing through the centre of the parish, and so denominated from the old British term jieilli, or nid, implying a"turning"or" whirling stream", of which term nethii is a diminutive. But others are of opinion that the appellation has been received from Nectan or Nethan, one of the Pictish kings who dignified the place, and of whose kingdom it was the capital. The most ancient and credible of the Scottish historians agree in representing this locality as the metropolis of the Pictish nation, both in civil and religious matters; but the particulars relating to the erection of the church are variously described. The Pictish Chronicle states the edifice to have been raised by Nethan, or Nectan, I., about the year 456, as a sacrifice offered to God and St. Bridget, for the recovery of his kingdom; whilst Fordua asserts, that St. Patrick himself introduced St. Bridget and her nine nuns into the religious establishment of Abernethy. Others, however, think that the church was founded and endowed towards the close of the sixth century, by King Gamard M'Dourmach, or in the beginning of the seventh century, by Nethan II., his immediate successor. The church was shortly after made the head of an episcopal see; and here was the residence of the metropolitan of the Pictish kingdom, and probably of all Scotland, until the Picts were subdued by one of the Kenneths, and both the see and the residence of the bishop were transferred to St. Andrew's, the head of which was afterwards acknowledged as the national bishop. Abernethy was subsequently comprehended in the bishopric of Dunblane, founded in the twelfth century, by King David I., out of the national bishopric of St. Andrew's. After the removal of the see from this place, the church became collegiate, and was in the possession of the Culdees, of whom but little is known with certainty, except that this parish was their principal seat, and that here they had a university for the education of youth, in which the whole of the sciences were taught, as far as they were then knowm. In the twelfth century, by a charter of King William the Lion and of Lawrence de Abernethy, the church and advowson of Abernethy, with its pertinents, were conveyed to the abbey of Arbroath; and about the year 1240, the altarage of the church was given with certain lands to the Bishop of Dunblane, who in return, among other things, engaged to provide for the service of the church, to enrol it among his prebendal institutions, and to instal the abbot of Arbroath as a prebendary or canon, with a manse and privileges similar to those of the other canons. The ancient monastery, in 1273, became a priory of canons regular, and a cell of Inchaffray, all the Culdee institutions yielding to the increasing power of the Romish Church; and this priory seems to have been afterwards converted into a provostry or college of secular priests, the church becoming a collegiate establishment. The church was valued at the Reformation at £273 per annum, and was afterwards a parsonage. The civil occupancy of the principal lands appears to have taken place at an early period. In the twelfth century, Orme, the son of Hugh, received the lands of Abernethy from King William the Lion, and from them both himself and his posterity took their name. Alexander de Abernethy, a descendant, swore fealty to Edward I. in 1292, and was appointed by Edward II., in 1310, warden of the counties between the Forth and the Grampians. His lands are supposed to have been forfeited after the battle of Bannockburn, or to have been continued in the family only by the marriage of his daughters, the eldest of whom, Margaret, was united to John Stewart, Earl of Angus, who thus obtained the lordship of Abernethy, and whose grand-daughter, Margaret Stewart, married William, Earl of Douglas. Their son, George Douglas, on the resignation of his mother in 1389, became Earl of Angus. This family, in the earlier period of Scottish history, were numerous and powerful: during their more intimate connexion with the parish, they seem to have had a castle or place of residence here, which tradition says was near the house of Carpow; and some of the most illustrious of the Earls of Angus were interred in the parish. According to some authors, it was at Abernethy that Malcolm Canmore did homage to William the Conqueror; but so many different opinions exist on the point as to render it altogether doubtful. This TOWN, which is of great antiquity, and, from the ruins discovered eastward of it, is supposed to have been once much more extensive, is situated near the confluence of the Tay and Earn rivers, on the south-eastern border of the county, and adjoining Fifeshire, in which county a small portion of it stands. The lands in the vicinity, and throughout the greater part of the parish, are interesting and beautiful, consisting of large tracts highly cultivated, forming on the north a portion of the rich vale of Strathearn, enlivened by the rivers; on the south the lands are for the most part hilly, occupying about two-thirds of the whole area, and belonging to the picturesque range of the Ochils. About a mile to the east is the mansion of Carpow, a neat modern structure; a little beyond it is a small stream which separates Abernethy from the parish of Newburgh, in Fifeshire, and to the west is the mansion of Ayton House, skirted by the Farg rivulet, which flows through the romantic scenery of Glenfarg, and joins the Earn at Colfargie. In the south-western district, about three-quarters of a mile from the town, rises Castle Law, a steep grassy elevation, 600 feet high, the summit of which is the seat of a vitrified fort. It commands a beautiful view of Strathearn and the Carse of Gowrie, with the interjacent Tay, where there is an island named Mugdrum, belonging to this parish, a mile in length, comprehending thirtyfive acres of rich arable land, and which is thronged in autumn and winter with various kinds of water-fowl, and sometimes is visited by fine wild swans. The town contains a library, but no other institutions of interest. The Perth line of the Edinburgh, Perth, and Dundee railway company passes here, and has a station. A large portion of the inhabitants, both male and female, as well as of those residing in the villages of Aberdargie and Glenfoot, in the parish, are employed in weaving linen-yarn, for the manufacturers of Newburgh. The trade consists chiefly in the sale of grain and potatoes, the former being sent to the weekly market of Newburgh, and the potatoes taken to Ferryfield, on the estate of Carpow, where is a stone pier, and thence conveyed to the London market. The Earl of Wemyss has fishings on the Earn, and there are others on the Earn and the Tay, belonging to the estate of Carpow. A brick and tile work is in operation j and a bleachfield has been formed at Clunie, in the eastern district, which has to some extent caused an increase in the population. Besides the above mentioned line of railway, the turnpike-road from Perth to Edinburgh passes through the parish: several good roads, also, are kept in repair by statute labour, one of them leading from Perth to Cupar, in which line a new bridge was erected over the Farg a few years since. There are two ferries, one at Gary, and the other at Ferryfield. Cattle-fairs are held on the 12th of February, the fourth Wednesday in May, and the second Thursday in November; they are, however, in a very low state. Abernethy is a burgh of barony, held under Lord Douglas. It had a charter from Archibald, Earl of AjJgus, Lord of Abernethy, dated the 23rd of August, 14/6, in which mention is made of a royal charter of erection, in his favour, by King James II. By a charter of William, Earl of Angus, dated the 29th day of November, 162S, the privileges were confirmed, and, among them, the right of fairs and markets, the customs of which were to be applied to the use of the burgh, unless they amounted to more than 100 raerks Scots yearly, when the surplus was to be accounted for to the superior. The practice of the burgh has fixed the number of bailies at two, and the councillors at fifteen, and by right of charter the burgesses elect their magistrates; the fee for admission as a burgess, to a stranger, is 10s. 6(/., and to the son of a burgess, half that sum. The bailies formerly exercised both a civil and criminal jurisdiction, to a small extent, but their authority has been lately challenged; they still, however, hold courts for petty offences, from which there is no appeal but to the court of justiciary or session. The PARISH comprises about 7030 acres, of which 2568 acres are comprehended in the northern division, forming the lowest part of the vale of Strathearn, and the remainder consists of a portion of the Ochil hills. The soil of the former is deep rich clay, black earth, and sand; and that of the latter, tilly, and resting on whinstone, among which numerous valuable pebbles have at different times been found. All kinds of grain and green crops, of the first quality, are raised on the lower portion, where the lands are cultivated to the highest degree; the hilly part contains 950 acres of permanent pasture, S50 acres in plantations, and 2660 arable, the last producing oats, barley, turnips, potatoes, &c. The whole farming of the parish is of the most approved kind. The rocks between the Tay and the Ochils consist principally of the old red sandstone, and the substrata of the Ochils chiefly comprise the clinkstone, amygdaloid, porphyry, and claystone varieties of the trap formation. Gneiss, primitive trap, and quartz are found in boulders, especially on the hills; and quarries of the greenstone and clinkstone rocks are in operation, supplying a material for roads and coarse buildings. Zeolites of great beauty are found in Glenfarg, and agates, jaspers, &c., in many places; there is limestone in Auchtermuchty, and in the Glenfarg quarry have been found scales of the ichthyolites. The annual value of real property in the parish is £9626. Ecclesiastically the parish is in the presbytery of Perth, synod of Perth and Stirling, and in the gift of the Earl of Mansfield; the minister's stipend is £2.56. 5. 7., with a manse, and a glebe valued at £12 per annum. The church, built in 1S02, is a plain but commodious edifice, containing 600 sittings. There are places of worship belonging to the Free Church and United Presbyterian Church, and another at Aberdargie connected with the United Presbyterian Church. The parochial school affords instruction in the usual branches; the master has the maximum salary, and the fees, together with about £13. 13., chiefly arising from a bequest by Lord Stormont, of £200, in 1748, and another producing £1. 13., for teaching. On the top of a hill behind Pitlour, are the remains of an ancient fort called the " Roman camp," supposed by some antiquaries to have been occupied by the Roman army before the great battle with Galgacus. Many Roman antiquities have been discovered in the parish, leading to the supposition that this people had an important military station here; and a Roman road is said formerly to have existed, conducting to Ardoch, and another to Perth. lu the south-western extremity of the parish, in Fifeshire, is the ruin of Balvaird Castle, situated among the Ochils, the property of the Earl of Mansfield and his ancestors since the time of Robert II., and which conferred a title on Andrew Murray of Balvaird, who was settled minister of Abdie in 1618, knighted in 1633, and created Lord Balvaird in 1641. But the most interesting relic of former times, and that which has excited the greatest interest, is a round tower, to which there is nothing similar in Scotland, except at Brechin, and the origin of which is altogether involved in obscurity. It stands at the entrance of the church, near the site containing the old college and ecclesiastical estabhshment, and also the ancient church taken down in 1802; and has a clock, and an excellent bell which has been used from time immemorial for ecclesiastical purposes, and to a certain extent by the burgh for civil purposes. The building is seventy-four feet high, and forty-eight feet round outwardly at the base, and consists of sixty-four courses of hewn freestone, diminishing a little towards the summit, where there are four windows, equidistant, facing the four quarters of heaven, each five feet nine inches high, and two feet two inches wide. The walls, at the bottom, are three feet and a half thick; and opposite to the north is a door, eight feet in height and three feet wide, arched overhead. The structure is flat at the top, having a large projecting moulding for the uppermost course of stones; and, being entirely hollow, and without staircase, is ascended by scaling ladders attached to wooden platforms. The Rev. John Brown, for thirty-six years minister of the Associate Burgher congregation at Haddington, and author of the Setf-inlerpreting Bible and other theological works, was born at Carpow in 1*22.