St. Andrews

St. Andrews, a famous city of Fife, occupies a bold site on St. Andrews Bay, 42 m. NE. of Edinburgh; for long the ecclesiastical metropolis of Scotland, and associated with many stirring events in Scottish history; its many interesting ruins include a 12th-century priory, a cathedral, “robbed” in 1559, a castle or bishop's palace built in the 13th century; has a university (St. Salvator's 1521 and St. Leonard's 1537) the first founded in Scotland, and is still an important educational centre, having several excellent schools (Madras College the chief); since the Reformation its trade has gradually dwindled away; fishing is carried on, but it depends a good deal on its large influx of summer visitors, attracted by the splendid golf links and excellent sea-bathing.

Population (circa 1900) given as 7,000.

Definition taken from The Nuttall Encyclopædia, edited by the Reverend James Wood (1907)

St. Aloysius * Saint Arnaud, Jacques Leroy de
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Saghalien
Saguenay
Saguntum
Sahara
Saharanpur
Sahib
Saigon
Saint
St. Albans
St. Aloysius
St. Andrews
Saint Arnaud, Jacques Leroy de
St. Asaph
St. Bees
St. Bernard
St. Brieuc
St. Christopher
St. Clair
St. Cloud
St. Cyr
Saint-Cyr, Laurent Gouvion, Marquis de

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Links here from Chalmers

Agard, Arthur
Andrews, James Pettit
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Annand, William
Arundel, Thomas
Ashmole, Elias
Bacon, Francis
Baillie, Robert
Becan, Martin
Bernard, Nicholas
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