7-564: The Molendinar Burn is a burn in Glasgow , Scotland . It was the site of the settlement, Mellingdenor, that grew to become the kernel of Glasgow, and where St Mungo founded his church in the 6th century. It was later used to power the growing town's mills and the name became adapted because the word "molendinar" means "relating to a mill or millers", possibly because that is what the Welsh name Mellingdenor originally meant. Richard Thomas' 1795 "Map of
14-610: Is "bourn", " bourne ", "borne", "born", which is retained in placenames like Bournemouth , King's Somborne , Holborn , Melbourne . A cognate in German is Born (contemp. Brunnen ), meaning "well", "spring" or "source", which is retained in placenames like Paderborn in Germany. Both the English and German words derive from the same Proto-Germanic root. Scots Gaelic has the word bùrn , also cognate, but which means " fresh water ";
21-630: The River Clyde is fairly similar to that of 1795. However the majority of the length of the burn has been culverted in stages since the 1870s. Short stretches of the burn can be seen above ground in Molendinar Park (in the Blackhill / Provanmill area) and beside the former Great Eastern Hotel on Duke Street . The final 250 m (270 yd) stretch from Greendyke to the Clyde was rerouted at some time in
28-491: The city centre area of the burn in greater detail. It can be seen from both of these maps that the burn ran almost entirely above ground at that time. The present source of the burn is Frankfield Loch in Cardowan . This loch did not exist (or was not mapped) when Thomas published his 1795 map. A short man-made cut connects Frankfield Loch to the 0.9 km (0.56 mi) distant Hogganfield Loch . The route from Hogganfield Loch to
35-474: The city, the course turned south past "Kirk" and down the route of the present day Wishart Street, passing under what are now Duke Street and Gallowgate to pass in front of St Andrew's Church. Saltmarket south of Bridgegate did not exist at that time, the burn ran through fields there to enter the Clyde at the present day Clyde Street at Mart Street. Peter Fleming's 1807 "Map of the City of Glasgow and suburbs" shows
42-678: The past. The burn now enters the Clyde 125 m (137 yd) upstream of the 1795 confluence point, near the Tidal Weir. 55°53′06″N 4°09′02″W / 55.884985°N 4.150681°W / 55.884985; -4.150681 Burn (landform) In local usage, a burn is a kind of watercourse . The term applies to a large stream or a small river . The word is used in Scotland and England (especially North East England ) and in parts of Ulster , Kansas , Australia and New Zealand . The cognate of burn in standard English
49-464: The town of Glasgow & country seven miles around" clearly shows the course of the burn. The source at that time was a small loch at "Huggenfield" to the north east of the city (the present day Hogganfield Loch). The course then headed generally south west, passing through the virtually undeveloped areas of Craighead, Blackhill and Blochairn , where it passed under the Monkland Canal. Approaching
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