In the shadow of Kirkharle’s small but rather famous church of St.Wilfrid ’s (baptism of Lancelot
‘Capability’ Brown, et al) sits a
curious monument dedicated to the memory of one Robert Loraine. This prominent
local landowner and dignitary lived in the troubled days of the Border Reivers,
and was known as ‘a zealous Prosecutor of Robbers, Thieves &
Moss-Troopers’. He lived in Kirkharle
Tower , and maintained a
number of alliances with other families (notably the Fenwicks) as well as a
large stock of arms and horses to help maintain law and order as best he could.
On day in 1483, however, Robert Loraine let his defences
slip and was killed by a party of Scots who ‘lay in ambush between his house
and the church… & in his return home, suddenly surprised and dragged him
into an adjacent Close’. The attackers, determined to make an example of
Loraine, cut his corpse up into tiny pieces, stuffed them into his horse’s
saddlebags and set it loose to wander home.
The monument we see today to the chap known locally as ‘the
unfortunate gentleman’ was erected in 1728 by a descendant, Sir William Loraine
(the first employer of Capability Brown, actually), and replaced an earlier
stone which had fallen into disrepair.
awesoeme written article
ReplyDeletei also liked thankss
ReplyDeletelovely peice of work
ReplyDeletewow good
ReplyDeletei enjoyed this
ReplyDeletethankss
ReplyDelete