Most of the divisions
of Great Britain are known as shires or counties, names often, but
not always, interchangeable. Shire comes from the Old English sciry
meaning administration, charge. Often, though incorrectly, our early
kings are represented as having divided up their realm and as having
given shares of it to various noblemen to rule in subordination to
the crown. Rather, we should regard many of the present divisions of
the country as the relics of older kingdoms now merged in the larger
unity of Great Britain.
County, or the
district presided over by a count, is a Norman-French name and was
not used on this side of the Channel until the Conquest. The title
of count was regarded as the equivalent of our earl and was soon
replaced by the latter, though the earl’s lady is still called
countess. For long the earl’s duties and privileges were those of
the original count. The comes, or companion of the king, he was the
ruler under his sovereign of a county or shire, and he derived an
official revenue from his earldom.
The county or shire
treated of in this volume has, like a few others, two distinct
names, Angus and Forfar. Angus is much the older, although Forfar is
now much the commoner. Angus is held by some to have been the name
of a Scottish prince who was granted the district by his father,
while others interpret it as meaning a particular kind of hill. The
designation Forfarshire is taken from the name of the county town.
Geographically Angus
and the adjoining county of Mearns or Kincardine belong to one
district, and it is thought that they formed originally one
independent province, which, however, became part of the wider
region of Pictavia. They appear at one time to have been ruled by a
single maormor, but if so they must have been separated at an early
date. |