MORTIMER, the
surname of an ancient potent family of Norman descent, who possessed the
lands of Aberdour in fife. At an early period these lands belonged to a
family of the name of Vetere-Ponte or Vipont, a surname still known in
Scotland, under the latter form, though now very rare. This family ended
in an heir female, Anicea, only daughter and sole heiress of ‘Johannes
dominus de Vetere-ponte or Vypont, anno 2 regni Davidis I.’ She married,
in 1126, Alanus de Mortuo-Mari or Mortimer, who thereby acquired right
to her lands. The name, though fancifully supposed to have been first
borne by a crusader, and said to be derived from “De Mortuo Mari,” “from
the Dead Sea,” was taken from a place in Normandy, the great ancestor of
the family being a relative by blood of William the Conqueror. In the
Register of the abbey of St. Colme there is the following entry in
Latin: “Sir Alan Mortimer, lord of Aberdour, gave the half of the lands
of his town of Aberdour to God and the monks of St. Colme’s Isle for the
benefit of a burial-place to himself and his posterity, in the church of
their monastery.” Sibbald (History of Fife, page 92, edition 1803) says,
“It is reported that Alain the founder being dead, the monks carrying
his corpse in a coffin of lead, by barge, in the nighttime, to be
interred within their church, some wicked monks did throw the samen in a
great deep, betwixt the land and the monastery, which to this day by the
neighbouring fishermen and salters is called Mortimer’s Deep.” With the
Mortimer family the lands of Aberdour continued for more than a century,
when they came to the ancestors of the earl of Morton, the present
proprietor. |