194 



NOTES AND QUERIES. 



t2'"i S. X, Sept. 8. '60, 



William Stewart, of Clunie ; Lilias Campbell, married to 

 Kinloch, minister of Dundee ; and Margaret Camp- 

 bell, married to William Ferguson, merchant, burgess, 

 and Dean of Guild of Perth)." 



In the Registers for the city of Edinburgh there 

 occurs a service dated 2nd March, 1764, wherein 

 "Ann Campbell, of Fairntoun, relict of the de- 

 ceased Captain John Mainzies of Fairntoun, and 

 eldest daughter in life of the deceased Mr. Patrick 

 Campbell of Monzie, one of the Senators of the 

 College of Justice," claims to be served heir to 

 " the now deceased Oaptain James Campbell of 

 Monzie, my cusin-german, only lawful son of the 

 deceased Mr. Collin Campbell, sometime minister 

 of the Gospel at Gask, who was brother-german 

 of the said deceased Mr. Patrick Campbell, my 

 father," as being "nearest and lawful heir of 

 tailzie and provision to the said deceased Capt. 

 James Campbell, my cusin-german, confornr to 

 the terms of the destination contained in the con- 

 tract of marriage between the said deceased Capt. 

 James Campbell and Mrs. Mary Stirling his 

 spouse, dated 4th Aug. 1760."' 



The destination being to the heirs male of this 

 marriage ; failing these, to the heirs male of any 

 subsequent marriage of Capt. James Campbell ; 

 failing these, to the heirs female of said marriage ; 

 failing these, to the heirs female of any subsequent 

 marriage of Capt. James Campbell ; whom failing, 

 to his own nearest heirs or assignees whomsoever : 

 and in the event of heirs female succeeding, to the 

 eldest heir female and her descendants, without 

 division throughout the whole course of succes- 

 sion. "The said Capt. James Campbell having 

 deceased without issue of his body, and there be- 

 ing no issue male existing of the body of the said 

 deceased Mr. Patrick Campbell of Monzie," her 

 father, the claimant was served heir accordingly. 



According to Douglas's Peerage (title Breadal- 

 bane), Archibald, fourth son of Sir Colin Camp- 

 bell, of Glenurchy, got part of the barony of 

 Monzie by his marriage with Margaret, daughter 

 and heir of Andrew Toshach of Monzie. 



They had a charter of one-fourth part of the 

 lands of Monzie in conjunct fee, 23rd Dec. 1585, 

 wherein he is designed fourth son of Colin Camp- 

 bell of Glenurchy. 



Having no male issue, the estate seems to have 

 gone to his nephew, " Archibald Campbell of 

 Monzie, ancestor of the Campbells of Monzie." 



Douglas, in his baronage., has no notice of 

 Campbell of Monzie ; and Nisbet merely gives 

 his arms, and states that he is " descended of a 

 third son of the family of Glenurchy." 



There is a brief notice of Patrick Campbell, 

 Lord Monzie, in Brunton's Senators of the College 

 of Justice. He is there said to be " second son of 

 Colin Campbell of Monzie (who got a charter 

 from Charles II., dated 1st December, 1676, of 

 the lands of Monzie,) and Anne Oliphant, was re- 



toured heir to his brother Duncan (who died 

 17th June, 1697,) on the 2nd of July, 1708." He 

 took his seat as Lord Monzie 10th June, 1727; 

 and his death is recorded in the Scots Mag. for 

 1751 : — 



" Aug. 1. At Dunse, whither he had gone to drink 

 the waters for his health, in the 76th j'ear of his age, 

 Patrick Campbell of Monzie, Esq., one of the Senators of 

 the College of Justice. He is succeeded in estate by his 

 only surviving sou, Patrick." 



His successor on the Bench was Lord Kames, 

 who took his seat Feb. 6, 1752. 



He had a son — Capitani Colini Campbell, filii 

 legitimi natu maximi M"^' Patricii Campbell de 

 Monzie unius ex senatoribus Collegii Justitias," — 

 who had a charter of the lands of Wester Craige, 

 &c., Perth, 26th July, 1739. 



There is also a charter of the same date to 

 " M" Caroli Campbell advocati filll legitimi natu 

 secundi M"'' Patricii Campbell," etc., of the lands 

 of Trewin in Perth. 



The death of Miss Campbell, eldest daughter of 

 Lord Monzie, is noted in the Scots Mag. for Aug. 

 1739; and in Dec, Colin Campbell, of Monzie, 

 Jun., is appointed Captain in the Earl of Craw- 

 ford's Regiment. 



Upon tEe death of Lord Monzie's only surviving 

 son, the estate had evidently gone, though at a 

 much more recent period than that stated in 2°'* 

 S. ix. 326., to his cousin James as next heir male ; 

 and he dying without issue, it reverted again to 

 the heirs female of Lord Monzie. 



William Galloway. 



Edinburgh. 



DATE OF THE CRUCIFIXION. 

 (2"" S. ix. 404. 473.) 



The precise dates in the personal history of our 

 Saviour have been admirably discussed in A Chro- 

 nological Introduction to the History of the Church, 

 by the Rev. Samuel Farmar Jarvis, D.D., LL.D., 

 Historiographer of the Protestant Episcopal Church 

 in the United States of America. His appoint- 

 ment as historiographer, by the House of Bishops 

 (the House of Clerical and Lay Deputies concur- 

 ring) took place in 1838, and the volume now 

 before me was published in London in 1844 as 

 the first result of his official labours. I presume 

 it was at the same time, if not previously, pub- 

 lished in the United States. 



The I'espective answers of the Editor of " N. & 

 Q." and F. C. H., with the absence of any other 

 answers to the Query of Ctwrm, lead me to the 

 suspicion that this book is not so generally known 

 in England as it assuredly deserves to be ; and I 

 therefore think that I shall please many of the 

 contributors and readers of " N. & Q." by placing 

 on its pages a few extracts, containing the conclu- 

 sions to which the laborious and learned investi- 



