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224 pages, Paperback
First published September 28, 2008




Living in a cave was not unusual. Prehistoric man and many primitive tribes were known to be troglodytes. But in sixteenth century Scotland, all most people knew about caves was based on local folklore; and because these tales involved frightening superstitions, it was not common for people to want to live in them, or even enter them.
A settlement in Scotland was called a farm town, or if it contained a parish church or gristmill, it was a kirk town or mill town, respectively. The size of these settlements, which centered on a grouping of individually-owned fields, was determined by the total area of land that one or sometimes two or three plough teams of horses or oxen could keep under cultivation. Homes, which were mainly small huts, all focused on a central street or green where the market was set up once a week. This gave the residents, as well as nearby farmsteaders and peasants from nearby estates, an opportunity to buy and sell their produce and crafts. Sawney's father sold his excess produce in such a town.

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