#Glasgow southside
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movingnortharchive · 2 months ago
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Even vampires need their coffee fix | Glasgow, October 2023
📸: Konica Pop AF + Kodak Ultramax
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unrealityliminal · 3 months ago
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jan 2018
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househuntingscotland · 11 months ago
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2 bedroom flat for sale on McLennan Street, Mount Florida, Glasgow
Asking price: £199,000
Sold price: £248,000
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theragingmoon · 1 year ago
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@tillywester
glasgow, scotland❄️
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toomuchracket · 8 months ago
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lana del rey come to scotland challenge
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kanegardenchips · 5 months ago
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Using forest bark in your landscape is a healthy approach. However, you should know where to use bark in your garden.
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thebathroomcentreglasgowuk · 6 months ago
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Transform your space with stunning bathroom designs from The Bathroom Centre Glasgow! Whether you're dreaming of a sleek modern look or a classic retreat, our Southside Glasgow team delivers exceptional quality and craftsmanship. Visit http://www.thebathroomcentreglasgow.co.uk/
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somusinha · 2 years ago
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Bathroom Installation Services in Glasgow
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The Bathroom Centre Glasgow is the go-to provider for bathroom installation services in Glasgow. With their vast experience, quality products, and exceptional customer service, they are the best choice for anyone looking to transform their bathroom into a luxurious space.
Visit now-
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truth-truly-tasty123 · 2 years ago
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Best Halal Takeaway Glasgow Southside-Truth Truly Tasty
Truth Truly Tasty is the best halal takeaway in Glasgow Southside, offering a delicious range of Mediterranean cuisine. Their menu includes halal options such as shawarma, falafel, hummus, and more, all made with high-quality ingredients and prepared with care.
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truthtrulytasty23456 · 2 years ago
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Best Takeaway Glasgow Southside - Babylon Supermarket
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scotianostra · 2 months ago
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Dugald Stewart the noted Scottish mathematician and philosopher was born on November 22nd 1753 in Edinburgh.
Dugald Stewart was a Scottish philosopher and mathematician. Today regarded as one of the most important figures of the later Scottish Enlightenment.
The Scottish Enlightenment began in the mid 18th century and continued for the best part of a century. It marked a major shift from religion into reason. Religion had been influential in every part of Scottish life. A little over a hundred years before it resulted in a war between the Royalists and covenanters causing countless deaths in period known as the killing time, indeed during the Enlightenment the strict Calvinists Government meant some people were punished for crimes such as blasphemy.
Dugald’s father was a Professor of Mathematics at the University of Edinburgh, his mother Marjorie Stewart was the only daughter of Archibald Stewart, writer to the signet, so he had a good pedigree, he was schooled at Edinburgh high school from then entered the University of Edinburgh where he took an arts degree although he also attended courses in natural philosophy. On the advice of Adam Ferguson, Dugald Stewart spent one year in Glasgow where he attended the lectures of Thomas Reid. On his return to Edinburgh University he spent 13 years teaching mathematics.
In 1775 he was appointed joint professor of mathematics with his father. However, when Ferguson resigned as professor of moral philosophy in 1785 he was succeeded by Dugald Stewart who held the post for 25 years.
His writing included: Elements of the Philosophy of the Human Mind, published over 35 years in three volumes, Outlines of Moral Philosophy and Philosophical Essays.
Stewart left Scotland on a number of occasions to visit France. In 1806 for example he accompanied the Earl of Lauderdale in an attempt to negotiate peace with Napoleon. On a previous visit to the country, he had witnessed the outbreak of the French Revolution.
He spent much of his retirement at Kinneil House, Boness, a stately home owned by the Dukes of Hamilton since the 17th century.
My favourite wee story about Dugald Stewart involves other big hitters of the era like Dr Joseph Black, Professor Adam Ferguson, John Home and two other poets, Robert Burns, our national bard, and Walter Scott, famous for may poetic works as well as the Waverley series and Ivanhoe. I’m not sure about how Walter Scott had come to be at the meeting on Edinburgh Southside in Sciennes Hill House as he was only 15 at the time, but he must have been a bit star struck, these guys were the creme de la creme.
We know what happened, because Scott left several accounts of the meeting. Burns, it should be said, did not do so, but by then Burns was well on his way to fame and no doubt met many of Edinburgh’s literati in the Oyster Clubs and other clubs such as the Crochallan Fencibles Club, one of many he became a member of.
Scott recalled in 1827: “I was a lad of fifteen in 1786-7, when he came first to Edinburgh, but had sense and feeling enough to be much interested in his poetry, and would have given the world to know him; but I had very little acquaintance with any literary people, and still less with the gentry of the west country, the two sets that he most frequented.
“Mr Thomas Grierson was at that time a clerk of my father’s. He knew Burns, and promised to ask him to his lodgings to dinner, but had no opportunity to keep his word, otherwise I might have seen more of this distinguished man.
“As it was, I saw him one day at the late venerable Professor Fergusson’s, where there were several gentlemen of literary reputation, among whom I remember the celebrated Mr Dugald Stewart. Of course we youngsters sate silent, looked and listened.
“The only thing I remember which was remarkable in Burns’ manner, was the effect produced upon him by a print of Bunbury’s, representing a soldier lying dead in the snow, his dog sitting in misery on the one side, on the other his widow with a child in her arms. These lines were written beneath, – ‘Cold on Canadian hills, or Mindens’ plain, Perhaps that parent wept her soldiers slain: Bent o’er her babe, her eye dissolved in dew, The big drops, mingling with the milk he drew, Gave the sad presage of his future years, The child of misery baptized in tears.’ “Burns seemed much affected by the print, or rather the ideas which it suggested to his mind. He actually shed tears.
He asked whose the lines were, and it chanced that nobody but myself remembered that they occur in a half-forgotten poem of Langhorne’s, called by the uncompromising title of The Justice Of The Piece.
“I whispered my information to a friend present, who mentioned it to Burns, who rewarded me with a look and a word, which, though of mere civility, I then received and still ecollect, with very great pleasure.”
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luminitalense · 7 months ago
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Madrassa-Tul-Madinah (Dawat-E-Islami)
Spring in Southside, Glasgow
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househuntingscotland · 11 months ago
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2 bedroom flat for sale on Melville Street, Pollokshields, Glasgow
Asking price: £225,000
Sold price: £282,174
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theragingmoon · 3 months ago
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jack o'lantern watch around shawlands, glasgow 🎃
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commonpigeon · 1 year ago
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when im in the shower or walking places i make up conversations with a special guy of the month and it'll literally just be me telling funny (and fake) anecdotes to a random famous guy. for ages as a teenager that guy was dan howell and for a while it was james mcavoy and it is currently colin morgan. But if i was put in front of any of these people i would have fuck all to say. Hi colin i looooved that show you were in a decade ago and i don't know if this was on purpose but it was a beautiful portrayal of a closeted man. Btw i know you used to live in glasgow so i was just wondering if you have any restaurant suggestions? yeah central westend or southside is all good
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folxlorepod · 2 years ago
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Merkland Street Station - New Lead (!)
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Some interesting historical data for you today. Everybody knows the Glasgow Subway has 15 stops, right? Wrong! Famous for being one of the oldest subways in the world, and remaining largely unchanged since its creation, Glasgow’s ‘Clockwork Orange’ hides an odd mystery: the ghost station of Merkland Street. And before I get any more anons saying ‘But Charlie, Merkland Street isn’t a secret, everyone knows about it’, you need to know that's not what I'm getting at. The secret isn’t that it existed, but why it no longer does.
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If you put your head out from the platforms of the Partick Street subway, just around the bend towards the Southside, you might be able to catch a glimpse of the Merkland Street stop. Most of the original fixtures, signs, etc. live in the Transport Museum, but some of the picked-clean carcass remains. If you’re on the incoming carriage, you may be able to spot the stop by a change in sound, a softening of the screeching the trains make as they hurtle through the narrow tunnel. If you look out of the window and focus on the darkness just right - for only a split second - it's said you might see a face staring back that's not your own. At least, so I’ve heard.
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Some say the reported haunting started during the Second World War, when Merkland Street was bombed accidentally (they were likely aiming for a nearby shipyard). It's also claimed by some that the haunting's increase in frequency and potency led to the station's close, with the city opening the busier, better connected Partick Station right next door. Some of us… think otherwise. That the haunting started well before the war, that it was there before the subway was even built.
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My research into Merkland Street started due to a… very personal interest. Which I won't be getting into - again, get out of my inbox 'anons', it's none of your business. It didn't take me long to find some evidence, with these pictures offering insight that even someone who hasn't been touched by the between can appreciate. See below. Right there! I’ve been there before - stood on that platform, felt the trains pass by, felt feathers and talons brush through my coat, watched the glisten of old lights glint on a canine too sharp to be true.
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And then I found something that shook me to my core, and it takes a lot to do that these days. Look, I know what you probably think of me - that this is either some long, elaborate joke, or I'm completely obsessed with something that isn't even real. But this is a photo from 1972, taken by George Watson. Look closely. If this is from the Seventies, then why is it that in the background, that husk of a man, more a shadow than a being… How come he looks like me? Stands like me? Hunches his shoulders to the floor like me?
I’m waiting for the subway. I’m waiting.
-Charlie
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