COCKPOOL, remnant of old baronial castle, in Ruthwell parish, Dumfriesshire.
COCKS, burn, running eastward to the Calder, in Lanarkshire.
COCKUM, rivulet, running southward to the Gala, near Stow village, Edinburgh- .shire.
COE, rivulet, traversing Glencoe, and entering Loch Leven, in Argyleshire.
COGRIEBURN, place in Johnstone parish, Dumfriesshire.
COICH, affluent of the Dee, in Crathie parish, Aberdeenshire.
COIGACH, district of Cromartyshire, bounded by the Minch, Loch Broom, Ross-shire, and Sutherland. It is included in Lochbrooin parish, contains Ullapool village, has a post office of its own name under that village, measures 22 miles by 8, is mostly mountainous, and contains the fine vales of Strathceannard and Rhidorch.
COIGNAFEARN, mountain near source of Findhorn river, Inverness-shire.
COILA.
COILANTOGLE, ford on Vennachoir rivulet, at effluence from Loch Vennachoir, 2 miles south-west of Callander, Perthshire. It was 'Clan Alpine's out-most guard,' the place to which Roderick Dhu led Fitz-James ; but, for its use as a ford, it has been superseded by a bridge.
COILSFIELD, seat, | mile south-east of Tarbolton, Ayrshire. It was Burns' ' Castle o' Montgomery,' where his ' High-land Mary ' served as dairymaid ; it be-longed, in his time, to Colonel Hugh Montgomery, who became Earl of Eglinton ; and it is now called Montgomery.
COILTIE, rivulet, rising on lofty shoulder of Mealfourvounie Mountain, and running impetuously about 7 miles to Loch Ness, in Inverness-shire.
COINICH, seat and streamlet in Kingairloch, Argyleshire.
COINNEAG, lake in Rosskeeii parish, Ross-shire.
COIRE, lake in Daviot parish, Inverness-shire.
COIR-NA-FEARN, lake in Farr parish, Sutherland.
COIR-NAN-URISKIN, large, deep, circular hollow, engirt by acclivitous lofty rocks, on face of Benvenue, overlooking Loch Katrine, in Perthshire.
COIRUISK.
COLDBACKY, terminal part of mountain-range, in Tongue parish, Sutherland.
COLDINGHAM, village and parish on coast of Berwickshire. The village stands 3 miles north-north-east of Reston Junction, and has a post office under Ayton, an inn, a Volunteer hall of 1872, interesting remains of an ancient priory, a parochial church, a United Presbyterian church, and a public school with about 121 scholars. Pop. 572. The parish contains also Reston, Auchincraw, and Coldingham-Shore villages, and Houndwood and Grants House hamlets. Its length is 8J miles ; its greatest breadth 7i miles ; its area 24,021 acres. Real property in 1880-81, 32,579. Pop., quoad civilia, 3173 ; quoad sacra, 1644. The coast measures 6J miles in direct line, but fully 9 miles in line of sinuosities ; is all bold and rocky, has numerous caves and fissures, and includes St. Abb's Head and Fast Castle. The interior is mostly uneven, contains lower terminal ranges of the Lammermoors, and consists partly of fertile vales and hollows, but largely of pastoral or barren moorland. Coldingham Loch, with an area of about 30 acres, lies about 300 yards from the sea, and has an elevation of about 300 feet above sea-level. The seats are Coldingham Law, Homefield, Templehall, Press, Highlaws, Houndwood, Fairlaw, Coveyheugh, Newmains, Berrybank, Stoneshiel, Sunnyside, and Renton ; and the chief antiquities are vestiges of 2 ancient Caledonian camps, vestiges of 2 Roman camps, ruins of Fast Castle, and traces or sites of numerous Border peels. Established and Free churches are at Houndwood; and there are within the parish 6 schools with accommodation for 572 scholars.
COLDINGHAMSHIRE, ancient district, comprehending Coldingham, Eyemouth, Ayton, and Aldcambus parishes, and parts of Mordington, Foulden, Chirnside, Bunkle, and Cockburnspath, in Berwickshire.
COLDINGHAM-SHORE, fishing village in Coldingham parish, Berwickshire. It has a public school with about 54 scholars. Pop. 298.
COLDROCHIE, streamlet on boundary between Redgorton and Monedie parishes, Perthshire.
COLDSTONE.
COLDSTREAM, town and parish on southern border of Berwickshire. The town stands on high bank overlooking the Tweed, 9J miles north-east-by-east of Kelso ; was the place of an international truce in 1491 ; gave origin to the regiment called the Colclstream Guards, raised by General Monk ; is near a ford of the Tweed, crossed by many armies, both Scotch and English, in the international wars ; gave interment, in the cemetery of an ancient wealthy nunnery, to most of the distinguished Scottish officers who fell at the battle of Flodden ; presents a well-built but irregularly-aligned appearance ; and has a head post office with most departments, a railway station If mile distant, 2 banking offices, 3 hotels, an elegant five-arched bridge on the Tweed, a recent lofty monument to Mr. Charles Marjoribanks, a Volunteer hall of 1872, an Established church, a Free church, 2 United Presbyterian churches, and 2 public schools with about 279 scholars. Pop. 1616. The parish contains also the village of Lennel, and measures about 4f miles by 3. Acres, 8320. Eeal property in 1880-81, 20,499. Pop. 2561. The surface is flat and well cultivated. The seats are the Hirsel, the Lees, Lennel House, Milne-Graden, Hope Park, and CastleLaw. There are 4 schools for 550 scholars, and 2 of them for 250 are new.