Hermitage; is felt to mean a place where a hermit lives or an Army Fort/Guard house.
A hermit house;
An army house;
With Soulis owning it, it could have been either, a hermit or army (guard) house.
Though one of the for districts it was in was;
with the spelling of Ermytag, have a tendency to think army house or guardhouse to be correct.
Ermydoune, one of the four districts of Liddesdale 1376, is felt to be named Ermy (army), -doune (fort), the region of the Ermytag (Hermitage or army house/guardhouse).
Armstrong; (strong arm); as seen on;
The to of the Milnholm Cross;
But;
The top shied with arm symbol was added;
in the nineteenth century.
In the fourteenth century the earliest known writing;
Robert de Lawis (likely Robert Elwald of Lawis (Hermitage Hill))
The name seems to be Armystrand.
Given;
Which means; an army along a river bank.
Map;
In the 1576 Saxton, map do the peel towers of the Armstrong, with Mangerton, north of Whitehaugh, on the river (Liddel), does it look like an army strand?
MSE 1/28/2014
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