Friday, 13 June 2014

SCOTLAND 9 - Aberdeenshire and Moray

 
 
 
 
 
 
Aberdeen, known as The Granite City, is the third largest city in Scotland.
 
 

This statue of Robert The Bruce stands proudly outside Marischal College which was founded in 1593 by Earl Marischal.
The present building dates to the 19th century.

 
 

 
 
 
 
 
St Machar's Cathedral in Old Aberdeen dates to the 15th and 16th centuries.
 
 
 
 


Royal Deeside runs westwards from Aberdeen passing Balmoral, the Queen's private residence. Many of Ballater's long established businesses have Royal warrant's and from time to time members of the Royal Family can be seen
in the town.







 Once upon a time the Royal Family would arrive at Ballater railway station on their journey to Balmoral. The station is now preserved as a museum.






 
The River Dee near Balmoral.



This Isambard Kingdom Brunel bridge crosses the river to give access to the Balmoral estate.





The Queen and the Royal Family worship at nearby Crathie Church when they are in residence at Balmoral.





Queen Victoria's faithful servant, John Brown, is buried in the
old churchyard close by.









Braemar is a fine Deeside resort situated where Clunie Water joins the Dee. Well known for its Highland Games which are attended by the Royal Family
each September.





The Fife Arms, a fine Victorian Hotel, dominates the main street.
Whilst Clunie Water flows nearby to join the River Dee.











In the graveyard at Braemar there is a flat tombstone alongside the Invercauld Vault, in memory of one Peter Grant, known as Auld Dubrach.  He was born in 1714 at Dubrach in Glen Dee and became known as the oldest surviving Jacobite.  He had been taken prisoner at the Battle of Culloden but managed to escape from  Carlisle Castle whilst awaiting trial and returned home on foot to resume his normal trade as a weaver and tailor in Auchendryne where he married and had six children.  When he celebrated his 100th birthday, King George 1V heard about him and granted him a pension of 1 guinea per week.
Aud Dubrach died at Auchendryne in 1824 when he was 110 years old. His funeral was attended by over 100 people and it is said that an ‘anker’ of whisky (about 4 gallons) was consumed before he was interred, and at the graveside a piper played the Jacobite tune, ‘ Wha widna fecht for Charlie’s richt’.
 
 

 




The River Dee rises in the Cairngorm Mountains to the west of Braemar and before reaching Braemar it tumbles through a very picturesque 300 metre natural rock gorge known as the Linn of Dee.








 
There are many Pictish stones remaining in Scotland.
 
The Maiden Stone at Pitcaple near Inverurie is a good example. Of pink granite, it stands 10 feet tall and is one of the finest examples of a Pictish cross slab in Aberdeenshire.
It dates from about the 9th century.   The creation of the stone is subject of a local legend when The Maiden of Drumdurno made a wager with a stranger that she could bake a firlot of meal before he could build a road to the top of the local Benachie hill.  The stranger was the Devil and of course he finished the road before the bread was baked.  The maiden fled and as the Devil caught up with her she uttered a prayer to God.  At once she was turned to stone and the place where the Devil touched her shoulder is still marked by the cleft in the stone.
 


 
 
Another huge sandstone pictish cross slab stands on the eastern side of Forres. Standing some 21 feet in height the stone has a Celtic cross on one side and a large battle scene on the other. Although the origin is uncertain, it may be that the stone commemorates the defeat of Malcolm 11 by Norse warriors led by Sueno in 1008.
Local legend says that it stands at the cross roads where Macbeth originally met with the three witches who were eventually imprisoned inside the stone.
 



 
 
 
Fyvie Castle is one of several castles in Aberdeenshire in the care of the National Trust for Scotland. Dating from the 13th century this fine castle has five towers each of which is named after different family owners up to the 19th century.
 
 
 
 


 
 
 
By contrast there are a variety of ecological houses at the Findhorn Foundation Eco Village on the Moray coast.
 
 


 

 

Tucked away in a corner are several houses which have been constructed from redundant whisky vats.



 
 


 



The battlemented clock tower situated in the main street of Dufftown was completed in 1839.   It was originally the town jail, later the Burgh Chambers and now the tourist information office and museum.   The clock, originally from Banff, is known locally as  The clock that hanged MacPherson.’


Hailing from nearby Kingussie, James MacPherson was a Robin Hood type of villain and fiddler who was sentenced to death at Banff in 1700 for ‘robbing the rich and giving to the poor.’   The local people secured a reprieve for MacPherson but, before the pardon arrived, Lord Braco, Sheriff of Banff, put the clock forward by one hour and MacPherson was hung.   Before going to the gallows, MacPherson offered his fiddle to the crowd.   The Biggar Fountain in Banff now occupies the site of the former gallows.


 


 

 
 
 
 
 
Just west of Dufftown, Ballindalloch Castle has been continually occupied by the Macpherson-Grant families since 1546.
Tradition  says that the original intention was to build at a better site defensively but the building was constantly thrown down at night. Eventually the Laird heard a mysterious voice saying, "Build in the cow-haughs and you will meet with no interruptions." He did so and managed to build the first tower in 1546. Since that time the castle has been extended throughout the centuries.
The Rivers Spey and Avon flow through the grounds.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 This is whisky country and most of the distilleries have a visitor centre with tours and tasting and the nearby Glenlivet Distillery is no exception.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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