Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Clunie

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OS grid reference
  
NO109438

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Postcode district
  
PH10

Local time
  
Tuesday 6:28 PM

Council area
  
Perth and Kinross

Scottish parliament
  
Perthshire North

Country
  
Scotland

Post town
  
BLAIRGOWRIE

Police
  
Scottish

Dialling code
  
01250

Lieutenancy area
  
Perth and Kinross

Clunie

Weather
  
6°C, Wind S at 24 km/h, 82% Humidity

UK parliament constituency
  
Perth and North Perthshire

Clunie church near blairgowrie


Clunie is a small settlement in Perthshire, Scotland, 4 miles west of Blairgowrie. It lies on the western shore of the Loch of Clunie. Near the village are the foundations of what is believed to have been a castle used by Kenneth MacAlpin, the first king of Scotland, as a base for hunting in the nearby royal forest of Clunie.

Contents

Map of Clunie, Blairgowrie, UK

On a small island (formerly a crannog) in the loch stand the remains of Clunie Castle, a tower house of the Bishops of Dunkeld. The last pre-Reformation bishop, Robert Crichton, passed the property to his near relative, Robert Crichton, Lord Advocate of Scotland. His son James, the notable Scottish polymath better known as the Admirable Crichton, spent his childhood there.

Within the grounds of the parish church, rebuilt in 1840, stands a mausoleum with a romanesque doorway thought to be from an earlier 12th- or 13th-century church that stood on the same site. The church is now linked with those at Kinclaven and Caputh.

Clunie Primary School is now closed but the local hall survives with regular functions taking place.

Clunie is the birthplace of John James Rickard Macleod, co-recipient of the 1923 Nobel prize in Physiology or Medicine.

Loch clunie


References

Clunie Wikipedia