Cothiemuir Wood - Stone Circle
Cothiemuir Wood - Stone Circle
Rhynie - Pictish Symbol Stones
Rhynie - Pictish Symbol Stones
Moray - Birnie Kirk
Elgin - Cathedral
Elgin - Cathedral
Elgin - Cathedral
Elgin - Cathedral
Elgin - Cathedral
Nairn
Nairn
Nairn
Nairn
Nairn
Battle of Culloden
Battle of Culloden
Inverness
Inverness - Castle
Inverness - Cathedral
Inverness - Town House
Inverness - Town House
Nigg - Old Church
Port Elphinstone - Broomend of Crichie
Port Elphinstone - Broomend of Crichie
Maiden Stone
Maiden Stone
Balquhain
Balquhain
Easter Aquhorthies
Easter Aquhorthies
Easter Aquhorthies
Inverurie - Brandsbutt Stone
Loanhead of Daviot
Loanhead of Daviot
Loanhead of Daviot
Loanhead of Daviot
Dyce - Old Parish Church
Dyce - Old Parish Church
Dyce - Old Parish Church
River Don
Brechin - Cathedral
Brechin - Cathedral - (PiP)
Brechin - Cathedral
Brechin - Cathedral
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Monymusk - Parish Church


The first missionaries to arrive here were the Culdees'. It is possible that they were the followers of St. Ninian and his missionaries from Whithorn.
At the beginning of the 12th century, Queen Margaret of Scotland imposed reforms. The 12 Culdees became a Prior and 11 canons of the Augustinian Order. The tower and some parts of the present church date from this period.
Malcolm III gave a grant of land to the Cathedral of St. Andrew's (Fife) in thanksgiving for victory over his enemies in 1078, and the Romanesque style of architecture suggests that the building was completed early in the second half of the 12th Century.
At that time the church building may have been a dual purpose place of worship: a parish Church for the inhabitants who stood in the nave and a conventual building for the canons who occupied the Chancel.
By the early 16th Century the Priory entered into a period of decline. Fire gutted the Priory buildings and debt ended its existence. The church now became the Parish Church. The structure has been altered several times, including post-Reformation (around 1690), and in 1822, 1851 and again in 1921
At the beginning of the 12th century, Queen Margaret of Scotland imposed reforms. The 12 Culdees became a Prior and 11 canons of the Augustinian Order. The tower and some parts of the present church date from this period.
Malcolm III gave a grant of land to the Cathedral of St. Andrew's (Fife) in thanksgiving for victory over his enemies in 1078, and the Romanesque style of architecture suggests that the building was completed early in the second half of the 12th Century.
At that time the church building may have been a dual purpose place of worship: a parish Church for the inhabitants who stood in the nave and a conventual building for the canons who occupied the Chancel.
By the early 16th Century the Priory entered into a period of decline. Fire gutted the Priory buildings and debt ended its existence. The church now became the Parish Church. The structure has been altered several times, including post-Reformation (around 1690), and in 1822, 1851 and again in 1921
William Sutherland, Ernest CH, Alexander Prolygin, appo-fam have particularly liked this photo
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