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DUNKELD , a See also: town of See also: Perthshire, Scotland, on the See also: left See also: bank of the Tay, 152 M
.
N.W. of See also: Perth by the Highland railway
.
Pop
.
(19o1) 586
.
The See also: river is crossed by a See also: bridge of seven See also: arches which was designed by See also: Thomas
See also: Telford in 1805 and opened in 18o8
.
The town lies in the midst of luxuriant trees, and the See also: noble sweep of the Tay, the effectively situated bridge, the magnificent grounds of Dunkeld See also: House, and the protecting mountains combine to give it a very romantic appearance
.
The town See also: hall is the
See also: principal See also: modern See also: building, and the fountain erected in Market Square to the memory of the 6th duke of Atholl (d.1864) occupies the site of the old See also: cross
.
As early as 729—some authorities See also: fix the date a See also: hundred and fifty years before—the See also: Culdees possessed a monastery at Dunkeld, which was converted into a See also: cathedral by See also: David I. in 1127
.
This structure stood until the See also: Reformation, when itwas unroofed and suffered to fall into ruin
.
The building consists of the See also: nave (120 ft. long, 6o ft. wide, 40 ft. high), aisles (12 ft. wide), choir, chapter-house and tower
.
The nave is the most beautiful portion
.
The Pointed arches rest upon pillars, possibly Norman, and above them, below the Decorated See also: clerestory windows, is a series of semicircular arches with flamboyant See also: tracery, a remarkable feature
.
The choir, founded by See also: Bishop See also: William
See also: Sinclair (d
.
1337), has been repaired, and serves as the parish See also: church, a blue marble slab in the floor marking the bishop's
See also: grave
.
The chapter-house, adjoining the choir, was built by Bishop Thomas Lauder (1395–1481) in 1469, and the vault beneath is the See also: burial-place of the Atholl Murrays
.
Lauder also began the tower, completed in 1501
.
In the porch of the church is the most interesting of the extant old tombs, namely, the recumbent effigy of See also: Alexander
See also: Stewart, the
See also: Wolf of See also: Badenoch (1343–1405; the inscription refers his See also: death to 1394, but this is said to be an error)
.
The most famous of the Bishops was Gavin See also: Douglas (1474-1522), translator of the Aeneid
.
One of the most heroic exploits in the See also: annals of warfare is associated with the cathedral
.
Shortly after the See also: battle of See also: Killiecrankie (1689), the Cameronian regiment, enrolled in the same See also: year (afterwards the 26th See also: Foot), was despatched to hold Dunkeld See also: prior to another invasion of the See also: Highlands
.
It was under the command of Colonel William See also: Cleland (b
.
1661), a poet of some merit
.
On the 26th of See also: August a force of 5000 Highlanders suddenly appearing, Cleland posted his men in the church and behind the See also: wall of the See also: earl of Atholl's mansion
.
Still flushed with their victory under Dundee, and animated by bitterest hatred of their Whiggamore foes, the Highlanders assaulted the position of the See also: Covenanters, who were 1200 strong, with the most desperate valour
.
Sustained by their See also: enthusiasm, however, the recruits displayed equal courage, and, at the end of four See also: hours' stubborn fighting, their defence was still intact
.
Fearing lest victory, even if won, might be See also: purchased too dearly, the Highlanders gradually withdrew
.
While leading a sortie Cleland was shot dead, and was buried in the churchyard
.
Adjoining the cathedral is Dunkeld House, a seat of the duke of Atholl, the grounds of which are estimated to contain 50 M. of walks and 30 M. of drives
.
On the See also: lawn near the cathedral stand two of the earliest larches grown in See also: Great Britain, having been introduced from See also: Tirol by the 2nd duke in 1738
.
The 4th duke planted several square See also: miles of the estate with this See also: tree, of which he had made a See also: special study
.
A mile See also: south of Dunkeld, on the left bank of the Tay, is the See also: village of Birnam (pop
.
389), where See also: Sir See also: John
See also: Everett Millais, the painter, made his summer residence
.
It lies at the foot of Birnam See also: Hill (1324 ft.), once covered with a royal
See also: forest that has been partly replaced by plantations
.
The See also: oak and sycamore in front of Birnam House, the famed twin trees of Birnam, are believed to be more than l000 years old, and to be the remnant of the See also: wood of Birnam which See also: Shakespeare immortalized in See also: Macbeth
.
The Pass of Birnam, where the river narrows, was the path usually taken by the Highlanders in their forays
.
In the vicinity are the castles of Murthly, one a modern mansion in the Elizabethan See also: style, erected about 1838 from designs by See also: James Gillespie
See also: Graham (1777-1855), and the other the old See also: castle, still occupied, which was occasionally used as a hunting-See also: lodge by the Scottish See also: kings
.
At Little Dunkeld, almost opposite to Dunkeld, the See also: Bran joins the Tay, after a run of 11 m. from its source in Loch Freuchie
.
It is celebrated for its falls about 2 M. from the mouth
.
The upper fall is known as the Rumbling Bridge from the fact that the stream pours with a rumbling noise through a deep narrow See also: gorge in which a huge fallen See also: rock has become wedged, forming a See also: rude bridge or See also: arch
.
Inver, near the mouth of the Bran, was the birthplace of the two famous fiddlers, See also: Niel See also: Gow (1727–1807) and his son Nathaniel (1766-1831)
.
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