Winter Road Trip Drive To Parish Church And Cemetery On History Visit To Clunie Perthshire Scotland

Tour Scotland 4K Winter travel video of a sunny road trip drive, with Scottish music, on a narrow Scottish road on ancestry, genealogy, family history visit to the Parish Church and cemetery in Clunie, Perthshire. The parish church was rebuilt in 1840, and is a Gothic structure, with a tower. John James Rickard Macleod was born on 6 September 1876, in Clunie. Soon after he was born, his father Robert Macleod, a clergyman, was transferred to Aberdeen, where John attended Aberdeen Grammar School and enrolled in the study of medicine at the University of Aberdeen. He is noted for his role in the discovery and isolation of insulin during his tenure as a lecturer at the University of Toronto, Canada, for which he and Frederick Banting received the 1923 Nobel prize in Physiology or Medicine. He was married to Mary W. McWalter, but they never had children. He died on 16 March 1935 in Aberdeen after several years of suffering from arthritis. In Scottish history, few names go farther back than Clunie, whose ancestors lived among the clans of the Pictish tribe. They lived in the lands of Clunie in Stormmot, Perthshire where the name can be found since very early times. The surname Clunie was first found in Perthshire, Gaelic: Siorrachd Pheairt, former county in the present day Council Area of Perth and Kinross, located in central Scotland. Clunie has been spelled Clunie, Clooney, Cloon, Cloone, Clowney, Clune, Cluney, Clunis and many more. Officially, the Scottish winter runs from the 21st of December through to the 20th March. All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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