Tour Scotland Photograph Skull and Crossbones Gravestone Kilspindie


Tour Scotland photograph of a Skull and Crossbones gravestone in Kilspindie Churchyard, Perthshire, Scotland. Kilspindie is a village in Perth and Kinross, Scotland. It is situated on the Kilspindie burn, approximately 5 km Northwest of Errol, 10 km west of Dundee and 10 km east of Perth.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Kilspindie Church


Tour Scotland photograph of Kilspindie Church, Perthshire, Scotland. Records show there has been a chapel in Kilspindie since 1214, the present church dates from 1670. The union of Kilspindie and Rait Churches took place around 1619. Past history links William Wallace to Kilspindie Church, the west wall between the graveyard and the neighbouring orchard of Kilspindie Farmhouse contains the Wallace Doorway through which he is reputed to have walked to services.



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Tour Scotland Photograph West Town Chapel


Tour Scotland photograph of West Town Chapel, Perthshire, Scotland. This old 16th century ruined church is situated in the centre of its churchyard. In one of the old charters of the estate this is called the Church of the Blessed Virgin of Inchmartin. It was dismantled about 1800, but burials have occurred in the graveyard since then. It has been known in the past as Wast Town, Westown, and West Town.



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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Kinnaird Castle



Tour Scotland Autumn video of Kinnaird Castle, Perthshire, Scotland. Kinnaird Castle is located between Perth and Dundee, built in a place of great defensive strength high on a spur of the Sidlaw foothills, where it looks out across the Carse of Gowrie to the Tay estuary. It is basically an oblong keep which rises 4 stories to the parapet, with an attic floor above that. The original castle on this site was built by the Kinnaird family, although the present building was probably built by the Thrieplands in the 17th century. King James VI stayed here for a week’s hunting in 1716.



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Tour Scotland Photograph Video Parish Church Kinnaird


Tour Scotland photograph of the Parish Church, Kinnaird, Perthshire, Scotland. Kinnaird is a village in Gowrie, Perthshire, Scotland. It is notable for its 15th century castle and early 19th century parish church. In the 18th century, it was the home of the Reverend James Adams, who contributed to the Marrow Controversy in the church of Scotland. It is also the birthplace of the philosopher James Mylne 1757 to 1839 who later taught moral philosophy at the University of Glasgow from 1797 to 1836 and also lectured on political economy. The Threiplands of Fingask were a local Jacobite family. The Carse of Gowrie in which the village is located is a prosperous agricultural district of Perthshire.



All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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