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The
Early Church in Dunkeld
For
a short period Dunkeld played a leading role in the history
of the early church in Scotland. We first hear of it in the
middle of the ninth century when, in 849, it seems that King
Kenneth son of Alpin had a part of the relics of St Columba
brought here from Iona, at which time he made Dunkeld the administrative
centre for Scotlands ecclesiastical organisation. The
reason for this move was probably that the small island of Iona
was increasingly vulnerable to Norse raids, whilst Dunkeld,
at the very heart of the recently united kingdoms of the Scots
and the Picts, must have seemed a much safer place. It is therefore
perhaps ironic that Dunkeld itself was to suffer a Danish raid
soon after the move.
At this period the leaders of the Church in what was known as
Fortriu, Pictish Scotland, were usually the heads of the monasteries
rather than the bishops, although the first abbot of Dunkeld,
whose death is recorded in 865, was also described as the chief
bishop of the kingdom.
Before the mid tenth century St Andrews, then known as Kilrimont,
had taken over as the headquarters of the Church, although Dunkeld
continued to figure in the annals of the Kingdom, as in 965
and 1045, when two of its abbots were killed in battle. This
may seem a strange fate for the heads of a religious house,
but it is likely that by this time the abbot had come to be
regarded more as a great officer of state than as spiritual
leader of a religious community. Many of those who bore the
title of abbot were married and may have had little to do with
the day-to-day running of the community. Crinan, the abbot who
was killed in 1045, was important enough to be married to a
daughter of Malcolm II, and their son was to rule as Duncan
I until he was killed by Macbeth in
1040.
The abbacy, or at least the income associated with it, continued
to be regarded as a suitable perquisite for members of the royal
family up to the eve of the great period of renewal in the Church
in the eleventh and twelfth centuries. We know that Ethelred,
one of the sons of Malcolm III (Canmore) and Queen Margaret,
was both Earl of Fife and last abbot of Dunkeld.
Return
To Dunkeld Cathedral
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