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Tour
Invergowrie
"The
united parishes are about 3 miles in length and nearly the same
in breadth. The surface rises with an easy ascent from the Tay,
except twoards the south west where it joins to the parish of
Dundee. The higher ground forms a ridge, stretching obliquely
in a direction from East to West, and behind is an extensive
tract of muir, where there are some plantations, but no marks
of cultivation. The muir is bounded by the water of Dichty,
which rises in the parish of Lundie, and runs south and east
through the valley of Strathmartin. There are several villages,
viz, Locheye, Millhouse, Liff, Benvie and Invergowrie: the latter
is noted as the site of the first christian church erected on
the north side of the river Tay." (The Gazetteer of Scotland,
W Chalmers, Dundee 1803)
Invergowrie
A
village on the north shore of the Firth of Tay, which acts as
a residential suburb of Dundee. Although having been previously
formally incorporated within Dundee, Invergowrie now exists
within Perth and Kinross.
Said
to have been a royal point of embarkation at which Alexander
I planned to build a palace, Invergowrie was gifted to the monks
of Scone in the Middle Ages. Its church was allegedly founded
by St Bonifacius in the 8th century and in the ancient churchyard
are two large stones known as the Ewes (or Yowes) of Gowrie.
Thomas the Rhymer predicted in the 13th century that 'When the
Yowes o' Gowrie come to land, The day o' judgement's near at
hand.' Another stone to the north of Invergowrie is associated
with a local tale describing how the Devil flung a huge boulder
from Fife with the intention of destroying the church. Invergowrie
toll-house stands nearby on the south side of the former Perth-Dundee
turnpike road.
Invergowrie.
Invergowrie Jobs.
Dating
In Invergowrie.
Invergowrie
Cottages.
Invergowrie Property.
Invergowrie Ancestry
Tours.
Small
Group Tours of This Area Of Scotland.
Return
To Tour Angus Region
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