Primitive
Inhabitation.—The Bass—The Sanners—Dunnideer—Ardtannies—Remains of Stone
period—Broomend—Cists, urns, cairns, tumuli. Ancient Highways.—From
fords of Don to Dunnideer— Stone circles and Sculptured monoliths—Double
road from Broomend to Iirhnmies; by CoT8‘. man hill and Blackball, with
branch ascending the Don—By Stanners and Inverurie Roods, Stonefield and
Kelpyfold, with branch to Caskieben, and east side of Ury—Garioch
highways farther north—Poictate and roads to Old Meldrum and Howford—The
Roman Iter.
PRIMITIVE INHABITATION.
AT a point about six
miles south-east from the summit of Benachie, one of the extremities of
the Grampians, the rivers Don and Ury descend, through valleys which
meet at right angles, to a marshy hollow where their waters are only 120
yards apart, when they are again deflected, and their junction removed a
good way southward, by an abrupt mound, seemingly composed of shingle,
but coated with vegetable soil, from which a triangular field, of about
40 acres in area, slopes between the two streams.
The mound and field are
the Bass and Stanners of Inverurie; and these, from their position and
apparent structure, may be a memorial of the glacial period. It is
evident from the strue found upon rock surfaces, that the course of the
ice-slip was from Benachie to the North Sea at Belhelvie. The local
meltings of the glacier left a string of moraines along the Don, in the
parish of Kemnay, where the line of railway now is—the Kaims of Kemnay.
A mound, called the Cuninghill, exactly resembling these, stands
Southward of the Manse of Inverurie, at the edge of a sandy terrace,
named the Kellands, where the slope of the alluvial floods begins. The
glacial mass, obstructed a little below that point by the narrow hollow
in which Don and Ury meet, would deposit most of its sandy burden at the
point where the streams would together wash its edge. That point is
where the Bass now stands; and the slow liquidation might naturally
deposit the more diffused haugh stretching onwards from the Bass, which,
from its stony character, bears the name of the Stanners.
Among the oracular rhymes
attributed to Thomas of Ereildoune, one foretells that
Dee and Don shall run in
one,
And Tweed shall run in Tay,
And the bonny water o’ Ury
Shall bear the Baas away.
The lofty flat-topped
cone of the Bass, flanked on the east side by a lower mound of oblong
form, rises upon the broad northern extremity of the river peninsula
from the very water’s edge of the Ury, barely admitting of foothold
between.
The starting point of any
historical description of Inverurie must be here, where both the
earliest annals and remains of a pre-historic period place the
associations of primitive inhabitation. A central portion of the
Stanners left uncultivated for centuries of Christian times under the
name of the Goodman’s Croft—a sort of Devil’s Acre— forms a record of
the ancient times of heathen worship, and of how ineradicable the
customs of superstitious observation were here as in other parts of the
Christianized world.
The highway of travel
must at all times have passed the Don and the Ury, at a point where the
Bass commanded the passages. There the Romans must have forded the Don
on their northern expedition, as the contingent of the poor Chevalier’s
army did when it surprised and routed the Macleods.
The Bass probably was the
fortress of Inverurie, the prison and death-chamber of the unfortunate
monarch Eth, when Cyric, or Grig, having defeated him in battle at
Strathallan, in Angus, a.d. 878, brought him to the fortress of Nrurin,
near his own castle of Dunnideer.
Three centuries later,
before 1176, the Bass contained the Castle of Inverurie, the chief scat
of the royal earldom of the Garioch. Malcolm, the son of Bartolf, held
it as Constable for his friend David, Earl of Huntingdon and the
Garioch, from whose daughter the royal houses of Bruce and Stewart, and
the reigning dynasty of Great Britain, all descend. From the Castle of
Inverurie, Malcolm may have sent his son and namesake in David’s train
to the crusade with Richard Coeur de Lion, from which younft Malcolm
never returned. In the next century, Malcolm's other son, Norman, the
Constable of Enrowrie, may have issued from the wide castle limits of
the Stanners in all the pomp of the then novel decorations of heraldry,
bearing on his shield the Leslie griffin and buckles, and the motto,
“Grip fast”.
From the time now
mentioned, the Bass does not appear in history, but it is found recorded
in deeds respecting the burgh lands of Inverurie, in which the
nomenclature of lands in the Stanners is of antiquarian interest, as
containing such monuments of the social condition of early centuries
there, as the names of the Castle Park, the Castle Croft, the Mill
Butts, &c.
It was at Ardtannies that
Alexander Stewart, the grand, though in no sense legitimate, Earl of
Mar, Lord or Earl of the Garioch, Lord of Duffle in Brabant, High
Admiral of Scotland, and the hero of Harlaw, held his head
courts—described as held at his Manor of Inverurie—but in all likelihood
the Bass was, along with the Manor, the rendezvous of his army before
Harlaw; and there his local following may have been joined by Irvine of
Drum, and Robert Davidson, his close friend, the Provost of Aberdeen,
with his bold burghers, on the celebrated 24th July, 1411, when they
marched to check the advance of Donald of the Isles in the sanguinary
battle in -which the gallant Balquhain, himself of the ancient blood of
the Inverurie Constables, lost six sons.
Lying in a direct line
between the Bass and Benachie, the whole parish is one prolonged sharply
undulating ascent, rising from the level of the boundary rivers, Don and
Ury, by terraces, from which ascend rounded hills, to its highest
altitude of 780 feet, the summit of Knockinglews. Looking from the
meeting of the waters, the Davo hill, 523 feet in height, and
Knockinglews, seem two great stepping stones up to Benachie. Badifurrow
and Woodhill, standing west of the Davo and 60 feet higher than it,
intervene between the Don and Knockinglews, while north of the Davo a
lower hill, the Dilly-hill of Conglass, rises from the Ury towards the
same central ridge.
The contemporaneous
fortresses of Nrurin and Dunnideer, commanding the south and north
entrances to the inclosed strath, called the Garioch, must have been
among its earliest habitations—strongholds being the first necessity of
settled life. But the secluded river hollow of Ardtannies had been a
place of important habitation even in the unknown times now spoken of as
the Stone Period.
A hundred yards or little
more west of the spot marked on the ordnance map a-s the site of the
Hall, a knoll previously uncultivated was turned up shortly before 1870,
and appeared to have been the site of a manufactory of flint arrow
heads. A mass of chips lay about, and fire had evidently been used in
the process, a space of twenty feet, or thereby, in breadth being full
of burnt stones. The black spot remains apparent whenever the ground is
under the plough. A deep draw-well at the Hall, which was closed during
the same improvements, was found to be a great pit, whose sides
presented the same burnt material. On the bank of the Don, a hundred
yards from the place of the flints, a sharp stone axe of laminated
appearance was found in January, 1874.
About a thousand feet
north from the Hall, upon a platform of the hill-side above the flinty
spot, there were cleared out three circular structures, the places of
which are marked in the ordnance map. The largest had a 11th of 60 feet
within its circumference, which was a mound of stones, about three feet
in height. A fine limestone axe was found inside. Across the interior, a
little from the centre, was a straight trench, about 18 inches deep,
full of ashes. A circular enclosure, like the others in appearance,
remains in the wood at some distance eastward, near which had been
another. One of them is marked in the ordnance map.
In front of these
last-named circles, which were fourteen yards in diameter, was a strong
rampart. It was a curve of 120 yards in span, having ten feet of base
and six of height, commanding the face of the Corseman hill down to the
Don. Outside of that rampart some long barrows, on being dug up, were
found full of fatty mould, over which luxuriant crops afterwards grew.
Near the circle first
mentioned there were several small cairns of stones never larger than
six inches, which covered earth of the same fatty character. In January,
1874, a drain having to be dug close by that spot, was found to
intersect a mass of dark matter about nine feet broad, in which were
fragments of bone, from aii ineh to two inches long, one showing the
edge of a joint.
Close by the sixty foot
circle a careful artistic structure appeared in the small cirele marked
eastward of it. It was in the form of a saucer, nine feet wide and about
one in depth, the circumference being of triangular stones dovetailed
together so firmly, that the ordinary tramp pick was not sufficient to
unsettle the fixture. They were bedded in finely wrought tough clay; and
the bottom of the saucer was of small pebbles closely packed in the same
material, making a water-tight basin.
Near by these stood upon
four props a great stone, ten feet in length by five in breadth and four
deep, shaped like a fishing cobble, having a broad end and a narrower
point. The pillars kept it quite clear of the ground, so that it had
formed a good hiding place for rabbits. The erection stood on a prepared
base—a flat space neatly causewayed with pebbles, oval in form, and
about the same length as the table, but wider.
The platform on the
shoulder of the brae above Ardtannies, on which these artistie works
were found, is at a level considerably lower than the point of the
Corseman hill, about four hundred yards eastward, upon which the curved
rampart and the long barrows were. In the wood behind which crowns the
hill there are numerous round, or long mounds, suggestive of a
sepulchral character.
Evidence exists of the
district of the Garioch having been inhabited very early. The remains of
two British camps occupy sites near Inverurie on the hills of Crichie
and Barra. Both stone circles and sculptured monoliths are frequent, and
seem to have stood upon lines of primitive highway. At the beginning of
the present century about thirty stone circles continued traceable. Six
were to be seen close by Dunnideer, and four more in the same parish,
some of which were from fifty to sixty feet in diameter, and contained
stones measuring twelve feet in height. The remains of a double circle
are in the woods of Monnie, five miles from Inverurie; and, within the
parish of Inverurie, a circle still entire looks over an extensive range
of country from the centre of a highway on the heights of Achorthies.
Another had its site where, at the place now called Stonefield, the
oldest known highway crossed the boundary of the burgh near Brandsbutt,
and several stood along the same road as it led southward through the
parish of Kintore.
The mysterious sculptured
stones abound in the district. One stood at the point where probably the
Romans forded the Don on their northward expedition. Others had their
places along the highway, which parsed from that point to the famous
Maiden Stone on the slope of Bviiachie. The Newton Stone, well known to
antiquaries, is in an adjacent parish.
Another evidence of very
early habitation was obtained in 1867 by the discovery at Broomend—about
a mile and a-hflf south from Inverurie—of a number of stone coffins,
close by one another. The edges of the slabs were neatly closed with
fino clay, which was still plastic when first removed; but the cists
contained no ornaments or fictile productions, except urns of unbaked
clay ornamented in simple patterns. One, at the opening of which the
writer was present, contained indications of the tenant having been a
person of importance. A well-formed shell lamp of leather was suspended
inside the urn by a broad curved shank. The body had also been wrapt in
some thick envelope, which, in decay, looked like felt. Such a wrapping
is believed to have been all but unexampled.
Remains of the same kind
of sepulture have been dug up all along the Don, from Broomend to
Badifurrow above Polnar chapel. On the Davo a cairn covering a cist was,
until late years, the culminating point of the hill. The rising grounds,
encircling Ardtannies, have yielded numerous urns to the excavations
made in the course of agric ultural improvement. Eight were dug up in a
small area near the summit of the Davo; others near where the priest of
Polnar dwelt, and at Waterside of Manar, on the hill of Crichie, and at
several places on the road from Broomend to the Greenlev ford of the
Don. Solitary cairns were lately frequent in the district, and also some
clusters, or rather fields, of such memorial structures are noticed in
an antiquarian manuscript, written about 1790.
ANCIENT HIGHWAYS
The fortress of Inverurie
stood on the spot which commanded the fordable points of the rivers Don
and Uric, where the Don opened a way through a long hilly region from
the upper districts, and where also any southern invaders were most
likely to seek a road into the Garioch. In historic times, the castle of
the “Warderys” remained in a ruinous condition on the north-western
entrance to the Garioch, immediately beyond Dunnideer. The earliest
highway through the Garioch, it is therefore probably, passed near these
strongholds. But in auy district the fordable passages of the rivers
determine the lines of road first in use, and for this reason, it is
probable that the earliest highway known to modern times through the
hollow occupied by Inverurie, was also the primitive track used by the
Picts, and by their predecessors—the men who used the mode of burial so
curiously exemplified in the cist dug up at Broomend in 1867, and who
left behind them the debris of a workshop of flint arrowheads at
Ardtannies.
The probability that the
earliest known road from the south to Inverurie was that still traceable
from Tyrebagger by the hill of Kintore, Dalwearie, Castlehill of Kintore,
and Broomend, to the south west corner of the Stanners opposite Port-Elphinstone,
is much enhanced by the fact that along that line of road there stood a
close succession of stone circles and monoliths, including some
sculptured stones. The Standing Stones of Dyce, several circles and
monoliths between Kintore and Inverurie, sculptured stones at the ford
of the Don, and at Brandsbutt, and near Drimmies, and the famous Maiden
Stone of Benachie, all stood upon the line of the road leading directly
from the scath to Dunnideer.
Half-a-mile south of the
Greenley ford to the Stanners stand the remains of a stone circle upon
the lands of Broomend, around which the road from the south forked, one
branch taking the east side to the Greenley ford, the other passing on
the west, and going by the rising ground above Port-Elphinstone, past
Windyedge to the Broadford at Overboat. 'Soso diverging paths traversed
the length of the Parish of Inverurie apart, and united again at the
highest point of the lands of Drimmies.
The western branch
ascended the Corseman Hill from the Broadford in a straight line till
near the summit of the south shoulder of the Davo, and then struck
north-west, attaining its greatest elevation at the site of the present
farm-houses of Davo, close by which the “Merchants’ Graves” mark the
spot where, according to tradition, two packmen, encountering on the
road, fought and killed one another. So far the road is nearly all still
in use, or traceable. On the height it passed westward, until opposite
Blackball, where it descended by Gavin’s Croft to the manor place of
Blackhall, and passing Dubston, continued by the route presently in use
to the melting-point of Conglass, Drimmies, and Xetherton of Balquhain.
From that spot it now forms the boundary between Drimmies and Netherton,
to the point where it was joined by the other main road, which left the
stone eirele at Broomend for the lower fords at the Stanners.
Between Overboat and the
shoulder of the Corseman Hill, the road now described formed part of
what may have been the oldest line of road within the parish of
Inverurie, that leading between the Fortress, or Castle, up the Don to
the territories of the Mnrmaors of Mar. In later times, it would be the
eastern highway of the Culdees of Monymusk; at a later period still, the
approach by the ancient kirk of St. Apollinaris to the Episcopal palaeo
of Fetternear; as it was, even for some part of the nineteenth century,
the kirk road from Achorthies, Badifurrow, and tho hill of Balquhain,
and had been to nearly the same period the mill road from Inverurie to
the Mill of Davo, viz., Ardtannies. The present Donside road does not
represent that primitive highway, except in one or two fragments. It had
led from the Bass along the south edge of the Upper Roods, now turnpike,
keeping the present line from the Bridge to Upperboat, where it entered
the great highway ascending the Corseman Hill. It left the road to
Blackball, at the level shoulder of the hill, and turning sharply to the
left, made for the summit, whence it descended in a straight line past
the Priest’s house, now Coldwells, to Polnar Chapel, and under the spot
occupied by Waterside of Manar, coming into the line of the present road
somewhat east of Burnervie. Upon the Corseman Hill, the road, at its
highest point, parsed behind the strong stone rampart, which commanded
the valley south of the road. Tumuli resembling graves lie thickly round
that part of the hill.
No lower road from
Overboat to Coldwells broke the privacy of the old Hall of Ardtannies,
or afforded easy access to the mill, until a century ago or less. When
the elevated highway descended the steep west side of the summit of
Corseman to the level shoulder, which contained the sixty-foot circle
and others* a road, still partly preserved in the edge of the present
wood, led down an unbroken green sweep to the platform on which the old
manor house stood. The corns sucken to the mill had to be conveyed from
Inverurie in currarks on horseback, by paths crossing the Kellands for
the height of the Corseman, a chief one leading from the Sand Hole or
Gallow Hill. The access from the Blackball side was past the Merchants’
Graves to the saddle lying between the Corseman summit and the higher
Davo, where the mill road would be entered upon.
The eastern branch of the
great highroad through the Garioch, proceeding from the Broomend stone
circle to the Greenley ford of the Don, divided itself there, and
crossed at two fords, to meet again on the other side; the double road
making a loop which enclosed the east branch of the river and part of
the island called the Broom Inch, and the Ducat Haugh. The two tracks
became a single line again where the High Street of Inverurie is now
entered from Keithhall Road.
One line of the double
track kept the centre of the Broom Inch, until opposite the spot where
the sewage filter bed was made in 1872. Crossing there, it formed the
boundary between the Ducat Haugh—likely, from its name, to have been
part of the Castle grounds—and the Streamhead, a part of the common
lands of the Burgh. The other line crossing to the Stanners kept the
water-side and the Haugh of Old Don, now Keithhall Road, on to the level
of High Street, where tho two paths came together again and formed- the
north road through the burgh of Inverurie.
The eastmost line of that
double approach to the town of Inverurie, after fording the Don, skirted
the Stanners until it reached the point nearest the Ury. By that
waterside path young Malcolm rode south to join the second Crusade ;
aid, a hundred years afterwards, Norman, the son of the last of the
Constables, went to take the oath of fealty to English Edward, at
Aberdeen. A green loaning, called Killiewalker in recent years, led from
Don to Ury, over the isthmus of the Castle peninsula, and was the
highroad to Caskieben, by which the Leslies, Garviachs, and Johnstons,
lords of that fine domain for four -centuries, issued forth to the
numerous devoirs which feudal barons had to go through. The path lay
between the kirkyard and the Castle, and had been little wider than a
bridle road. It connected the Garioch highroad with the other great
north road, by which Edward I. went from Aberdeen, past Kinkell, to
Fyvie, and by which the Duke of Cumberland, in 1746, marched from
Aberdeen, by Tyrebagger, Bogheads, Kintore, Balbithan, and Old Meldrum,
on his way to Culloden. The stepping-stones still remain by which the
Ury was in former days crossed by foot passengers.
On attaining the level of
the modern street, the highway of the Garioch went along the present
line until the middle of the west side of Market Place, where it skirted
the northmost Upper Rood from between Numbers 25 and 17 Market Place,
and keeping the north side of the Gallow Slack, called afterwards
Porthead, entered the present line of West High Street at Chelsea Lone,
or Gallowhill. The road proceeded from that point, under the Broomfold,
as West High Street now lies, to cross ----the Overburn, sometimes
difficult of passage, and ascended the Burgh Muir. The triangular nook
called the Poet’s Corner, and the houses adjoining it, all stand upon
the primitive line which led along the side of the Market Green to
Stonefield, as it till continues to do. At Stonefield the road, now
obliterated, made for the highest level of Brandsbutt, and then kept a
line now marked by a continuous stone dyke along the upper fields of
Conglass. It crossed the march of Conglass and Drimmies, below an eerie
spot named the Kelpy Fold, and, ascending to the highest point of
Drimmies, it joined the road which came thither by the Davo and
Blackball.
From the point of
re-union the highway descended to the Castle of Balquhain, crossing the
Patrick, and from the Castle gradually rose to Craigsley, from which, to
the Maiden Stone, it is still open. By the north slope of Benachie it
extended, after passing that remarkable monument, to a spot marked by a
line of old beech-trees where a cart track now leads from the Oyne
railway station to the west summit of Benachie, and, crossing the hill
of Ardoyne, passed the Gadie near the Kirk of Prem-nay, where General
Wade, in 1746, bridged that stream, making thence for the hill of
Dunnideer and the Castle of the Warders.
Between Dunnideer and the
first home of the Leslies, a road still open passed by the site of the
ancient kirk of Rathmuriel, and is given as a boundary, in a title deed
of date 1245. There King James the First witnessed the revels of
Christ’s Kirk fair.
Besides the highway
traversing the western heights of the valley of the Garioch, another
had, in very early times, gone along the opposite side of the river Ury
; possibly starting from the Earl’s castle, but certainly passing
Balbaggardy, Sillerstrind, and the Standing Stones of Bayne, where the
King’s Justiciar at times held assize, and proceeding northwards to
Culcalmond, where the earliest named lands in the Garioch Earldom lay.
At the time when the
highway through Inverurie had been chosen, by ascending the Gallowslack,
instead of taking the present line of Market Place and West High Street,
the site of Market Place had been covered by a loch, known in after
centuries, when it was much diminished, as Powtate. Excavations made in
1872, for drainage purposes, showed the blue clay, deposited by the
stagnant pool in the deep gravel bed upon which Inverurie stands,
extending from nearly the south end of Market Place to a point in the
Crosslit Croft a hundred yards north of West High Street. The Xorth Burn
found its ordinary basin in that sheet of water; and the usual drainage
to the Ury through the narrow passage between the Town’s Roods and the
Longland Folds must have been occasionally supplemented by a spill-water
discharge down the low level now leading to the Market Place Public
SchooL As the loch was gradually shut up into narrow dimensions, the
dried north bank of it which separated it from the burn formed the space
now occupied by the Town- Hall and the open area before, it, and became
the Butts and Ball-green of the inhabitants. The Powtate, at the close
of the last century, had contracted into a “mill muddy“ dewkdub, where
incapable pedestrians occasionally lost a shoe. A well was sunk at an
early period on the edge of it. The burgh or parish school, from the
first record we have of its situation, was always near the well, and the
juvenile clients never permitted its waters to become stagnant.
In the end of the last
century, roads led from the burgh to Souterford and How-ford, but the
Blackhall Road did not exist, and the present turnpike had no more
representing it in the parish of Inverurie than the portion between
Keithhall Eoad and the beginning of North Street. The road to Souterford,
by which it is likely Bruce chased back the enemy’s skirmishers at the
beginning of the battle of Inverurie, took the east side of Powtate.
Some local movement in 1G71 got the “mercat cross” removed to the
“pairting of the gaits be south of the draw-well”; but in 1G78 a
peremptory order was passed that it be “remuved back againe from William
Downie’s land to the place where it stode auncientlie,” which was
opposite the present Station Road.
The line of the Roman
iter from the camp of Eaedykes in Peterculter, to that ad Itunam (on the
Ythan) at Glenmailen in Forgue, has been traced confidently by
antiquaries, between Kintore and the ford of Inverurie from the rule
observed by the Romans in marching, which was to keep along the strath
of any stream that lay in their designed route, until they had to cross
it at a bend in its course. Passing the Don at the Greenley ford and
then keeping the strath of the Ury, they would lind that stream lying
across their course to Glenmailen at Pitcaple. The immemorial road from
the lower fords of the Don along the present highway of Inverurie by the
Gal-lowslacks and Stonefield, to the site of the Castle of Balquhain,
exactly suits the Roman rule of selection, and the coincidence of stone
circles with the road—whii h is so marked between Kintore and
Inverurie—continues at Stonefield, and on to Pitcaple; a great circle
standing on the farm of Mains of Balquhain, beyond the Old Castle. At
tho present ford of Pitcaple, indications of Roman presence are said, in
the Statistical Account, to have been discovered in a fortified work
north of Pitcaple Castle; the foundations of a bridge also being found
at the crossing of the Ury, and a bit of Roman road farther on in the
line towards Glenmailen, at Cairnhill in the parish of Rayne.
It would be interesting
to know something of the men who, in primitive times, passed along those
ancient highways, and who perhaps could read with understanding the
symbols of the sculptured monoliths; or of those who went up from the
Stanners to till their rigs on the Upper or Lower Roods ; or of those
who were the first dwellers upon the burgage lands, the two lines of
Roods which stretch like the filaments of a straight feather from either
side of the highway, beginning at the Ducat Haugh and Ury bunk, and
extending to the Gallowslack on the west side, and the North Burn on the
east. The stone circles abounding in the neighbourhood have not been
examined, at least extensively. The one which stands where the
separation of the south road into two lines of approach to the Don took
place, afforded two amateur antiquarians a tantalising “find,” the story
of which would have delighted the author of the Antiquary. It was a
broad concave plate of iron, straight at one end, but worn thin and
round at the other, yet betraying its original purpose of serving as the
front part of a cuirass, by the thick central ridge which ran up to the
point covering the gorge. After a night spent in excited contemplation
of the importance of such a discovery for fixing the chronological
period of stone circles, it was distressing that a more cool examination
next day discovered the relic to be part of a spade. |