Dunachton

Dunachton
Scottish Gaelic: Dùn Neachdain

Dunachton Moor
Dunachton
 Dunachton shown within the Badenoch and Strathspey area
OS grid referenceNH820047
    Edinburgh  86 mi (138 km) SSE 
    London  417 mi (671 km) SSE 
Council areaHighland
Lieutenancy areaInverness (lieutenancy)
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post town KINGUSSIE
Postcode district PH21
Dialling code 01540
Police Scottish
Fire Scottish
Ambulance Scottish
EU Parliament Scotland
UK ParliamentInverness, Nairn, Badenoch and Strathspey
Scottish ParliamentInverness East, Nairn and Lochaber
Highlands and Islands
List of places
UK
Scotland

Coordinates: 57°07′05″N 3°57′01″W / 57.118044°N 3.950359°W

Dunachton (Scottish Gaelic: Dùn Neachdain) is an estate on the north-west shore of Loch Insh in Badenoch and Strathspey, in the Highlands of Scotland. It occupies land immediately to the north of the A9 road and General Wade's Military Road.

Recent research has suggested Dunachton as a potential location for the Battle of Dun Nechtain in 685 in which the Picts permanently secured independence from the Northumbrians.

History

The Dunachton Stone. Class I Pictish stone
St Drosten's Chapel, Dunachton

The area around Dunachton shows evidence of human occupation in prehistory, with flintwork and whetstones being found in the vicinity.[1]

The name Dunachton derives from Dun Neachdain the fort of Nechtan. Nechtan's identity is unknown, but it is likely he was one of several of the early Pictish Kings that went by that name.[2]

Dunachton had some importance in the Early Medieval period. It is the site of an early class I Pictish stone which was discovered in 1870, having been recycled as a lintel stone in a farmstead building. Dunachton is first documented as 'Dwnachtan' in 1381,[3] in reference to the 'capelle de Nachtan', the Chapel of Nechtan,[4] which was dedicated to St Drostan.

Recent research has pointed to the possibility that Dunachton may have been the correct site of the Battle of Dun Nechtain in 685, when Bridei mac Bille, king of the Pictish kingdom of Fortriu defeated Ecgfrith of Northumbria, securing Pictish independence from Northumbria. The battle site was previously thought to be somewhere in the vicinity of Dunnichen in Angus, but reappraisal of the scant documentary evidence along with the reappraisal of Fortriu as being north of the Grampian Mountains has led to the suggestion that Dunachton is the true location.[5]

Dunachton Lodge was built on the remains of Dunachton Castle.[6] The landowners were originally the MacNivens, who as a sept of the MacNaughtons, claim descent from Nechtan. The barony subsequently came into possession of the Clan Mackintosh in the early 16th century through the marriage of Isabel MacNiven, the heiress of the Barony of Dunachton to William Mackintosh, cousin of the chief of the clan Mackintosh, and later chief of Clan Mackintosh and the wider Chattan Confederation.[7]

A centuries old feud between the Mackintoshes and Clan MacDonald of Keppoch came to a head in 1688 at the Battle of Maol Ruadh. Dunachton Castle was destroyed the following year by Coll MacDonald under the auspices of the Jacobite cause, provoking a public rebuke from Dundee.[8] It was never rebuilt.[9]

Dunachton was bought in the 1950s by Andrew Forbes-Leith, who later inherited the baronetcy of Fyvie. In the 1970s he turned 600 acres (2.4 km2) of Dunachton into the Highland Wildlife Park.[10]

Notes

  1. Wordsworth and Harden
  2. Seton p200
  3. Registrum episcopatus Moraviensis p93; p188
  4. Registrum episcopatus Moraviensis p93; p184
  5. Woolf
  6. Canmore Record: Dunachton Lodge
  7. Shaw p77; Seton p201; Adam and Innes p163
  8. Roberts p180
  9. Shaw p77
  10. Andrew Forbes Leith obituary

References