Ballumbie

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Ballumbie
Angus
Ballumbie Golf Course.jpg
Ballumbie Golf Course
Location
Grid reference: NO443335
Location: 56°29’27"N, 2°54’18"W
Data
Postcode: DD4
Local Government

Ballumbie is a village of Angus which has become a residential area on the northeast edge of Dundee. Ballumbie was formerly an estate centred on Ballumbie Castle, a mid-16th-century fortification, which was followed by the 19th-century Ballumbie House.

There is also a golf course and the site of a late mediæval parish church. The castle and house are located just outside the houses of the village.

Ballumbie Castle

Ballumbie Castle

Ballumbie Castle was built by the Lovell family in the 16th century. The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland records the date of construction as 1545,[1] although Historic Scotland give a date of 14th–15th century.[2]

The castle consisted of a rectangular enclosure, approximately 22 yards on a side, with round corner towers, overlooking the Fithie Burn.

Ballumbie Castle, heraldic panel

In the early 17th century the castle passed to the Maule family, who became Earls of Panmure in 1646. The castle was reported as being ruined by 1682, although the remaining east and south walls were later incorporated into the stable block of Ballumbie House.[2]

Today the castle is a ruin again, in private ownership. Access is prohibited beyond the castle's security fencing for reasons of personal safety.[3]

The lands surrounding Ballumbie Castle are known as the Ballumbie Castle Estate, and the lands of Ballumbie Castle remain the caput of this property. These are distinct from the lands of Ballumbie, which were last in the possession of Robert Williamson of Ballumbie, hence there is a Laird of Ballumbie Castle as well as a Laird of Ballumbie.

Ballumbie House

In 1810, Ballumbie House was built adjacent to the castle, for David Miller. It was a two-storey classical house, with an ice house and stable block, which incorporated the remaining parts of Ballumbie Castle. By 1902, the house was the property of Alexander Gilroy, a merchant, who commissioned architect James Findlay to carry out alterations. The house was remodelled in an Arts and Crafts / Scots Baronial style.[4] It was converted for use as a hotel, operating from 1965 to 1981, after which a fire in 1982 gutted the building.[5] After over twenty years as a roofless shell, the house was rebuilt as flats, while some 230 houses were constructed in the grounds.

Ballumbie parish church

First mentioned in 1470, the parish church of Ballumbie is last mentioned about a century later. Until recently its precise location remained unknown. Excavations carried out by SUAT Ltd in 2006 ahead of routine land-stripping for a new housing project uncovered burials associated with a stone building. The excavation revealed a simple rectangular stone building measuring 46 feet by 13 feet, with both internal burials and an external graveyard.[6]

A chantry chapel or laird's aisle measuring c. 16 feet square was attached to the southeast side. Such chapels allowed the laird and his family to be buried away from the commoners. In the case of Ballumbie, the lairds were probably the Lovell family at this time. This family are recorded as the feudal owners of Ballumbie during the 12th century and they may have been the beneficiaries of a Norman-style plantation of new overlords by King David I. Their former castle stands about half a mile from the church, which they may have founded.[6]

Excavations also revealed a previously unknown, Christian long cist cemetery, underlying the mediæval church buildings, containing the remains of several adults and children.[7]

Outside links

References

  1. Ballumbie Castle - RCAHMS
  2. 2.0 2.1 "Ballumbie Castle, Listed Building Report". Historic Scotland. http://hsewsf.sedsh.gov.uk/hslive/hsstart?P_HBNUM=19482. Retrieved 2009-08-12. 
  3. Ballumbie Castle Estate
  4. "Ballumbie House, Listed Building Report". Historic Scotland. http://hsewsf.sedsh.gov.uk/hslive/hsstart?P_HBNUM=18664. Retrieved 2009-08-12. 
  5. "Hotel and castle". Dundee Evening Telegraph. 9 June 2006. http://www.eveningtelegraph.co.uk/output/2006/06/09/letters.shtm. Retrieved 2009-08-12. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 Hall, D. (2007). "The lost lairds of Ballumbie". Current Archaeology 207: 46–48. 
  7. "Ballumbie Parish Church". CANMORE. RCAHMS. http://canmore.rcahms.gov.uk/en/site/33498/details/ballumbie+parish+church/. Retrieved 2009-08-12.