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| Gartnafuaran Farm Cottage Open May to Oct. Balquhidder Glen ........................Details Self Catering Cottage - 4 persons, 2 bedrooms |
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BALQUHIDDER SUMMER MUSIC SEASON
Now in its twentieth season, Balquhidder Summer Music is a unique series of classical concerts in a beautiful church set among the magnificent scenery of the Braes of Balquhidder and Loch Voil.
The concert series was started in 1986 to promote the enjoyment of classical music in this rural community and to provide a platform for young musicians starting out on their careers.
Balquhidder Glen has it's origins lost in the mists of time, but Balquhidder has been important, probably since neolithic times. Below the Manse there are remains of a stone circle, the Pudreag Stone , and there is a Neolithic chambered cairn near further east.
You may find the map of the parish useful.
Robert the Bruce defied Edward I of England, and found himself on the run through these glens. He rallied the remnants of his army and won back Scottish independance at Bannockburn in 1314. There is a Bruce Cave (one of many), above Loch Voil at Craigruie in Balquhidder glen where he reputedly hid.
The MacGregors made their first appearance in Balquhidder Glen after losing their ancestral lands in GlenStrae to the land hungry Campbells. There is a small ruinous MacGregor burial ground at the head of Loch Doine at the foot of Glencarnaig.
The first burial here was early 18th century.
The MacLarens are another ancient clan of this glen.
They take their name from Abbot Labhran of Auchtoomore. Their clan badge is a laurel, "labhras" in Gaelic. The clan's traditional meeting place is Creag an Tuirc, The Boars rock.
In 1480, King James III appointed Sir William Stewart as his Royal Baille in the Parish. The Kirkton of Balquhidder was his centre of operations! There have been Stewarts at Ardvorlich on Loch Earn since the 15th Century.
By the 17th c Sir John Murray was the master of Balquhidder and Strathyre and relative prosperity was the general condition. All that changes with the series of Jacobite rebellions in support of the Stewart line which had been 'ejected'.
Rob Roy MacGregor is Balquhidders most famous resident. His story may be found on the 'Rob Roy' page.
The popular romantic picture of a Highlander as a huge, wild man with a blood-dripping claymore in hand, and always in the face of battle, is a slight exaggeration. Certainly in times of nation strife, there would be regional involvement and there were clan feuds. One notable battle raged in and around the Balvaig in Balquhidder glen, all because a Buchanan of Leny had struck a McLaren wi' a dead salmon. Because the MacGregors weighed in against the intruders, who were massacred, the MacLarens were granted the privilege of entering the Church at Balquhidder before them a Sunday.
Fairs were regularly held at the township of Stronvar to the south of the Kirkton. This may have been the forerunner of the Annual Balquhidder and Lochearnhead Highland Games, now held at Lochearnhead. Stronvar house now provides superb self catering accommodation for up to 12 in that fabulous house with it's historic connections.
The Jacobite Rebellion in 1745 had disastrous consequences all over Scotland. In Balquhidder glen, many clans including MacGregors, MacLarens and Stewarts had supported the forces of Prince Charles Edward. Lands were forfeit and clansman and families burned out of their homes. The MacGregor estate Invercarnaig was laid
waste. You
can still see the remains of their burial ground at the top of Loch Doine.
The wearing of Highland dress was forbidden as was carrying arms. Even the bagpipe was outlawed, classed for the purpose of the Act, as weapon of war. In 1803, the MacLarens of Invernenty, at the west of Balquhidder glen , having held their lands since the Middle Ages emigrated to Nova Scotia.
Robert Louis Stevensons novels "Kidnapped" and "Catriona" have also made Balquhidder a household name
In the 18th Century, the growth of sheep farms meant that the rest of the land became over-used and over-populated. When the military road was built from Stirling to Fort William in 1750, the concentration of population shifted towards this new road. Planned cottar towns were created to take the overspill. These were Strathyre, on the western side of the
river, Lochearnhead or Rusgachan, which had then fourteen crofts. At the main road is Kingshouse Hotel, built originally as a drovers inn, and also used as quarters for the Army.
The railway changed everything! The cottar houses at Strathyre and most of Rusgachan disappeared to make way for the new project, and only small traces remain. By the time the line from Callander to Lochearnhead was opened in 1870, new villas, hotels and a station had been built with a large yard. Balquhidder Station was built after much representation by local people and the line was carried over a viaduct, whos remains may still be seen, to Crieff and Perth. Then the railways were closed in 1965 by Dr. Beeching, pre-empted in fact by a major rock-fall in Glen Ogle. The station at Lochearnhead became a Scout camp; the one at Balquhidder a caravan park, and the station yard at Strathyre now boasts some modern houses!
Parish registers show that there have been fifty different family names from the 16th to the 19th Century. The clan with the biggest numbers were the Fergusons, followed by the Stewarts, MacLarens, MacGregors and then Macintyres. The Carnegies came to Stronvar in 1849, and it was they who built Stronvar House and the present Church.
Robert Fergusson who owned Stronvar and was Writer to the Signet in Edinburgh encouraged his clansmen to join him in Balquhidder. Amongst them was another Robert Fergusson who came to Muirlaggan. He extended one of the existing houses on the site in 1750 and a seventh generation decendant of his still lives in Muirlaggan today.
Muirlaggan farmhouse itself is a building of some antiquity, still having a portion of 'heather thatch' preserved under a flat roof. built into the wall above one of the exterior doors is a primitive carved head and upper torso reminiscent of the 'McNab heads' commonly found around ancient residences and burial grounds of the McNab clan.
The odd thing is that the stone was reportedly found on the shores of Loch Earn, home to the clan Neish - historically sworn enemy of that clan.
The chief of Clan Gregor lived until recently at Edinchip House, built 1830, and their family mausoleum is at Auchtubh.
The much older MacGregor Clan burial ground is near the top of the glen just beyond Loch Doine, a hint of the days when the glen was populated by more than a thousand souls.
The MacLaren chief owns Kirkton Farm. lnverlochlarig in the west has been owned by McNaughtons for years and there have been Cameron lands in Glen Ogle and Lochearnhead for a large part of the last century.
Modern times have changes much with new roads and the curse of sitka spruce, but you can still see the ruins of shielings in Glen Buckie, and over the high passes - the drovers roads. In the west of the Glen you can walk over the 'Bealach nam Corp' where the MacGregors carried their coffins to Loch Katrine.
I holidayed at Earnknowe at Lochearn a few years ago and found a small graveyard behind the farm. I later found that the MacLaren Chieftains of Ardveich were buried there. Read more of the old graveyards on the 'Burial Grounds' page.
St. Angus, a monk From Dunblane came to Balquhidder Glen in the 8th or 9th Century and built a stone oratory at Kirkton, where he spent the rest of his life. He preached from Tom Anglaise east of the present Manse .
Angus was buried at the foot of Tom nan Angeae, the Hill of Fire, and the stone which reputedly covered his grave stands in the Church. About 1250, Labhran of Auchtubh, from where the MacLarens took their name, Abbot of the Culdee Monostry at Edinchip, built a small stone church (Eaglais Beag) over this gravestone.
By this time many Christian burials here, some recently discovered, make Balquhidder an important early burial ground. In 1631 Lord Scone built a church, partially incorporating Eaglais Beag. Three elegant windows, arches and a belfry, are seen in the ruin.
The present church was given by David Carnegie of Stronvar. An ancient font found while making the Scone church a ruin, stands in the present church and is used for baptisms.
A
nother Minister Duncan Stewart (1772) put the Angus stone out of the church, incensed at the superstitious practice of parishoners standing on the stone to be married.
Whilst a crypt was being excavated at the old church some years ago, a skeleton was found who's skull contained a musket ball. This was the head of Stewart of Glenbuckie who, whilst on his way to join in the '45' with MacGregor of Glencarnaig, was either murdered or shot himself in the head at Leny castle in Callander (Now Leny House).
Note:
This material was sourced largely from 'The Highland Constable' and a collectors book 'Picturesque Scotland'written about 1880. The inspiration came from 'The Real Rob Roy Country'
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