Building record MHG2628 - Chapel, Killuradan

Summary

No summary available.

Location

Grid reference Centred NH 3766 3006 (40m by 40m) (Buffered by site type)
Map sheet NH33SE
Old County INVERNESS-SHIRE
Civil Parish URQUHART AND GLENMORISTON
Geographical Area INVERNESS

Map

Type and Period (1)

Full Description

See also:
NH33SE0027 Burial Ground
Jhooper, 24/3/2002
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This graveyard, which is still in occasional use, is surrounded by a 19th century wall and contains no gravestones with legible dates earlier than the 19th century. The triangular "basin stone" is built into the NE wall with an inscribed plaque in Gaelic above it. No trace and no local knowledge of St Uradan's Well.
Visited by OS (A A) 1 May 1975

NH33SE 4 3767 3006.
Grave Yard {NAT}(NH 3767 3006) Old coins found here A.D. 1869 {NAT} OS 6"map, Inverness-shire, 2nd ed., (1904)

About 8 yds from E wall of the graveyard is a triangular basin-stone. No tradition exists regarding it, but it was probably a font connected with chapel. It was long used as a gravestone of a family of McDougals.
W Jolly 1882 <1>

An old graveyard called Killuradan or the graveyard of St. Uradan. (W Jolly 1882) The combination of Killuradan, Claodh Churidan and St. Uradan's Well nearby, leaves little doubt that this was the site of one of the chapels of St. Curitan with its associated graveyard and well. St. Curitan was active 700-750 AD. (W J Watson 1926) <2>

Sources/Archives (2)

  • <1> Text/Publication/Article: Jolly, W. 1882. On cup-marked stones in the neighbourhood of Inverness; with an appendix on cup-marked stones in the Western Islands. Proc Soc Antiq Scot Volume 16. 300-401. 381-2.
  • <2> Text/Publication/Volume: Watson, W J. 1926. The history of the Celtic place-names of Scotland: being the Rhind lectures on archaeology (expanded) delivered in 1916. 338.

Finds (1)

Protected Status/Designation

Related Monuments/Buildings (1)

Related Events/Activities (0)

Record last edited

Aug 3 2010 3:32PM

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