Peterculter

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Peterculter
  • Scottish Gaelic: Cultair
  • Scots: Petercouter
Peterculter is located in Aberdeen
Peterculter
Peterculter
Location within the City of Aberdeen
Population4,570 (mid-2016 est.)[1]
OS grid referenceNJ840007
Council area
  • City of Aberdeen
Lieutenancy area
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townPETERCULTER
Postcode districtAB14
Dialling code01224
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
Websitehttp://www.culter.net/
List of places
UK
Scotland
Aberdeen
57°05′49″N 2°15′57″W / 57.09700°N 2.26570°W / 57.09700; -2.26570Coordinates: 57°05′49″N 2°15′57″W / 57.09700°N 2.26570°W / 57.09700; -2.26570

Peterculter /ˌptərˈktər/ (About this soundlisten) (Scots: Petercouter),[2] also known as Culter (Scots: Couter), is a suburb of Aberdeen, Scotland, about eight miles inland from Aberdeen city centre.[3] Peterculter is on the northern banks of the River Dee, near the confluences with Crynoch Burn and Leuchar Burn. Following the 1996 Scottish council boundary changes it became part of the City of Aberdeen's Lower Deeside ward.

Communication mast on Ardbeck Hill Peterculter

The latter part of the name is said to come from the Gaelic compound word "Cul-tir", which signifies the "back part" of the country.

History[]

About one mile south west of the Peterculter is the site of the Roman marching camp at Normandykes.

King William the Lion bestowed the church of Kulter, "iuxta Abirdene", upon the Abbey and monks of St Mary of Kelso, about 1165–1199. The gift was afterwards confirmed by Mathew, Bishop of Aberdeen, within whose diocese the church sat.

Alan of Soltre, chaplain, who had probably been an ecclesiastic of the hospital, or monastery of Soutra, in Lothian, was presented by the Abbot of Kelso, to the vicarage of the church of Culter, 1239–1240.

In 1287–1288, an agreement was made between the Abbot and Convent of Kelso and the brotherhood of the Knights of Jerusalem, regarding the Templars’ lands of Blairs and Kincolsi (Kincousie, now Kincaussie[4]), on the south side of the Dee, by which a chapel, built by the Templars at their house of Culter, was recognised as a church, with parochial rights, for the inhabitants of the said lands. It was this agreement that changed the existing parish of Culter into two separate parishes with two separate names, the other being Maryculter.

Attractions[]

Statue of Rob Roy

High up on the steep, rocky bank of the Culter Burn near the western exit of the village was a colourful and well-tended kilted wooden figure holding a broadsword and targe (shield) that represents Rob Roy Macgregor, who according to local legend leapt across the stream at that point to flee pursuing Hanoverian troops (Given the width of the stream there, the story - which has its local variants in many parts of Scotland - is unlikely to have much basis in fact). The outlaw Gilderoy is a more likely historical figure for the story. The original statue is thought to have been a modified ship's figurehead. The statue was replaced in 2017 by a resin effigy, wearing ancient Macgregor tartan.

Due to its nearness to Aberdeen City and being only about thirty miles from the Cairngorm National Park, Culter is a base for tourists. In the town itself there are chances of many local walks, including its connection to the Deeside Way at the site of the former Culter railway station, as well as the forest area known locally as 'Sandy Hilly', or 'The Muggies', the entrance to which sits beside the Bucklerburn region.

For sport, there is Peterculter Golf Club and . Each year, on the last Saturday in May is the Culter Gala, in the main playing field of the village; this event draws hundreds of people.

Education[]

Culter School is a primary school in Peterculter dating from 1896.[5]

Notable people[]

See also[]

Notes[]

  1. ^ "Mid-2016 Population Estimates for Settlements and Localities in Scotland". National Records of Scotland. 12 March 2018. Retrieved 30 December 2020.
  2. ^ The Online Scots Dictionary
  3. ^ United Kingdom Ordnance Survey Map, Landranger 45, Stonehaven and Banchory, 1:50000 scale (2004)
  4. ^ Macfarlane, Walter (April 1906). "Maryculter". In Mitchell, K. C. B., Sir Arthur (ed.). Geographical Collections Relating to Scotland Vol. 1 in: Publications of the Scottish History Society, Vol. 51 (1st ed.). Edinburgh: Scottish History Society. p. 430. Retrieved 23 July 2015.
  5. ^ Early history of Peterculter Archived 28 September 2007 at the Wayback Machine

External links[]

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