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Monastery in Highland, Scotland, UK From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Beauly Priory was a Valliscaulian monastic community located at "Insula de Achenbady", now Beauly, Inverness-shire. It was probably founded in 1230. It is not known for certain who the founder was, different sources giving Alexander II of Scotland, John Byset, and both. The French monks, along with Bisset (a nearby, recently settled landowner), had a strong enough French-speaking presence to give the location and the river the name "beau lieu" ("beautiful place") and have it pass into English.
Monastery information | |
---|---|
Order | Valliscaulian, Cistercian (after 1510) |
Established | 1230 |
Disestablished | 1634 |
Mother house | Val-des-Choux |
Diocese | Diocese of Moray |
Controlled churches | Abertarff; Comar; Conveth |
People | |
Founder(s) | Alexander II of Scotland John Byset |
Important associated figures | Robert Reid |
It is not the best documented abbey, and few of the priors of Beauly are known by name until the 14th century. It became Cistercian on 16 April 1510, after the suppression of the Valliscaulian Order by the Pope. The priory was gradually secularised, and ruled by a series of commendatory abbots. The priory's lands were given over to the bishop of Ross by royal charter on 20 October 1634.
The ruins today are still extensive and are one of the main visitor attractions in Inverness-shire. It is protected as a scheduled monument.[1]
In August 1818 John Keats and his friend Charles Brown stopped at Beauly on their way to Cromarty. Their visit produced a collaborative poem, On Some Skulls in Beauley Abbey, near Inverness, written early in August 1818 or possibly some weeks or months later. The majority of the lines are by Brown. Keats contributed to the first line of the poem and the first four words of the second line, and three stanzas.[2]
George F Campbell: "The First and Lost Iona." Candlemas Hill Publishing 2006 and on Kindle.
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