History and Heritage
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History
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The Royal Burgh of Cullen is renowned for both
the beauty of its setting and its rich history.
Inverculen, the original village, was at the mouth
of the Cullen Burn, but the people moved inland to
what is now known as Old Cullen about the year 1300,
during the Wars of Independence against Kind Edward
I of England. In 1327, King Robert the Bruce's
Queen, Elizabeth de Burgh, died at Cullen.
A prominent family of the time, the Ogilvies, lived
at Findlater Castle, perched on a rocky promontory,
east of Cullen. In 1600, however, they built Cullen
House close to the church and village and Findlater
Castle fell into ruin. In the 17th Century,
Cullen's laird became Earl of Findlater, and in the
next century, the estates passed to the Earl of
Seafield. Cullen House was extended more than once,
and has now been converted into luxury homes. |
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The Royal Burgh of Cullen and its Coat of Arms
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The ancient Burgh of Cullen was founded by
William the Lion in the 12th Century. King Robert
the Bruce granted a further charter in 1327, but
this may never have been registered. A new charter
was granted by James II on March 6th 1455,
constituting the Town as a Royal Burgh. Records
imply that this was granted due to the volume of sea
trade with Europe.
The Charter had not been entered in the Great
Register of that date. However, after 166 years,
the then Council of the Royal Burgh of Cullen
decided to have the Charter registered in the books
of Chancery for preservation. At this time, an
official extract in Latin was written.

Shortly before the 500 year celebration of the
Charter, it was discovered that the Coat of Arms had
never been registered in the All Arms and Bearings
Register of Scotland. The Town Council petitioned
the Lord Lyon King of Arms in Edinburgh who granted
the Warrant.
The Arms, in the shape of a shield coloured silver,
has the Virgin Mary and Child as a focal point (the
Ancient Collegiate Church having been dedicated to
the Blessed Virgin). She is sitting on a cushioned
faldstool of mediaeval shape, a stool with an arm at
each side, but no back. She is dressed in a red
dress with a blue robe and holds the Holy Child in
white at her left arm and a sceptre in her right
hand.
The Sceptre, Crown and Halo are in gold, and, at the
base, there is a Whelp dog (that is reputed to be a
pun on the name of the Town, the Gaelic word for
whelp being "Cuilean"). In a compartment on the
base is the Motto: "In Secula Seculorum" - for
which there are two English translations -
"celebration of mankind for ever and ever" - "world
without end to all eternity". |
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Cullen Auld Kirk, Old Cullen
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The existence of a church at Cullen was first
recorded in 1236, and again in 1275. In 1327, Queen
Elizabeth de Burgh, second wife of Robert the Bruce,
died at Cullen, and her entrails were buried in the
church. The king founded a chaplaincy that year to
pray for her soul - a tradition that continues to
this day.
The church was dedicated to St. Mary the Virgin, the
patron saint of Cullen. Later additions were St.
Anne's Aisle, the present south transept (built in
1536), and the Seafield Loft, an imposing example of
a laird's gallery (built in 1602). The church
features a beautiful sacrament house in the north
wall and an ornate monument (dated 1554) to
Alexander Ogilvie of that Ilk, who, in 1543, raised
the church to collegiate status. The churchyard has
many interesting and imposing tombs, monuments and
gravestones.
Cullen Auld Kirk stood in the centre of the original
Burgh of Cullen. If you stand at the main gate and
look up the avenue, the market cross would have been
directly in front, with the main street running
north south to the left and the right. Between 1820
and 1830, the new town of Cullen was built, and
every trace of the old one demolished, save for the
Kirk, to allow the Earl of Seafield to improve his
policies. A place was reserved for a new church in
Cullen Square, but it was never built.
A booklet describing the church is available, and
the church is open during the summer months on
Tuesdays and Fridays from 2 p.m. to 4 p.m., with
guided tours available. |
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Mercat Cross
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| Now sited in the Square, the Cross previously
stood at Old Cullen. It dates from 1696 and
incorporates a still older carving of the Virgin and
Child. |
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Fishing and Cullen Harbour
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Fishing has been carried on at Cullen for at
least 500 years, and the picturesque Seatown with
its colourful painted houses and twisting lanes
dates in part from the 17th century. The small
harbour was built between 1817 and 1819 by William
Minto, to a design by Thomas Telford; alterations
and an additional quay were added by William
Robertson in 1834.
Robert Southey, the well known poet and friend of
Telford, who travelled the Highlands with him, wrote
of Cullen: "When I stood upon the pier at low
water, seeing the tremendous rocks with which the
whole shore is bristled, and the open sea to which
the whole place is exposed, it was with a proud
feeling that I saw the first talents in the world
employed by the British Government in works of such
unostentatious, but great, immediate, palpable and
permanent utility. Already their excellent effects
are felt. The fishing vessels were just coming in
having caught about 300 barrels of herring during
the night…." The harbour is now mainly used by
pleasure craft.
The village specialised in the export of smoked
haddock and had at one time three large curing
houses.
The local delicacy, Cullen Skink, is a delicious
fish soup of smoked haddock, potatoes, onions and
milk. |
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The Cullen Railway Viaducts
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The most striking feature of the town is the
series of railway viaducts, one of the great
achievements of 19th Century railway engineering,
which divide the Seatown from the upper town. They
were completed in 1886 by the Great North of
Scotland Railway. The Countess of Seafield would
not allow the line to cross the policies of Cullen
House.
The arches of the viaducts frame some of the best
views of the town and its surroundings - the
Seatown, the Cullen Burn, the 19th Century Temple of
Pomona (a garden teahouse in the shape of a
classical temple) and, most magnificent of all,
Cullen Bay with the isolated rock strata known as
"The Three Kings". The railway line was closed in
1968 and is now incorporated in a coastal footpath
to Portknockie.
It also forms part of the SUSTRANS
national cycle path (www.sustrans.org.uk)
and of the North Sea Cycle Route (www.northsea-cycle.com). |
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