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Towns and Villages in Aberdeenshire and Moray
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You may view the information for ALL the towns and villages
in Aberdeenshire (the page may be very large)
or
You can view your
preferred location from the list on the left.
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Aberchirder Main Street - Photo:
Greg Stringham
CCL |
This small town
- colloquially
known as
Foggieloan, or
‘mossy track’ -
lies close to
the Moray Firth
coastal route
and started life
as an estate
village founded
by Alexander
Gordon in 1746.
Nearby is the
Bridge of
Marnoch as well
as prehistoric
standing stones
dating to 1800
BC. Of great
interest is
16th-century
Crombie Castle –
stronghold of
the ancient
Innes Clan - and
its neighbour,
Kinnairdy
Castle. The
latter has a
14th century
stone tower and
16th century
palace.
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At first glance this is a
thoroughly grey city. Look beneath the surface,
though, and it is uniquely fascinating. Known as
the ‘Granite City’ thanks to the grey stone used
in many buildings, it has terraced gardens,
flower-decked parks – it’s famous for its displays
of roses – and a skyline dotted with sky-touching
spires, the most notable of which is the 195ft
tower of St Nicholas Church. The city is famous
for golf and is a popular seaside resort with two
miles of golden beaches. |

Typical granite houses in Belvidere St -
Photo:
Richard Slessor
CCL |
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Aberdeen boat club on the Dee Estuary - Photo:
Richard Slessor
CCL |
Lying at the mouth of the
salmon rivers Don and Dee, it has an ‘old’ part
containing fine architecture and the twin-spired
15th century cathedral of St Machar. Founded by
the saint in 580AD, Aberdeen was called Devana by
the Romans and was granted a royal charter in 1179
by King William the Lion. Within 200 years it was
a prosperous port dealing in cargoes such as fish,
wool and timber. |
Its great castle was destroyed
in 1308 when supporters of Robert the Bruce
evicted a garrison of English troops. The city
itself was burned down by Edward lll, resulting in
a ‘new Aberdeen’ with a thriving harbour.
Scotland’s third largest city
still has a thriving fishing industry and acts as
a base for the exploration of North Sea oil
fields. Its Harbour Board claims to be the oldest
business in Britain while its university is the
fifth oldest.
The ornate 19th century
Marischal College is possibly the largest granite
building in the world and here visitors will find
curios aplenty at the anthropological museum. The
Gordon Highlanders Museum also has an array of
interesting memorabilia.
The Provost Skene’s House
houses a fine museum while one of the oldest
houses in Aberdeen is the 16th century Provost
Ross’s House. The Old Tolbooth - scene of public
executions - still displays the ‘Aberdeen Maiden’,
forerunner of the guillotine.
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Situated at Dyce,
north of the
sprawling city
of Aberdeen,
this bustling,
international
airport boasts
the busiest
heliport in the
world, helping
thousands of oil
riggers to reach
their platforms
out in the North
Sea. Ferries
sail from here
to Orkney and
the Shetlands
Isles. Nearby is
the golfing town
of Newmachar.
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River Don at Dyce - Photo:
Richard Slessor
CCL |
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River Spey at Aberlour - Photo:
Iain Macaulay
CCL |
Located at the
heart of
Speyside, this
small village,
otherwise known
as Charlestown,
may be noted for
its salmon
fishing and
shortbread but
it is
world-famous for
its single malt
whisky produced
since the early
19th century in
a local
distillery
founded by John
and James Grant.
The oldest
structure is a
packhorse bridge
which crosses
the Lour burn.
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Based around a
large green
where a Highland
Gathering takes
place each year,
Aboyne stands on
the south side
of the River Dee
and is the ideal
location from
which to explore
its picturesque
surroundings.
Its 13th century
castle acted as
a Gordon
stronghold. The
valley of Glen
Tanar eventually
leads to Glen
Mark and the
eastern
Cairngorms, and
at nearby
Lumphanan lies
Macbeth’s Cairn,
reputed to be
where Macbeth
made his stand
before being
killed by
Malcolm in the
11th century.
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Winter on the Loch of Aboyne - Photo:
Keith Grinsted
CCL |
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Haughton Park Railway Station - Photo:
Colin Smith
CCL |
This pretty
market town,
lying on the
River Don on the
fertile Howe of
Alford, has a
narrow gauge
railway that
carries visitors
from a Victorian
station through
beautiful forest
scenery. All
manner of
vehicles are on
display at the
local Grampian
Transport
Museum. Nearby
Craigievar
Castle looks
almost
Disneyesque and
is practically
unaltered since
being built by
the Forbes
family in the
early 17th
century. In
contrast, 14th
century
Kildrummy Castle
- dismantled
after the 1715
Jacobite
rebellion - has
been extensively
restored. It has
a splendid
Alpine garden
laid out by
Japanese
designers in
1904. |
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This is an irresistible resort
lying on the River Dee in the menacing shadow of
3786ft Lochnagar. Nearby is a path which takes you
to the 700ft summit of Craigendarroch (Hill of
Oaks) and panoramic views. A one-time spa, it
received the ultimate accolade when Queen Victoria
and her husband Prince Albert purchased an old
tower house nearby and converted it into Balmoral
Castle in 1852.
The town, in upper Deeside,
was largely created by Francis Farquson who built
the original spa here after an old woman
apparently cured herself of a skin condition by
jumping into a bog at the foot of Pannanich Hill.
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Bridge over the river Dee at Ballater - Photo:
Daryl McKeown
CCL |
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Ballater Golf Course - Photo:
Greg Stringham
CCL |
Nearby is the Birkhall estate,
on the River Muick, where a fine 18th century
mansion bought from the Aberdalgie family was to
become a residence for both the late Queen Mother
and Prince Charles. A 19th century wire suspension
bridge crosses the river. Close by is Crathie
Church, a favourite haunt of the Royal Family.
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This small, ancient town
sits stoically above the fast-flowing River
Dee close to a number of forest walks. One
path takes the visitor to the top of 1,000ft
Scolty Hill, which has a monument to General
Burnett, an officer in the Napoleonic Wars.
His home was L-shaped Crathes Castle, a 16th
century tower house said to be one of the
finest Jacobean houses in Britain. Looking
more like a chateau, it contains the Room of
Nine Nobles, the Room of the Muses and the
Room of the Green Lady - all famous for their
painted ceilings. Its four-acre garden
contains an ancient yew hedge while an ivory
horn that once belonged to Robert the Bruce
hangs in the Great Hall. |

Banchory High Street - Photo:
Richard Slessor
CCL |
The sweet-smelling Ingasetter
lavender distillery is a popular attraction here
while the Brig o’ Feugh is an 18th century bridge
over a dramatic gorge.
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View of Banff across the mouth of the River
Deveron - Photo:
Anne Burgess
CCL |
This picturesque
and mostly
Georgian resort
boasting miles
of beaches sits
at the mouth of
the River
Deverton on the
Moray Firth.
Made a royal
burgh in 1372 by
Robert 11, it
prospered in the
18th century
once it had
acquired a
harbour. Its
castle was built
in the mid-18th
century but
Banff’s most
famous building
is restored Duff
House. Completed
in 1740 and
built by William
Adam, it is now
a satellite of
the National
Galleries of
Scotland. The
Biggar Fountain
stands on the
site of a
gallows where,
in 1701, a local
outlaw went to
his death
playing the
fiddle. |
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With Balmoral Castle in close
attendance, high-flying Braemar sits eagle-like at
a height of 1,100ft in the Cairngorm Mountains,
attracting thousands of visitors each year. It is
world-famous for its September Highland Games,
which are frequently attended by the Queen. The
colourful event dates to the 11th century when
Malcolm 111 set up contests to find his strongest
warriors. |

Braemar Castle - Photo:
Colin Smith
CCL |
Set among heathery scenery,
the village is overlooked by Cairn Toul, at
4,000ft, while the fortress of Braemar Castle acts
as a reminder of violent times. It was built by
the 2nd Earl of Mar in 1628 but was effectively
destroyed by a Jacobite army some 60 years later.
Repaired in 1748, it has a round tower, a huge
iron gateway and a barrel-vaulted ceiling. The
Invercauld Arms stands on a mound where the 6th
Earl of Mar raised the Jacobite standard in 1615.
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View over Braemar - Photo:
Peter Ward
CCL |
Nearby, the grey-granite
Balmoral Castle started life as a 15th century
tower house. It was bought by Queen Victoria and
Prince Albert in the mid-19th century and
transformed into a royal residence in the Scottish
baronial style. Crathie Church, where the Royal
Family still worship, stands on a knoll and was
built of granite in 1895. The summit of Lochnagar
towers above Balmoral while, below, the Royal
Lochnagar Distillery is an ever-popular
crowd-puller. Its unique malt was Queen Victoria’s
personal favourite. |
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With bottlenose
dolphins chasing
surf out in the
bay, this
fishing port,
seemingly
crammed with
traditional
fishermen’s
cottages and
distinctive
kirks, sits
proudly on the
north coast of
Moray and is
part of
Scotland’s
self-proclaimed
‘Riviera’. The
area has a
series of
splendid beaches
while its
climate is
regarded as
mild. Behind the
town lie the
beautiful
Cairngorm
Mountains. |

View over Buckie - Photo:
Anne Burgess
CCL |
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The Beach at Cruden Bay -
Photo:
Richard Slessor
CCL
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Cruden Bay is a
pretty coastal
village with a
fine small
fishing harbour,
good beaches and
dunes, a
championship
golf course and,
curiously, the
echo of a
vampire!
The peaceful beach scene
opposite gives little indication of the
activity that once was there.
In 1012, Cruden Bay was
the site of a battle in which the Danes were
defeated by the Scots and the name of the
village is said to come from the Gaelic
for "Slaughter of Danes". |
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Just north of what is
now Cruden Bay, the Earls of Errol built a
castle around the late 16th century. This
was modified and added to but was
virtually rebuilt in 1836. Perched right
on the cliff edge it is very dramatic and
must have been a magnificent place when at
the height of its grandeur.
It was here that in
the late 19th century the 19th Earl of
Errol entertained many dignitaries
including the author, Bram Stoker, who is
said to have been inspired by the castle
when writing his Dracula novels. He stayed
at the Kilmarnock Arms Hotel in Cruden Bay
and the present owners now have the
original visitors' book containing his
signature. |

Slains Castle - Photo: Louise Johnson
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As
is often the case with legislation, laws can
have a negative effect. A building was taxable
but a structure with no roof is not a building
and is therefore not subject to tax. The
castle and its contents had been sold in 1916
but when the new owner, Sir John Ellerman gave
it up in 1920, its roof was removed to avoid
tax and the building fell into decay. What a
waste!
The Victorian era saw a
great expansion which brought prosperity to
Cruden Bay. In 1897 a railway branch line of
the Great North of Scotland Railway Company
was opened from Ellon to Boddam, and within a
couple of years was built the golf course and
a spectacular hotel (linked by its own tramway
to the railway station). The company promoted
Cruden Bay as a holiday destination for the
gentry only 12 hours from London.
Unfortunately the scheme failed. The railway
was closed to passenger traffic in 1932, the
hotel was requisitioned as an army hospital in
1939 and, although the railway had continued
to be used for freight, it was eventually
closed in 1945. All across the area visitors
can see remains of the trackbed and bridges of
this now defunct railway as it winds its way
across the countryside.
The golf course, however,
still survives and thrives.
Another claim to fame is that it was from here
in June 1914 that the first flight across the
North Sea started. Tryggve Gran, a 26 year old
Norwegion serving as a pilot in the Royal
Flying Corps was determined to be the first to
cross the North Sea from Scotland to Stavanger.
He decided to fly from nearby Nethermill
because there were many steamship routes
between Peterhead and Stavanger. He thought
that, should he get into difficulties and have
to ditch in the sea, he would have a good
chance of being picked up. The onset of the
First World War meant that all civilian
flights were to be banned from 6pm on 30th
July so at 8am he set off in his plane "Ca
Flotte", purchased from Louis Bleriot, but was
forced back by fog to land on Cruden Bay
beach. Eventually he took off and achieved his
aim. A small memorial stands in the village.
Today, Cruden Bay attracts
tourists. It has some small hotels and
guesthouses, its well-known golf course, its
magnificent long sandy beach and the small
harbour area, more correctly called Port
Erroll which is now home to just a few small
fishing boats. Even in the height of summer
the beach is uncrowded and there is no sign
whatsoever of its biggest hidden secret. It
was here beneath the sands of Cruden Bay, that
the first North Sea Oil pipeline was laid to
bring crude oil from the Forties field ashore.
From here it is piped by underground pipeline
to Grangemouth refinery. |
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BULLERS OF BUCHAN
Natural arch & sea caves |
Just north of Cruden Bay
is the spectacular Bullers of
Buchan, an
immense rock
amphitheatre
caused by a
collapsed cavern and further carved out by
the sea. It is
close to the road, easily accessible on foot
(though not with a wheelchair) and not to be
missed. Care should be taken as it can be
dangerous for children and animals.
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This small
fishing port on
the north coast
of Moray
overlooks
beautiful Cullen
Bay, which
boasts unusual
rocks with names
like Three Kings
and the Bow
Fiddle. The
village was
part-inspiration
for ‘Portloise’
in George
Macdonald’s
famous novel
‘Malcolm’,
published in
1875. The
diarist and
author Dr
Johnson paid
Cullen a visit
in 1773. A
haddock-based
soup known as
the ‘Cullen
Skink’ has its
roots here.
The upper part of Cullen
was planned in 1832. When the railway was
being built, the Countess of Seafield would
not allow the track to be built through the
grounds of Cullen house, so it was carried on
viaducts through the town |

Cullen Viaduct - Photo:
Anne Burgess
CCL |
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Balvenie Castle, Dufftown - Photo:
Anne Burgess
CCL |
This is the self-proclaimed
‘Malt Whisky Capital of the World’ and is where
the River Fiddich and Dullan Water meet. It was
founded by James Duff, 4th Earl of Fife, in 1817.
Both the Glenfiddich Distillery and the Balvenie
Distillery are nearby. They offer a chance for
visitors to see how single malts are created in a
process that has changed little since malts were
first produced here in the 19th century.
A clock tower in the village
centre houses an interesting museum while Balvenie
Castle – now a ruin – is one of the oldest
stone-built castles in Scotland’s. Two miles from
Balvenie are the ruins of 15th century Auchindoun
which was virtually destroyed during a battle
involving rival clans in the 16th century.
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Elgin Cathedral Ruins - Photo:
Anne Burgess
CCL |
Built around a medieval street
plan, this royal and ancient borough is today a
key centre for tourists heading for the area known
as Moray. Only a small part of the town’s castle
survives but Elgin’s twice-ruined 13th century
cathedral is considered one of Scotland’s finest
ecclesiastical buildings. First burned down by
Wolf of Badenoch, illegitimate son of Robert 11 in
1390, it is known as the ‘lantern of the north’.
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Spynie Palace – a beautiful
ruin – was the official home of the Bishops of
Moray in the Middle Ages while 13th century
Pluscarden Priory (also wrecked by the rebellious
Wolf of Badenoch) has been transformed into a
Benedictine abbey.
Bonnie Prince Charlie stayed
in Elgin at Thunderton House in 1646 before the
tumultuous Battle of Culloden. The property is now
a hotel.
The local museum is one of the
finest in the north of Britain and features some
of the oldest dinosaurs ever found in Britain.
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Once the capital of the
prehistoric Pictish province of Buchan, Ellon (or
‘island’) sits at a vital crossing point on the
River Ythan. In the Middle Ages the Celtic
Mormaers and later the Norman Earls of Buchan
dispensed justice at the Moot Hill. Ellon was one
of the places burned in the harrying of Buchan in
1308, following Robert the Bruce's defeat of the
Comyns near Oldmeldrum.
The ruins of Ellon Castle
stand on what was previously an ancient fort. The
‘Old Bridge’, built in 1793, is still open to
pedestrians.
Haddo House is a mansion built
by William Adam in 1732 for the 2nd Earl of
Aberdeen. A local park has a footpath running
beside the river for the length of the town. At
one time locals found pearl mussels in the waters
and - presented to King James VI – is part of the
Scottish Crown.
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Findhorn Bay - Photo:
Anne Burgess
CCL |
This pretty village lies at
the mouth of the Findhorn river and has a golden
beach. Over the centuries its sands have swallowed
up valuable farming land, forcing the village to
move at least three times. During the 18th century
it was a busy port but in 1829 it was overwhelmed
by floodwater, with the river rising by an
astonishing 49 feet.
More recently a so-called ‘New
Age’ community has established itself here, led by
the founders, Peter and Eileen Caddy, in the
1960s. Projects include a biological sewage works.
Members of the unorthodox society claim to have
grown giant food plants on virtually barren sand
dunes.
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This pretty village lying on
the River Spey was created in the 18th century by
the 4th Duke of Gordon who believed the original
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