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Church, in use, and associated graveyard. The church was built in 1806 on the site of earlier church. The kirk of Bouerden or Bowirdin was given to the canons of St Andrews in the 12th Century. In 1574 Bourtie shared a minister with three other parishes. The present church is built on the same site. It is a simple, near-square plan, church with tall piended roof with short ridge. it has a small gablet with bellcote and a ball finial. Interior has a horseshoe gallery, and ogee-canopied pulpit with a precentors box. Two badly damaged medieval effigies are preserved within the church, the male effigy said to be that of Thomas de Longville. The churchyard is a rubble-walled enclosure with a few 18th and 19th Century stones, as well as a sundial. Dated 1853, it is a square marble table dial on a circular granite shaft. An unknown heraldic device of vernacular nature was revealed on the rear ceiling coving painting of 1806-7, masked in 1933 along with other internal features. Investigation of a small panel revealed heraldic arms circa 45 mm by 45 mm set in the form of an escutcheon on a pale green frame with darker flourishes, resembling the repeat stencil pattern of vine leaves and grapes which form a blue background on the coving. The escutcheon is gilded, with the rendition of a handsaw (sinister) underpinning two gilded fish (dexter) outlined in dark blue. A 16th century gravestone was rediscovered in 1988, one of the earliest stones relating to the Kyng family lairds of Barra Castle in 1579-81. The gravestone marked the burial site of two Isabellas, one a mother who died in 1579, the other the young wife who died in 1581. The stones now lie outside near the south wall of the church. A Pictish symbol stone (NJ82SW0004) is built into the east end of the south face of the church. The renowned Aberdeen-born architect A. G. R. Mackenzie, former owner of nearby Bourtie House, is buried in the churchyard (1879-1963).
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