Angus HER - NO45SE0010 - RESTENNETH PRIORY

Main Details

Primary ReferenceNO45SE0010
NameRESTENNETH PRIORY
NMRS Card No.NO45SE10
NMRS Numlink33745
Site Form Standing Structure
Site Condition Incomplete
Details Remains of a priory. Restenneth Priory possibly occupies the site of a Celtic foundation. The remains of Restenneth Priory stand on a knoll (which has been suggested to be the site of a crannog). The walls of the choir are circa 5m high and contain fine lancet windows. The foundations of the nave and part of the chapter house vary from 0.3m to 1.2m in height. The plain cloister walls are circa 4m high. The tower is entire, square in plan, and dates to the 11th - 12th Century, the lower 3m may incorporate older elements and may originally have been a porch. It is similar to St Rule's Tower at St Andrews. The octagonal spire is probably 15th Century. Some scholars argue that this could be the remains of the church built for Nechtan, king of the Picts, who sent to Monkwearmouth, Jarrow, for masons to build a stone church in around 710 AD. Restenneth is recorded as an Augustinian Priory in the 12th Century after Malcolm IV granted it to the canons of Jedburgh in 1161-2. Malcolm's charter confirmed extensive land holdings and privileges. Prince John, the son of Robert the Bruce, was buried here around 1327, King David II later generously supported Restenneth as the last resting place of his brother. By 1500 only two canons remained resident in the priory. After the Reformation the priory had several owners and the remains of the choir were used as a burial aisle for the Dempsters of Dunnichen. In 1919 the remains passed into the custody of the state. Prior House, to the northwest (NO45SE0388) at the north end of the site, dates to the 18th Century but was restored in 1953. A geophysical survey (resistance and GPR) was carried out by RGC in June 2019 as part of a wider research project. This recorded anomalies within the cloister area which may be associated with the original cloister, although this is not clear as it is known that the existing 'cloister' walls are a later construction. Anomalies consistent with the Sacristy and chapter house/east range were also noted.
Last Update24/03/2025

National Grid Reference: NO 4821 5158


Easting: 341310, Northing: 737970

Compiler 
Date of Compilation 

Event Details

Event DateEvent Type
1905 Geophysical Survey

Excavations and Surveys

Date MDate YTypeDurationDirector / OrganisationAuspicesFundExtent
 1952  SIMPSON   
81958  JLDOS  

Artefact and Ecofact

Date MDate YArtefact TypeFinderRecovery MethodConditionStorage LocationAccess No.
 1877THUMB-RING  Stray Find National Museum of Scotland NJ 42
61992GOLD RING  Stray Find DBF 91
      

Ecofact

Samples 
Palynology 
Ecofact Notes 

Monument Types

Monument Type 1Monument Type 2Monument Type 3OrderProbability
POTTERY FRENCHC100
POTTERY SAINTONGE WARED100
CRANNOGS  SITE OF E25
TOWERS  B100
PRIORIES REMAINS OFA100

Google Map for NO45SE0010


National Status

National Status
Guardianship Monument (HBM)
Scheduled (under AM + Arch Area Act 1979)

Regional Status


Photo Details

SourceReferencePhoto TypeFilm TypeDate
 AN/4618  
 AN/4621/CN Colour Negative  
 AN/5617  
 AN/5618  
 AN/5619  
 AN/5919/CS  
 AN/5920/CS  
 AN/5921/CS  
 AN/5970/CS  
 AN/5971/CS  
 AN/5972/CS  
 B/16638  
 B/16639  
 B/16640  
 B/81522/CS  
 B/93502/CS  
 B/93505/CS  
 B/93506/CS  
 B/93507/CS  
 B/93508/CS  
 C/30612  
 C/30613  
 C/30614  
 C/30615  
 C/30616  
 C/30617  
 C/30618  
 C/30619  
 C/30620  
 C/30621  
 AN/4620/CN Colour Negative  
 AN/4622/CN Colour Negative  
 AN/5973/CS  
 B/93501/CS  
 B/93503/CS  
 B/93504/CS  
 AN/4617  
 AN/4619  
 AN/5620  
 B/16641  
 MS/329  
AASAAS/97/07/CT43-6, 48,52 Air-oblique Colour Transparency 07/06/1997
AASGR/04/CT641-655 Ground Colour Transparency 07/07/2004

Bibliographic Detail

Bib Ref NoTitleAuthorDateOthersEditorPublishedDetailsDate MDate Y
8 D G Adams1984  Brechin11, 33-4  
602Proc Soc Antiq Scot 116E Fernie1987   397, 399  
2936Archaeol Scot 5 2J Stuart1880   285-316  
3346Proc Soc Antiq Scot 12 1878   90  
3845 W D Simpson1952  Edinburgh   
4404Proc Soc Antiq Scot 124N [M] Cameron1994   375  
00501MEDIEVAL RELIGIOUS HOUSES: SCOTLANDD EASSON1957  London81 1957
02163THE CRANNOGS OF NORTHEAST SCOTLAND: QUANTIFYING THE RESOURCE. UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHAMPTON MA DISSERTATIONM J STRATIGOS2013   44-5, 77 2013
04618GEOPHYSICAL SURVEY REPORT RESTENNETH PRIORY 2019  RGC19342/RTP  2019
06719EARLY CHURCH ARCHITECTURE IN SCOTLAND. IN PSAS 116, 393-411E FERNIE1986     1986

Location

Historic Administrative Area Name Forfar
Positional Accuracy Centred at
Buffer Zone 1-5m
Buffer Type Bespoke
Capture Scale Unknown
Spatial Feature Type Polygon: Known Site Extent

Environment

Constraints Privately owned, access by arrangement - easy access.
Altitude70
Geology 
Topography Plateau
Aspect 1360
Aspect 2 Closed
Current Land Use Ancient Monument
Vegetation
Soil Type 
Hydrology 

Measurements

Plan 
Shape 1
Shape 2
Diameter 
Length 
Width 
Thickness 
Depth 
Area 
Height 

Historic Land Use


Period Details

PeriodOrderProbabilityRadiocarbon DatesDate BuiltDate of DestructionDate of Loss
Medieval (1100 - 1560 AD) A100    
Iron Age (800 BC - 400 AD) B25    

Period Notes

Period Notes

Architect Details

Architect Details

Maritime Archaeology

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