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Publication Account
Date 1977
Event ID 1017802
Category Descriptive Accounts
Type Publication Account
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1017802
What is perhaps the first reference to Banff parish church occurs in a charter of Matthew, Bishop of Aberdeen, to the ,monastery at Arbroath in the late twelfth century, a grant confirmed by Pope Innocent ID in 1200 (Cramond, 1893, 12). The church occupied a site on level ground which stretches southwards from the castle towards the shore. It is reputed to have been rebuilt in 1471 (Smith, 1894-96, 124). The church was described as being in a ruinous way in 1749 and the bell and clock were removed shortly thereafter in 1761. A new parish church was built in the High Street in 1789-90, with the old structure being demolished in 1797. Fragments of the latter building still survive. The south aisle containing the tomb of Sir Walter Ogilvy remains, along with a small part of the north wall of the nave to which is affixed a monument to the Bairds of Auchmedden. A fine collection of seventeenth-century headstones litter the graveyard.
Information from ‘Historic Banff: The Archaeological Implications of Development’ (1977).