Pricing Change
New pricing for orders of material from this site will come into place shortly. Charges for supply of digital images, digitisation on demand, prints and licensing will be altered.
Carnock Chapel
Chapel (Medieval)(Possible)
Site Name Carnock Chapel
Classification Chapel (Medieval)(Possible)
Alternative Name(s) Holy Water Stoup; Kernach
Canmore ID 46817
Site Number NS88NE 1
NGR NS 8653 8839
Datum OSGB36 - NGR
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/46817
- Council Stirling
- Parish St Ninians
- Former Region Central
- Former District Stirling
- Former County Stirlingshire
NS88NE 1 8653 8839.
(NS 8653 8839) Chapel (NR) (site of)
OS 6" map (1967)
The site of this chapel, of which no structural remains survive, is marked by an assemblage of loose stones and an inscribed iron panel. The fragments include a few door and window lintels, and one tapering slab, 2'2" x 1'2" at the wider end, which has been hollowed out, forming a basin 9 1/2" in diameter and 4" deep. This is most probably a holy water stoup, and if so it would help to attest the former existence of a pre-Reformation church on the site. Carnock, where this chapel is situated, has been identified (W F Skene 1887; N K Chadwick 1958) with the "Kernach" mentioned in Jocelyn's Vita S Kentigerni.
RCAHMS 1963, visited 1954
The plaque reads "Site of Chapel built where Kentigern rested with the body of Fergus on the way to Cathures (Glasgow) in the 6th century". The piscina and other carved stones exist at the site, but no remains of the chapel survive.
Visited by OS (JLD) 17 October 1953
Field Visit (August 1978)
Carnock, Chapel NS 865 883 NS88NE 1
Only a scatter of worked stones now marks the site of this chapel. A probable holy-water stoup suggests that the chapel was of pre-Reformation date. Carnock has been identified with the 'Kernach' mentioned in a 12th-century account of the life of St Kentigern, who died in 612.
RCAHMS 1979, visited August 1978
(Skene 1876-80, ii, 184-5; Jackson 1958, 310; RCAHMS 1963, p. 171, no. 175)