Country: | Scotland |
Official Name: | Biel |
Label Position: | bottom |
Static Image Name: | Entrance pillars to Biel, East Lothian - geograph.org.uk - 140927.jpg |
Static Image Caption: | Entrance pillars to Biel, East Lothian |
Coordinates: | 55.975°N -2.585°W |
Pushpin Map: | Scotland East Lothian |
Os Grid Reference: | NT634759 |
Post Town: | DUNBAR |
Postcode District: | EH42 |
Postcode Area: | EH |
Dial Code: | 01368 |
Biel is a village in East Lothian, Scotland, UK, to the south of Dunbar, off the B6370 road. It is situated on the Biel Estate, close to Biel House.
The word 'biel', 'beil' or 'bel' means "shelter", as in Belton, Belhaven, Bilsdean, or as in Robert Lauder of Beilmouth.
Archaeologists from Glasgow University found the remains of a small farmstead over 2000 years old, possibly with a palisade surrounding a roundhouse.
The Biel estate was originally owned by the Earls of Dunbar, then by Robert Lauder of The Bass. Sir James Hamilton, Sheriff of Lanark, bought Biel in 1641.
William Hamilton Nisbet succeeded to the Biel lands and made Biel House his residence. It is a 12th-century tower house, off the B6370, and a member of the Historic Houses Association.
The present Biel House is a 16th-century three-storey listed building, formerly owned by the Earls of Belhaven. William Atkinson extended it in 1814–1818, and in the early twentieth century, further interior alterations were made by R.R.Anderson.The grounds include a chapel, rock garden, doocot, summerhouse, gatepiers, deer park, woodland, arboretum, kitchen garden, glasshouses.
The Biel Water, locally known as the Biel Burn, flows through the Biel Estate, and Biel Mill is situated in a woodland.
The Biel Burn Flood of 1948 is still remembered by local residents. The latest flooding incident occurred in 2007.