Country: | Scotland |
Official Name: | Dunbeath |
Gaelic Name: | Dùn Bheithe |
Static Image Name: | Kenn and the Salmon.jpg |
Static Image Caption: | Kenn and the Salmon, a statue in memory of Neil Gunn at Dunbeath harbour |
Os Grid Reference: | ND160298 |
Map Type: | Caithness |
Coordinates: | 58.2493°N -3.4319°W |
Civil Parish: | Latheron |
Unitary Scotland: | Highland |
Lieutenancy Scotland: | Caithness |
Constituency Westminster: | Caithness, Sutherland and Easter Ross |
Constituency Scottish Parliament: | Caithness, Sutherland and Ross |
Post Town: | DUNBEATH |
Postcode District: | KW6 |
Postcode Area: | KW |
Dial Code: | 01593 |
Dunbeath (gd|Dùn Bheithe)[1] is a village in south-east Caithness, Scotland on the A9 road.[2] [3] It sits astride the Dunbeath Water just before it enters the sea at Dunbeath Bay.
Dunbeath has a very rich archaeological landscape, the site of numerous Iron Age brochs and an early medieval monastic site (see Alex Morrison's archaeological survey, "Dunbeath: A Cultural Landscape".)
There is a community museum/landscape interpretation centre at the old village school (http://www.dunbeath-heritage.org.uk).
Prince George, Duke of Kent, was killed when his Short Sunderland flying boat crashed on a Dunbeath hillside on 25 August 1942.[4]
It was the birthplace of Neil M. Gunn (1891–1973), author of Highland River and others, many of whose novels are set in Dunbeath and its Strath. Of Dunbeath's landscape, Gunn wrote: "These small straths, like the Strath of Dunbeath, have this intimate beauty. In boyhood we get to know every square yard of it. We encompass it physically and our memories hold it. Birches, hazel trees for nutting, pools with trout and an occasionally visible salmon, river-flats with the wind on the bracken and disappearing rabbit scuts, a wealth of wild flower and small bird life, the soaring hawk, the unexpected roe, the ancient graveyard, thoughts of the folk who once lived far inland in straths and hollows, the past and the present held in a moment of day-dream." ('My Bit of Britain', 1941).