Duntulm Explained

Map Type:Isle of Skye
Official Name:Duntulm
Gaelic Name:Dùn Thuilm
Static Image Name:Scotland Skye Trotternish 2.jpg
Static Image Caption:Tulm Island seen from Duntulm Castle
Country:Scotland
Unitary Scotland:Highland
Lieutenancy Scotland:Ross and Cromarty
Coordinates:57.68°N -6.34°W
Os Grid Reference:NG410739
Constituency Westminster:Ross, Skye and Lochaber
Constituency Scottish Parliament:Ross, Skye and Inverness West
Post Town:PORTREE
Postcode Area:IV
Postcode District:IV51
Dial Code:01470 552

Duntulm (gd|Dùn Thuilm) is a township situated on the northwest coast of the Trotternish peninsula on the Isle of Skye, and is made up of Shulista (North Duntulm) and South Duntulm.[1] It is located on the single-track A855 road about 24 miles north of Portree. The township is noted for its long fortified headland, which the ruins of Duntulm Castle presently sit.[2]

Geography and natural history

Duntulm is coastally composed of a series of bays and onlooked by Cnoc Roll, a small hill standing 122 m above sea level with a radio mast. Duntulm Bay sits north of Duntulm Castle, and contains the 33 m high Tulm Island and smaller Port Duntulm.[3] The bay is overlooked by the abandoned linear settlement of Erisco - depopulated during the highland clearances.[4] Duntulm features a single small loch, Loch Cleat (meaning Grey Loch).[5]

Immediately south of the castle is Cairidh Ghlumaig, a bay which forms part of the yair (Scottish Gaelic for fish trap) of Ghlumaig. Cairidh Ghlumaig is renowned for its outcrop of the type section of the Middle Jurassic aged Duntulm Formation (c. 170 million years old), which contains several trackways attributed to long-necked sauropods.[6] The coast from Cairidh Ghlumaig to Score Bay is strictly protected by the Skye Nature Conservation Order 2019, which safeguards Skye's vertebrate fossils.[7]

History

Duntulm was originally a Pictish fortress, forming one of a chain of duns or forts stretching along the north coast of the Isle of Skye. On the arrival of the Norsemen the fort became the residence of a powerful Viking leader who gave it the name David's Fort.

Trotternish often changed hands. It was not until the 16th century that the Lords of the Isles finally seized the territory and Donhall Gorm (Blue Donald) the chief (great-grandson of Hugh of Sleat), took up residence there and carried out considerable improvements to the fort. In 1730 the MacDonalds moved away from Duntulm and stayed for a time at Monkstadt before building their new castle at Armadale.

Duntulm is home to a clach-ultaich, a lifting stone believed to weigh a ton.[8]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Duntulm . The Gazetteer for Scotland . School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh and The Royal Scottish Geographical Society . 18 June 2018.
  2. Web site: Duntulm Castle Feature Page on Undiscovered Scotland . 2024-10-15 . www.undiscoveredscotland.co.uk.
  3. Web site: Ltd . Copyright The mountain Guide-A.-Connect . Tulm Island Scotland . 2024-10-15 . UK mountain Guide . en.
  4. Web site: Skye, Erisco Canmore . 2024-10-15 . canmore.org.uk . en.
  5. Web site: OS1/16/7/26 ScotlandsPlaces . 2024-10-15 . scotlandsplaces.gov.uk . en.
  6. Brusatte . Stephen L. . Challands . Thomas J. . Ross . Dugald A. . Wilkinson . Mark . August 2016 . Sauropod dinosaur trackways in a Middle Jurassic lagoon on the Isle of Skye, Scotland . Scottish Journal of Geology . en . 52 . 1 . 1–9 . 10.1144/sjg2015-005 . 2016ScJG...52....1B . 0036-9276.
  7. Web site: 15 October 2024 . Helping to safeguard Skye's fossil heritage FAQ's .
  8. Book: Dwelly, Edward. 1911. Faclair Gàidhlig gu Beurla le Dealbhan/The Illustrated [Scottish] Gaelic-English Dictionary. 4th. Glasgow. MacLaren & Sons.