- Causey Mounth
The Causey Mounth is an ancient
drovers' road over the coastal fringe of theGrampian Mountains inAberdeenshire ,Scotland . This route was developed as the main highway betweenStonehaven andAberdeen around the 12th centuryAD and it continued to function as the principal route connecting these two cities until the mid 20th century, when modern highway construction of theA90 road occurred in this area. There are extant paved and usable sections of this road over part of the alignment; however, many parts of the ancient route are no more thanfootpath s, and in some cases the road has vanished intoagricultural fields. Constructed in theMiddle Ages , the Causey Mounth was created as an elevated rockcauseway to span many of the boggy areas such as thePortlethen Moss . A considerable portion of the alignment of the Causey Mounth is illustrated on the UK Ordnance Survey Map. [United Kingdom Ordnance Survey Map Landranger 45, Stonehaven and Banchory, 1:50,000 scale, 2004] although a large fraction of the route cannot be navigated by a conventional passenger vehicle (particularly at the crossing of theBurn of Pheppie ).History
A number of
prehistoric megalithic monuments lie along the Causey Mounth such as theOld Bourtreebush stone circle .As late as theEarly Middle Ages , theMounth , or easternmost range of theGrampian Mountains , posed a formidable terrestrial barrier isolating the northeast of Scotland from the Scottish Lowlands. Thismountain ous barrier, combined with the localbog s, may have been a factor in re-routing the Romans' coastal march northward, since the farthest known majorcoast al Roman encampment (Raedykes ) in the east of Scotland, lies literally at the southernlatitude of the Causey Mounth. By the twelfth century AD construction of the Causey Mounth had begun to connect these two regions of Highlands and Lowlands.The Causey Mounth was traversed byWilliam Keith, 7th Earl Marischal and theMarquess of Montrose when they commanded aCovenanter army of 9000 men in the first battle of the Civil War in1639 . [ [http://www.megalithic.co.uk/article.php?sid=17932 C.Michael Hogan, "Causey Mounth", Megalithic Portal, ed. by Andy Burnham, Nov. 3, 2007] ]Detailed alignment
The route was specifically designed to connect the coastal portion of Stonehaven to a crossing of the
River Dee at the southern edge of Aberdeen. Stonehaven was most noted in the Middle Ages for thefortress ofDunnottar Castle , controlling land and sea movements ofmilitary might from its ruggedpromontory jutting into the North Sea. This fortress along withCowie Castle at the north of Stonehaven effectively controlled all coastal land and sea movements to the north. Proceeding north from Cowie Castle, the Causey Mounth crosses theBurn of Muchalls at theBridge of Muchalls and thence proceeds northward pastMuchalls Castle . Thetrackway passes theruins of the Episcopal Chapels, dating to1624 [ [http://familytreemaker.genealogy.com/users/c/h/r/Stuart-Christie/ Christie Lineage, Skateraw] ] situated on lands of the Muchalls Castle Estate, and thence northerly beside the present daySaint Ternan's Church , which is the successor facility to the ruinedchapel s. Thence the alignment crosses theBurn of Pheppie in an agricultural area and further crosses a bridge over theBurn of Elsick atGillybrands somewhat southeast ofElsick House . After crossing through the boggyPortlethen Moss (which had a much larger historic extent than present), the route passes west of a massivemegalithic standing stone .ee also
*
Cairnamounth
*Elsick House
*Elsick Mounth
*Burn of Elsick References
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