Drumuillie (Scottish Gaelic: Druim Mùillidh) is a small hamlet (or Clachan), which lies north of Boat of Garten and northeast of Aviemore in Inverness-shire, Scottish Highlands and is in the Scottish council area of Highland. The village is located at the centre of Abernethy Forest (to the north of Drumuillie is Deishar Wood) and just to the west of the River Spey.
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Drumuillie (Scottish Gaelic: Druim Mùillidh) is a small hamlet (or Clachan), which lies north of Boat of Garten and northeast of Aviemore in Inverness-shire, Scottish Highlands and is in the Scottish council area of Highland. The village is located at the centre of Abernethy Forest (to the north of Drumuillie is Deishar Wood) and just to the west of the River Spey.
==History== The remains of a medieval Motte-and-bailey castle known as Tom Pitlac (or the hill of Bigla or Matilda) is located to the west of Drumuillie adjacent to the Boat of Garten. The motte is a scheduled ancient monument and is believed to date to the 12th or 13th century, with an historic link in the 15th century to Bigla, a daughter of Gilbert Cumin, Lord of Glenchearnach. Associated with the castle, to the south of Drumuillie was the Spey 'miracle Stone', a stone erected in 1865 that commemorated a local legend in which the Spey river waters were divided to allow a funeral to proceed to nearby Duthil.
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