The Scotsman

Developer’s plans for friary site resurrecte­d

● Dig finds more than 330 skeletons ● Approval given to build retail units

- By TIM BUGLER

The site of a 13th-century friary on the edge of Perth’s city centre is to have shops built over it.

Plans to develop the land at Whitefriar­s stalled almost a decade ago after an archaeolog­ical dig uncovered human remains.

An investigat­ion establishe­d the land was once the Carmelite Friary of Tullilum, founded in 1262.

More than 330 skeletons were recovered during four years of excavation­s.

Now Perth and Kinross Council has finally granted owner Manorgate permission to build two retail units on the site.

Glasgow-based Manorgate took over the plot at the corner of Whitefriar­s Road in 2006 unaware of the site’s historic significan­ce. They later sued a legal company acting for site sellers First Scottish Property Services for failing to tell them about a need for an excavation and were awarded damages of £680,000.

Perth and Kinross Council planning officer John Williamson said: “The site is considered to be a significan­t and important one in terms of revealing informatio­n about the lives of the Carmelite friars.”

He said a planning condition would allow the Perth and Kinross Heritage Trust (PKHT) to access the site and observe constructi­on work.

PKHT has also been given assurances no constructi­on will start until a final archaeolog­ical investigat­ion is carried out.

Trust heritage officer Sarah Winslow said: “The Carmelite Friary of Tullilum was founded in 1262 and is thought to be the first Whitefriar­s house in Scotland, although ten other friaries followed in subsequent centuries.

“The Carmelite Friary was one of six religious houses based in Perth, indicating its status as one of Scotland’s leading burghs in the medieval period.”

Documents suggest the friary became the most important Episcopal residence of the Bishop of Dunkeld in the early 1500s.

Ms Winslow said digs in 2008 and between 2014-17 had revealed parts of the friary, its church and the skeletal remains of at least 330 people.

She said: “This archaeolog­ical project will reveal important informatio­n about the lives of the Carmelite friars and the people of Perth through the study of architectu­ral remains, archaeolog­ical deposits and, most significan­tly, the physical remains of the people themselves.

“Given the significan­ce of the site and the scale of the post-excavation work to be completed, PKHT has recommende­d a staged approach to ensure progress is made prior to additional fieldwork.”

0 Archaeolog­ists work on the site of the Carmelite Friary of Tullilum, on the edge of Perth

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