Generated by GPT-5-mini| Logierait | |
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![]() Wim Kegel · CC BY-SA 2.0 · source | |
| Name | Logierait |
| Country | Scotland |
| Council area | Perth and Kinross |
| Lieutenancy | Perth and Kinross |
| Coordinates | 56.6490°N 3.9730°W |
| Postcode area | PH |
Logierait is a village and parish in Perth and Kinross, Scotland, situated on the north bank of the River Tay near the confluence with the River Tummel. The settlement lies close to major historic routes between Perth and the Highlands and has associations with medieval ecclesiastical foundations, clan territories, and Scottish legal figures. Its landscape, built environment, and community life reflect connections to regional hubs such as Perth, Scotland, Pitlochry, Aberfeldy, Abernethy, Scotland, and historical routes to Inverness and Edinburgh.
The parish area was influenced by Pictish, Gaelic, and later Lowland Scottish institutions, with local medieval ecclesiastical links to Dunkeld Cathedral, Scone Abbey, St Andrews Cathedral and the diocesan structures of medieval Scotland. During the Wars of Scottish Independence notable regional events involved figures associated with Robert the Bruce, Edward I of England, and local lairds tied to the shifting allegiances of the Clan MacGregor and Clan Murray. In the early modern period, landowners engaged with the judicial and political networks of Perthshire and the Parliament of Scotland, while the 18th and 19th centuries brought agricultural improvement influenced by proponents such as James Hutton and estate practices seen elsewhere in Scotland. The area saw impacts from national developments including the Highland Clearances, the Industrial Revolution, and the expansion of transport infrastructures like the Caledonian Railway and later road networks connected to A9 road (Scotland) corridors. Prominent legal and ecclesiastical personalities linked to the parish intersected with institutions such as the Church of Scotland and the Court of Session.
The village occupies riverine terrain by the River Tay and its tributary flows, featuring alluvial floodplains, glacial deposits, and surrounding uplands that form part of the Southern Highlands transition zone near the Grampian Mountains. Underlying geology includes metamorphic and igneous formations comparable to exposures studied by Agnes Muirhead and commentators influenced by the work of James Hutton and later geologists at Edinburgh University. Hydrological connections tie the parish to the Tay catchment and to hydrographic studies linking to Loch Tummel and the headwaters feeding toward Loch Rannoch. The local soil profiles and topography have informed agricultural patterns similar to those documented in surrounding parishes like Weem and Dull, Perth and Kinross.
Population patterns reflect rural Scottish trends with historical fluctuations tied to agrarian economics, migration to urban centres such as Glasgow and Aberdeen, and local retention influenced by commuter links to Perth, Scotland. Census-era changes mirror shifts experienced in Perth and Kinross council area and comparable parishes including Alyth and Crieff. Age distribution, household composition, and occupation structures in the parish align with regional data used by agencies such as National Records of Scotland and policy frameworks administered from Holyrood.
Land use comprises mixed arable and pastoral farming, sporting estates, and limited commercial activities connected to tourism circuits incorporating Cairngorms National Park, Highland Perthshire attractions, and heritage trails associated with Jacobite history. Estate management practices involve tenancies and holdings comparable to models used by organizations such as the National Trust for Scotland and land agents linked to historic families like the Murrays of Atholl. Small-scale enterprises service local needs and link to markets in Perth, Scotland and regional supply chains reaching ports such as Dundee and Invergordon.
Built heritage includes parish churches, grave slabs, and estate houses reflecting vernacular and ecclesiastical architecture found across Perthshire, with stylistic kinship to structures preserved at Dunkeld Cathedral, Scone Palace, and rural kirk sites catalogued by the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. Surviving carved stones and memorials provide material evidence of medieval and post-medieval patronage parallel to collections in Perth Museum and Art Gallery and antiquarian records compiled by figures such as Sir Walter Scott in his cultural surveys. Landscape features include river crossings and bridges analogous to those at Queensferry Crossing in engineering heritage, and farmstead patterns comparable to those recorded in Scotland's Rural Past.
Transport connections have evolved from drovers' roads and military routes associated with 18th-century improvements by engineers influenced by figures like General Wade to modern road links feeding into the A9 corridor and secondary roads toward Pitlochry and Aberfeldy. Historic railway developments affecting the wider area involved companies including the Caledonian Railway and later national networks administered by British Rail. Utilities, communications, and public services reflect integration into the infrastructure systems of Perth and Kinross Council and national providers regulated from Edinburgh.
Community life participates in Highland cultural circuits featuring events similar to those at Pitlochry Festival Theatre, music traditions connected to Scottish Traditional Music Hall of Fame repertoires, and sporting practices such as hillwalking in ranges linked to Cairngorms National Park and fishing on the River Tay associated with angling traditions celebrated in publications from Scottish Natural Heritage. Local volunteer organisations coordinate activities influenced by national charity networks like Scotland's Charity Air Ambulance and cultural partnerships with institutions such as Historic Environment Scotland and regional museums.
Category:Villages in Perth and Kinross