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The grey ruined walls of a historic abbey featuring ornate archways

Who were the monks of Dundrennan Abbey?

Fergus, Lord of Galloway, founded Dundrennan Abbey in 1142, with the help of David I of Scotland. The white-robed Cistercian monks came from Rievaulx Abbey, North Yorkshire and worshipped here for 400 years.

After establishing Dundrennan, monks went forth to found two more Cistercian abbeys in Galloway – Glenluce Abbey, around 1190, and Sweetheart Abbey, in 1273.

We know very little about the Dundrennan monks. The names of abbots and other officials are known from grave-markers, charters and other legal documents. A hint of the abbey’s economy comes from papers dealing with the wool trade.

Church and cloister

Dundrennan’s ruins have a peaceful beauty. Its church and cloister lie in secluded woods below the little village. Together they hold some of the best early Gothic architecture in Scotland.

The church is the most impressive to survive from the 13 Cistercian monasteries set up in Scotland. It is laid out on the usual Cistercian cross plan, but has an unusual three-storey design graced by blind and open arcades. (The order’s legendary austerity was waning when the transepts were built in the later 1100s.) This complements the presbytery’s simple details – notably the ‘bundled-shaft’ piers with their plain, bell-shaped caps.

The cloister, although much ruined, is still largely traceable on the ground. The chapter house in the east range dates from the early 1200s and must have been very beautiful, judging by what remains.

The chapter house features:

  • a delightful entrance façade

  • six finely moulded piers, which once held up a handsome, stone-vaulted ceiling

  • grave slabs of four abbots set into the floor

  • a slab of blue marble, once highly polished and mounted with a Flemish brass depicting a knight and lady

Statement of Significance

Read our Statement of Significance for Dundrennan Abbey for facts, figures and further reading about the abbey and its history.

Read more
A stone window opening looking onto a stone decorative archway
A square stone carving, cracked in places with some areas missing, with a monk carved into the middle and wording and a hand around the side

Mary’s last hours in Scotland

The abbey’s most famous visitor was Mary Queen of Scots.

She was welcomed at the gates on 15 May 1568, following her escape from Lochleven Castle and her defeat at Langside. Mary was making for England and the relative safety – or so she thought – of her cousin, Elizabeth I. She never returned to her native land after setting sail for the Cumberland coast.

Natural history

The fairy foxglove grows on the abbey walls. This rare, small, pink-flowered plant is an Alpine from southern Europe. It’s said that the plant is found only where the feet of Roman soldiers once trod.

Our archives and collections

Get a further glimpse into Dundrennan Abbey's history by exploring archive images and collections objects on trove.scot, your companion to researching Scotland’s past.

A historic abbey ruin from above, showing the outline of the walls, trees and a graveyard
A stone abbey ruin amongst trees and fields, with housing nearby
A historic stone abbey wall in ruins, with archways