Dundee Law | |
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![]() Dundee Law as seen fromThe Old Steeple | |
Highest point | |
Elevation | 174 m (571 ft)[1] |
Prominence | 78 m (256 ft) ![]() |
Listing | Tump[2] |
Coordinates | 56°28′11″N2°59′24″W / 56.469734°N 2.990000°W /56.469734; -2.990000 |
Geography | |
Dundee Law in theDundee City council area. Dundee Law inScotland | |
Location | Dundee, Scotland |
Geology | |
Rock age | ~400-415 million years |
Mountain type(s) | Crag and tail,Volcanic sill |
Dundee Law is a hill in the centre ofDundee,Scotland, and is the highest point in the city. The Law is what remains of a volcanicsill, which is the result of volcanic activity around 400 million years ago.[3] With a largewar memorial at its summit, it is the most prominent feature on the local skyline.[4]
Dundee Law, which takes its name from a Scots word for a prominent hill, is an example of a volcanic sill. A volcanic area miles to the west forced lava through fissures inOld Red Sandstone. The subsequent action of rain, wind and ice eroded the sandstone, revealing the volcanic rock. Glaciers during theice ages deposited more debris around the base, creating acrag and tail. The shallow gradient of the northern and eastern slopes of the law suggest a north-easterly movement of ice flows. The summit of the hill is over 150 metres (500 feet) above sea level.[5] Despite the derivation of "law" making ittautological to do so, the Law is commonly referred to as the "Law Hill".[6][7]
Archaeological evidence of burials suggest that the Law may have been used by human settlers 3500 years ago. During theIron Age it was the site of aPictish settlement.Roman pottery has been found on the law, suggesting that the Romans may have used it as a lookout post in the first century. The Law played host to an important event on 13 April 1689:Viscount Dundee raised the Stuart Royal Standard on the Law, which marked the beginning of thefirst Jacobite rising.
The Law has a railway tunnel running through it, formerly used by the line toNewtyle which closed in the 1960s. In 2014, a campaign was started to reopen it as a tourist attraction.
Amemorial to the fallen of both world wars, first unveiled on 16 May 1925, stands atop the summit of the Law.Mills Observatory was proposed to be built on the Law but plans were scrapped in favour of the war memorial. Plans for the observatory moved to Balgay Hill and it eventually opened in 1935 after a series of delays.
Between 1992 and 1994, the facilities on the summit were upgraded byDundee District Council and Scottish Enterprise Tayside, with additional funding from the regional development fund of theEuropean Commission. The memorial is lit with a large flame at its top on a number of significant days, viz: 25 September (in memory of theBattle of Loos, in which many members of the localBlack Watch regiment died), 24 October (United Nations Day), 11 November (Armistice Day), andRemembrance Sunday.
In recent times Dundee Law featured prominently in the television dramaTraces.[8]
In 2022, as part of the Dundee Summer Streets Festival, asign inspired by the Hollywood Hills sign was erected onto the Dundee Law which spelt out "Beanotown", a reference to the fictional location featured inThe Beano that is published inDundee and was the theme of the festival.[9]
In 2024,The Times featured the Dundee Law in a list of the best views in Scotland, ranking it fifth.[10]