An eighth-century
Christian presence in Aboyne is attested by a
Pictish stone cross called the Formaston Stone. The slab is inscribed with
Ogham characters which have been transliterated as “MAQQOoiTALLUORRH | NxHHTVROBBACCxNNEVV.” These are the Pictish names Talorc (TALLUORRH) and Nehht (NxHHT), both of which were names of kings. In fact, the Pictish king
Nechtan (d. 732) was said by Bede to have accepted the Christian faith in response to the teachings of
Adamnan, abbot of
Iona, eventually bringing his people to Christianity as well. Aboyne's first church was dedicated to Adamnan, and it was at the burial ground of this church where the Formaston Stone was first discovered. The stone was eventually removed to Aboyne Castle and is currently exhibited in the
Inverurie Museum. In 1237, Alexander II granted the
Knights Templar a
charter of liberty to acquire lands in Scotland, and
Walter Byset, Lord of Aboyne, gave the Templar
preceptory the church of Aboyne. Then, between 1239 and 1249, the church was conveyed to the Templars
adproprier usus by
Ralph, Bishop of Aberdeen. According to the terms of the charter, the Templars would take charge of the temporalities of the church and maintain a
vicar there, while the
bishop retained authority in spiritual matters.
King Alexander II confirmed the donation on 15 April 1242, and Pope Alexander IV, in 1277, the same year that John of Annan, chaplain to Alexander III, was appointed vicar. Aboyne, along with other Templar possessions in Scotland, was held by the
Torphichen Preceptory in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries and remained so until the Reformation. In 1761, a new parish church was constructed in Aboyne, under the patronage of the
Marquess of Huntly; then, in 1842, another church was built on the site of the eighteenth-century structure, and in 1929 at the Union of the
Established Church, it was formally dedicated to St. Machar. In 1936, St. Machar's was joined with the United Free Church, and fifty years later, was linked with the parish church of Dinnet, a linkage which led to the 1993 union between the two, which is now known as the Aboyne-Dinnet Parish Church. In 2006, Aboyne-Dinnet was linked with the parish church at Cromar. ==Climate==