Applecross's name is an
anglicisation of the
Pictish name
Aporcrosan, 'confluence of the [river] Crossan' ( in modern Gaelic). The name is derived from the
Pictish aber- and
Scottish Gaelic cros. Applecross is linked with Saint
Máel Ruba, who came to Scotland in 671 from the major
Celtic Church monastery of
Bangor Abbey in
Gaelic Ireland. He founded
Aporcrosan in 672 in what was then
Pictish territory, and was the monastery's first abbot, dying on 21 April 722 in his eightieth year. The deaths of several of his successors as abbot are recorded in the
Irish Annals into the early ninth century. The early monastery was located around the site of the later
Church of Scotland parish church (present building erected 1817). A large, unfinished cross-slab standing in the churchyard and three extremely finely carved fragments of another preserved within the church are evidence of the early monastery. The surrounding district is known as 'the sanctuary' in Gaelic. Its boundaries were once marked by
high crosses. The stub of one, destroyed in 1870, survives among farm buildings at Camusterrach. During the
Scottish Reformation in the second half of the 16th century, the lands of Applecross were
secularised and granted c.1591 to
Clan Mackenzie. The estate was eventually inherited by Alexander Mackenzie (died 1650), an
illegitimate son of
Colin Cam Mackenzie of Kintail. With a brief interruption between 1715 and 1724 (a period of forfeiture caused by the
Laird of Applecross' role in the
1715 Uprising), the estate remained in the ownership of Alexander Mackenzie's heirs until the mid-19th century, when the lands were sold to the
Duke of Leeds. In the early 1860s, the estate was sold to
Lord Middleton. Following the death of the 10th Baron Middleton in 1924, the estate was sold to the
Wills family. The estate is now owned by the Applecross Trust, a registered Scottish charity with the declared aim of preserving "the special character of the Applecross peninsula in a responsible and progressive manner whilst acknowledging its wilderness heritage and its importance as an area of outstanding natural beauty". The Applecross Trust is overseen by a board of seven people and chaired by Rodger Harvey-Jamieson. == Wildlife ==