Resembling a fairytale castle and an example of the best of Scottish Baronial architecture, Craigievar fits naturally amongst the rolling hills of Aberdeenshire.
Scotland has many castles, but there is something truly unique about Craigievar. It is widely recognised as one of the best preserved and most authentic tower houses in Scotland. This recognition started early. In 1824 Sir John Forbes, who had inherited the castle the previous year on the death of his older brother, commissioned Aberdeen architect John Smith to report on the condition of Craigievar. His report highlighted the need for a new roof and new harling, but noted that the castle was "well worth being preserved as it is one of the finest specimens of architecture in this Country of the age and stile in which it is built, and finely situated."
What followed can be seen in some of the exterior images on this page. After exploratory work in 2006, the castle was closed between October 2007 and April 2010 to allow extensive interior and exterior renovation to take place. Externally this involved completely removing the concrete coating which had been applied in 1973. Stone details covered for the first time in 1973 and largely obscured as a result were uncovered, while the rest of the structure was given a coat of authentic lime harling complete with pigments intended to match the finish that first emerged in 1824. The castle which emerged from under its swathe of scaffolding in 2010 is stunningly beautiful and decidedly pink: the main visual difference being the newly exposed stone corbelling and decorative detail.
Today's visitor finds an interior that probably looks very much as it did when the castle was visited by Victoria and Albert in 1879. There is no electricity in the castle above the ground floor, so you really get a sense of how dark the rooms would have been (and that is before you begin to imagine what they would be like in the depths of a Scottish winter). One of the things that sets Craigievar apart is how modestly sized many of the rooms are. This really is a castle built on a domestic scale. Even the Hall, by some margin the largest room on the lower floors of the castle, is diminutive by the standards of most castle halls. On the other hand, Craigievar's hall is unique in Scotland in being entered through its original screened off passage, and the original Jacobean carved woodwork is exceptionally rare.
Another of the glories of Craigievar Castle are the amazing moulded
plaster ceilings. These date back to 1624 and were some of the first in
Scotland: until then it had been traditional simply to paint the structure of
the wooden beams and flooring above, as can be seen at Crathes Castle 14 miles
to the south east. The first plaster ceilings in Scotland were introduced in Edinburgh in
1617: and a single team of plasterers then worked at Kellie Castle in 1617
and Glamis Castle in 1620
before moving on to Craigievar.![]() |
| Alex photo-bombing this time |
In 1610 the estate and its castle was purchased by William Forbes of Menie. He was a younger son who had made his fortune (and become popularly known as Danzig Willie) as a merchant trading between Aberdeen and the Baltic states. It was William Forbes who created the Craigievar Castle we see today. He appears to have cleared the existing structure down to the level of the top of the fourth floor. He then corbelled out the whole building at that level, allowing the construction of two additional floors with an area larger than those of the floors below.
But it isn't the amount of extra accommodation which makes
Craigievar Castle so special, it is the sheer panache with which the upper
floors were embellished with multiple turrets, towers, dormer windows and
viewing platforms. Look at it today and it is difficult to believe that that
the upper floors are a later addition, and the result has a fairy tale quality
that long predates fairy tales. You get the sense that William Forbes, and his
wife Margaret Woodward, daughter of the Lord Provost of Edinburgh, thoroughly
enjoyed designing their new home and got a lot of pleasure from seeing their
dreams turned into stone. The result is a castle that inspires a sense of
playfulness: and is as far away from some of the martial and forbidding castles
found elsewhere in Scotland as it is possible to imagine.At Craigievar the cannons that project from the structure are disguised water spouts, and while there are gun loops in many of the corner turrets, you again get the sense they are there for decorative rather than practical reasons. Later generations of the Forbes family made minor improvements to their castle, and the additional ranges of buildings to the west and south were partly removed in the 1790s, with the remainder disappearing as part of Sir John Forbes' renovations in the 1820s. All that was left was the length of heavily buttressed wall that you find today, terminating in what was originally a corner turret, which now stands with a decided lean to one side.
The view:

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