Kildrummy Castle was open later than some of the other castles, but we were still too late to take the tour. Out of all the castles we missed, this was the one that I would most like to have been able to really explore. The ruins were so awe-inspiring even from the distance.
Kildrummy Castle was once one of the most magnificent and imposing
castles in Scotland. It was built in about 1250 by the Earl of Mar. The castle
was intended to consolidate the Mar dynasty's hold over north-eastern Scotland
and was located where it could command important routes across the region. It
may have replaced an earlier castle built on a motte a mile to the north east
and since occupied by Kildrummy Kirkyard.
Edward I paid
at least two visits to Kildrummy Castle, in 1296 and 1303. Both times he came
as a guest on his way south from Elgin, and he may even have lent his
favourite mason to help design a better gatehouse for the castle. What emerged
as a result was very like the gatehouse of Edward's castle at
Harlech.
Kildrummy Castle's plan is best appreciated from the model in the
visitor centre. It was built as a "D" shape, with its rear wall towering over a
ravine. Circular towers were built at the two back corners, and on either arm
of the D, leaving the gatehouse to guard the apex of the design. The main
living quarters were originally in the Snow Tower, a highly sophisticated seven
story tower copied from the very latest in French castle design at the time.
There was also a Great Hall backing on to the rear wall of the castle, and a
chapel on the east side.
By 1306 relations between Scotland and England had changed. Robert the Bruce had
declared himself King of Scotland, and Edward I had dispatched
an army to quell the Scots
under his son Edward, Prince of Wales. Kildrummy Castle was held for Robert by
his brother Sir Neil Bruce against an extended siege by the Prince of Wales'
forces. This came to an end when Osbourne, the castle blacksmith, betrayed
Bruce and set fire to the castle. The defenders, including Neil Bruce, were
hanged. Osbourne was paid handsomely in gold: poured, it is said, molten down
his throat.
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| Me, Nikki, Alex, and Jamie |
Following repairs, the castle was again besieged in 1335 by
supporters of the English. Its defence was commanded by Lady Christian Bruce,
sister of Robert the Bruce. It successfully held out until relieved by
Lady Christian's husband, Sir Andrew Murray. In
1357 it was once more attacked, this time successfully, by King David II to defeat the
disloyal Earl of Mar. In 1435 the castle and estates were annexed by King James I in his efforts to
control the power of the barons, and over the following decades the castle was
strengthened and improved.
The estate passed to the Elphinstone family in 1507, who added a
tower house to the castle, now known as the Elphinstone Tower. The castle was
occupied by Jacobites during the 1689 uprising, and damaged by them as they
left. It had been repaired enough to serve as the base for the
23rd Earl of Mar when he
launched the 1715 Jacobite rebellion. Defeated, Mar accompanied the
Pretender to
France, and Kildrummy played no further part in Scottish history.
The next two centuries were largely a period of decline for
Kildrummy. The exceptionally high quality of its stone led to its use as a
handy quarry for the area, and the mighty Snow Tower collapsed in 1805.
However, in 1898 the castle was acquired by Colonel James Ogston, who until his
death worked steadily to restore parts of it. Kildrummy Castle was placed in
the care of the State in 1951, and is now looked after by Historic Scotland.
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