Cal Mac Ferry M.V. CORUISK leaving Oban 20th April…
NLV PHAROS at Oban 20th April 2017
M.V. CLANSMAN arriving at Oban 20th April 2017
LMS class 5MT 45212 arrives at Mallaig with the Ja…
LMS class 5MT 45212 stands at Mallaig after arrivi…
CalMac ferry LORD OF THE ISLES arriving at Mallaig…
Caledonian McBrayne M.V LORD OF THE ISLES with Bow…
LMS class 5 45212 running round its Train at Malla…
The Isle of Eigg and The Sgurr of Eigg from Mallai…
0010. DRS class 66`s 66431+66429 at Scout Green wi…
New DRS class 88 88002 PROMETHEUS +68025 SUPERB at…
LMS class 7P Royal Scot 46115 SCOTS GUARDSMAN at S…
LMS class 7P Royal Scot 46115 SCOTS GUARDSMAN at G…
New DRS class 88 88002 PROMETHEUS + 68025 SUPERB a…
West Coast Railways class 47 47760 on rear of 1Z32…
GBRf class 66 66743 at Greengate near Kirkby Steph…
LMS class 8P Coronation 46233 DUCHESS OF SUTHERLAN…
LMS class 8P Coronation 46233 DUCHESS OF SUTHERLAN…
LNER class A4 60009 UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA on test…
LNER class A4 60009 UNION OF SOUTH AFRICA on its r…
LMS class 6P5F Jubilee 45690 LEANDER on 1Z94 Manch…
LMS class 6P5F Jubilee 45690 LEANDER with 1Z95 Sc…
Starting our Holiday our Flight Boeing 737-800 G-F…
Beinn Dorain with it's top in cloud 3530Ft 20th Ap…
Loch Tulla 20th April 2017
Gearr Aonach & Aonach Dubh,Glen Coe 20th April 201…
Beinn Fhada & Gearr Aonach,Glen Coe 20th April 201…
Glen Coe 20th April 2017
DRS class 68 68022 RESOLUTION on the returning 1Z6…
DRS class 68 68022 RESOLUTION with 1Z68 Pathfinder…
River Oich,Ft Augustus 19th April 2017
Loch Ness 19th April 2017
Another angle on Inverness Castle 19th April 2017
Inverness Castle 19th April 2017
Sgurr a`Mhaim from Glen Nevis 18th April 2017
Glen Nevis Lower Falls 18th April 2017
Garden of Rememberance,Commando Memorial,Spean Bri…
Commando Memorial,Spean Bridge 18th April 2017
Loch Lochy
Bridge Open "Full Ahead"
Bridge Ahead Caledonian Canal,18th April 2017
The Ben 18th April 2017
Ben Nevis & Coire Leis from Banavie 18th April 201…
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Neptune`s Staircase Banavie 18th April 2017
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Kilchurn Castle,Loch Awe 20th April 2017


Kilchurn Castle is a ruined structure on a rocky peninsula at the northeastern end of Loch Awe, in Argyll and Bute, Scotland. It was first constructed in the mid-15th century as the base of the Campbells of Glenorchy, who extended both the castle and their territory in the area over the next 150 years. After the Campbells became Earls of Breadalbane and moved to Taymouth Castle, Kilchurn fell out of use and was in ruins by 1770. It is now in the care of Historic Environment Scotland and is open to the public in summer.
The Campbells of Glenorchy were the most powerful cadet branch of the Clan Campbell, and over two centuries from the 1430s came to dominate the central Highlands. The building of several castles, of which Kilchurn was the first, was a key part of their territorial expansion duing this period. Sir Colin Campbell, 1st of Glenorchy (died 1475), was a younger son of Duncan Campbell, 1st Lord Campbell, ancestor of the Earls of Argyll. Sir Colin was granted Glen Orchy and other lands by his father in 1432, and afterwards established Kilchurn around 1450.The first castle comprised the five-storey tower house, with a courtyard defended by an outer wall. At the time Kilchurn was on a small island scarcely larger than the castle itself, and would have been accessed via an underwater or low-lying causeway.
Sir Colin's son, Sir Duncan Campbell of Glenorchy, built the 'laich hall' - a single-storey dining hall built along the inside of the south curtain. Sir Duncan was one of the many Scottish nobles killed at the Battle of Flodden in 1513. During the second half of the 16th century, another Sir Colin Campbell, the 6th Laird (1499–1583), further improved the castle's accommodation by adding some chambers to the north of the tower house, and remodelling the parapet. This included the introduction of the circular corner turrets adorned by corbels.Sir Colin also constructed Balloch Castle (now Taymouth Castle) by Loch Tay, to consolidate the Campbell's territorial gains in Perthshire, which had been achieved largely at the expense of their former allies, the Clan MacGregor of Glenstrae.
Sir Duncan Campbell, (c.1550–1631), known as "Black Duncan", represented Argyll in the Scottish Parliament and was created a baronet, of Glenorchy in the County of Perth, in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia in 1625. Sir Duncan had the south range of the castle rebuilt and enlarged in 1614, and constructed a new range incorporating a chapel in the south-east part of the courtyard.The ambitious Black Duncan also began construction of Finlarig Castle at the west end of Loch Tay, and improved farmland around Finlarig, Kilchurn and Balloch Castles.
In 1681 Sir John Campbell, 5th Baronet, was created Earl of Breadalbane and Holland. He took advantage of the turbulence of the times, negotiating with Jacobite rebels at the same time as serving William III. In the 1690s he promoted a scheme to pacify the Highlands, and as part of this he began conversion of Kilchurn into a modern barracks, capable of housing 200 troops. His main addition was the three-storey L-shaped block along the north side. In 1714, on the death of Queen Anne, Breadalbane held a conference of Jacobites at Kilchurn, and he subsequently joined the Earl of Mar's Jacobite rising of 1715. Following the failure of the rising he returned home to find pro-government members of his household had turned Kinchurn and Finlarig over to Alexander Campbell of Fonab, to whom Breadalbane was obliged to surrender in February 1716. He remained under house arrest at Taymouth until his death the next year.Kilchurn was also used as a government garrison during the 1745 Jacobite rising.The Campbells attempted, unsuccessfully, to sell Kilchurn to the government after they moved in 1740 to the reconstructed Taymouth Castle. In 1760, the castle was badly damaged by lightning and was completely abandoned; the remains of a turret of a tower, still resting upside-down in the centre of the courtyard, attest to the violence of the storm. The castle was unroofed by 1770. J M W Turner painted the castle on one of his tours of Scotland in the early 19th century.In 1817 the water level in Loch Awe was altered, so that the castle now stands on a long peninsula. MacGibbon and Ross surveyed the castle in about 1887, after which restoration works appear to have altered some of the castle's original features.
The ruin is now in the care of Historic Environment Scotland, and is open to the public during the summer. Access is either by boat from Lochawe pier, or on foot from the A85 near Dalmally. The access is under the railway viaduct that crosses Loch Awe, and access is sometimes restricted by higher-than-usual levels of water in the loch, at which times the site effectively becomes a temporary island.The castle is a scheduled monument.
The Campbells of Glenorchy were the most powerful cadet branch of the Clan Campbell, and over two centuries from the 1430s came to dominate the central Highlands. The building of several castles, of which Kilchurn was the first, was a key part of their territorial expansion duing this period. Sir Colin Campbell, 1st of Glenorchy (died 1475), was a younger son of Duncan Campbell, 1st Lord Campbell, ancestor of the Earls of Argyll. Sir Colin was granted Glen Orchy and other lands by his father in 1432, and afterwards established Kilchurn around 1450.The first castle comprised the five-storey tower house, with a courtyard defended by an outer wall. At the time Kilchurn was on a small island scarcely larger than the castle itself, and would have been accessed via an underwater or low-lying causeway.
Sir Colin's son, Sir Duncan Campbell of Glenorchy, built the 'laich hall' - a single-storey dining hall built along the inside of the south curtain. Sir Duncan was one of the many Scottish nobles killed at the Battle of Flodden in 1513. During the second half of the 16th century, another Sir Colin Campbell, the 6th Laird (1499–1583), further improved the castle's accommodation by adding some chambers to the north of the tower house, and remodelling the parapet. This included the introduction of the circular corner turrets adorned by corbels.Sir Colin also constructed Balloch Castle (now Taymouth Castle) by Loch Tay, to consolidate the Campbell's territorial gains in Perthshire, which had been achieved largely at the expense of their former allies, the Clan MacGregor of Glenstrae.
Sir Duncan Campbell, (c.1550–1631), known as "Black Duncan", represented Argyll in the Scottish Parliament and was created a baronet, of Glenorchy in the County of Perth, in the Baronetage of Nova Scotia in 1625. Sir Duncan had the south range of the castle rebuilt and enlarged in 1614, and constructed a new range incorporating a chapel in the south-east part of the courtyard.The ambitious Black Duncan also began construction of Finlarig Castle at the west end of Loch Tay, and improved farmland around Finlarig, Kilchurn and Balloch Castles.
In 1681 Sir John Campbell, 5th Baronet, was created Earl of Breadalbane and Holland. He took advantage of the turbulence of the times, negotiating with Jacobite rebels at the same time as serving William III. In the 1690s he promoted a scheme to pacify the Highlands, and as part of this he began conversion of Kilchurn into a modern barracks, capable of housing 200 troops. His main addition was the three-storey L-shaped block along the north side. In 1714, on the death of Queen Anne, Breadalbane held a conference of Jacobites at Kilchurn, and he subsequently joined the Earl of Mar's Jacobite rising of 1715. Following the failure of the rising he returned home to find pro-government members of his household had turned Kinchurn and Finlarig over to Alexander Campbell of Fonab, to whom Breadalbane was obliged to surrender in February 1716. He remained under house arrest at Taymouth until his death the next year.Kilchurn was also used as a government garrison during the 1745 Jacobite rising.The Campbells attempted, unsuccessfully, to sell Kilchurn to the government after they moved in 1740 to the reconstructed Taymouth Castle. In 1760, the castle was badly damaged by lightning and was completely abandoned; the remains of a turret of a tower, still resting upside-down in the centre of the courtyard, attest to the violence of the storm. The castle was unroofed by 1770. J M W Turner painted the castle on one of his tours of Scotland in the early 19th century.In 1817 the water level in Loch Awe was altered, so that the castle now stands on a long peninsula. MacGibbon and Ross surveyed the castle in about 1887, after which restoration works appear to have altered some of the castle's original features.
The ruin is now in the care of Historic Environment Scotland, and is open to the public during the summer. Access is either by boat from Lochawe pier, or on foot from the A85 near Dalmally. The access is under the railway viaduct that crosses Loch Awe, and access is sometimes restricted by higher-than-usual levels of water in the loch, at which times the site effectively becomes a temporary island.The castle is a scheduled monument.
, Peter_Private_Box, Doug Shepherd, Andy Rodker and 2 other people have particularly liked this photo
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Best wishes ... Steve
Alan Drury club has replied to SteAlan Drury club has replied to Nick Weall clubBest wishes,
Andy
Alan Drury club has replied to Andy Rodker clubBest regards, Doug
Alan Drury club has replied to Doug Shepherd clubI like the effect here, a very dark castle against the more pleasant scenery. I can see that you must have had a great holiday judging by the number of photos!
Best Wishes
Peter
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