Inside Dunnottar
This is my first effort in the ABZCHALLENGE this month!
Today I took the boys down to Dunnottar Castle as I had promised to do ages ago. It was a wet and miserable day when we set out from Aberdeen but it brightened up a bit by time we got to Dunnotter.
This view from inside the grounds is looking from Wateron's Lodging towards the Silver house, West Range and the north range. This pic was taken after Matthew and I had slipped on the mud and got covered in the stuff.Matthew was not best pleased at being muckit. I suffered a blow to the head from my very solid feeling Nikon D5000 (it is fine btw and i've a headache).
Below is some facts about Dunnoter Castle.
Visit Dunnottar Castle for an unforgettable experience. A dramatic and evocative ruined cliff top fortress in a truly stunning setting.
As you wander around the extensive buildings - from the keep through the barracks, lodgings, stables and storehouses to the less-ruinous chapel and drawing room - you will discover the importance of Dunnottar, an impregnable Castle that holds many rich secrets of Scotland?s colourful past.
William Wallace, Mary Queen of Scots, the Marquis of Montrose and the future King Charles II, all graced the Castle with their presence. Most famously though, it was at Dunnottar Castle that a small garrison held out against the might of Cromwell?s army for eight months and saved the Scottish Crown Jewels, the ?Honours of Scotland?, from destruction. Crown, sceptre and sword now take pride of place in Edinburgh Castle.
A darker chapter in the history of Dunnottar is that of the ?Whig?s Vault?. The gruesome story of the imprisonment in 1685 of a group of Covenanters who refused to acknowledge the King?s supremacy in spiritual matters.
The Castle was the home of the Earls Marischal once one of the most powerful families in the land. The last Earl was convicted of treason for his part in the Jacobite rising of 1715, and as a result his estates, including Dunnottar, were seized by the government.
The buildings were thereafter much neglected until 1925 when the 1st Viscountess Cowdray embarked on a systematic repair of the Castle. The Castle was officially made open to visitors thereafter.
Hope you have all enjoyed this history lesson.
Steve
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- Nikon D5000
- 1/100
- f/9.0
- 24mm
- 200
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