
Huntly Castle
Huntly Castle location in the eastern Highlands of
Aberdeenshire.
Huntly Castle is a ruined
castle in Huntly
in Aberdeenshire
, Scotland
. It
was the ancestral home of the chief of
Clan
Gordon,
Earl of Huntly.
History
Architecturally the
L plan castle consists of a
well-preserved five-story tower with an adjoining great hall and
supporting buildings. Areas of the original ornate
facade and interior stonework remain. A mound in the
grounds of the castle is all that remains of an earlier 12th
century
motte.Originally named
Strathbogie, the castle was granted to
Sir Adam Gordon of Huntly in the 14th
century. King
Robert the Bruce
was a guest of the castle in 1307 prior to his defeat of the
Earl of Buchan.
It was fired in 1452 by the
Earl of
Moray then extensively rebuilt by the first
Earl of Huntly. In 1449 the king was at war
with the powerful
Earls of Douglas.
The Gordons stood on the king’s side and, with their men involved
in the south of the country, the Earl of Moray, a relation and ally
of the Douglases, took the opportunity to sack the Gordon lands,
setting Huntly Castle ablaze. The Gordons returned and quickly
destroyed their enemies. Although the castle was burned to the
ground, a grander castle was built in its place. In 1496, the
pretender to the English throne
Perkin
Warbeck was married to
Catherine
Gordon at Huntly Castle, an act witnessed by King
James IV of Scotland.

Carved inscriptions feature on the
facade
Wings were added to the castle in the 16th and 17th centuries. In
1640 it was occupied by the Scottish Covenantor army under
Major-General
Robert Monro .
The parson of Rothiemay tells us how the house ‘was preserved from
being rifled or defaced, except some emblems and imagerye, which
looked somewhat popish and superstitious lycke; and therefore, by
the industry of one captain James Wallace (one of Munro’s foote
captaines) were hewd and brocke doune off the frontispiece of the
house; but all the rest of the frontispiece containing Huntly’s
scutcheon, etc, was left untouched, as it stands to this
daye’.
Captured in October, 1644, the castle was briefly held by
James Graham, 1st
Marquess of Montrose against the
Duke
of Argyll. In 1647 it was gallantly defended against General
David Leslie by Lord
Charles Gordon, but its 'Irish' garrison was starved into
surrender. Savage treatment was meted out, for the men were hanged
and their officers beheaded.
In December of the same year Huntly himself
was captured and on his way to execution at Edinburgh
was detained, by a refinement of cruelty, in his
own mansion. His escort were shot against its walls.
In 1650
Charles II visited briefly on
his way to the Battle of Worcester
, defeat and exile. The Civil War brought an
end to the Gordon of Huntly family's long occupation of the
castle.
In the early eighteenth century it was already in decay and
providing material for predatory house builders in the village. In
1746, during the
Jacobite Risings,
it was occupied by British Government troops. Thereafter, it became
a common quarry until a groundswell of antiquarian sentiment in the
19th Century came to the rescue of the noble pile.
Huntly Castle remained under the ownership of the
Clan Gordon until 1923. Today, the remains of
the castle are cared for by
Historic
Scotland.
External links