Barra Castle

{{Short description|L-plan tower house in Aberdeenshire}}

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File:Barra Castle, Bourtie, Oldmeldrum side view.jpg

Barra Castle is an unusual L-plan tower house dating from the early 16th century, about {{convert|2|mi|km|0|abbr=off|spell=on}} south of Oldmeldrum, above the Lochter Burn, in the parish of Bourtie,{{cite web |url= http://www.scottish-places.info/parishes/parhistory327.html|work=Gazetteer for Scotland|title=Parish of Bourtie|accessdate=2014-02-12}}

Aberdeenshire, Scotland.Lindsay, Maurice (1986) The Castles of Scotland. Constable. {{ISBN|0-09-473430-5}} p77 It occupies the site of the Battle of Inverurie (1308), in which Robert Bruce defeated John Comyn, Earl of Buchan.

History

A castle on this site was, from the mid-13th century, the seat of the King family.

An earlier castle associated with the hereditary Forester and Coroner of the Garioch, a Blackhall,{{cite web |url=http://canmore.rcahms.gov.uk/en/site/18786/details/barra+castle/|work=Canmore|title=Barra Castle|accessdate=2014-02-12}} may be incorporated in the main block and south-eastern wing, but the present castle owes its form mainly to George Seton, chancellor of the University of Aberdeen, Tutor and Vicar of Meldrum who was granted the estate in 1598. A charter of 1599 to George Seton, tutor of Meldrum, mentions the erection of the lands of Barra as a free barony, while a charter of 1615, ordains that the 'fortalice of Barra' is to be the chief seat of the barony.

James Reid, an Aberdeen advocate, was in possession of the estate by 1630, and the Reid family retained it until 1754. Dame Margaret Abercrombie, the wife of John Reid (who was made a baronet in 1703), refitted parts of the house; she may be responsible for the fireplace in the Great Hall.

The purchaser in 1754 was John Ramsay of Melrose, a merchant trading in Russia, who added the north wing, and his descendants still own it; a Ramsay heiress married Andrew Irvine, one of the Irvines of Drum, early in the 20th century. John Ramsay preferred his estate at Straloch, and after his death in 1787 the property came to be used as a farmhouse. It was restored as a dower house, to plans by George Bennet Mitchell, in the first decade of the twentieth century.

Structure

File:Barra Castle, Bourtie, Oldmeldrum 04.JPG

The plan of the castle is an unusual variation on the L-plan, with the main block of the castle lying north to south. There is a circular tower at the south-west. A D-plan tower at the south-east contains the main stair and entrance. This tower, corbelled square at the top to give a watch room, links to a large square wing. At its north-west angle, this wing has a second circular tower. The castle’s entrance is in the main re-entrant angle. The towers have conical roofs.

Running eastward from the north end of the main block there is an addition, dating from the 18th century. A wall to the east, which contains the entrance, forms the fourth side of a square court.

The buildings around the courtyard are three storeys high, built of pinned boulder rubble. The main gables are crow stepped. The drawing room, which is panelled, has a large chimneypiece, with a later one inserted in it. The first floor bedroom in the South-East wing has panelling, dating from the early to mid-18th century. There is a panelled sitting room in the North wing.{{cite web |url=http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/sc-2821-barra-castle-bourtie|work=British Listed Buildings|title=Barra Castle|accessdate=2014-02-11}}

The castle is a category A listed building and is constructed on the site of Robert the Bruce's successful battle against John Comyn, Earl of Buchan in 1308.{{citation|last1=MacGibbon|first1=David|last2=Ross|first2=Thomas|title=The castellated and domestic architecture of Scotland from the twelfth to the eighteenth century|url=https://archive.org/stream/castellateddomes02macguoft#page/399/mode/1up/search/Barra|year=1887|publisher=D. Douglas|page=399 }}

The Hunterian Museum in Glasgow has a hammerstone from Barra Castle.

Paintings

There are two paintings of the interior of the castle by James Cassie in the Aberdeen Art Gallery:

  • [https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/the-kitchen-of-barra-castle-aberdeenshire-106753 The Kitchen, 1854]
  • [https://artuk.org/discover/artworks/on-the-terrace-barra-castle-aberdeenshire-106741 On the terrace, 1854]

File:The Kitchen of Barra Castle, Aberdeenshire - James Cassie - ABDAG011565.jpg|alt=interior of castle kitchen, with large fireplace in background, and woman and child in foreground|The Kitchen of Barra Castle, Aberdeenshire - by James Cassie

File:On the Terrace, Barra Castle, Aberdeenshire - James Cassie - ABDAG000181.jpg|alt=external view of castle, with gardens on left and castle on right|On the Terrace, Barra Castle, Aberdeenshire - by James Cassie

References

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Category:Castles in Aberdeenshire

Category:Category A listed buildings in Aberdeenshire

Category:Listed castles in Scotland