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Cramond Tower View from South West
ED 5536/5
Description Cramond Tower View from South West
Date 11/1959
Collection Records of the Scottish National Buildings Record, Edinburgh, Scotland
Catalogue Number ED 5536/5
Category Photographs and Off-line Digital Images
Copies SC 537384
Scope and Content Cramond Tower, Cramond, Edinburgh, from the south Cramond Tower, a small tower-house built in the 15th century by the Bishop of Dunkeld as a 'summer palace', became the home of James Inglis, laird of Cramond, in 1622, whose descendants built the nearby Cramond House in the 1680s. The tower-house stands on an impressive site overlooking Cramond Island and the Firth of Forth. The four-storeyed tower has large windows on the first two levels, a round-arched doorway, and a stair turret that serves all the floors. Cramond appears as 'Bishop's Cramond' in the 15th century. The Bishop of Dunkeld, who was granted the land by King David I in 1160, built a tower-house in strategic position north of the church, and appointed and paid a priest to conduct services. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/collection/407318
Attribution: © Crown Copyright: HES (Scottish National Buildings Record)
Licence Type: Full
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