Accessibility

Font Size

100% 150% 200%

Background Colour

Default Contrast
Close Reset

Publication Account

Date 1997

Event ID 1017025

Category Descriptive Accounts

Type Publication Account

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1017025

The latest in the long sequence of buildings (see no. 39) on this important site is the early 17th-century laird's house which overlies part of the prehistoric broch (in fact the broch 'proved a useful source of building stone for the house). Contemporary Shetlanders knew this house as Sumburgh, and, by the time that Sir Waiter Scott re-named it 'Jarlshof' in his novel The Pirate, its ruins were virtually buried in wind-blown sand; the passage at the beginning of the novel in which Scott describes the house as he imagined it to have appeared in the late 17th century is fictitious,though probably close to the mark: 'a rude building of rough stone with nothing about it to gratify the eye or to excite the imagination'. It was, nevertheless, a substantial building with two upper storeys, and its accompanying domestic buildings formed the other three sides of a central rectangular courtyard.

The dwelling-house, the south block, was a simple rectangular house, 18m by 7m with walls more than a metre thick; the groundfloor was divided into two storerooms, and an external stair (known as a forestair) led from the courtyard into the two rooms on the first floor, each with a fireplace set into the gable wall. There was evidently a garret in the roof space, because a small window survives at that height in the north-west gable. Although the upper floors are incomplete and the building roofless, this is the best preserved block; it was flanked by outhouses of which only the east block survives to a height of almost 4m, while the building on the north side of the courtyard functioned as the kitchen block. This survives little higher than a metre, but it was originally the house built in Earl Robert's time which was later superseded in 1605 by the house built by Earl Patrick on the south side of the courtyard.

The old house at Sumburgh had a brief and turbulent existence. By the end of the 17th century it was in ruins and a new house, of which no trace now survives, had been built nearby, itself replaced by the 19th-century building that is now the Sumburgh Hotel. The latter was designed in 1866 by David Rhind as a Baronial mansion with bow windows and a round tower surmounted by a conical roof, but later additions have detracted from the impact of a once attractive house.

Information from ‘Exploring Scotland’s Heritage: Shetland’, (1997).

People and Organisations

References