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Field Visit

Date 16 July 1913

Event ID 1087723

Category Recording

Type Field Visit

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/1087723

This ruin stands ¾ mile due east of Innerwick, on the left bank of the Thornton Burn, at an altitude of 250 feet above sea-level. The deep but narrow channel of the burn skirts a harder mass of rock to form a promontory encompassed on the north, east and south by the loop of the stream; on this promontory the castle (fig. 15 [SC 1127022]) is built, being cut off from the mainland on the west by an artificial ditch 15 feet deep and 18 feet wide hewn across the neck. On either side of this ditch a row of five mortices for joists, cut in the rock and spaced over a width of 8 ½ feet suggests that the gap was crossed at one time by a permanent wooden bridge.

The promontory measures 100 feet along its major axis from east to west and has a mean width of 53 feet from north to south. It is entirely covered with building of different periods to within a few inches of the edge, the disposition and area of the structures being naturally governed by the site (fig. 95). So ruinous are these that the arrangement of the castle is difficult to elicit; the lowest storey only remains, and even in that important features such as accesses have disappeared. It may be premised that a site of this nature would be occupied from an early period, but the arrangement on plan does not seem to warrant a date earlier than the 15th century for the oldest structures.

On west, south and possibly also on the north the rock is crowned by a wall of enceinte along its sides, the wall being embodied, probably during a reconstruction, in buildings to the west of the main block, which lies 24 feet east of the rock. cut ditch. If the structure borne across the ditch and indicated by the beam holes was a bridge, the entrance in the curtain would lie opposite to it. The main. block comprises two chambers of approximately equal lengths but unequal in width, with a vaulted passage on the north. These chambers are ceiled with round barrel-vaults and enter from the east, the northern through a vestibule within the thickness of the wall, the southern from a passage, at the southern end of which are traces of a staircase leading to the upper floor. In the east wall of these chambers' above the vault is a stone conduit sloping diagonally downwards in the thickness of the wall, which, it is suggested, may have served to collect roof water for domestic purposes.

A rib-vaulted passage on the north turns southwards along the main block and gives access to a long apartment running east and west; the western portion nearest the passage has a large fireplace beside the doorway and is elevated above the eastern and larger division. This chamber was covered with a round barrel vault but appears to be later than the main block. Off it, at its eastern end, is a little room on the north, which has been ceiled in wood, while a doorway farther west leads to an irregularly shaped chamber with a drain in the north wall east of the window. This chamber has a pointed barrel-vault and gives access to a small circular staircase.

The structures west of the main block are extremely ruinous. The only feature of architectural interest is a window overlooking the ditch, which from its detail, is evidently of the16th century. At the north-west angle of the site an oblong tower is placed, from which is entered a passage to the south against the west wall of enceinte.

If the entrance to the castle was not by means of such a bridge as has been suggested, it must have been by a stairway abutting against the oblong tower and descending to the north passage; in which case, probably, the courtyard originally extended as far as the cross wall shown dotted on plan, the other portions to the south being occupied by two conjoining structures.

The chambers in the portion referred to as the main block measure internally 18 ¼ feet and 17 ½ feet from east to west and 7 feet and 14 ½ feet from north to south; the long apartment to the east has a total length of 36 feet and a width of 16 feet. To the north of this the irregularly shaped chamber is 14 ¼ feet long by 12 1/3 feet wide. The walls of the castle vary in thickness from 1 ¼ to 4 feet. The older portions are built of ashlar, the later of uncoursed rubble.

HISTORICAL NOTE. The castle of Innerwick or Inverwick (castrum de Inverwik in Laudonia) was one of the places that fell into the hands of the English after their success at Homildon Hill in Sep. 1402. I t was recaptured by the Regent Albany with an army in the summer of the following year, when he had it razed to the ground (prostravit ad terram) (1). But a purchase of timber ‘for the siege of the castle of Innerwick’ in 1406 would seem to relegate the siege to that year (2). Thereafter it was reconstructed, and ‘Anderwyke’ as a ‘pyle or holde’ on a ‘craggy foundacion’ menacing communication with Berwick, was assaulted by Somerset on the way into Scotland with a force on Sep. 6, 1547. The place ‘perteined to the Lorde of Hambleton’ and was kept by the Master of Hamilton and eight others ‘gentlemen for the moste part’. The defenders blocked the outer doors and the stairs and made their defence from the battlements. But the hackbutters, who were attacking, forced a way in and started a fire in the lower parts, so that the ‘smoke and smoother’ forced the defenders to ask mercy. Ere a reply could come from the commander, the hackbutters had forced their way up and killed eight of the garrison; one jumped from the wall and ran a furlong before he was overtaken and slain (3).

On the Hamiltons of Innerwick, see [RCAHMS 1924] Introd.,p. xxii.

RCAHMS 1924, visited 16 July 1913.

(1) Scotich. Lib. xv. cap 16; (2) Exch. Rolls iii., p. 644; (3) Patten's Expedicion into Scotlande, pp. 36-7.

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