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Cawdor Castle

Castle (Medieval)

Site Name Cawdor Castle

Classification Castle (Medieval)

Canmore ID 15021

Site Number NH84NW 1

NGR NH 84718 49870

Datum OSGB36 - NGR

C14 Radiocarbon Dating

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/site/15021

Ordnance Survey licence number AC0000807262. All rights reserved.
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Digital Images

Oblique aerial view of Cawdor Castle and policies, taken from the SSW.
Oblique aerial view of Cawdor Castle and policies, taken from the SSW.Oblique aerial view of Cawdor Castle and policies, taken from the SSE.Nairn, Cawdor Castle. General view.
PHOTOGRAPH ALBUM NO 47: DUNDEE ALBUM.Oblique aerial view centred on the castle and walled garden, taken from the SSE.Oblique aerial view centred on the castle and walled garden, taken from the WNW.Aerial viewCawdor CastleView N from Tower, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle View S from Tower, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle View E, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle SW Service Wing, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle Tower Garden, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle, cellar and shop, Candor parishCawdor Castle, dining room, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, NH84NW 1, Ordnance Survey index card, page number 2, VersoCawdor Castle, NH84NW 1, Ordnance Survey index card, page number 1, RectoCawdor Castle. Central windows of North wing from NorthCawdor Castle. Windows at East end of North wing from NorthCawdor Castle. Blue room closet from NorthCawdor Castle. Front doorAerial viewDrawbridge, Cawdor CastleOblique aerial view of Cawdor Castle and policies, taken from the ESE.Oblique aerial view of Cawdor Castle Golf Course, taken from the NE.Cawdor Castle, Nairn, interior viewView of Cawdor Castle, Nairn showing Draw Bridge  
Photographic copy of sections.Oblique aerial view.Oblique aerial view centred on the castle and walled garden, taken from the E.Oblique aerial view centred on the castle and walled garden, taken from the NNE.Cawdor Castle Tower from Drawbridge, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle from SW, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle from W, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle W elevation, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle north Lodge, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle, bridge, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, bridge, Cawdor parishOblique aerial view of Cawdor village, Castle and gardens, E of Inverness, looking SE.Cawdor Castle, NH84NW 1, Ordnance Survey index card, RectoDining roomCawdor Castle. Panel-dated 1672 at front doorCopy of photograph in Photograph Album 132. General view from the NW.
Titled: 'Cawdor Castle, near Nairn' 
General view of gateway with eagle sculptures and lodge, Cawdor Castle, Nairn
Oblique aerial viewOblique aerial viewCawdor Castle Tower Parapet, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle View NE, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle from W, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle, dining room, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, dining room, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, yellow room, Cawdor parishAerial viewCawdor Castle, NairnThe Dungeon, Cawdor CastlePresentation drawing of West elevation.
Scanned image of E 21160.Survey plan of cellar.View of Cawdor Castle, Nairn showing Draw BridgeDrawing showing masons' marks from the Old Castle of Duffus and Cawdor Castle.Oblique aerial view centred on the castle and walled garden, taken from the NNW.Aerial viewCawdor Castle View NE, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle North Courtyard, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle Drawbridge Tower, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle Woods to SW of Castle, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle north Lodge, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle, old kitchen, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, tower sitting room, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, tower sitting room, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, tapestry bedroom, Cawdor parishNear vertical aerial view of Cawdor Castle, Nairn, looking N.Oblique aerial view of Cawdor Castle and gardens, E of Inverness, looking SW.Cawdor Castle, NH84NW 1, Ordnance Survey index card, page number 1, RectoDining roomPhotographic copy of 'The Drawing Room Cawdor Castle'
Photograph Album No.66: The Tollemache Album, p.41Cawdor Castle. Corbels under drawbridgeCawdor Castle. Pediment on garden wingCawdor Castle. West most window of North wing from NorthAerial viewAerial viewThe Dining Room, Cawdor CastleEngraving of Cawdor Castle from river below.
Titled: 'Cawdor Castle (Nairnshire). T. Allom. T. Barber. London, published for the Proprietors by Geo. Virtue, 26 Ivy Lane, 1836.'Oblique aerial view of Cawdor Castle and policies, taken from the NW.Oblique aerial view of Cawdor Parish Church, taken from the W.View of Cawdor Castle, Nairn, interiorOblique aerial view centred on the castle and walled garden, taken from the SE.Oblique aerial view centred on the castle and walled garden, taken from the NW.Cawdor Castle Woods to SW of Castle, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle from SW, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle W elevation, Cawdor, HighlandCawdor Castle, pond, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, dining room, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, stair, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, tapestry bedroom, Cawdor parishCawdor Castle, dining room, Cawdor parishThe Tower, Cawdor CastleDrawings showing Glamis Castle, Cawdor Castle, Megginch Castle, Ferniehurst Castle, Elsieshields, Kellie Castle, Killochan Castle and Girnigoe Castle.Survey plan of first floor.General oblique aerial view of Cawdor Village, looking to the S.Oblique aerial view of Cawdor Castle Golf Course, taken from the SE.Oblique aerial view of Cawdor Castle Golf Course, taken from the ENE.Oblique aerial view of Cawdor Castle and policies, taken from the WSW.

First 100 images shown. See the Collections panel (below) for a link to all digital images.

Administrative Areas

  • Council Highland
  • Parish Cawdor
  • Former Region Highland
  • Former District Nairn
  • Former County Nairn

Archaeology Notes

NH84NW 1 84718 49870

For (predecessor) house of Old Cawdor (NH c. 858 512), see NH85SE 9.

(NH 8471 4987) Cawdor Castle (NR)

(AD. 1393) Moat (NR) Drawbridge (NR)

OS 6" map, Nairnshire, 2nd ed., (1906)

Cawdor Castle consists of mainly 17th century buildings, incorporating a keep which probably dates from about 1454.

Most of the features which give the castle the appearance of a 15th century castle, eg. drawbridge, moat and entrance gateway, also date from the 17th century, although they are probably on the original sites. The castle originally belonged to the Calders, but passed, in the 17th century, to the Campbells of Calder, who are still represented by the Earl of Cawdor.

A previous building, mentioned as 'Calder Castle' in 1398, may have occupied the site.

D MacGibbon and T Ross 1887-92.

Cawdor Castle is still inhabited and in excellent condition. According to the late Lord Cawdor it comprises a towerhouse with curtain wall and dry-moat built c. 1396, with 17th century additions. The tower-house was modified c 1456, and the cap-house added.

Visited by OS (NKB) 21 July 1971; Information from pamphlet 'Some facts about Cawdor Castle', by Lord Cawdor.

Architecture Notes

NH84NW 1.00 NH 84718 49870 Cawdor Castle

NH84NW 1.01 NH 85054 49647 East Lodge

NH84NW 1.02 NH 84703 49971 North Lodge

NH84NW 1.03 NH 84763 49810 Walled Garden

NMRS REFERENCE

Architect: Thomas MacKenzie - additions; Alexander Ross - additions

CAWDOR CASTLE ALBUM

Photogrpah album with views by J Valentine of exterior and interiors of Cawdor Castle c. 1890 and view of Helmingham Hall and Peckforton Castle including many interiors.

EXTERNAL REFERENCE

NATIONAL LIBRARY

Country Life, May 11th & 18th 1945 - text & photographs

Scots magazine. November 1808 - engraving. D Thomson

SRO

Alterations to Cawdor Castle

Articles of Agreement betwixt Sir Archibald Cambell of Clunes and John Nicolson, Mason in Pyperhill.

The 2 windows in the Red room of the Tower are to be sloped and built up to conform to the 2 below.

Two windows are to be built in the King's room upon the west side and the position of the door altered. In the Laigh Dining room the door is to be moved from East to West.

1717

GD128/35/2

Activities

Antiquarian Observation (1857 - 1861)

Mason's marks from Scottish churches, abbeys and castles recorded between 1857 and 1861 on 29 drawings in the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland Collection.

Publication Account (1995)

Dominated by its great 15th-century tower, Cawdor is an outstanding example of a fortified house which has evolved over many centuties. Whether or not the site was occupied in the 11th century at the time of Macbeth, the Calders are documented as Thanes of Calder or Cawdor from the late 13th century on. The present tower dates from 1454 when William, Thane of Cawdor, was granted a royal licence 'to erect his castle of Cawdor and fortify it with walls and ditches, and equip the same with turrets and means of defence'. By the forced marriage of an heiress in 1510 the succession passed to a cadet branch of the Campbells of Argyll.

The central tower has a blocked entrance (now a window) to the first-floor hall, and the usual vaulted basement reached only by a stair in the wall. From this there is a modern opening to a newly discovered pit-prison with its own latrine chamber, formerly reached on ly from above through a trapdoor. The iron yett at the foot of the stair is said to have been taken from Lochindorb Castle, which was destroyed in 1457. Access from the hall to the upper floors was by a spiral stair in the thickness of the wall. The early tower may well have been surrounded by a walled courtyard with outbuildings on the present lines, but these ranges have been extensively rebuilt.

To the south and south-east are two-storey ranges of the mid to late 19th century, but built to match the style of the earlier castle; in the east wall is a central drawbridge over the dry moat. On the west and north are long three-storey ranges, 16th century in origin but largely rebuilt for Sir Hugh Campbell of Cawdor between 1639 and 1674 by local masons from Nairn. These ranges have vaulted lower rooms with slit windows and thick walls, crowstepped gables, and projecting attic stair turrets with attic chambers above, and they are linked to the old tower by a new scale-and-platt stair tower. The north-east range is early 18th century (contract signed in 1699) but its roof, dormer windows and turret were added in the 19th century, when some alterations were also made to the north range.

Over the entrance to the 17th-century wing is a date-stone of 1672. On the first floor is the new Great Hall with wooden ceiling beams, a musicians' gallery at one end, and its original chimneypiece. Above this on the bedroom floor is the Tapestry Room, its walls still hung with tapestries made for the room in Flanders in 1682. All the rooms are filled with family furnishings and pictures collected over many years. Passing through other rooms the visitor reaches the present diningroom, with its curious chimneypiece carved around 1670 to commemorate the Calder-Campbell marriage of 1510. Past the modern kitchen is the old kitchen with a rock-cut well in the vaulted basement of the west range. This room was used as a kitchen from at least the 17th century to 1938, and retains much of its old equipment. Beyond were the bakehouse, now a larder, and the vaulted stables, later used as wine cellars.

Round the castle are three different gardens, and there is an attractive 17th-century church in Cawdor village.

Information from ‘Exploring Scotland’s Heritage: The Highlands’, (1995).

References

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