Ethie Castle

Ethie Castle is a 15,091 square feet (1,402.0 m2) 14th-century castle, situated around 3 miles north of the fishing town of Arbroath in Angus, Scotland.

Ethie Castle

History

Ethie Castle dates to around 1300,[1] when the monks at nearby Arbroath Abbey built a sandstone keep. The castle passed through the hands of the de Maxwell family and into the ownership of Scotland's last Cardinal, David Beaton who was murdered in St. Andrews in 1546.[1] Its association with Cardinal Beaton is still evident as the castle includes a small chapel and the Cardinal's Sitting Room, with its secret staircase to the Great Hall above.

The castle was purchased in 1665 by the Carnegie family, who later became the Earls of Northesk. The 7th Earl was a Vice Admiral and commanded with Nelson at the Battle of Trafalgar in 1805. As a tribute, the Earl was entitled to incorporate Trafalgar in his arms and this can still be seen set in a dormer at Ethie. In 1927 the castle and grounds were bought by Glasgow artist and antique collector William Cunningham Hector.[1]

The castle is reputed to be the basis for the fictional Castle of Knockwhinnock in Sir Walter Scott's novel The Antiquary.[1][2] Sir Walter Scott was a close friend of William Carnegie, 8th Earl of Northesk and frequently stayed at Ethie Castle.[1]

The castle was restored by the chief of the Forsyth Clan, Alistair Forsyth and it now serves as the clan's seat.[3][4]

Ghosts

The castle is said to be haunted by a Grey Lady spectre as well as by David Beaton who was Abbot of Arbroath in the 16th Century.[5]

gollark: I've probably patched it now (hard to test, because one of my changes broke the exploit code but in a way which could be worked around), but at the cost of causing minor breakage in a mostly unused feature.
gollark: I'm having to reverse-engineer yet ANOTHER heavily obfuscated potatOS sandbox exploit.
gollark: https://pastebin.com/RM13UGFa line 1275.
gollark: Well, it prevents malicious programs (also users) from removing it or meddling with system files without doing a simple thing which ensures it can't be automatically removed.
gollark: > > > PotatOS is at least interesting. The sandboxing stuff it uses is pretty generalizable.> > It's a virusPeople often foolishly label potatOS a "virus" just because it conveniently copies itself to disks and has sandboxing.

References

  1. "Ethie Castle: History". Archived from the original on 2007-08-29. Retrieved 2007-07-04.
  2. M'Bain, James M. (1897). Eminent Arbroathians. Arbroath: Brodie & Salmond. p. 23. Retrieved 2009-05-19. Ethie Castle Antiquary.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-04-30. Retrieved 2010-05-05.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. "Halloween happenings in your area". BBC News. 2010-10-22.

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