Glenbervie House

Glenbervie House is a mansion house, which has incorprorated parts of an earlier castle, located near Glenbervie, Kincardine and Mearns, Scotland.

Glenbervie House
Glenbervie Castle
Glenbervie, Kincardine and Mearns, Scotland
Coordinates56.914°N 2.383°W / 56.914; -2.383
Site information
Open to
the public
Unknown

History

A castle existed in the 13th century, owned by the Melville family which originally controlled a number of trackways over the Mounth. King Edward I of England stayed one night in 1296 at the castle, during his invasion of Scotland on his way to Aberdeen. Alterations were undertaken in the 14th century. The castle passed by the heiress Elizabeth Melville to the Auchinleck family in 1468 and by the heiress Elizabeth Auchinleck to the Douglas family in 1496.

Further alterations were undertaken in the 15th century. Adam Gordon of Auchindoun laid siege to Glenbervie in 1572 and captured the castle during the Marian civil war.[1] The castle was sold in 1675 to Robert Burnett of Leys. Further alterations were undertaken in 1700, as well as 1854.

Citations

  1. Mackintosh 1898, p. 159.
gollark: Particularly the noncentral fallacy.
gollark: It's basically entirely appeal to emotion, vague word association and stacks upon stacks of fallacies.
gollark: It's also very hard to empirically test anything in politics, not that people want to anyway.
gollark: The world is annoyingly complicated, so trying to start from a set of known premises and use formal logic to get results isn't very workable, plus there's Hume's guillotine.
gollark: <@772143922679644231> Nothing in politics is ever very "logical".

References

  • CANMORE - Glenbervie House
  • Coventry, Martin. Castles of the Clans: the strongholds and seats of 750 Scottish families and clans. Goblinshead, 2008. ISBN 9781899874361
  • Mackintosh, John. Historic Earls and Earldoms of Scotland. W. Jolly, 1898.


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