Inglismaldie Castle
Inglismaldie Castle is a castle in the parish of Marykirk and the county of Kincardineshire, Scotland.[1][2]
Inglismaldie Castle | |
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Marykirk | |
Drawing of Inglismaldie Castle |
History
The Tower House was built in 1636. It was revised in 1882 by the Aberdeen-based architect James Matthews. At that time, Inglismaldie was one of the properties of the Earl of Kintore.
In 2007, the pigeon house was added to the register of endangered listed buildings in Scotland. Seven years later, its condition was classified as very poor with moderate risk.[3]
gollark: In any case, I have so far dropped my phone on solid surfaces... upward of 10 times, I think, and water zero.
gollark: I TOLD YOU THIS TWICE
gollark: THERE ARE PHONES WITH BOTH
gollark: WATERPROOFING AND REMOVABLE BATTERIES CAN COEXIST YOU TRIANGLE
gollark: I just want a phone I can actually repair easily, with cheap standardized equipment, but noooo...
References
- Sweet, Andy. "Inglismaldie Castle | Castle in Marykirk, Kincardineshire | Stravaiging around Scotland". www.stravaiging.com. Retrieved 2017-08-01.
- Historic Environment Scotland. "Inglismaldie Castle (35957)". Canmore.
- "Inglismaldie Castle Doocot, Northwater Bridge | Buildings at Risk Register". www.buildingsatrisk.org.uk. Retrieved 2020-05-10.
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