Dunnottar Castle
Dunnottar Castle is a ruined medieval fortress located on a 160-foot (49 m) promontory of conglomerate rock extending into the North Sea, approximately 1.6 miles (2.6 km) south of Stonehaven in Aberdeenshire, Scotland.[1][2] The site spans about three acres, surrounded on three sides by steep cliffs, and features remnants of structures primarily from the 15th to 17th centuries, including a gatehouse, barracks, and the earl's lodging.[2] Originally a Pictish hillfort with evidence of occupation from the 5th century AD, possibly including a chapel established by Saint Ninian around 400 AD, it evolved into a strategic stronghold during the early medieval period, enduring sieges recorded in 681 and 694 AD amid Pictish conflicts.[3][4] The first stone castle was constructed in 1392 by Sir William Keith, who made it the principal seat of the Keith family, Earls Marischal, who held hereditary responsibility for Scottish coronations and custody of the regalia for over 400 years.[3][4] Dunnottar played pivotal roles in Scotland's struggles for independence and civil wars, notably recaptured by William Wallace from English forces in 1297 and besieged for eight months in 1651–1652 by Oliver Cromwell's army, during which the Honours of Scotland—the crown, sceptre, and sword—were concealed and smuggled out to prevent their capture and melting down.[3][4] In 1685, over 120 Covenanters were imprisoned in its whins, with many perishing from exposure, highlighting its use as a site of royalist enforcement.[3] The castle's decline followed the 1715 Jacobite Rising, when the 10th Earl Marischal's attainder led to forfeiture of the Keith estates in 1716; stripped and sold in 1717, it lay in ruin until partial restoration began under the Cowdray family in 1919.[3][4] Now privately owned by the fifth generation of the Pearson family and designated a scheduled monument, Dunnottar attracts over 135,000 visitors annually as a testament to Scotland's turbulent past, with ongoing conservation efforts preserving its evocative ruins.[3][5][6]