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|ownership=Historic Scotland
|ownership=Historic Scotland
|open_to_public=Yes
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|website={{HES link}}
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'''Dirleton Castle''' is a mediæval fortress standing in ruins by the village of [[Dirleton]] in [[East Lothian]]. It is to be found just two miles west of [[North Berwick]], and around 19 miles east of [[Edinburgh]]. The oldest parts of the castle date to the 13th century.  It was abandoned by the end of the 17th century.
'''Dirleton Castle''' is a mediæval fortress standing in ruins by the village of [[Dirleton]] in [[East Lothian]]. It is to be found just two miles west of [[North Berwick]], and around 19 miles east of [[Edinburgh]]. The oldest parts of the castle date to the 13th century.  It was abandoned by the end of the 17th century.
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==Outside links==
==Outside links==
{{Commons}}
{{Commons}}
*{{historic-scotland-link|089}}
*{{HES link}} - Historic Environment Scotland
*[http://www.scottish-places.info/features/featurefirst255.html Dirleton Castle] in the Gazetteer for Scotland
*[http://www.scottish-places.info/features/featurefirst255.html Dirleton Castle] in the Gazetteer for Scotland
*{{newcanmore|56735|Dirleton Castle}}
*{{newcanmore|56735|Dirleton Castle}}

Latest revision as of 19:23, 15 May 2016

Dirleton Castle

East Lothian


Dirleton's 13th-century keep
Type: Castle of enceinte
Location
Grid reference: NT515839
Location: 56°2’60"N, 2°46’48"W
Village: Dirleton
History
Built Early 13th century
Information
Condition: Ruined
Owned by: Historic Scotland
Website: Dirleton Castle

Dirleton Castle is a mediæval fortress standing in ruins by the village of Dirleton in East Lothian. It is to be found just two miles west of North Berwick, and around 19 miles east of Edinburgh. The oldest parts of the castle date to the 13th century. It was abandoned by the end of the 17th century.

Begun in around 1240 by John De Vaux, the castle was heavily damaged during the King Edward's Scottish Wars, when it was twice taken by the English. In the 14th century,

Dirleton was repaired by the Haliburton family, and it was acquired by the Ruthvens in 1505. The Ruthvens were involved in several plots against Mary, Queen of Scots, and King James VI, and eventually forfeited the castle in 1600. Dirleton ceased to be a residence, although Oliver Cromwell was forced to besiege the castle to flush out a band of "mosstroopers" (marauders), during the Third Civil War in 1650. The damaged castle was then acquired by John Nisbet, Lord Dirleton, who decided to build a new country house on the nearby Archerfield Estate. The Nisbet family of Dirleton continued to maintain the castle's gardens, before handing Dirleton into state care in 1923. The ruins and gardens are now maintained by Historic Scotland.

Dirleton Castle stands on a rocky outcrop, at the heart of the rich agricultural lands of the barony of Dirleton, and guards the coastal approach to Edinburgh from England, through the port of North Berwick. The ruins comprise a 13th-century keep, and a 16th-century house which the Ruthvens built adjacent. Only the basement levels survive of the 14th- and 15th-century additions built by the Haliburtons, although these comprised a large hall and tower house along the east range. Other buildings within the courtyard have also been demolished.

Surrounding the castle are gardens, which may have been first laid out in the 16th century, although the present planting is largely of the 20th century. The garden walls enclose a 16th-century doocot, or pigeon house.

History

de Vaux

The de Vaux family originated in Rouen in Normandy and settled in England following the Norman Conquest of 1066. Two de Vaux brothers, or cousins, were among a number of knights invited to Scotland, and granted land, by King David I of Scotland in the 12th century. Hubert de Vaux was given the barony of Gilsland in Northumberland, at that time part of Scotland, while John de Vaux was granted the barony of Dirleton. John built a castle at Eldbotle, probably to the north-west of modern Dirleton, and another, named Tarbet Castle, on the island of Fidra, although neither survives.[1]

In 1220, Fidra was granted to the monks of Dryburgh Abbey by William de Vaux.[2] William's son, another John, had been held hostage in England as surety for the good conduct of King William the Lion in 1213, and succeeded to the barony in the 1220s.[2] He then began the construction of a replacement for Tarbet at Dirleton, which was recorded as a "castellum" in 1225,[3] although this may refer to an earlier timber structure.[4] In 1239, de Vaux was appointed seneschal, or steward, to Marie de Coucy, on her marriage to King Alexander II. Marie de Coucy was the daughter of Enguerrand III, Lord of Coucy (d.1242), builder of the Château de Coucy, in Picardy (c.1220s), which probably served as a model for Dirleton.[5] The 13th-century stone castle, of which only the donjon, or keep, remains, represented a show of de Vaux's status, and would have required peaceful times to permit a prolonged construction project.[6]

Peaceful times ended in 1296, with the outbreak of King Edward's Scottish Wars. Dirleton, which guarded the route between Edinburgh and the English border, changed hands several times through the invasions of the English under King Edward I. During the campaign of summer 1298, the castle was besieged by English forces under Antony Bek, the Bishop of Durham.[7] Dirleton withstood the assault for several months, until the English victory at Falkirk in 1298 allowed them to bring up large siege engines, after which the castle was soon reduced.[8] Dirleton was garrisoned by the English, but must have been retaken by the Scots before 1306, when the English commander Aymer de Valence, 2nd Earl of Pembroke recaptured Dirleton once more. It was finally retaken by the Scots some time before 1314, and was slighted, or deliberately damaged, to prevent its reuse by the English.[8]

The main gate, built in by the Haliburtons

Haliburton

The castle and lands of Dirleton passed to the Borders family of Haliburton (or Halyburton) when John Haliburton (d.1355) married the heiress of the de Vaux family, shortly before 1350. The castle had been repaired by 1363, when it was seized by William Douglas, 1st Earl of Douglas,[7] during his brief rebellion against King David II,[4] although it was later returned to the Haliburtons. In the 1420s, Sir Walter Haliburton (d. before 1447) acted as a hostage in exchange for the release of King James I, who had been held captive by the English since 1406.[7] He was rewarded in 1439 by being appointed Treasurer of Scotland.[9] Either Walter, or his eldest son John (d. before 1454),[10] was ennobled as a Lord of Parliament in the 1440s, with the title Lord Dirletoun. The Haliburtons carried out extensive works at Dirleton, heightening the original towers, and constructing a new gatehouse to the south-east. A large hall and tower house were added to the castle in the 15th century, forming the east range.[7] King James IV visited Dirleton in 1505, and gave money to the masons then engaged on works in the north-east part of the castle.[4][7] Later that year, Patrick, the last Haliburton of Dirleton, died, and his estates were divided among his three daughters, Janet, Margaret, and Mariotta.[11]

Ruthven

The Murder of David Rizzio, by Sir William Allan

Patrick Haliburton's eldest daughter, Janet, married William Ruthven, 2nd Lord Ruthven (d. 1552) in 1515, and the castle and lordship of Dirleton passed to the Ruthven family. The son of William and Janet, Patrick, 3rd Lord Ruthven (c. 1520–1566), was one of the leaders of the group who murdered David Riccio, private secretary to Mary, Queen of Scots, in 1566.[11] Patrick was forced to flee to England, where he died, leaving Dirleton to his son William (c. 1541–1584), who was created Earl of Gowrie in 1581.

Lord Gowrie led a plot, later known as the Raid of Ruthven, in which the 16-year-old King James VI was seized, in August 1582. Ruthven then ruled in the king's name, while James was held captive. Although Gowrie was pardoned the following year, he was executed in 1584 for his part in another plot to seize Stirling Castle, and his lands were forfeited to the crown.[7] A keen amateur arboriculturalist, Lord Gowrie is thought to have laid out the gardens at Dirleton, and planted numerous trees.[4] Except today, it is known that most of the stories told about the Ruthvens and the plot of Gowrie House, and the attempted kidnap of King James, was made up by the king, after he and his men murdered John Ruthven 3rd Earl of Gowrie and his brother Alexander, in a plot for revenge, murder and also to get the king out of paying a large debt he owed the Ruthven Earl, and most evidence was forged at the kings order.

James VI granted Dirleton to the Earl of Arran, who entertained the King there in 1585.[7] The following year, the castle was restored to Lady Dorothea, widow of the first Earl,[11] and by 1600 had passed to John Ruthven, 3rd Earl of Gowrie (c. 1577–1600), their second son. However, in August that year, in an event known as the "Gowrie Conspiracy", Lord Gowrie and his younger brother were killed attempting to kidnap or assassinate James VI at Perth.[7] Lord Gowrie is said to have persuaded Robert Logan of Restalrig to join the plot by offering, as a bribe, Dirleton Castle, which Logan described as "the pleasantest dwelling in Scotland".[12] However, the failure of the plot led to the attainder of the Ruthven family, and the castle was forfeited once again.

Dirleton was granted to Thomas Erskine of Gogar, who had killed Lord Gowrie and helped to save the King,[12] although Lady Dorothea was permitted to live there until her death in 1605, after which the castle ceased to be a noble residence.[13] Erskine was later created the 1st Earl of Kellie, but sold the castle to Sir James Douglas in 1625. Douglas sold it on to Alexander Morieson of Prestongrange,[4] who sold it in turn, in 1631, to James Maxwell of Innerwick (d. c. 1650), who was created Earl of Dirletoun in 1646.[7]

Cromwell

Oliver Cromwell's army invaded Scotland in 1650, during the Third Civil War, and defeated the Scots Royalists at Dunbar on 3 September. With this victory, Cromwell gained effective control of southern Scotland, but bands of Royalist moss-troopers continued to harry Cromwell's supply lines. One such band was based at Dirleton, and Cromwell ordered General Monck and General Lambert, with 1,600 troops, to capture the castle. This was achieved on 10 November, using mortars to destroy the drawbridge and inner gate.[14] The captain of the moss-troopers was hanged from the walls with two of his comrades.[12] The castle was slighted once more, and although briefly used as a field hospital, it was then left to decay.[15] The soldier and engineer responsible for Cromwell's effective use of artillery was a German, Major Joachim Hane. He also designed fortresses near Inverness and in Ayr, and directed the mortar fire at the siege of Stirling Castle in August 1651. He later spent a year spying for Cromwell's Secretary of State, John Thurloe.[16]

The west flower garden

Nisbet

Dirleton Castle and estate were purchased, from the widowed Countess of Dirletoun, by the lawyer John Nisbet (c. 1609–1687) in 1663. Nisbet, who took the title Lord Dirleton when he was appointed as a judge, built a new house at Archerfield, to the north-west of the village. The Nisbets continued to maintain the gardens around the castle as part of the park around Archerfield, and installed the bowling green. The 19th-century garden walls were added by Mary Nisbet, Lady Elgin (1778–1855), wife of the Earl of Elgin, as part of a "beautification" of Dirleton village.[17] In the mid-19th century, two new parterres were laid out by the head gardener, David Thompson. Although neither survived, the west garden was restored, based on 19th-century plans, in 1993. The north garden was replaced in the 1920s with an Arts and Crafts-style garden of herbaceous borders.[18] Also in the 1920s, the castle was passed into state care, and is now maintained by Historic Scotland.

Today

The castle and grounds are protected as a Scheduled Ancient Monument,[19] while the gardens appear on the Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes in Scotland.[4] The castle, doocot, and boundary walls are Category A listed buildings.[17]

Description

Floor plans of the castle.
Ground floor: A Kitchen. B Well. C Postern. D Inner courtyard. E Guard rooms. F Entrance passage. G Cellars. H Ovens. I Former postern. J Prison, with pit below. K Courtyard. L Demolished ranges. M Bases of demolished 13th-century towers.
First floor: N Lord's hall. O Lord's bedchamber. P Dining room. Q Chapel. R Priest's chamber.
Second floor: S Gun emplacement on roof. T Murder hole. U Kitchen. V Kitchen fireplaces. W Buffet. X Great hall. Y Lord's chamber, base of tower house.

The castle is built on a natural rocky outcrop, on a low ridge overlooking the farmland of East Lothian. It comprises a kite-shaped courtyard, 131 feet by 89 feet, flanked by buildings on the south and east sides. The most substantial remains are the Ruthven Lodging, the gatehouse, and the de Vaux keep to the south, while only the basement of the east range survives. Fragments of the north and west curtain walls outline the courtyard, which was formerly divided in two by further 16th-century buildings. The castle was originally approached from the south, by a bridge and 11-foot drawbridge, across a ditch 49 feet wide. In the 16th century, steps were built to access the Ruthven lodging from the west.[3]

The keep

The keep, or donjon, survives largely intact from the 13th century, and forms the south-west part of the present castle. Described by architectural historian W. D. Simpson as a "cluster keep",[20] it comprises a large round tower to the south, a smaller round tower to the west, with the two joined by a square tower. The masonry is of squared ashlar, or dressed stone blocks. Internally, the original use of the rooms is difficult to interpret,[3] although the round towers may have served as private suites for Lord Dirleton and his Lady.[21] The large tower contains a six-sided chamber at ground level, possibly a kitchen, with a seven-sided main chamber above. This room has a pointed vaulted ceiling, window seats in the large windows around the south wall, and a carved fireplace at the north. To the east is a postern, or side door, and beyond is a well. Adjacent to the well is a floor hatch, which would have allowed food to be transferred directly from the kitchen to a servery above.[22] A room in the square tower to the west, possibly the lord's bedroom,[7] has holes in the ceiling to allow smoke from braziers to escape. The more ruined west round tower probably contained another hall, with chambers above and storage below.[21] In the 17th century, the top of the main round tower was lowered and remodelled to form a gun platform.[23]

Only fragments of the rest of the 13th-century castle remain. A fourth tower, where the Ruthven lodging now stands, may have completed the "cluster keep".[7] Bases of round towers at the south-east and north-east corners of the castle are visible below the later walls. Parts of the north-west wall are 13th-century work, as is the blocked postern in the basement of the east range.[7] The overall plan of the castle, however, was not greatly changed through later rebuilding work. Dirleton is the earliest dated example in Scotland of a castle with round towers that project beyond the curtain wall, as opposed to those at Dunstaffnage, for example, where the towers are contained within the walls.[6] This new form was subsequently used in other 13th-century Scottish castles, including Bothwell and Kildrummy.[6]

Vaulted basement of the east range

The east range and gatehouse

The gatehouse, kitchens, and east range were built by the Haliburtons in the 14th and 15th centuries. The gatehouse, built in the 14th century to the east of the keep, is similar to the one at nearby Tantallon Castle.[7] It is fronted by a high, pointed arch, formerly with bartizans, small round turrets, at the top. The gate was protected by a drawbridge over the outer ditch, a portcullis, and three sets of doors. Guard rooms open off the entrance passage, and a round opening in the roof, known as a "murder hole", allowed defenders to drop objects on to any attacker who breached the outer gate.[24]

The large kitchens occupy the south-east angle of the castle. The 30-foot high main kitchen has two 13-foot wide fireplaces for cooking, and a circular vent in the vaulted ceiling.[3] Hatches in the floor give access to a well (38 feet deep) and cellars below. The adjacent passage linked the kitchen to the hall in the east range.

Remains of the hall and the basement of the tower house

The east range itself runs the length of the east side of the castle, and originally comprised a large hall, with a square tower house at the north-east corner. Although only the basement survives, this once formed one of the finest noble residences of its time, and would have been similar to the contemporary buildings at Doune Castle.[25] The basement is a single tunnel vault, with low walls subdividing the area into stores. Two large ovens and a well lie at the south end, while at the east is the 13th-century postern, blocked when the wall was thickened to support the new buildings above, and re-used as a fireplace.[26] At the north end of the basement is a vaulted prison for freemen, and below this, a rock-cut pit, 10 feet square, to house prisoners of the peasant classes.[26] Above the prison, but still within the basement, is a vaulted chapel with various ceremonial recesses, such as a sacristy and a piscina, or water basin.[26] A private chamber for the priest is next door. The hall above is 72 feet by 25 feet,[20] and once had a high timber roof, and a minstrel's gallery at the south end. An ornately carved stone buffet, or cupboard, is located on this wall, which formed part of the servery next to the kitchen.[26] At the north-east corner of the castle, a tower house provided accommodation for the Lord's family and guests. Again, only the lowest floor remains, above the chapel. This probably formed a private chamber for the Lord, and was connected to the adjacent hall.[26]

The north façade of the Ruthven Lodging

The Ruthven Lodging

Constructed by the Ruthvens after they acquired the castle around 1515, the Ruthven Lodging represents the final stage of building at Dirleton. In the later part of the 16th century, it served as the main residence of Lady Dorothea, wife of the first Earl of Gowrie, and their 15 children.[27] The three-storey building is constructed, like the Haliburton range, from undressed stone, although the Ruthven Lodging is decorated with string courses, horizontal mouldings running around the walls. The large windows were protected by iron grilles and small gun holes.[27] The rectangular Lodging is immediately to the north of the de Vaux building, separated by a narrow irregular courtyard, which is accessed via a passage in the ground floor of the Lodging. The remainder of the ground floor was occupied by cellars, with family rooms and bedrooms on the upper floors. The first-floor dining room was paved with patterned floor tiles, and may once have had a painted timber ceiling.[27]

The gardens

The 16th-century doocot

The castle is set within extensive gardens, bounded by a 19th-century wall. The gardens were first laid out in the 16th century, but have undergone many changes. A bowling green lies to the west of the castle, fringed by yew trees, which may once have formed a hedge around a parterre in this area.[28] West of the bowling green is a flower garden, laid out in 1993 to an 18th-century design, and containing yew, cedar, monkey puzzle and Lawson's cypress trees. To the north is the 1920s Arts and Crafts garden, which is home to a 705-foot -long herbaceous border, and is overlooked by a castellated 19th-century gazebo, or summer house. The border is recognised by the Guinness Book of Records as being the longest in the world. The rest of the gardens comprise lawns, with numerous mature specimen trees, including redwood, beech, and sycamore.[4]

There is a well-preserved 16th-century beehive-shaped doocot, or pigeon house, in the castle grounds. The doocot is 25 feet high, and contains around 1,000 nesting boxes for pigeons, which were an important source of food for the castle's inhabitants. To the north-east, now located outside the castle gardens, is a 16th-century gateway which formerly served the castle, but now serves the adjacent farm.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Dirleton Castle)

References

  1. Tabraham (2007), p.21
  2. 2.0 2.1 Tabraham (2007), p.22
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 McWilliam, pp.174-177
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 "Dirleton Castle". Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes in Scotland. Historic Scotland. http://data.historic-scotland.gov.uk/pls/htmldb/f?p=2400:15:0::::GARDEN:GDL00136. Retrieved 5 November 2013. 
  5. Tabraham (2007), p.23
  6. 6.0 6.1 6.2 Tabraham (1997), p.40
  7. 7.00 7.01 7.02 7.03 7.04 7.05 7.06 7.07 7.08 7.09 7.10 7.11 7.12 Salter, pp.41-42
  8. 8.0 8.1 Tabraham (2007), p.24
  9. Tabraham (2007), p.26
  10. "John Halyburtons, 1st Lord Dirletoun". thepeerage.com. http://www.thepeerage.com/p10814.htm#i108139. Retrieved 2008-06-18. 
  11. 11.0 11.1 11.2 Tabraham (2007), p.28
  12. 12.0 12.1 12.2 Groome, Frances (1882-4). "Descriptive Gazetteer entry for Dirleton". Ordnance Gazetteer of Scotland. http://vision.edina.ac.uk/descriptions/entry_page.jsp;jsessionid=8E27EF055CCF4C2F0DAED241BF077990?text_id=104380&word=NULL. Retrieved 2008-06-17. 
  13. Tabraham (2007), p.29
  14. Lindsay, pp.188-190, Salter, pp.41-42
  15. Tabraham (2007), p.30
  16. Frith, Charles Harding (1896). The Journal of Joachim Hane. T. F. Unwin. pp. vi–vii. http://archive.org/stream/journaljoachimh01firtgoog#page/n10/mode/2up. 
  17. 17.0 17.1 "Dirleton Castle, dovecot, castle gate, tower, north and west gateways and boundary walls, Listed Building Report". Historic Scotland. http://data.historic-scotland.gov.uk/pls/htmldb/f?p=2200:15:0::::BUILDING:1525. Retrieved 2008-06-17. 
  18. Tabraham (2007), p.31
  19. "The Monument known as Dirleton Castle, Dovecot and Gardens". 2003. http://hsewsf.sedsh.gov.uk/eschedule/show?ID=90096&OK=Y. Retrieved 2008-06-17. 
  20. 20.0 20.1 Lindsay, pp.188-190
  21. 21.0 21.1 Tabraham (2007), p.12
  22. Tabraham (2007), p.13
  23. Tabraham (2007), p.6
  24. Tabraham (2007), p.9
  25. Tabraham (2007), p.14
  26. 26.0 26.1 26.2 26.3 26.4 Tabraham (2007), p.17
  27. 27.0 27.1 27.2 Tabraham (1997), p.10
  28. Tabraham (2007), p.18

Books

  • Lindsay, Maurice. (1986) The Castles of Scotland. Constable & Co. ISBN 0-09-464600-7
  • McWilliam, Colin. (1978) The Buildings of Scotland: Lothian, except Edinburgh. Penguin. ISBN 0-14-071066-3
  • Salter, Mike. (1994) The Castles of Lothian and the Borders. Folly Publications. ISBN 1-871731-20-8
  • Tabraham, Chris. (1997) Scotland's Castles. BT Batsford/Historic Scotland. ISBN 0-7134-7965-5
  • Tabraham, Chris. (2007) Dirleton Castle 2nd edition. Historic Scotland. ISBN 978-1-904966-41-8