Earl's Palace, Birsay

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Earl's Palace, Birsay

Orkney


The Earl's Palace
Location
Grid reference: HY248279
Location: 59°7’53"N, 3°18’54"W
History
Built 1570s
Information
Condition: Ruined
Owned by: Historic Scotland

The Earl's Palace in Birsay, Orkney, is a ruined 16th-century castle. It was built by Robert Stewart, 1st Earl of Orkney (1533–1593) (bastard son of King James V and his mistress Euphemia Elphinstone).

The palace is a category A listed building and a Scheduled Ancient Monument, and is in the care of Historic Scotland.

History

The castle was built in two phases. The first phase of work, begun in the 1570s, consisted of the great hall located in the south range, above the main door. Beside this was Lord Orkney's private chamber in the south-east corner tower. An inscription above the entrance, dated 1574, marks this phase. The second phase, completed in the 1580s, saw a new range containing a great hall and chamber built on the north side of the courtyard. The second phase probably followed Robert's acquisition of the Earldom of Orkney in 1581. After the death of Robert Stewart, the palace was used only occasionally by later earls of Orkney, and was not occupied after the mid-17th century.[1] By 1701 the palace had begun to deteriorate badly.

The castle

Detail of the window

The two-storey palace was constructed around a central courtyard and well, with large stone towers at three of the four corners. It was as much a fortress as a residence. Only the palace's upper floors had large windows; the accessible ground floors were equipped with small openings and an array of gun-holes, from which musketeers could cover every side of the building.

Few records of the palace remain to give a clear impression of its contents and layout. The Reverend John Brand published a book about Orkney in 1701, and included a description of the palace. He wrote:

The Earl's Palace during reconstruction
"[The upper floor] hath been prettily decored, the Ceiling being all Painted, and that for the most part with schems holding forth scripture-histories, as Noah's floud, Christ's riding to Jerusalem &c. And the Scripture is set doun beside the Figure."[2]

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Earl's Palace, Birsay)

References