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celtes
location: Wales, UK Gender: Female
| | Kilchurn Castle, Lochawe, Scotland < on 10/17/2010 5:21 PM >
| | | Kilchurn Castle was built in about 1450 by Sir Colin Campbell, first Lord of Glenorchy, as a five storey tower house with a courtyard defended by an outer wall. By about 1500 an additional range and a hall had been added to the south side of the castle. Further buildings went up during the 16th and 17th centuries. Kilchurn was on a small island in Loch Awe scarcely larger than the castle itself, although it is now connected to the mainland as the water level was altered in 1817. The castle would have been accessed via an underwater or low lying causeway. At the turn of the 16th century Kilchurn Castle was extended by Sir Duncan Campbell with the addition of a single storey dining hall built along the inside of the south curtain. During the second half of the century, another Sir Colin Campbell, the 6th Laird, continued to improve the castle's accommodation by adding some chambers to the north of the tower house, and remodelling the parapet. This included the introduction of the circular corner turrets adorned by corbels, most of which have survived remarkably well. Towards the end of the 16th century the Clan MacGregor of Glenstrae were occupying the castle. Once owning the lands of Glenorchy during the 14th century, until they passed through marriage to the Campbells, the MacGregors were appointed keepers to Kilchurn Castle as the Campbells spent much of their time at Fincharn. This arrangement lasted until the very early part of the 17th century, when a violent feud between the two families brought it to an end and the Campbells retook possession. In 1681 Sir John Campbell of Glenorchy was made 1st Earl of Breadalbane. To take advantage of the turbulence of the times, he converted Kilchurn into a modern barracks, capable of housing 200 troops. His main addition was the three storey L-shaped block along the north side. Engraving of Kilchurch Castle by William Miller, 1846 Kilchurn was then used as a Government garrison during the 1715 and 1745 Jacobite risings. The Campbells attempted, unsuccessfully, to sell Kilchurn to the government, after they moved in 1740 to Taymouth Castle in Perthshire. In 1760 the castle was badly damaged by lightning and was completely abandoned; the remains of a turret of a tower, still resting upside-down in the centre of the courtyard, attest to the violence of the storm. 1.
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Imbroglio
location: DFW Gender: Male
The glass is twice as big as it needs to be.
| | | Re: Kilchurn Castle, Lochawe, Scotland <Reply # 1 on 10/28/2010 6:14 AM >
| | | Beautiful. I visited here in 1998, and long to return someday.
http://www.noelkernsphotography.com |
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johnie walker
| | Re: Kilchurn Castle, Lochawe, Scotland <Reply # 2 on 10/30/2010 9:51 AM >
| | | fantastic pics.they should be framed and hanging on walls somewhere.
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celtes
location: Wales, UK Gender: Female
| | Re: Kilchurn Castle, Lochawe, Scotland <Reply # 3 on 11/2/2010 12:51 AM >
| | | Posted by johnie walker fantastic pics.they should be framed and hanging on walls somewhere.
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Wow! Thank you!
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