Home About Us FIND US Activities Groups Host an Event Shop & Eat CONTACT US  
Click here to go to our Home page Loch an Eilein Castle Click here to go to our Home page
 
ABOUT US
THE PEOPLE
THE FOREST
LOCH AN EILEIN
CAMP & CARAVAN PARK
HISTORY
Place Names
The Doune
Loch an Eilein Castle
CARE
WHAT OUR VISITORS SAY
FAQs
FILMING & PRESS
WORKING HERE
Loch an Eilein Castle

Loch an Eilein translates from Gaelic as “Loch of the Island”.

The ancient castle on the island was built on a natural defensive site. Its origins are uncertain, however it is thought that between 1222 and 1298, the Bishop of Moray chose the south end of the island to build a half house surrounded by a defensive wall.

In the 1380s, the notorious Wolf of Badenoch (Alexander Stewart, a younger son of King Robert of Scotland and Robert the Bruce’s grandson) probably constructed a sturdy tower house as a fortified hunting lodge on the north end of the island of 10m x 8.5m with walls 1.8m thick. It also had a barrel-vaulted cellar, first floor hall and upper chamber. In 1600 Patrick Grant of Rothiemurchus built a connection curtain wall between the hall house and the lower tower to increase security in emergencies.

These are the ruined structures you will see today, made so by winter storms despite minor repairs early last century. The island, on which the castle sits proudly, decreased in size in the 1770s when a sluice built to enable felled timber to be floated down the Spey, raised the water level. The water now obscures the zigzag causeway once said to connect the castle to the shore.

The most notable skirmish to take place was in 1690, when the defeated Jacobites from the Battle of Cromdale besieged the castle. Furthermore, in 1745 after the battle of Culloden, the widow of 5th Laird Jean Gordon, (alias Grizel Mhor a well known Jacobite Lady), sheltered fugitives in the castle. More recently Grant lairds have also used the island loch to protect Osprey nests on the castle.    

Source: Nature and People on a Highland Estate 1500- 2000 - T C Smout & R A Lambert

BOOK ONLINE
over 30 activities
Call us +44 (0) 1479 812345 Click to read our blog Go to our Facebook page Follow Rothiemurchus on Twitter Pininterest Instagram
Read about our weather
 
LEARN THE LAND CONSERVATION early history CHARITIES FRIENDS AN CAMAS MÒR Click to learn more about the Green Tourism scheme
educational visits deer FORESTRY PLAN gaelic heritage awards explorers intranet
visitors & Tourism farming MAINTENANCE TRUST the highland lady CONCORDAT WALKING CAMP & CARAVAN PARK
Environmental Resources river spey the access code kampeni linge & drumintoul LINKS PRIVACY POLICY © Rothiemurchus 2010