Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Huntingtower Castle, once known as Ruthven Castle or the Place of Ruthven, is located near the village of Huntingtower beside the A85 and near the A9, about 5 km NW of the centre of Perth, Perth and Kinross, in central Scotland, on the main road to Crieff. This castle is the subject for several local ghostlore stories. Huntingtower Castle
Huntingtower and Ruthvenfield is a village in Perthshire, Scotland, on the River Almond, 3 miles (5 kilometres) northwest of Perth. Bleaching, the chief industry, dated from 1774, when the bleaching-field was formed.
Huntingtower Castle 56°24′34″N 3°29′18″W / 56.40945°N 3.48833°W / 56.40945; -3.48833 ( Huntingtower 15th-century tower extended in 16th and 17th centuries
Huntingtower Castle, in Perth, Scotland, originally called Ruthven Castle but was renamed Huntingtower Castle in 1600. Ruthven Castle, Angus, Scotland. Ruthven Barracks, Ruthven, Badenoch, Scotland, 18th-century military barracks built on the site of a castle called Ruthven.
Lord George Murray was born on 4 October 1694, at Huntingtower Castle near Perth, sixth son of John Murray, Duke of Atholl (1660–1724) and his first wife, Katherine Hamilton (1662–1707). As a younger son, 'Lord' was a courtesy title.
Huntingtower may refer to: Huntingtower, a part of the village of Huntingtower and Ruthvenfield, near Perth, Scotland; Huntingtower Castle, near the village of Huntingtower, Scotland; Huntingtower, a 1922 novel by John Buchan; Huntingtower, a 1927 British film based on the novel; Huntingtower School, Melbourne, Australia
Huntingtower Football Club was a football club from the village of Huntingtower and Ruthvenfield, Perthshire, Scotland. History. The club was formed as a Junior ...
During the war of the Rough Wooing, Patrick, Master of Ruthven, aided the English cause.In 1548 the English commander Grey of Wilton noted that he had been at the English-held Yester Castle with his servants in their "jacks" wearing red scarves. [1]