Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Culzean Castle house and gardens (April 2011) Culzean Castle (/ k ʌ ˈ l eɪ n / kul-AYN, see yogh; Scots: Culzean, Culȝean, Colean [1]) is a castle overlooking the Firth of Clyde, near Maybole, Carrick, in South Ayrshire, on the west coast of Scotland.
Name Location Date Listed Grid Ref. [note 1] Geo-coordinates Notes LB Number [note 2] Image Culzean Road Whitefaulds Category B 37693: Upload Photo: Dailly Road Church Of Our Lady & St Cuthbert's School And Presbytery
Upload another image See more images Dalquharran Castle Dailly NS2705502161 55°16′59″N 4°43′29″W / 55.283127°N 4.724627°W / 55.283127; -4.724627 (Dalquharran Castle) 125 Upload another image See more images Kennedy Aisle Ballantrae NX0837982444 55°05′57″N 5°00′18″W / 55.099287°N 5.004894°W / 55.099287; -5.004894 (Kennedy Aisle) 869 Upload ...
Maybole Castle is a 16th-century castle located on High Street in Maybole, South Ayrshire, Scotland. Originally built for the Earls of Cassillis, it is an L-shaped construction with Victorian two-storey extensions. It is associated with a legend of John Faa, in which an earl killed Faa and imprisoned his wife, the Countess of Cassilis, in the ...
A portrait of Thomas Kennedy dated 1592 giving his age as 43, attributed to the Edinburgh-based artist Adrian Vanson, is displayed by the National Trust for Scotland at Culzean Castle. The painting has his arms and a motto "AVISE A LA FIN". [6] Portrait of Sir Thomas Kennedy, ArtUK
Castle of Mey, near Thurso, Scotland; St. George's Hall, Liverpool 1; ... National Botanic Garden of Wales 2 (3 May 2020) Series 43 (2021) ... Culzean Castle 2 (4 ...
The origin of the abbey's name refers to the ancient Cross of Riaghail (Latin form St Regulus) that stood on the spot. [4] Crossraguel was a Cluniac abbey and the monks - members of a branch of the Benedictines - were known as the "Black monks" after the colour of their clothes.
Thomas Kennedy of Culzean, Master of Cassilis (died 1602), who joined the court of James VI as a gentleman of the bedchamber in October 1580. [6] Jean Kennedy, who married Robert Stewart, 1st Earl of Orkney in 1561. [7] Isobel Kennedy (1542–1598), who married Patrick McElwain of Thomaston