Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Brodie Castle is a well-preserved Z-plan tower house located about 3.5 miles (5.5 kilometres) west of Forres, in Moray, Scotland. The castle is a Category A listed building , [ 1 ] and the grounds are included in the Inventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes in Scotland .
Upload another image Brodie Castle, West Lodge 57°35′48″N 3°42′59″W / 57.59657°N 3.716318°W / 57.59657; -3.716318 (Brodie Castle, West Lodge) Category C(S) 2263 Upload another image Darnaway, Whitemire Village, No 63 (Pinewood) No 64 57°33′57″N 3°42′36″W / 57.565849°N 3.709973°W / 57.565849; -3.709973 (Darnaway, Whitemire Village, No 63 ...
Thenral, earlier known as Brodie Castle, is a house in Chennai, India. Named after civil servant James Brodie (1769-1801) who constructed the house in 1796, it currently houses the School of Carnatic music .
Brodie Castle: fortified house: complete: National Trust for Scotland: Nairnshire: Open to public: Burgie Castle: ... Castle: No remains Kilbuaick Castle: No remains ...
The Z-plan castle has a strong central rectangular tower with smaller towers attached at diagonally opposite corners. [1] Prominent examples of the Z-plan include Brodie Castle in Moray, Castle Menzies in Perthshire, [2] Glenbuchat Castle in Aberdeenshire, [3] Castle Fraser in Aberdeenshire, Claypotts Castle in Dundee [4] and Hatton Castle ...
Rodney's Stone is a two-metre high Pictish cross slab now located close on the approach way to Brodie Castle, near Forres, Moray, Scotland. It was originally found nearby in the grounds of the old church of Dyke and Moy. It is classed as a Class II Pictish stone, meaning that it has a cross on one face, and symbols on the other.
There are two church buildings in Dyke: the still functional Dyke Parish Church, built in 1781, and the old East Church, which was an old Presbyterian church built in 1856 on land given to the town by the Brodie family, still major landowners in the region. This old church was closed in the mid 20th century and used as a potato barn for many ...
Alexander Brodie (1617–1680), of Brodie, lord of session, was a notable Scottish diarist of the 17th century. He was Chief of Clan Brodie , and resided at Brodie Castle in Elginshire . Early life