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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.
Culzean Castle was a former seat of the chiefs. Dunure Castle in South Ayrshire was the original stronghold of the chiefs. Dalquharran Castle in South Ayrshire once owned by the Kennedys of Kirkhill and Dunure; now a ruin; Cruggleton Castle, Sorbie, Wigtownshire; Dunduff Castle; Greenan Castle in Ayr; Maybole Castle; Kinmuck Castle; Old Ellon ...
Crosbie Castle: Keep: 14th century: Ruin: South Ayrshire Council: Troon: Demolished by the Fullarton of Fullarton family and made into an ice house: Culzean Castle: Historic house: 1792: Preserved: National Trust for Scotland: Incorporates an older tower house: Dalquharran Castle (old) 15th century: Ruin: Dailly: Dalquharran Castle (new) 1785 ...
The castle, Culzean, Scotland Photographer: Photochrom Print Collection. ... Views of landscape and architecture in Scotland in the Photochrom print collection ...
An estate map was drawn up in the 1750s by John Foulis of Redburn, a copy of which is kept in Culzean Castle. The map shows a building on a piece of land about 800 metres from the castle, near to the current walled garden, and it is overwritten with the word "Sipios". [17]
Wedderburn Castle, Duns, Scottish Borders, Berwickshire (1770–1778) Culzean Castle, South Ayrshire (1772–1790) Moreton Hall, Suffolk (1773–1776), building and interiors; Stowe, Buckinghamshire (1774) Moreton Hall, Bury St Edmund (1783) Brasted Place, Kent (c. 1783) Pitfour Castle, Tayside, attributed (c. 1785–90) Seton Castle, East ...
The Castle was built between 1566 and 1572 by George, the 4th Earl of Caithness, for his son William Sinclair. According to the Historic Environment Scotland, "[George's] initials and those of his ...
The Maidens and Dunure Light Railway was a railway in Ayrshire, Scotland built to open up coastal communities by connecting them to the main line railway network.. It opened in 1906 and closed to local passenger traffic in 1942, but a section serving a holiday camp at Heads of Ayr remained open for the purpose until 1968.