Inverugie Castle | |
---|---|
Inverugie, Aberdeenshire, Scotland | |
Coordinates | 57°31′31″N 1°49′50″W / 57.5252°N 1.8305°W |
Type | motte-and-bailey |
Site information | |
Open to the public |
no |
Condition | ruined |
Site history | |
Built | 12th and 17th centuries |
Inverugie Castle or Cheyne's Tower is the ruins of a motte-and-bailey castle in Aberdeenshire, Scotland.
Inverugie Castle is located two miles from Peterhead on the north east coast. The ruins are a small mound only three metres high above the River Ugie. This is all that remains of a wooden motte-and-bailey castle of Inverugie built by the Cheynne family in the 12th century. The stone ruins date from later than the original building on the site.
The location of the motte relative to the river at Inverugie suggests it was built to protect the ford at this point and that the bailey ditch (moat) would have been filled with water from the Ugie for additional defence.
In the basement of the oblong tower house there was the storage area and kitchen. The next level contained the hall used for entertaining guests. In the north and south corners of the hall were small turnpike stairs accessing both round towers. On the middle of the west side was a third tower with the main staircase. This faced into the cobbled courtyard with its wall beside the river Ugie.
The castle of Inverugie was first raised by the Cheynne family in the 12th century. In 1345 with the death of Reginald le Chen, Baron Inverugie, the estate of Inverugie had passed to the Keith Earl Marischals who had their main seat at the coastal fortress of Dunnottar Castle, via marriage of Edward Keith and the heiress Marjory, daughter of Reginald le Chen and Helen de Strathearn. The Keiths built the current (ruined) stone castle of Inverugie south of the original wooden motte in around 1660. In the 19th century an oak heraldry shield was found in a local cottage with the arms of William Keith, 7th Earl Marischal and its date was carved as 1660.