የ Dunglass Castle ፎቶዎች

The Gordons of Gight – 3 of 9 በ arjayempee

Just inside the main door, and easily missed as one looks at so much else, is this arched ceiling – the only bit of ornate stonework remaining. On with the story: (Continued from previous photo) . . . . . The Keith feud was still going on merrily in April 1597, when the magistrates of Aberdeen thought it judicious to send the Bishop of the diocese to the castles of Gight and Inverugie near Perterhead, in an effort to secure peace between the families. The Bishop’s efforts seem to have been in vain, because in December of that year, George Keith the Earl Marischal and James Hogg of Ballyedrie complained to the Scottish Privy Council that one Alexander Keith and accomplices had stolen a gray horse belonging to the earl’s wife, and two mares belonging to Hog. Horse theft was an extremely serious crime in those days, often punished more severely than murder, and frequently by hanging. Perhaps because the culprit was a Keith, or more likely because the horses had still not been recovered, Alexander was not immediately hung, but was locked up in Inverugie Castle, however before a suitable punishment could be devised, he managed to escape. Thereafter, the “complainants” carried out a diligent and methodical search, both for the escaped Alexander Keith, and also for the missing horse flesh, which latter they eventually found – “in the possession of Gordon of Gight and certain of his tenants”! The complainants claimed their horses and also demanded suitable restitution. William Gordon however (who was by now laird of Gight, his father having died earlier that year) not only refused but “most maliciously and cruelly” and accompanied by his brothers and “divers other men, all armed with hagbuts, pistolets, jacks, steelbonnets, swords, gauntlets and other weapons”, pursued the said Hogg, and others with him, and “wounded them in divers parts of their bodies”! The Privy Council also heard, that ever since his escape, the thief, Alexander Keith had been “resettled and maintained” by Gordon of Gight. The court found that Gordon of Gight, for failing to appear, was “to be denounced rebel”. (Continued next photo)
Dunglass Castle is a tourist attraction, one of the Castles in Bowling, ዩናይትድ ኪንግደም. It is located: 14 km from Erskine, 14 km from Dumbarton, 900 km from Liverpool. Read further
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