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Admission
Facilities
- Accessible by public transport (16)
- Bicycle rack (10)
- Bus parking (15)
- Car parking (21)
- Children's quiz available (20)
- Disabled toilets (14)
- Display on history (16)
- Dogs not permitted (4)
- Guided tours – ask on site for details (2)
- May close for lunch in winter, please call in advance (3)
- May close for lunch, please call in advance (7)
- Mobility scooters available (3)
- Picnic area (22)
- Restaurant/café (6)
- Self service tea/coffee (4)
- Shop (22)
- Strong footwear recommended (5)
- Toilets (22)
- Visitor centre (7)
- Water bottle refill (17)
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Search results
The search has returned 22 places
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Aberdour Castle and Gardens
Admire views of the Forth from what’s possibly Scotland’s oldest standing castle.
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Balvenie Castle
Face a mighty, curtain-walled fortress, built in the 1200s as the seat of the powerful earls of Buchan.
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Blackness Castle
See for yourself why this mighty fortress is known as ‘the ship that never sailed’ – with its pointed stem, square stern and tall mast.
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Craigmillar Castle
Step inside Edinburgh’s ‘other castle’, once a rural retreat from Scotland’s capital.
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Dallas Dhu Historic Distillery
Step back in time to see and hear how whisky was made in the 1900s – and then sample a dram for yourself.
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Dryburgh Abbey
Wander around this medieval ruin nestled in secluded woodland by the River Tweed to grasp the appeal of monastic life.
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Duff House
Unravel the story of how owner William Duff and architect William Adam clashed over the creation of this splendid Georgian mansion.
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Fort George
March the length of this massive fort built in the wake of the Battle of Culloden to see why it’s served the British Army so well for 250 years.
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Hermitage Castle
Discover a history filled with intrigue, murder, torture and treason at this awesome, eerie ruin.
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Huntly Castle
Visit the seat of one of medieval and Renaissance Scotland’s most powerful families, the earls of Huntly.
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Inchcolm Abbey
Set sail for a very special island in the Firth of Forth – home to Scotland’s best-preserved group of monastic buildings.
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Jedburgh Abbey
Admire the unusual mix of architecture in what is one of four great abbeys established in the Scottish Borders in the 1100s.