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Admission
Facilities
- Accessible by public transport (16)
- Bicycle rack (2)
- Bus parking (12)
- Car parking (18)
- Children's quiz available (22)
- Disabled toilets (10)
- Display on history (12)
- Dogs not permitted (7)
- Guided tours – ask on site for details (5)
- May close for lunch in winter, please call in advance (1)
- May close for lunch, please call in advance (23)
- Picnic area (14)
- Restaurant/café (1)
- Self service tea/coffee (2)
- Shop (22)
- Strong footwear recommended (4)
- Toilets (16)
- Visitor centre (6)
- Water bottle refill (14)
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Regions
Search results
The search has returned 23 places
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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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Cardoness Castle
Learn about the lawlessness of the McCullochs, for whom this elegant six-storey tower house was built.
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Corgarff Castle
Unravel the two very different tales of this medieval tower house, a noble residence turned army base.
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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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Dundrennan Abbey
Visit the secluded spot where Mary Queen of Scots sheltered during her last hours in Scotland.
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Dunfermline Abbey and Palace
Walk among kings in Dunfermline Abbey, a royal mausoleum, and see the palace where the last monarch born in Scotland was delivered.
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Edzell Castle and Garden
Get a sense of the standing of the Lindsay family from the beauty of their lordly seat and its great garden.
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Elcho Castle
Imagine the comfortable life of the laird and lady of this fine house, built as their second home in the country.
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Elgin Cathedral
Discover some of the highlights that make the ‘Lantern of the North’ a shining example of Scottish medieval architecture.
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Glenluce Abbey
Learn about 400 years of monastic life in the valley of the Water of Luce.
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Huntingtower Castle
Explore the castle where Mary Queen of Scots and new husband Lord Darnley stayed during the Chaseabout Raid.
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Huntly Castle
Visit the seat of one of medieval and Renaissance Scotland’s most powerful families, the earls of Huntly.