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Scotland’s oldest

Castle Sween is the oldest standing castle on the Scottish mainland that we can date with confidence. It and its adjacent sea loch take their name from Suibhne (Sven) ‘the Red’, a chieftain of Irish descent and ancestor of the MacSweens. He probably built Castle Sween in the 1100s, a time when Argyll lay outside the Kingdom of Scotland.

The castle is set on a low, rocky ridge overlooking Loch Sween. Its curtain wall, 2m thick and 8m high, surrounded a quadrangular courtyard, though the complex was altered and built upon during the next 500 years.

We can tell the castle dates back to the 1100s by the broad buttresses on the outside walls. There is also an absence of windows and other openings, aside from the entrances.

Reddish foliage in the foreground, a castle on a grassy hill in the centre, a body of water behind and hills beyond that
Substantial stone wall with an archway, looking in towards another substantial stone wall
View of water on the left and land on the right, with castle close to shoreline and area with vehicles parked

The Lords’ stronghold

In the 1200s, control of Argyll and the Isles was in dispute between the King of Norway and the King of Scots. As part of Scottish efforts to secure control, the MacSweens were replaced as Lords of Knapdale by 1262 by the Stewart Earls of Menteith. But it was not until 1266 that overall lordship of Argyll and the Isles was transferred to the King of Scots by King Magnus of Norway.

In about 1300, an attempt by John MacSween to take back Castle Sween failed – despite ‘a tryst [meeting] of a fleet against Caisteal Suibhne’. A new three-story seaward tower was built about this time.

In the late 1300s, the castle passed to the MacDonald Lords of the Isles, and several families served as keepers. In 1481 James III of Scotland, fearful of the MacDonalds’ treachery, entrusted the castle to the Campbell earls of Argyll. The castle was destroyed by Sir Alexander MacDonald in 1647.

Our archives and collections

Get a further glimpse into Castle Sween's history by exploring archive images and collections objects on trove.scot, your companion to researching Scotland’s past.

Plan of castle building showing layout
Black and white photo of walls with scaffolding
Castle ruin from across water

Across the centuries

Castle Sween has been excavated several times, and there’s evidence that the site was occupied before the castle was built. Works in the 1920s revealed:

  • a stone axe and whetstone in a cave beneath the castle

  • a Neolithic six-knobbed stone ball

  • three medieval brooches and implements

  • a barbed and tanged arrowhead

Further excavations in the 1980s found evidence for at least five separate periods of use within the courtyard. One notable find was a 1400s harp-peg found on the site, associated with the Lords of the Isles.

Castle from elevated angle over water. Castle is close to shoreline and has hills beyond it

Statement of Significance

You can find out more about Castle Sween in our Statement of Significance, part of a series of special documents outlining the history and development of Historic Scotland sites.

Read the Statement of Significance for Castle Sween
Interior of well-preserved castle ruin. Many walls and window openings are still in tact
Aerial view from directly above a castle with no roof, clearly showing its outline
Grassy and rocky area with some bare trees and a castle