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A noble residence

Dirleton Castle is one of Scotland’s oldest surviving strongholds. The 13th-century fortress was, for 400 years, a magnificent fortified residence to three successive noble families – the de Vauxs, Haliburtons and Ruthvens.

The Ruthvens’ eventual downfall saw Dirleton abandoned as a noble residence. Oliver Cromwell’s 1650 siege then rendered it unfit for military use. But the castle was not forgotten.

New owners the Nisbets bought the estate in the 1660s, turning the graceful ruins into an eye-catching feature in their new designed landscape. (They built a new mansion house, Archerfield, to live in.) Today, both castle and gardens are attractions in their own right.

A stairway leads from bottom left to the centre, upwards to the base of a castle ruin with a moody sky
Aerial angled view of well-preserved castle ruin revealing the side that has the most damaged walls

A French double

The impressive cluster of towers dating from the 1200s is among the oldest castle architecture surviving in Scotland. These remnants from the de Vauxs’ time include the imposing keep at the south-west corner.

A remarkably similar castle can still be seen near Amiens in northern France. Dirleton’s builder, John de Vaux, had been a steward in the nearby household of Alexander II’s queen, Marie, daughter of the Duke of Coucy.

Crushed by the Hammer

The de Vaux castle suffered badly in the Wars of Independence with England that erupted in 1296. Dirleton was captured in 1298, on the orders of Edward I – ‘Hammer of the Scots’ – and then changed hands several times.

By 1356, Dirleton had a new lord, John Haliburton. He rebuilt the battered castle, adding a new residential tower and great hall along the east side of the courtyard. Even as ruins, the surviving Haliburton storage vaults, family chapel and grim pit prison give a good idea of lordly life in the later Middle Ages.

Castle ruin with walls in varying states of repair, with grass and trees

Ruthven developments

Having acquired the castle around 1510, the Ruthvens made some big improvements to Dirleton, despite their main residence being Huntingtower Castle.

The Ruthvens built a new residence, the Ruthven Lodging, and laid out gardens to the west. They added what is now a bowling green, but at the time it may have been a parterre (formal garden). They also constructed a fine, circular doocot (pigeon house)

Well-preserved castle ruin after snowfall from directly above

The gardens

The gardens that grace the castle grounds today date from the late 1800s and early 1900s.

The formal Victorian west garden – with its foliage plants and geraniums – was faithfully reconstructed in 1993.

Fragrant herbaceous borders greet you as you enter the estate. These belong to the beautiful north garden, which dates from the Arts and Crafts movement of the 1920s.

View of garden area with a well-kept lawn in the middle and a colourful range of plants on either side

Natural history

The garden has a rare ginkgo, or maidenhair tree, a species unchanged since the time of the dinosaurs.

Thought to be native to China, the gingko was introduced to Europe in 1730. Its leaves are unique: they have a distinctive double-lobed shape, giving the tree its proper Latin name Ginkgo biloba.

Ginkgos are long-lived and are very disease-resistant, surviving well in polluted cities. Ginkgo trees growing in Hiroshima survived the atomic bomb blast of 1945.

Statement of Significance

Read our Statement of Significance for Dirleton Castle for facts, figures and further reading about the castle and its history.

Read more
Garden area with lots of different plants and a small castle tower in the background

Our archives and collections

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

Two men in tartan trousers standing in archway
Luscious gardens in front of small turret
Interior of dovecot