Huntingtower Castle
Buy tickets for Huntingtower Castle
Huntingtower Castle ticket options
-
Standard entry
Explore the castle at a specific date and time, with options for family and carer tickets.
-
Member tickets
Historic Scotland members get free, unlimited entry to all our sites
-
Explorer Pass tickets
Explorer Pass holders can book their visit here
-
Family tickets
Choose the family ticket that works best for you
-
Young Scot Card holders
Young Scot card holders can visit our sites for just £1
-
Partner organisations
Members of our partner organisations receive free or discounted entry
Ruthven Raid
A lordly residence for 300 years – from the 1400s to the 1700s – the castle is linked to both the Ruthvens (later earls of Gowrie) and the Murrays (earls of Tullibardine and later dukes of Atholl).
Before 1600, Huntingtower was known as the Place of Ruthven.
In a famous episode known as the ‘Ruthven Raid’, the 1st Earl of Gowrie held James VI, Mary’s son, here against his will in 1582.
An equally bizarre event called the ‘Gowrie Conspiracy’ led to the downfall of the 3rd Earl of Gowrie in 1600. The Ruthvens were disinherited and their forfeited castle was renamed Huntingtower.
Place of Ruthven
Huntingtower today looks like a single building, but the Place of Ruthven had consisted of two fine tower houses standing about 3m apart. A frontage facing the gardens to the south may have always linked the pair.
How and why this highly unusual layout came about isn’t known. Other buildings, including a great hall, stood beside the tower houses around a courtyard. All lay inside a stone defensive wall.
The Murrays altered the medieval castle in the later 1600s, to try to make it look more like a regular country mansion.
Huntingtower still has medieval treasures including one of the oldest painted ceilings surviving in Scotland nd exquisite fragments of wall frescoes.
Rise and fall of the Ruthvens
The Ruthvens settled in Perthshire in the late 1100s, but the oldest part of the present castle dates only from the 1400s. Exactly where the family lived for the 250 years in between times is a mystery.
In 1480, the two sons of William, 1st Lord Ruthven, were each granted letters of legitimation. This may explain the building of two tower houses so close together – one for each son.
In 1581, James VI made the 4th Lord Ruthven the Earl of Gowrie. The following year, the Place of Ruthven was the setting for a celebrated coup, the Ruthven Raid, during which the 1st Earl held the young king against his will for 10 months.
The king forgave his earl, but after the Gowrie Conspiracy of 1600 – in which James alleged that the 3rd Earl had tried to have him assassinated – the king had the earl executed and his family forfeited their estates.
The Place of Ruthven was given to the Murrays of Tullibardine and renamed Huntingtower.
Statement of Significance
Read our Statement of Significance to learn more about the unique Huntingtower Castle.
Natural history
Huntingtower is home to a large colony of pipistrelle bats.
Other wildlife seen here includes:
long-eared bats
natterer’s bats
barn owls
roe deer
rabbits
pheasants
hedgehogs