Beta Help us improve: share your feedback on our new website.

Galloway's sweetheart

In 1268, Lord John Balliol died. His grieving widow, Lady Dervorguilla of Galloway, had his embalmed heart placed in an ivory casket. She is said to have carried it with her everywhere.

She undertook many charitable acts in her late husband’s memory. These included founding the Cistercian abbey of Dulce Cor (Latin for ‘Sweet Heart’) in 1273. When she too died in 1289, Dervorguilla was laid to rest in front of the abbey church’s high altar, clutching her husband’s heart to her bosom.

Sweetheart Abbey’s origin as a shrine to human and divine love is as appealing as its setting. The graceful ruin nestles between the grey bulk of Criffel and the shimmering waters of the Solway Firth. Its blood-red sandstone walls are vivid against the lush green grass.

Aerial view of abbey ruin with graveyard, fields, carpark and road surrounding
Illustration of an impressive abbey complex with white walls and dark grey roofs in an otherwise green and leafy area

A chequered history

Monks from Dundrennan Abbey established the new monastery – the last Cistercian house to be founded in Scotland. The Wars of Independence with England erupted while the builders were still working on the abbey church.

Edward I himself resided at the abbey in 1300, while campaigning in Galloway. Thirty years later, the bishop of Galloway bemoaned Sweetheart Abbey’s “outstanding and notorious poverty” as a result of the conflict with England.

Archibald the Grim, Lord of Galloway and 3rd Earl of Douglas, financed extensive repairs and rebuilding in the later 1300s. From then on, history offers few records of Sweetheart Abbey – until its demise following the Protestant Reformation of 1560.

Illustration of an interior of an abbey with decorated flooring and people conducting some sort of service

A graceful ruin

The beautiful abbey church of St Mary the Virgin survives almost complete, despite the wars with England and other changes in fortune. It is a lasting tribute to the monastic ideal that was so important in the Middle Ages. (In contrast, the monks’ cloister is largely gone.)

The church was planned in the shape of a cross and divided into different areas:

  • a presbytery at the east end, once housing the high altar

  • the monks’ choir immediately west of the high altar

  • flanking transepts to the north and south, housing side-chapels

  • six-bay nave to the west

A bell tower soars high above the central crossing. The church adheres to the Cistercian principles of austerity, but has fine flourishes. These include the:

  • ornate stone tracery in the presbytery windows

  • circular window above the south transept

  • impressive west front

  • stone effigy of Lady Dervorguilla cradling her husband’s embalmed heart to her bosom, in the south transept

View in the middle of a ruined abbey with significant walls still in good condition

Statement of significance

Read our Statement of Significance for Sweetheart Abbey for facts, figures and further reading about its history.

Read more
A cow standing in a field with a ruined abbey behind

Our archives and collections

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

Drawing of Sweetheart Abbey ruin
Black and white photo of Sweetheart Abbey
Aerial view of abbey ruin and graveyard in New Abbey area with some buildings and green fields, trees