Clan Leslie Castle Coast Of East Neuk Of Fife Scotland



Tour Scotland travel video of Newark Castle, a Clan Leslie castle, now in ruins located just west of St Monans, on ancestry visit to the coast of the East Neuk of Fife. The building stands in a dramatic location, overlooking the North Sea. The upper storeys are ruinous, but vaulted cellars survive, hidden from view. Building on the site probably dates back to the 13th century at which time the Scottish king Alexander III, born 1241, died 1286) spent some of his childhood here. The current building was begun in the 15th century by the Kinloch family. It then passed, through marriage, to the Sandilands of Cruivie, who sold it in 1649 to David Leslie. Leslie was a prominent figure in the English and Scottish Civil Wars, becoming Lord Newark after the wars. Following Leslie's death in 1682 the castle passed to the Anstruther family, and finally to the Bairds of Elie. The castle attracted the attention of Sir William Burrell, the Glasgow shipping magnate and collector of art and antiques, in the late 19th Century when Sir Robert Lorimer produced a plan for its restoration. The scheme never went ahead as the owner of the site, a Mr Baird of Elie, refused to sell.The castle has been known by several names, including Inverie, St Monans and St Monance, the latter being a mediaeval form of the possessive St Monan's.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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