Spring Balvaird Castle Perthshire Scotland



Tour Scotland Spring 4K travel video of Balvaird Castle on visit to Perthshire. Balvaird Castle, also spelled as Balverd Castle or Balverde Castle or Balwaird Castle or Baleward Castle. It is a particularly fine and complete example of a traditional late medieval Scottish tower house. It is located in the Ochil Hills, around 3 miles South of Abernethy. The name Balvaird is from Baile a' Bhàird, meaning Township of the Bard in Gaelic. Balvaird was built around the year 1500 for Sir Andrew Murray, a younger son of the family of Murray of Tullibardine. He acquired the lands of Balvaird through marriage to the heiress Margaret Barclay, a member of a wealthy family. It is likely that Balvaird Castle was built on the site of an earlier Barclay family castle. Substantial remnants of earthwork fortifications around the Castle may survive from earlier defences. Over the years the castle was extended and altered. A gatehouse was built in 1567. An outer courtyard was attached to the main gate which possibly contained stabling as well as adding an extra layer of defence to the castle. Another courtyard to the south was a garden, while a much larger walled area to the north-east was an orchard. The family continued to live at Balvaird until they were elevated to the Viscountcy of Stormont, ancestors of the Earldom of Mansfield, and in 1658 moved to the rather more comfortable Scone Palace, near Perth. Thereafter the castle continued to be inhabited, though not by the family itself. In its later days, it probably accommodated farm workers.

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