Gordon Castle

Gordon Castle is a historic country house and former ducal seat near Fochabers in the parish of Bellie in Moray, Scotland. Originally built in the 1470s by George Gordon, 2nd Earl of Huntly, as a fortified tower known as the Bog o’ Gight, it evolved over the centuries into one of the largest and most distinguished houses in Scotland. Rebuilt on a monumental Neoclassical scale in the late 18th century by Alexander Gordon, 4th Duke of Gordon, the castle served as the principal residence of the Dukes of Gordon and later of the Gordon-Lennox family, Dukes of Richmond and Gordon.

At its height, Gordon Castle was celebrated for its vast façade—over 170 metres long—and for its social prominence under Jane, Duchess of Gordon, who made it a centre of political and cultural life in the Highlands. Much of the house was demolished in the 1954 after wartime deterioration, but the surviving east wing and medieval tower remain as part of a private residence owned by the Gordon-Lennox family. The surrounding Walled Garden, among the largest in Britain, has been restored as a major heritage and horticultural attraction.