Duffus Castle is one of the finest examples of a motte and bailey castle in Scotland. The raised
ground of the motte and bailey look somewhat out of place sitting like an island in a sea of very
flat farmland, but at the time of its construction its position was far more strategic. The castle
was located by the shore of Loch Spynie and was surrounded by water and marshy ground. Over the
years the loch silted up and was eventually drained and reclaimed as farmland, creating the flat
landscape that now surrounds the castle.
The castle was built in the mid 12th century by Freskin, Lord of Strathbrock, a Flemish knight,
whose descendants took the title ‘de Moravia’ (of Moray). Freskin was given the land
at Duffus by King David I, and by 1151 the castle was complete enough to accommodate the King
while he supervised the construction of nearby Kinloss Abbey.
The castle was held by the Cheyne family, supporters of the English king, Edward I, during his
campaigns in Scotland, and was attacked and burnt down by the Scots in 1297. The destroyed wooden
defences were then rebuilt in stone. The wooden palisade around the bailey was replaced by a stone
curtain wall and a stone tower was built on the motte. The construction of the largely artificial
motte does not appear to have been strong enough to support the heavy new tower and at some point
the north-west corner collapsed down the slope. A range of buildings was added along the north
side of the bailey, but these are now even more ruined than the tower. The castle was abandoned
towards the end of the 17th century in favour of nearby Duffus House.
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