Kinneddar Castle


Kinneddar Castle in Moray, Scotland was the residence of the bishops of Moray from c.1187 and whose first documented incumbent was Bishop Richard. Very little of the structure now remains but the site is protected as a scheduled ancient monument.

History

enlarged or rebuilt the castle in c. 1280 and it continued to be used by the bishops until the late 14th century. Nothing now exists of the castle except one fragment of a rubble wall that is integrated into the Kinneddar kirkyard boundary wall. Loch Spynie, then open to the sea and much larger than its present size, came close to the castle and its marshes surrounded the castle enclosure on three sides. The ruinous structure still existed in 1734 and was described as being a central tower enclosed by two concentric hexagonal walls which made it unique in Scottish terms.
Adjacent to the castle grounds stood the ancient Kirk of Kinneddar which became the second cathedral of Moray following the move of the bishop's seat from Birnie. The Pictish sculptures found in the vicinity of the castle and kirkyard point to the area being an important 8th century Christian centre and may have been a principal location for the conversion of the Picts.