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Scottish Castle Road Trip to Spynie Palace




Jacqui Cooper (Host: JCooperTravels & Love Travel Scotland) speaks with Yvette MacDonald (Host: Love Travel Scotland & Scottish Entrepreneur) about Spynie Palace.

For nearly 500 years, the bishops of Moray relaxed in this majestic building a short distance from their cathedral at Elgin. It even had its own bowling green and, according to one account, a tennis court.


Today, you can climb David’s Tower, where bishops once entertained kings and queens.


Very occasionally the property has to close at short notice due to adverse weather conditions or other reasons out.

To listen to the talk show, click here

To watch our conversation, click below.




A long-lasting episcopal residence


The bishops of Moray may have established their residence at Spynie in the late 1100s. Around 1207, Bishop Brice chose the church of Spynie as his cathedral. His successor, Bishop Andrew, built a new cathedral in Elgin, but the bishops still lived at Spynie.


The oldest surviving buildings, dating from the 1300s, include a first-floor hall and perhaps a chapel, with an entrance gateway below. There was another hall range with tall windows against the west wall. A large, circular tower may have held the palace’s main accommodation (only its basement remains).



David’s Tower


The colossal David’s Tower dominates the palace complex. It measures 19m by 13.5m externally and rises to a height of 22m, making it one of the largest tower houses ever built in Scotland. The great tower had a first-floor front entrance and six storeys.


Though named after Bishop David Stewart (1462–76) who commissioned it, the tower remained incomplete at his death. Bishop William Tulloch (1477–82) finished the tower and Bishop Patrick Hepburn (1538–73) added the gun holes.


The coats of arms of all three bishops are carved on the south wall, beneath the Royal Coat of Arms of Scotland.



Later developments


In the mid-1400s, the gateway in the south range was blocked and a more impressive gate put in the east wall. The coat of arms above the gate may belong to Bishop John Winchester (1435–60).

By 1500, a large, new great hall and chamber had been erected along the north side of the courtyard, and rectangular towers added to two of the corners.


The last building works were carried out for Hepburn, the final pre-Reformation bishop. He had wide-mouthed gun holes inserted at the base of each tower – clearly in anticipation of trouble ahead.


Spynie remained a residence for the Bishops of Moray until 1682, when it was annexed to the Crown and rented out for £12 a year.





Contact Jacqui at jcoopertravels@gmail.com for travel booking, consultations or travel insurance.

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