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A haar materialises over Cromarty, on the Moray Firth, seen from Roseisle beach at 500mm

Colonial Acres Beach

West Yarmouth, Massachusetts

Cummingston rock formation

Canal de Suez 2017

Münster

Nordrhein-Westfalen

Germany

 

artist:DAX

PHOTOGRAPHOHOLIC

I born to capture |

 

(C) DAX ☆

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Pruebas de revelado desde negativos. Duplicado con Olympus EM5, Macro 60mm Olympus, procesado con NegSet, LRC y Nik. www.blastovar.com

Aquel murallón de castilla y león.

Walt Disney Concert Hall

Los Angeles, California

Pruebas de revelado desde negativos. Duplicado con Olympus EM5, Macro 60mm Olympus, procesado con NegSet y en LRC y Nik Soft. www.blastovar.com

Part of my 'Duffus Castle through the seasons' project.

 

601314487fe3c.site123.me/

 

The castle is situated on the Laich of Moray, a fertile plain that was once the swampy foreshore of Spynie Loch. This was originally a more defensive position than it appears today, long after the loch was drained.

 

The motte is a huge man-made mound, with steep sides and a wide ditch separating it from the bailey. The whole site is enclosed by a water-filled ditch, which is more a mark of its boundary than it is a serious defensive measure.

Duffus Castle was built by a Flemish man named Freskin, who came to Scotland in the first half of the 1100s. After an uprising by the ‘men of Moray’ against David I in 1130, the king sent Freskin north as a representative of royal authority.

 

He was given the estate of Duffus, and here he built an earthwork-and-timber castle. Freskin’s son William adopted the title of ‘de Moravia’ – of Moray. By 1200, the family had become the most influential noble family in northern Scotland, giving rise to the earls of Sutherland and Clan Murray.

In about 1270, the castle passed to Sir Reginald Cheyne the Elder, Lord of Inverugie. He probably built the square stone keep on top of the motte, and the curtain wall encircling the bailey. In 1305, the invading King Edward I of England gave him a grant of 200 oaks from the royal forests of Darnaway and Longmorn, which were probably used for the castle’s floors and roofs.

 

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