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  2. Bathgate Castle, near Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland, was a motte-and-bailey castle. It was abandoned after 1327 and only the motte survives aside from some earthworks. It was designated a scheduled monument in 1961 by Historic Environment Scotland. History. The castle was the caput of the barony of Bathgate.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BathgateBathgate - Wikipedia

    55°54′08″N 3°38′35″W  / . 55.902359°N 3.643097°W. / 55.902359; -3.643097. Bathgate ( Scots: Bathket or Bathkit, [2] Scottish Gaelic: Both Chèit) [3] is a town in West Lothian, Scotland, 5 miles (8 km) west of Livingston and adjacent to the M8 motorway. Nearby towns are Linlithgow, Livingston, and West Calder.

  4. He died on 9 April 1327 at Bathgate Castle and was buried in the Abbey Church of Paisley, alongside his first wife, Marjorie Bruce, and his five High Steward ancestors. A memorial on the wall of the Abbey is inscribed as follows: In everlasting memory of the High Stewards of Scotland.

  5. Bathgate Castle: Motte Unknown Bathgate: Walter, High Steward of Scotland, received the barony and castle of Bathgate as part of the dowry assigned to his bride Marjorie Bruce, daughter of Robert the Bruce, in 1314. Walter died there in 1327, and the castle may have been little used afterwards.

  6. Bathgate Castle, earthworks of short lived castle of the Stewarts now part of a golf course. Closest To: Bathgate. Access: S.O.A.C. Public Access. Grid Reference: NS981680. Bathgate Castle now lies entirely hidden beneath the 9th and 10th holes of Bathgate Golf Course, and consists primarily of an oval mound measuring perhaps 50 metres by 75.

  7. The original site of Bathgate Castle, which was part of her dowry, can be found on the grounds of Bathgate Golf Club. The site is protected by Historic Environment Scotland and the club is barred from carrying out any excavation work on the site without prior permission.

  8. Bathgate itself had an uneventful middle ages, but had grown into a linear town with a coaching inn on the Edinburgh to Glasgow road by the early 1700s. The medieval Old Parish Church was replaced in 1739. By 1736 the coaching inn had been supplemented by a brewery and a maltings. And by 1800 Glenmavis Distillery had arrived on the scene ...

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