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The
Majestic Dwelling
Balmoral
Castle, (Gaelic, the majestic dwelling ), a private residence
of the British sovereign, in the parish of Crathie an.d Braemar,
Aberdeenshire, Scotland, on the right bank of the Dee (here spanned
by a fine suspension bridge), 9 miles West of Ballater and at
a height of 900 ft. above the sea. The property formerly belonged
to the Farquharsons of Inverey, from whom it was acquired by Sir
Robert Gordon, whose trustees disposed of the lease in 1848 to
the prince consort, by whom the whole estate was purchased in
1852 and bequeathed to Queen Victoria.
The
castle is built of granite in the Scots baronial style, with an
eastern tower 100 ft. high commanding a superb view Ballochbuie
and Braemar to the West, Glen Gairn to the North, Lochnagar and
the beautiful valley of the Dee to the South. On Craig Gowan (13,9
ft.), a hill 1 m. to the south, have been erected memorial cairns
to Queen Victoria, the prince consort, Princess Alice and other
members of the royal family of Great Britain. The parish church
of Crathie (1903), replacing the kirk of 1806, is 11/2 m. to the
West, and about 2 m. farther west stands Abergeldie Castle, another
Highland royal residence, an ancient building to which modern
additions have been made, inhabited by King Edward VII. when prince
of Wales, and after his accession to the throne used as a shooting-lodge.
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