
Somewhere inside Fyvie Castle, three ancient stones are sealed into the walls. They have been there for over seven centuries. Five great Scottish dynasties have owned the castle across those centuries. Not one of them passed it on to a direct heir. And nobody — not one owner, not one restorer, not one curious workman — has ever moved the stones.
A Curse Spoken at the Gates
The story begins with Thomas the Rhymer — the 13th-century Border prophet said to have received the gift of true speech from the Fairy Queen herself.
When he stood at Fyvie’s gates, he recited a verse that would echo through seven hundred years of Scottish history:
“Fyvie, Fyvie, thou’s never thrive, as lang’s there’s in thee stanes three. There’s ane intill the oldest tower, there’s ane intill the ladye’s bower, there’s ane intill the water-yett — and thir three stanes ye’se never get.”
Three stones, hidden within the castle walls. Leave them, and no lord of Fyvie would ever pass the castle to his son.
The prophecy has held, unbroken, ever since.
Five Towers, Five Dynasties — All Failed the Same Way
You can count the families in stone. Walk along Fyvie’s grand south facade and you’ll see five towers rising against the Aberdeenshire sky — each named for the dynasty who built it.
The Prestons were first, in the 14th century. They held Fyvie for decades. No direct heir.
The Meldrums came next, then the Seatons, who transformed the entrance front into something approaching a palace. No direct heirs.
The Gordons held Fyvie for the longest stretch and built some of its finest rooms. Still no direct heir.
Finally, the Leith family — Victorian industrialists who poured a fortune into restoring the castle — passed without a son to inherit.
Five centuries. Five families. Five towers. Zero direct heirs.
Some call it coincidence. Others call it exactly what Thomas the Rhymer predicted.
Fyvie sits at the heart of Aberdeenshire’s extraordinary castle trail, but no other castle along that route carries a curse quite like this one.
The Name Carved Where No One Could Reach
Of all the strange things inside Fyvie’s walls, none is more unsettling than the carved name of Dame Lilias Drummond.
Lilias was the wife of Sir Alexander Seton, the castle’s first Gordon lord. She died in 1601 — and her husband remarried within months.
Shortly after, the letters “D. LILIAS DRUMMOND” were discovered carved into the outer stone sill of the master bedroom window. The letters are deep and deliberate. They are also on the outside of the wall — sixty feet above the ground.
No scaffold. No ladder. No explanation.
The carving is still there today. Guides point it out to visitors who lean from the window to see it. Nobody has ever explained how it got there.
Lilias is said to still walk the upper floors of Fyvie, dressed in green. Many visitors over the centuries have reported a presence — a cold room, a draught where there should be none.
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The Room That Was Sealed and Left That Way
In the early 20th century, workers restoring parts of Fyvie Castle broke through a wall and found something nobody expected: a hidden chamber containing human skeletal remains.
No record of the room existed. No burial had been documented. No one knew who was inside, or why they had been placed there.
The decision was simple and swift: seal the room again. The wall was rebuilt. The remains were left where they were.
A small external window — just visible from the castle grounds — is all that marks the location of the sealed room. It sits in the stonework like a closed eye.
No one has opened it since.
Fyvie is not alone in its eerie reputation. Scotland’s most haunted castles each hold their own dark histories, but Fyvie’s combination of prophecy, unsolved mysteries, and documented strangeness puts it in a category of its own.
What You Will Find When You Visit
Today, Fyvie Castle is managed by the National Trust for Scotland and is open to visitors from spring through autumn.
Inside, you’ll find one of the finest wheel staircases in Scotland, a superb collection of Scottish portraits spanning centuries, and the five distinctive towers that tell the story of each dynasty.
The carved name of Lilias Drummond is visible from inside the master bedroom — lean toward the window sill and you can see the letters yourself. Guides will show you where to look.
And the three weeping stones? They are still in the walls. Exactly where Thomas the Rhymer said they were. Exactly where they have always been.
Whether you believe in curses or not, standing inside Fyvie Castle and looking out at that carved name tends to leave people quieter than when they walked in. If you’re planning your trip to Scotland, this is one castle that deserves an afternoon to itself.
Frequently Asked Questions About Fyvie Castle
Where exactly is Fyvie Castle in Scotland?
Fyvie Castle is located near the village of Fyvie in Aberdeenshire, about 25 miles northwest of Aberdeen. It sits in the heart of northeast Scotland’s castle country, surrounded by rolling farmland and beautiful grounds.
Is Fyvie Castle open to visitors?
Yes. The National Trust for Scotland manages Fyvie Castle and opens it to visitors typically from April through October. The castle interior, grounds, and gardens are all accessible. Check the National Trust for Scotland website for current opening times before your visit.
Can you actually see the carved name of Lilias Drummond?
Yes — the carving is visible from inside the upper bedchamber, on the outer sill of the window. Guides at the castle point it out. The letters are deep and clearly legible, carved into the outside of the stonework sixty feet above the ground, which makes them impossible to explain by ordinary means.
What is the best time to visit Fyvie Castle?
Late spring through early autumn gives you the best conditions — open gardens, longer daylight hours, and good light on the castle exterior. The castle is quietest midweek in May and September.
Some places in Scotland carry their history lightly. Fyvie does not. Every stone here has a name — literally, in one case. Every corridor holds a question that seven hundred years have not answered.
The five towers, each named for a family that could not pass this place to its children, stand in silence above some of the most beautiful farmland in Aberdeenshire.
Go when the mist hangs over the grounds. You will understand why Thomas the Rhymer chose this particular castle to leave his most famous warning.
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