Fyvie Castle sits behind iron gates in the Aberdeenshire countryside, and the moment you walk through them, something shifts. It is not the size of the castle — though five towers stretch against the sky — or even its age. It is the feeling that something here is watching, waiting, and not entirely at rest.

The Stones That Are Never Meant to Leave
Deep inside Fyvie Castle, according to legend, are three weeping stones. They are not decorative. They are not ornamental. They are bound to the castle by a warning so old that nobody knows exactly when it was first spoken.
The prophecy, attributed to the seer Thomas the Rhymer in the 13th century, is this: as long as three ancient stones remain within the Fyvie estate, the castle will stand. Should they ever leave, the laird’s line will fail to pass through the male heirs — generation after generation — until the stones return.
One stone is said to be built into the castle wall. One is believed to lie beneath the waters of the estate pond. The third has been lost for centuries.
Thomas the Rhymer’s Warning
Thomas the Rhymer — also known as True Thomas — was a 13th-century poet and prophet from Earlston in the Scottish Borders. He is said to have spent seven years in the court of the Fairy Queen, returning with the gift of prophecy and the curse of always speaking truth.
He appears in folklore across Scotland, but Fyvie is one of the places where his name is spoken most carefully. Tradition holds that he visited the castle and left his warning about the stones.
Whether you believe Thomas was a real prophet or simply a legend who attracted real stories, the pattern of families at Fyvie is harder to dismiss.
The Families Who Could Not Break the Curse
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Five great families have owned Fyvie Castle since it was built in the 13th century: the Prestons, the Meldrums, the Setons, the Gordons, and the Forbes-Leith family. Each family added one of the castle’s five towers.
And each family — according to those who keep track of these things — struggled to pass the castle directly from father to son. Heirs died young. Lines ended abruptly. Estates passed sideways through daughters and nephews instead of through the male line.
Coincidence? Perhaps. But the pattern repeated across six centuries and five entirely different families. In Aberdeenshire, people do not laugh at the weeping stones.
The Green Lady Who Never Left
The curse is not the only thing that lingers at Fyvie. The castle is also home to one of Scotland’s most documented ghost stories — that of Dame Lilias Drummond.
Lilias was the wife of Alexander Seton, who owned Fyvie in the early 17th century. She died in 1601, reportedly of a broken heart after her husband took a mistress. Within months of her death, her initials were found carved into the outside of a first-floor windowsill — in a spot impossible to reach from inside the castle.
The letters read: D.LILIAS.DRUMMOND. They are still there today.
Sightings of the Green Lady have been reported across the centuries, always near the Seton Tower. If you want to read about another Aberdeenshire castle with a similarly haunting story, the Green Lady of Crathes Castle is one of Scotland’s most compelling — and also backed by physical evidence discovered centuries later.
What the Castle Keeps Today
The National Trust for Scotland now cares for Fyvie Castle, and it is open to visitors. The interiors are remarkable — grand painted ceilings, a gallery of Scottish portraits, and one of the finest wheel staircases in the country.
But it is hard to walk through those rooms without thinking about everything that happened here. The families who came and went. The sons who were never born. The name on the windowsill. The stone in the wall.
Scotland has no shortage of castles that carry unexplained stories. The name carved into a castle window that no living person could have left behind is another mystery that official history has never quite managed to close.
The Stones Are Still There
If you visit Fyvie today, you can stand at the stone walls and wonder which block hides the prophecy. The pond is just visible from the north side of the castle.
Nobody has ever moved the weeping stones — or at least, nobody who has admitted to it. Perhaps that is the shrewdest thing about the Fyvie curse. You do not have to believe in it to decide that shifting a 700-year-old stone from a Scottish castle wall is probably not worth the risk.
Scotland has a way of making you feel that some things are better left exactly where they are.
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