Oban- our Levingston/Livingston connection

High on a promontory overlooking Oban, Loch Fyne and distant islands in the Scottish Highlands are the medieval ruins of Dunollie castle. The site has been fortified since the sixth century. The castle was built and is still owned by the MacDougalls of Lorn, despite being  sacked and burned by the Covenenters in 1647, and attacked again during the Jacobite rising in1714. The 1745 house on site was the first home of the chiefs of the clan MacDougall after the family left the castle. It's now open to the public. 


The Livingstons were a sept (extended family) of the McDougall clan which descended from the 12th century Norse-Gaelic lord Somerled who created the kingdom of Argyll and the Isles. His father GilleBride was of royal Irish Ancestry. In 1140 he married Raghnild daughter of the King of the Isles. His eldest son was Dougal, the progenitor of Clan MacDougall.


Dunollie castle ruins

Inside the ruins



Sign in the 1745 MacDougall house 





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