Tuesday 2 June 2015

14 Scottish Places All “Outlander

1. Doune Castle, Perthshire (Castle Leoch)

Starz / Sony Pictures Entertainment
Flickr: swampa / Creative Commons
 
Flickr: boyko / Creative Commons
This stunning medieval stronghold near Stirling was built in the late 14th century by Robert Stewart, Duke of Albany. It stands in for the fictional Castle Leoch in Outlander, home to Jamie’s uncle Colum Mackenzie and his clan.

2. Culross, Fife (Cranesmuir)

Starz / Sony Pictures Television
The National Trust for Scotland
 
Flickr: goforchris / Creative Commons
The Royal Burgh of Culross is an appropriate setting for a TV series about time travel; it’s barely changed since the 17th century and is nowMANAGED by the National Trust. In the series it’s the village of Cranesmuir, home to Claire’s friend Geillis Duncan.

3. Rannoch Moor, Perthshire (Craigh na Dun)

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Flickr: 72486075@N00 / Creative Commons
 
Flickr: cosmicherb70 / Creative Commons
The scene where Claire time travels through the fictional Craigh na Dun stone circle is one of the most important in the series. The stones on set weren’t real (sorry), but you can see the scenery that surrounded them if you go to Rannoch Moor.

4. Blackness Castle (Fort William)

Starz / Sony Pictures Television
Flickr: armadale / Creative Commons
 
Purestock / Getty Images
This 15th-century castle overlooking the Firth of Forth is used as the setting for “Black Jack” Randall’s Fort William headquarters in the series. The ex-artillery fortress is often referred to as “the ship that never sailed” due to its unusual shape.

5. Falkland, Fife (Inverness)

Starz/ Sony Pictures Television
Flickr: sunstarrr / Creative Commons
 
The National Trust for Scotland
Outlander opens with a 1940s scene set in the picturesque town of Falkland, which stands in for the bigger city of Inverness. The town is also home to the beautiful Falkland Palace and Garden run by the National Trust for Scotland.

6. Aberdour Castle, Fife (Abbey of Ste. Anne de Beaupré)

Starz / Sony Pictures Television
Flickr: thehawk1 / Creative Commons
 
Flickr: thehawk1 / Creative Commons
This beautiful castle stands in for a monastery in the series. The castle’s 12th-century hall house is arguably the oldest standing stone castle in Scotland, and features a stunning and well-preserved early 17th-century painted ceiling.

7. Bo’ness and Kinneil Railway (Wartime London)

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Flickr: mgallacher / Creative Commons
 
Flickr: bruce89 / Creative Commons
This historic railway and museum near Falkirk was transformed into a bustling 1940s London train station during the series. The heritage railway is run by a charity that uses the proceeds from scenic train tours to maintain the locomotives.

8. Glencorse Old Kirk, Midlothian

Starz / Sony Pictures Television
Google
 
geograph.org.uk / Jim Barton
This 17th-century church near the foothills of the Pentland Hills is the spot where Claire and Jamie tied the knot. The Kirk stands in the grounds of the equally pretty Glencorse House; a popular wedding venue for modern-day couples.

9. George Square and Pollok Country Park, Glasgow

Starz / Sony Pictures Television
Getty Images / Doug Pearson
 
Flickr: stressedtechy / Creative Commons
Glasgow’s bustling George Square is the central hub of the city, and is featured in the 1940s scene where Frank proposes to Claire, while the nearby Pollok Country Park stood in for the Highland field where Claire gathers healing herbs in the 1700s.

10. Highland Folk Museum (MacKenzie village)

Starz / Sony Pictures Television
Flickr: sustainable-rural / Creative Commons
 
commons.wikimedia.org / Creative Commons
This beautiful and detailed folk museum in Newtonmore features replicas of traditional turf-roofed Highland crofts, which made it an ideal Outlander filming location. They feature in several of the show’s 18th-century scenes.

11. Hopetoun House, Edinburgh (Duke of Sandringham’s residence)

Starz / Sony Pictures Television
commons.wikimedia.org / Creative Commons
 
Flickr: ipohkia / Creative Commons
Hopetoun House is a grand stately home near Edinburgh. In the series it’s the residence of the fictional Duke of Sandringham (Simon Callow); in real life its owner is Adrian, Marquis of Linlithgow. The house is open to the public in summer.

12. Tulloch Ghru, Aviemore

Starz / Sony Pictures Television
Flickr: omg-itzjazzi / Creative Commons
 
Iliyas-campbell / Getty Images
This sweeping, stunningly beautiful area near Aviemore and the Cairngorms is the setting for Claire’s trip through the woodland with Jamie and his clansmen in the first episode. It’s also featured quite heavily in the opening credits.

13. Linlithgow Palace, West Lothian (Wentworth Prison)

Starz/ Sony Pictures Television
Flickr: jambamkin / Creative Commons
 
Victor Habbick / Getty Images
This beautiful palace - once the royal seat of the Stewart kings of Scotland - stands in for the fictional Wentworth Prison in a (quite harrowing) episode of Outlander. The real palace is a much friendlier place to visit: It’s run by Historic Scotland.

14. Midhope House (Lallybroch)

Starz / Sony Pictures Television
commons.wikimedia.org / Creative Commons
 
de.wikipedia.org / Creative Commons
Lallybroch, also known as Broch Tuarach, is Jamie’s fictional home in the series. In real life it’s a part-ruined 16th-century tower housenear Edinburgh. If you do visit, please don’t go inside; the interior is derelict and not entirely safe. Just admire it from a distance.

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