- Cairness House
Cairness House, four miles south of
Fraserburgh in the County ofAberdeenshire , is the largest and finest country house inBuchan and one of the great houses ofScotland . It was built between1791 and1797 to designs by architectJames Playfair and replaced an earlier house of1781 by Robert Burn, which was largely incorporated into the Playfair scheme.Sir John Soane assisted in the final stages of the construction following Playfair’s untimely death in 1794. The park was laid out by Thomas White, a follower ofLancelot 'Capability' Brown .History
Cairness House was commissioned by Charles Gordon of Cairness and Buthlaw and was part of a 9,000-acre (36 km²) estate that included the village of St. Comb’s and the
Loch of Strathbeg . The second laird, Major-General Thomas Gordon (1788-1841), a good friend ofGeorge Byron, 6th Baron Byron , was a hero of theGreek War of Independence and wrote a celebrated history of the conflict. The Gordon family sold the estate in 1937 to the Countess of Southesk.After the
Second World War , the house was used as a farmhouse and gradually fell into serious decline. The park was destroyed from the early 1950s onwards with the mass clearance of trees in order to reclaim land for agricultural use. In 1991, the house was listed as a Building At Risk by the Scottish Civic Trust. A major long-term restoration programme of the house and grounds was instigated by new owners in 2001. Cairness House now contains a very fine collection of furniture and works of art and is open to the public.Architecture
Considered one of the finest examples of
Neoclassical architecture in Britain, Cairness House shows the influence of the French architectsÉtienne-Louis Boullée andClaude Nicholas Ledoux and has many parallels with the works of Sir John Soane.The design incorporates a complex mixture of
Masonic and pagan symbols as well as many numerological and architectural conceits. It is acalendar house , and its ground plan shows an adjoining “C” and “H”, variously standing for Cairness House and Charles Gordon.Constructed in finely detailed granite ashlar, Cairness House consists of a 110 ft main block, flanked by two raised “bookend” wings. A tetrastyle pedimented Roman Doric porch sits to the centre, its unjointed columns hewn from menhirs taken from a nearby druids' temple. A pair of lower pavilions with representations of the Masonic Altar adjoin at the back. From these spans a huge semicircular service wing, with a central bell tower above a lunette arch, enclosing a courtyard at the rear of the house. The centre of the courtyard is dominated by a round ice house modelled on the
Temple of Vesta inRome . The main roof is surmounted by 51 cast iron chimney pots in the shape of fluted Doric columns.The interiors are boldly Neoclassical with fine examples of simulated marble walls, pendentive or
coffered ceiling s and Greek key friezes. The Egyptian Room was the first of its kind in Britain and contains elaborate hieroglyph plasterwork. The Entrance Hall features a columbarium fireplace with anthemion antefixes.ee also
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Calendar house External links
* [http://www.visitpeterhead.org.uk Official Buchan and Peterhead website]
* [http://www.cairnesshouse.com/ Cairness House: Official website]
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