With its picturesque domes, walls of pale pink sandstone and splendid
Dumfriesshire setting, Drumlanrig is one of Scotland's most romantic
castles, its story entwined with that of the country itself. Today's
castle was superimposed on a medieval Douglas stronghold by the 1st Duke
of Queensberry and took a decade to build. Finished in 1689, its North
Front is a stunning stage set of dressed stone, classical pilasters and
carvings of swags, scrolls and spooky faces. The 2nd Duke, known as 'The
Union Duke' for his role in the 1707 Act of Union, added the great oak
staircase, while his son created the vast gardens. The 4th Duke, a
rakish cousin known as 'Old Q', left it to future Dukes of Buccleuch and
Queensberry to rescue the castle and fill it with treasures, including
Rembrandt's luminous Old Woman Reading.