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Culloden House Hotel

Learn about:
-Accommodations
-Dining
-History
-Location
-Things to Do

Romance Packages
Honeymoon in Scotland, this hotel are part of our honeymoon and romantic getaway program in Scotland. Combining stays in castles, manor houses, boutique hotels and guest houses together with a car rental and driving directions.

Scottish Tourist Board Rated
4 Star

To book or for more information email call toll-free 1-800-876-5084

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History
The new Culloden House is itself a fine Georgian mansion incorporating much of the original fortified house/castle within its structure. Built in an elegant style, it shows the influence, or actual handiwork, of John Adam, considered to be the pre-eminent architect of the late 19th century. In addition to the house having an obvious compatibility with John Adam?s neo-classical style, his influence on the design is buttressed by surviving letters showing him to be a friend and houseguest during this period.
By the end of the 18th century Inverness, the largest town of the Highlands, was acknowledged as its capital with its theatre, Assembly Rooms and polite society. Its winter season dazzled the eyes of the townsfolk - balls, concerts and plays all diverted the local gentry and wealthy merchants who made the town their base for the dark winter months.
As the capital of the highlands, Inverness increasingly provided metropolitan sophistication and diversions as the town attracted wealthy families from all over the Highlands to settle. A ring of mansions and fine houses sprang up around the town where a civilized living style could be enjoyed distant from the noise and bustle of the town yet close enough to enjoy its facilities. The finest of the country houses in the neighbourhood of Inverness still survives, Culloden House, an exquisite Georgian mansion set in open parkland.
But the existing house, already over 200 years old, is not the first house to stand on this site. Timothy Pont's manuscript and map of the area surrounding Inverness, dating from 1595-1596, show Culloden as a fortified tower house, built in the traditional Scottish style.