Britain’s most scenic castle ruins

Along the magnificent English countryside, stop see these historic remains
By Don Willmott
Updated: 8:44 a.m. MT Oct 8, 2007
There it is in the distance: a crumbling castle or skeletal church wall majestically perched on a seaside cliff or rising silently from the middle of a windswept moor. Get closer, and walk through the vaulted archways. Run your hands along the carved stones. That’s what history feels like.
Visiting a scenic British ruin is one of those quintessential European experiences, a chance to reflect on natural and architectural beauty and to ponder the passage of time. Britain wears its old age well, and at its most scenic ruins, echoes of the past are always in the air. It’s enough to inspire romantic verse. Just flip through your dusty poetry anthology and reread Wordsworth’s “Composed a Few Miles Above Tintern Abbey.” You’ll get the idea.
You can walk in the steps of King Arthur at Tintagel Castle, set high on the Cornwall coast. You can climb the remnants of the battlements of Scotland’s Urquhart Castle and scan Loch Ness for mysterious ripples on the surface. At Linlithgow Palace near Edinburgh, you can wander through what’s left of the birthplace of Mary Queen of Scots.







