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  1. Bathgate Castle, near Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland, was a motte-and-bailey castle. It was abandoned after 1327 and only the motte survives aside from some earthworks. It was designated a scheduled monument in 1961 by Historic Environment Scotland. History. The castle was the caput of the barony of Bathgate.

  2. He died on 9 April 1327 at Bathgate Castle and was buried in the Abbey Church of Paisley, alongside his first wife, Marjorie Bruce, and his five High Steward ancestors. A memorial on the wall of the Abbey is inscribed as follows: In everlasting memory of the High Stewards of Scotland.

  3. Bathgate's origins date back to the 1100s when it was known as Batket, probably meaning "house in the wood" or "boar wood". By 1328 there was a Royal Castle here which was given by Robert the Bruce to his daughter Marjorie on her marriage to Walter, the High Steward of Scotland: thus began the Stewart dynasty that was to rule Scotland until 1689.

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  4. Bathgate has a unique history and exemplary attractions, with even more to do within Bathgates town centre. Bathgate, whose name comes from the Gaelic ‘boar wood’, has a splendid past to explore; Robert the Bruce gave his daughter Marjorie a castle in Bathgate when she married Walter, the High Steward of Scotland.

  5. Bathgate Castle, near Bathgate, West Lothian, Scotland, was a motte-and-bailey castle. The castle was the caput of the barony of Bathgate. The castle was part of the dowry of Marjorie Bruce , daughter of Robert the Bruce, upon her marriage to Walter, High Steward of Scotland in 1314.

  6. Bathgate first enters the chronicles of history in a confirmation charter by King Malcolm IV of Scotland (1141 – 9 December 1165). In royal charters of the 12th, 13th and 14th centuries, the name of Bathgate has appeared as: Bathchet (1160), Bathket (1250) and Bathgetum (1316).