@dira26._: pliss jangan dulu gasie, menolak tua😭 #CapCut #4u #fy

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𝒹𝒾𝓇𝒶.🪽་༘࿐
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Tuesday 09 December 2025 08:21:02 GMT
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𝑮𝒓𝒊𝒕𝒕𝒕 :
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2025-12-09 08:45:46
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Experience an unforgettable stay at Ascog House on the Isle of Bute with the @The Landmark Trust  The Landmark Trust is one of Britain’s leading conservation charities. They restore historic buildings and offer them a new future by making them available to everyone as self-catering holidays, including Ascog House.  Ascog House is a 17th century Laird’s house. The history of the Ascog estate, however, goes back further than either of the two houses on it. In 1312 King Robert the Bruce is said to have given Ascog to the Bute family of Glass. In 1594, the estate was bought by John Stewart of Kilchattan, a distant kinsman of the Stewarts of Bute who became Earls and later Marquesses of Bute. John Stewart may have built the first house at Ascog, replacing an older tower. The wall of the present kitchen is part of a grand chimneypiece. This belonged to a great hall whose floor and ceiling were both at a higher level than today.  In 1673 John Stewart of Ascog, grandson of the first John Stewart, married Margaret Cunningharn and it is their initials that are engraved on the house. John was rich enough to lend the Earl of Bute £9,385 to help re-build Rothesay Castle after damage in the Civil War.  In 1773, another John Stewart, who had no children, made a complicated will intended to ensure that Ascog would always be owned by a Stewart. His heir, a cousin named Archibald McArthur, therefore had to change his name. Archibald was said to both mean and eccentric - he kept pigs in his drawing room in Edinburgh. He too had no children.  The next heir was a distant American cousin, Frederick Campbell. He tried to sell Ascog but the terms of the old will defeated him. His brother Ferdinand, a professor of mathematics in Virginia, succeeded where he had failed and in 1831, sold Ascog House to the eminent engineer, Robert Thom. Ascog House passed through various hands until in 1989 it was given to the Landmark Trust who restored the building.  If you’re looking for a unique holiday this year, follow the Landmark Trust and check out their website.  #Scotland #travel #beautifuldestinations #hiddengems #landmarktrust
Experience an unforgettable stay at Ascog House on the Isle of Bute with the @The Landmark Trust The Landmark Trust is one of Britain’s leading conservation charities. They restore historic buildings and offer them a new future by making them available to everyone as self-catering holidays, including Ascog House. Ascog House is a 17th century Laird’s house. The history of the Ascog estate, however, goes back further than either of the two houses on it. In 1312 King Robert the Bruce is said to have given Ascog to the Bute family of Glass. In 1594, the estate was bought by John Stewart of Kilchattan, a distant kinsman of the Stewarts of Bute who became Earls and later Marquesses of Bute. John Stewart may have built the first house at Ascog, replacing an older tower. The wall of the present kitchen is part of a grand chimneypiece. This belonged to a great hall whose floor and ceiling were both at a higher level than today. In 1673 John Stewart of Ascog, grandson of the first John Stewart, married Margaret Cunningharn and it is their initials that are engraved on the house. John was rich enough to lend the Earl of Bute £9,385 to help re-build Rothesay Castle after damage in the Civil War. In 1773, another John Stewart, who had no children, made a complicated will intended to ensure that Ascog would always be owned by a Stewart. His heir, a cousin named Archibald McArthur, therefore had to change his name. Archibald was said to both mean and eccentric - he kept pigs in his drawing room in Edinburgh. He too had no children. The next heir was a distant American cousin, Frederick Campbell. He tried to sell Ascog but the terms of the old will defeated him. His brother Ferdinand, a professor of mathematics in Virginia, succeeded where he had failed and in 1831, sold Ascog House to the eminent engineer, Robert Thom. Ascog House passed through various hands until in 1989 it was given to the Landmark Trust who restored the building. If you’re looking for a unique holiday this year, follow the Landmark Trust and check out their website. #Scotland #travel #beautifuldestinations #hiddengems #landmarktrust

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