Achmelvich is home to what is reputedly Europe's smallest castle, known locally as '''Hermit's Castle'''. The castle was built in the 1950s by an English architect (David Scott), who left the area shortly after completion, spending only a weekend in the castle he spent months building. The castle was vandalised in the 1970s, when the windows were smashed and the door removed, but it is not unknown for people to use the castle as a
bothy. The detail design of this structure may give a clue to its popular name, as the entrance aperture consists of a tall but very narrow slit barely a foot wide. In this regard the design may be said to approach the concept of an
anchorite's (or hermit's) cell, a ceremonially bricked up enclosure whose sole access was only large enough to allow for the passage of food in and waste out. Another feature of great interest is that the structure is perched quite high above, and close to the edge of, a small inlet of the sea, and the above-mentioned aperture is on the seaward side. This results in the need to enter the Castle from below. Such a location also suggests a defensive aspect to the design. Combined with the quite strong resemblance to a
pill-box or similar military structure, this leads one to speculate exactly what the Castle's architect designer had in his mind when building it. Image:Bay of Alchmelvich (April 2008).jpg Image:SunsetAlchmelvicai.jpg Image:Flag & boats, Achmelvich.jpg ==References==