Cousland was a hunting lodge of the
St Clair of Roslin family.
Henry Sinclair, Lord Sinclair sold Cousland to
William Ruthven, Lord Ruthven in 1493. Cousland was also associated with
Robert or Thomas Cochrane, a courtier and favourite of
James III of Scotland. He was said to have been a stone mason who rose to prominence until he was assassinated at Lauder Bridge in 1482. Thomas Cochrane held some lands of Cousland as a gift from the King. The castle was burned by Patrick Charteris as a result of a feud with
William Ruthven, 2nd Lord Ruthven in 1529. Following the
Battle of Pinkie in 1547, the castle was
slighted by
Edward Seymour, Duke of Somerset. The castle is indicated as "Cowsland" with a sketch in the maps of the battle published by
William Patten in 1548. It is said that in 1567
Mary, Queen of Scots, made her formal surrender to the
Confederate Lords after the
battle of Carberry Hill at Cousland Castle.
David Calderwood's account of the battle places the Lords at the "north side of Cowsland" rather than at the castle. Cousland was forfeited by
John Ruthven, 3rd Earl of Gowrie and his mother
Dorothea Stewart, and was subsequently granted to Hugh Herries, a physician to
James VI and I who had helped to rescue the King from the Ruthvens at
Gowrie House in Perth on August 1605. The castle passed from the Herries family, to the Hays of Kinnoull, before passing to the Makgill family in the 17th century. In the late 17th century, Cousland was known to be in the ownership of
John Dalrymple, 1st Earl of Stair. ==References==