Pittarthie Castle
Pittarthie Castle in Fife is a ruined seventeenth-century tower house in the East Neuk of Fife, the peninsula stretching into the North Sea that contains some of the most charming and historically distinctive small fishing towns in Scotland. The castle was associated with a local Fife family and its ruinous condition is typical of the fate of many smaller Scottish tower houses following the gradual shift in residential preferences toward more comfortable buildings from the eighteenth century onward. The East Neuk of Fife is celebrated for its picturesque fishing burghs of Crail, Anstruther, Pittenweem and St Monans, each with characteristic crow-stepped gabled architecture, harbours and an active fishing and tourism economy. The Scottish Fisheries Museum at Anstruther provides the most comprehensive interpretation of the East Neuk's maritime heritage.