There are actually a few castles in Scotland with Dalrymple ties:
1. Tantallon Castle - Sold to Hew Dalrymple in the mid 1600's, but now in the possession of the Scottish Historical Society
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tantallon_Castle
http://www.historic-scotland.gov.uk/index/places/propertyresults/propertyabout.htm?PropID=PL_284&PropName=Tantallon%20Castle
2. Lochnich Castle - The original house for the Earl of Stair
http://www.rampantscotland.com/castles/blcastles_lochinch.htm
2. Baldoon Castle - Supposedly haunted by the ghost of Janet Dalrymple, who may have attempted to murder her husband David Dunbar on the night of they were wed at the castle.
http://www.angelsghosts.com/baldoon_castle_famous_haunted_place_story.html
Sweeney is Irish. Sometimes McSweeny from the Irish Gaelic Mac Suibhne, they came to Ireland from Scotland in the 1300s.
First found in the 1300s in Ayrshire, Scotland, the Thomson's family motto is "Honesty is the best policy".
Around the late 1300s, when siege cannon became strong enough to readily damage the castle.
wat is some inventions from 1300s
Maoris people lived in NZ in 1300s
he invented the drums in the late 1300s he invented the drums in the late 1300s
It's unknown - evidence appears in the 1300s (ie the bagpipes carried to the Battle of Bannockburn by the Clan Menȝies , but a study to find out about Scots and Irish bagpipes usage was only done in 1760.
Chateauneuf-du-Pape is a town in south-eastern France, near Avignon. In the early 1300s the Pope built a castle there, hence the name of the village meaning "Newcastle-of-the-Pope"
The first Pope who started (and ended) his Pontificate in the 1300s was Pope Benedict XI.
Vikings were no longer around during the 1300s, as their reign ended in the early 1000s.
Dublin in Ireland was never part of Britain. Britain is an island containing England, Scotland and Wales. Dublin is on the island of Ireland. It would have been under British rule at that time, which is what you would mean.
The 14th century.