World’s Oldest Whisky Found in Scottish Castle to Be Auctioned

World's Oldest Whisky (Blair Castle)
Image credit: Whisky Auctioneer.

Whisky believed to be distilled almost 200 years ago and sipped by a young Queen Victoria, has been found behind a hidden cellar door in a 750 year old castle in Scotland. Understood to be the oldest known Scotch whisky in existence, it will soon be offered for sale at auction.

In late 2022, Bertie Troughton, Resident Trustee at Blair Castle in Perthshire, found a number of old bottles in an unassuming cellar room. Around 40 bottles of whisky were discovered at the back of a shelf which are believed to have been distilled in 1833 and bottled in 1841 (the whisky was then rebottled in 1932).

The bottles were initially sampled by the family and a local whisky expert before Whisky Auctioneer was contacted. Since then, research in the archives of Blair Castle and Atholl Estates, alongside authentication of the whisky by the Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre via carbon dating supports its early 19th century origin.

24 individual lots will be sold through Whisky Auctioneer from November 24 to December 4. For more information and to register your interest in the auction, visit: whiskyauctioneer.com.

Source: Whisky Auctioneer.

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