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The Highland Region

The Highland Region
The lowlands of the North-East are dramatically different to the North-West Highlands. On the east you find large farms have shaped the landscape. Wide expanses of flat land. In stark contrast the highland landscape of the west is one where human settlement has not been easy, the land is rocky and water logged peat soils. This led to this area being sparsely inhabited. More people lived in the Lowland east.

Ancient geological events created this landscape. People living on this land lived in small clusters, trying to world small amounts of cultivable land often at the head of sea lochs. One blessing the West had to the East was milder winters thank s to the Gulf Stream and they were more sheltered than the exposed landscape of the East. Quite often in some of the garden of the West can you find exotic plants and palm trees. So the impression of humans in the West is far less visible than in the East. But the story of man/land relationship is fascinating.

Ancient people

Little has really been known about how long people have lived in the Northwest Highlands. It’s only been the last 50/60 years with excavations into broch sites. Brochs were the stone dwellings long before medieval times in the Highlands and Islands. In the centuries between the middle Iron Age and the Medieval times stone dwellings of any kind are rare. These go back to the 7th or even 8th centuries BC in areas like Orkney.

Norse Settlement

Looking at place names you can not ignore the evidence of Norse, then with the spread of Gaelic culture can see how the languages mixed together and evolved, names are often prefixed by Gaelic elements . Showing us the contact between Old Norse and Gaelic.

Understanding Norse settlement patterns we can see that they are far more evident on the North West side of Scotland. Norse activity happened in coastal areas. The North West of Scotland is made of of many islands and sea lochs and ideal secret sheltered natural harbours to bring a boat in and easy mooring. ‘Vikings’ wanted good forest land for wood, arable land close to their harbour.

Gaelic influence

Content coming soon

Profound Change mid 17th Century to 19th Century

Between these times the Highlands underwent a profound social and economic transformation. All sectors of society were affected. It was the landlords who played a crucial role in this. In the North West Higlands there were the MacKenzies of Coigach/Cromartie owned vast amounts of land. They had rose through services to the crown and advantageous marriages to become one of the foremost clans of the Highlands. Although powerful, debts were building up, many junior branches of the Clan sprouted up.

Religion

In the East you’d find thick clusters of parish churches on fertile and populous land. On the west you find huge isolated churches.

More content coming soon …

Blogs Featuring the Highlands

Hector

The Voyage of the Hector

It was only 28 years after the infamous Battle of Culloden, in 1773, when the Hector was moored within Loch ...
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The fair lady

The Fair Lady of Strathglass – Heroine of The Clearances

Strathglass was known in gaelic as Crom ghleann, it is the area around Upper Valley of the River Beauly. This land ...
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NYFG

Looking at Scottish land with an indigenous Gaelic eye

I am of the opinion that there is value in pre-colonial indigenous ideas about how to get on in this world and ...
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NYFG

Doing Something Good For Gaelic: The Scottish Gaelic Foundation of the U.S.A. is underway!

Scottish Gaelic in the United States truly is a marginalized language and culture, and it has been largely subsumed and reinvented ...
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NYFG

“Our children are bred for emigration”

Yesterday was the birthday of a great Gael. One of the greatest in fact. Poet, story teller and Gaelic cultural warrior ...
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NYFG

Gaelic, Not Gaelic: Two Scotlands two Diasporas

If one looks at Scotland from a certain perspective, it is completely possible to identify two distinct worlds co-existing under ...
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NYFG

You might be a Gael if …

I wrote a Not Your Father's Gaelic blog post a few weeks ago wherein I expressed how nice it would be ...
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callanish

Scotland’s Most Inspiring Places: A Personal View

Having seen dozens of top ten places to visit in Scotland, mostly compiled by tourist guides who's writers have barely ...
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The Bluebell Fields

A Northward Meandering – Walking the West Highland Way – Part Two.

In part one of this series of blogs on my West Highland Way walk I had reached the first stop ...
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ej

Airline Reveals Tartan-Clad Plane

A distinctive orange and black tartan-clad aircraft has been unveiled to mark a new early morning flight from Inverness to ...
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Photos Featuring the Highlands

Culloden Battlefield

Ullapool

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Inverness

Glencoe

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Glen Nevis

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