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Islands of the Clyde

The Islands of the Firth of Clyde are the fifth largest of the major Scottish island groups after the Inner and Outer Hebrides, Orkney and Shetland. They are situated in the Firth of Clyde between Ayrshire and Argyll and Bute. There are about forty islands and skerries. Only four are inhabited, and only nine are larger than 40 hectares (99 acres).[Note 1] The largest and most populous are Arran and Bute. They are served by dedicated ferry routes, as are Great Cumbrae and Holy Island. [4][5] Unlike the isles in the four larger Scottish archipelagos, none of the isles in this group are connected to one another or to the mainland by bridges.

The islands within the Firth of Clyde
Holy Isle seen from Bute
The PS Waverley lying in Brodick Bay in front of Brodick Castle. Paddle steamers like this were formerly extremely common on the Clyde.[1]

The geology and geomorphology of the area is complex, and the islands and the surrounding sea lochs each have distinctive features. The influence of the Atlantic Ocean and the North Atlantic Drift create a mild, damp oceanic climate. There is a diversity of wildlife, including three species of rare endemic trees.

The larger islands have been continuously inhabited since Neolithic times. The cultures of their inhabitants were influenced by the emergence of the kingdom of Dál Riata, beginning in 500 AD. The islands were then politically absorbed into the emerging kingdom of Alba, led by Kenneth MacAlpin. During the early Middle Ages, the islands experienced Viking incursions. In the 13th century, they became part of the Kingdom of Scotland.

Geology and geography Edit

 
The Firth of Clyde

The Highland Boundary Fault runs past Bute and through the northern part of Arran. Therefore, from a geological perspective, some of the islands are in the Highlands and some in the Central Lowlands.[6] As a result of Arran's geological similarity to Scotland, it is sometimes referred to as "Scotland in miniature" and the island is a popular destination for geologists. They come to Arran to study its intrusive igneous landforms, such as sills and dykes, as well as its sedimentary and metasedimentary rocks, which range widely in age.[7] Visiting in 1787, the geologist James Hutton found his first example of an unconformity there. The spot where he discovered it is one of the most famous places in the history of the study of geology.[8][9] The group of weakly metamorphosed rocks that form the Highland Border Complex lie discontinuously along the Highland Boundary Fault. One of the most prominent exposures is along Loch Fad on Bute.[10] Ailsa Craig, which lies some 25 kilometres (16 mi) south of Arran, has been quarried for a rare type of micro-granite containing riebeckite, known as "Ailsite". It is used by Kays of Scotland to make curling stones. (As of 2004, 60 to 70% of all curling stones in use globally were made from granite quarried on the island.)[11]

Like the rest of Scotland, the Firth of Clyde was covered by ice sheets during the Pleistocene ice ages, and the landscape has been much affected by glaciation.[12] Back then, Arran's highest peaks may have been nunataks.[13] Sea-level changes and the isostatic rise of land after the last retreat of the ice created clifflines behind raised beaches, which are a prominent feature of the entire coastline. The action of these forces has made charting the post glacial coastlines a complex task.[14][15]

The various soil types on the islands reflect their diverse geology. Bute has the most productive land, and it has a pattern of deposits that is typical of the southwest of Scotland. In the eroded valleys, there is a mixture of boulder clay and other glacial deposits. Elsewhere, especially to the south and west, there are raised beach- and marine deposits, which in some places, such as Stravanan, result in a machair landscape inland from the sandy bays.[16][17]

The Firth of Clyde, in which these islands lie, is north of the Irish Sea and has numerous branching inlets. Some of those inlets, including Loch Goil, Loch Long, Gare Loch, Loch Fyne, and the estuary of the River Clyde, have their own substantial features. In places, the effect of glaciation on the seabed is pronounced. For example, the Firth is 320 metres (1,050 ft) deep between Arran and Bute, even though they are only 8 kilometres (5.0 mi) apart.[18] The islands all stand exposed to wind and tide. Various lighthouses, such as those on Ailsa Craig, Pladda, and Davaar, act as an aid to navigation.[19]

Climate Edit

 
Castle Island from Little Cumbrae

The Firth of Clyde lies between 55 and 56 degrees north latitude. This is the same latitude as Labrador in Canada and north of the Aleutian Islands. However, the influence of the North Atlantic Drift—the northern extension of the Gulf Stream—moderates the winter weather. As a result, the area enjoys a mild, damp oceanic climate. Temperatures are generally cool, averaging about 6 °C (43 °F) in January and 14 °C (57 °F) in July at sea level.[20] Snow seldom lies at sea level, and frosts are generally less frequent than they are on the mainland. In common with most islands off the west coast of Scotland, the average annual rainfall is generally high: between 1,300 mm (51 in) on Bute, in the Cumbraes, and in the south of Arran, and 1,900 mm (75 in) in the north of Arran. The Arran mountains are even wetter: Their summits receive over 2,550 mm (100 in) of rain annually. May, June and July are the sunniest months: on average, there is a total of 200 hours of bright sunshine during that 3-month period each year. Southern Bute benefits from a particularly large number of sunny days.[20]

History Edit

Prehistory Edit

 
Machrie Moor standing stones, Arran

Mesolithic humans arrived in the area of the Firth of Clyde during the 4th millennium BC, probably from Ireland. This initial arrival was followed by another wave of Neolithic peoples using the same route. In fact, there is some evidence that the Firth of Clyde was a significant route through which mainland Scotland was colonised during the Neolithic period.[21] The inhabitants of Argyll, the Clyde estuary, and elsewhere in western Scotland at that time developed a distinctive style of megalithic structure that is known today as the Clyde cairns. About 100 of these structures have been found. They were used for interment of the dead. They are rectangular or trapezoidal, with a small enclosing chamber into which the person's body was placed. They are faced with large slabs of stone set on end (sometimes subdivided into smaller compartments). They also feature a forecourt area, which may have been used for displays or rituals associated with interment.[22] They are mostly found in Arran, Bute, and Kintyre. It is thought likely that the Clyde cairns were the earliest forms of Neolithic monument constructed by incoming settlers. However, only a few of the cairns have been radiocarbon dated. A cairn at Monamore on Arran has been dated to 3160 BC, although other evidence suggests that it was almost certainly built earlier than that, possibly around 4000 BC.[22][23][24][25] The area also features numerous standing stones dating from prehistoric times, including six stone circles on Machrie Moor in Arran, and other examples on Great Cumbrae and Bute.[26][27]

Later, Bronze Age settlers also constructed megaliths at various sites. Many of them date from the 2nd millennium BC. However, instead of chambered cairns, these peoples constructed burial cists, which can be found, for example, on Inchmarnock. Evidence of settlement during this period, especially the early part of it, is scant.[27][28] However, one notable artifact has been found on Bute that dates from around 2000 BC. Known today as the “Queen of the Inch necklace,” it is an article of jewellery made of lignite (commonly called “jet”).

During the early Iron Age, the Brythonic culture held sway. There is no evidence that the Roman occupation of southern Scotland extended into these islands.[23][29]

Early Scots rule Edit

 
Map of Dál Riata at its height, c. 580–600. Pictish regions are marked in yellow

Beginning in the 2nd century AD, Irish influence was at work in the region, and by the 6th century, Gaels had established the kingdom of Dál Riata there. Unlike earlier inhabitants, such as the P-Celtic speaking Brythons, these Gaels spoke a form of Gaelic (a modern version of which is still spoken today in the Hebrides). During this period, through the efforts of Saint Ninian and others, Christianity slowly supplanted Druidism. The kingdom of Dál Riata flourished from the rule of Fergus Mór in the late 5th century until the Viking incursions beginning in the late 8th century.[30] Islands close to the shores of modern Ayrshire presumably remained part of the Kingdom of Strathclyde during this period, whilst the main islands became part of the emerging Kingdom of Alba founded by Kenneth MacAlpin (Cináed mac Ailpín).

Viking influence Edit

 
The 13th century curtain wall of Rothesay Castle, Bute

Beginning in the 9th century and into the 13th century, the Islands of the Clyde constituted a border zone between the Norse Suðreyjar and Scotland, and many of them were under Norse hegemony.

Beginning in the last half of the 12th century, and then into the early 1200s, the islands may well have served as the power base of Somhairle mac Giolla Brighde and his descendants. During this time, the islands seem to have come under the sway of the Steward of Scotland’s authority and to have been taken over by the expanding Stewart lordship.[31]

This western extension of Scottish authority appears to have been one of the factors motivating the Norwegian invasion of the region in 1230, during which the invaders seized Rothesay Castle.[32]

In 1263, Norwegian troops commanded by Haakon Haakonarson repeated the feat, but the ensuing Battle of Largs between Scots and Norwegian forces, which took place on the shores of the Firth of Clyde, was inconclusive as a military contest.[33][34]

This battle marked an ultimately fatal weakening of Norwegian power in Scotland. Haakon retreated to Orkney, where he died in December 1263, consoled on his death bed by recitations of the old sagas. Following his death, under the 1266 Treaty of Perth, all rights that the Norwegian Crown "had of old therein" in relation to the islands were yielded to the Kingdom of Scotland.[35][36][37]

Modern Scotland Edit

 
Steam Lighter VIC32, the last seagoing coal fired steam Clyde Puffer

Politically, from the conclusion of the Treaty of Perth in 1266 to the present day, all of the islands of the Clyde have been part of Scotland.

Ecclesiastically, beginning in the early medieval period all of these isles were part of the Diocese of Sodor and Man, based at Peel, on the Isle of Man. After 1387, the seat of the Bishopric of the Isles was relocated to the north, first to Snizort on Skye and then to Iona.[38] This arrangement continued until the Scottish Reformation in the 16th century, when Scotland broke with the Catholic Church.

The mid-1700s marked the beginning of a century of significant change. New forms of transport, industry, and agriculture brought an end to ways of life that had endured for centuries. The Battle of Culloden in 1746 foreshadowed the end of the clan system. These changes improved living standards for some, but came at a cost for others.[39]

In the late 18th and early 19th centuries, Alexander, the 10th Duke of Hamilton (1767–1852), and others implemented a controversial agricultural-reform programme called the Highland Clearances that had a devastating effect on many of Arran's inhabitants. Whole villages were emptied, and the Gaelic culture of the island was dealt a terminal blow. (A memorial to the tenant farmers evicted from the island by this programme was later erected on the shore at Lamlash, funded by a Canadian descendant of some of those evicted.)[40][41][42][43]

From the 1850s to the late 20th century, cargo ships known as “Clyde Puffers” (made famous by an early-20th-century story collection called the Vital Spark), were the workhorses of the islands, carrying a great deal of produce and a great variety of products to and from the islands. In May 1889, the Caledonian Steam Packet Company (CSP) was founded and began operating steamer services to and from Gourock for the Caledonian Railway. The company soon expanded by taking over rival steamer operators.[44] David MacBrayne operated the Glasgow-to-Ardrishaig steamer service, as part of the so-called "Royal Route" to Oban.[45] During the 20th century, many of the islands were developed as tourist resorts along the lines of mainland resorts such as Largs and Troon, but catering for Glaswegians who preferred to holiday "Doon the Watter".[46][47] In 1973, CSP and MacBraynes combined their Clyde and West Highland operations under the new name of Caledonian MacBrayne.[48] A government-owned corporation, they serve Great Cumbrae, Arran, and Bute, and also run mainland-to-mainland ferries across the firth.[4][49] Private companies operate services from Arran to Holy Isle,[5] and from McInroy's Point (Gourock) to Hunter's Quay on the Cowal peninsula.[50]

Politically, from 1890 to 1975, most of the islands comprised the traditional County of Bute, and its inhabitants were represented by the county council. Since the 1975 reorganization, however, the islands have been split more or less equally between two modern council authorities: Argyll and Bute, and North Ayrshire. Only Ailsa Craig and Lady Isle in South Ayrshire are not part of either of these two council areas.

Islands Edit

Below is a table listing the nine islands of the Firth of Clyde that have an area greater than 40 hectares (approximately 100 acres), showing their population and listing the smaller uninhabited islets adjacent to them (including tidal islets separated only when the tide is higher, and skerries exposed only when the tide is lower).

As of 2001, six of the islands were inhabited, but that included one with only two residents (Davaar), and one with only one resident (Sanda).[51] At the 2011 census, there was no one usually resident on either of these islands.[52]

Island Gaelic Name[53] Location Area (ha)[54] Population[52] Last inhabited Highest point[55] Height (m)[Note 2] Surrounding islets[56]
Ailsa Craig Creag Ealasaid South Ayrshire 99 0 1980s[57] The Cairn 338 None
Arran Arainn Arran 43201 4629 Goat Fell 874 Eilean na h-Àirde Bàine, Hamilton Isle, Pladda
Bute Bòid Bute 12217 6498 Windy Hill 278 The Burnt Islands: Eilean Mòr, Eilean Fraoich and Eilean Buidhe, Eilean Dearg, Eilean Dubh, Sgat Beag and Sgat Mòr
Davaar Eilean Dà Bhàrr Kintyre 52[51] 0 115 None
Great Cumbrae Cumaradh Mòr Bute 1168 1376 The Glaidstane 127 The Clach, The Eileans, The Leug, The Spoig
Holy Island Eilean Mo Laise Arran 253 31 Mullach Mòr 314 None
Inchmarnock Innis Mheàrnaig Bute 253 0 1980s[58] 60 None
Little Cumbrae Cumaradh Beag Bute 313 0 1990s[59] Lighthouse Hill 123 The Broad Islands, Castle Island, Trail Isle
Sanda Àbhainn Kintyre 127 0 123 Glunimore Island, Henrietta Reef, Scart Rocks, Paterson's Rock, Sheep Island

Outlying islands Edit

 
Lady Isle with Ailsa Craig beyond
 
Three islands of the Clyde: The village of Kildonan on Arran, Pladda and Ailsa Craig
 
The Byron Darnton tavern and holiday cottages on Sanda. The inn is named after a 1946 shipwreck on the island.[60]

The islets that lie remote from the larger islands are described separately below.[61]

There are two islets in Gare Loch: Green Island and Perch Rock. Gare Loch is small, but it hosts the Faslane Naval Base, where the UK's Trident nuclear submarines are located. At its southern end, the loch opens into the Firth of Clyde via the Rhu narrows.[62]

There are also several islets in the Kilbrannan Sound, which lies between Arran and the Kintyre peninsula. They are: An Struthlag, Cour Island, Eilean Carrach (Carradale), Eilean Carrach (Skipness), Eilean Grianain, Eilean Sunadale, Gull Isle, Island Ross and Thorn Isle.

(The Norse sagas tell a story about the Kintyre peninsula. In the late 11th century, a king of Norway (Magnus Barefoot) devised a plan to increase his territorial possessions. He persuaded a king of Scotland (Malcolm III or Edgar) to agree that he could take possession of an area of land on the west coast of Scotland if a ship could sail around it. Magnus then arranged for one of his longships to be dragged across the 1.5 kilometres (0.93 mi)-long isthmus at the northern tip of the Kintyre peninsula, which connects Kintyre to the mainland. (The isthmus lies between East Loch Tarbert and West Loch Tarbert). He took command of the ship's tiller himself. Then, declaring that Kintyre had "better land than the best of the Hebrides", he claimed that dragging his ship across the isthmus had been equivalent to “sailing around” the peninsula, and thus that the peninsula counted as “land around which a ship could sail.” As a result of this maneuver, he was able to claim possession of the peninsula, which remained under Norse rule for more than a dozen years.[63][64][65][66][Note 3])

There are also several islets and skerries in Loch Fyne, which extends 65 kilometres (40 mi) inland from the Sound of Bute, and is the longest of Scotland's sea lochs.[68] They are: Duncuan Island, Eilean Ardgaddan, Eilean a' Bhuic, Eilean Aoghainn, Eilean a' Chomhraig, Eilean an Dúnain, Eilean Buidhe (Ardmarnock), Eilean Buidhe (Portavadie), Eilean Fraoch, Eilean Math-ghamhna, Eilean Mór, Glas Eilean, Heather Island, Inverneil Island, Kilbride Island, and Liath Eilean.

There are several islets surrounding Horse Isle in North Ayrshire: Broad Rock, East Islet, Halftide Rock, High Rock and North Islet.

Lady Isle lies off the South Ayrshire coast near Troon. At one time it housed "ane old chapell with an excellent spring of water".[69] However, in June 1821, someone set fire to the "turf and pasture". Once the pasture had burned away, gales blew much of the island's soil into the sea. This permanently destroyed the island's ability to support grazing.[70]

There are no islands in Loch Goil or Loch Long, which are fjord-like arms in the northern part of the firth.[56]

Non-island areas with “island” in their name Edit

Here is a list of places along that shores of the Firth of Clyde that are not islands, but have names that misleadingly suggest they are islands (eilean being Gaelic for "island"): Eilean na Beithe, Portavadie; Eilean Beag, Cove; Eilean Dubh, Dalchenna, Loch Fyne; Eilean nan Gabhar, Melldalloch, Kyles of Bute; Barmore Island, just north of Tarbert, Kintyre;[71] Eilean Aoidh, south of Portavadie; Eilean Leathan, Kilbrannan Sound just south of Torrisdale Bay; Island Muller, Kilbrannan Sound north of Campbeltown.[72]

Natural history Edit

 
The Arran whitebeam in flower at Eglinton Country Park, Irvine

Around the Firth of Clyde, there are populations of red deer, red squirrel, badger, otter, adder, and common lizard. In the Firth itself, there are harbour porpoises, basking sharks and various species of dolphin.[73] Davaar is home to a population of wild goats.[74]

Over 200 bird species have been recorded as sighted in the area, including the black guillemot, the eider, the peregrine falcon, and the golden eagle.[73] In 1981, there were 28 ptarmigans sighted on Arran, but in 2009 it was reported that extensive surveys had been unable to find any recorded ptarmigans sightings.[75] Similarly, the red-billed chough no longer breeds on the island.[76]

Arran has three species of the rare endemic trees known as Arran Whitebeams:[77] the Scottish or Arran whitebeam; the cut-leaved whitebeam; and the Catacol whitebeam. All of them are found only in Gleann Diomhan, and they are amongst the most endangered tree species in the world. (Gleann Diomhan was formerly part of a designated national nature reserve—the designation was removed in 2011)- and it continues to be part of an area designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest.)[78] Only 283 Arran whitebeam and 236 cut-leaved whitebeam were recorded as mature trees in 1980,[79] and it is thought that grazing pressures and insect damage are preventing regeneration of the woodland.[78] The Catacol whitebeam was discovered in 2007, but only two specimens have been found, so steps have been taken to protect them.[80][81]

Etymology Edit

 
The Cumbraes with Arran and Bute beyond

The Roman historian Tacitus refers to the Clota, meaning the Clyde. The derivation is not certain but is probably from the Brythonic Clouta, which became Clut in Old Welsh. The name literally means "wash", probably referring to a river goddess who is seen as "the washer" or "the strongly flowing one".[82] The derivation of the word “Bute” is also uncertain. The Norse name for it is Bót an Old Irish word for "fire", which might be a reference to signal fires.[83] The etymology of “Arran” is no clearer. Haswell-Smith (2004) suggests that it derive from a Brythonic word meaning "high place",[84] although Watson (1926) suggests it may be pre-Celtic.[85][Note 4]

Island Derivation Language Meaning Modern Gaelic name[53] Alternative Derivations
Arran Possibly Aran Brythonic high place[84] Arainn Possibly pre-Celtic
Bute Bót (see above) Norse or Gaelic Possibly "fire isle" Eilean Bhòid or Bód Possibly from Brythonic budh for "corn" and previously known as Rothesay meaning "Roderick's island"[87]
Davaar Eilean Dà Bhàrr Gaelic Barr's island Eilean Dà Bhàrr
Great Cumbrae Cymri English/Brythonic place of the Brythonic people Cumaradh Mòr Gaelic literally means "place of the Cymric people".[53] Previously known in English as Great or Greater Cumray.[59]
Holy Island English Refers to Molaise of Leighlin Eilean Mo Laise Previously known as "Lamlash", the English name was adopted in 1830 when the Arran village took this name. In Gaelic, the island is also known as "An t-Eilean Àrd" (the high island).
Sanda Sandtange or Havin Old Norse or Danish sandspit or anchorage[88] Àbhainn Also known as "Sanda Island"[88]

See also Edit

Notes Edit

  1. ^ The definition of an island used is that it is land that is surrounded by seawater on a daily basis, but not necessarily at all stages of the tide, excluding human devices such as bridges and causeways. Various other definitions are used in the Scottish context. For example, the General Register Office for Scotland define an island as "a mass of land surrounded by water, separate from the Scottish mainland" but although they include islands linked by bridges etc., this is not clear from this definition.[2] Haswell-Smith (2004) uses "an Island is a piece of land or group of pieces of land which is entirely surrounded by water at Lowest Astronomical Tide and to which there is no permanent means of dry access". This consciously excludes bridged islands, which most other sources include.[3]
  2. ^ Note that the Ordnance Survey maps mark the height above sea level of a high point on most islands, but in a small number of cases, this may not be the highest point.[56]
  3. ^ This tale is related in the Norse sagas, but the context is confused. They assert that the arrangement was made with King Malcolm, but in fact it was Edgar who was King of Scots at the time.[67]
  4. ^ In support of the controversial Vasconic substratum hypothesis, Theo Vennemann notes the recurrence of the element aran, (Unified Basque haran) meaning"valley", in names like Val d'Aran, Arundel, or Arendal.[86]

Footnotes Edit

  1. ^ "Waverley" 8 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine. Clyde Waterfront Heritage. Retrieved 5 September 2010.
  2. ^ General Register Office for Scotland (2003) "Appendix".
  3. ^ Haswell-Smith (2004) "Preface" p. xi
  4. ^ a b "Destinations". Caledonian MacBrayne. Retrieved 22 January 2011.
  5. ^ a b "Getting Here". The Holy Isle Project. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
  6. ^ Gillen (2003) p. 28
  7. ^ McKirdy et al. (2007) pp. 297- 301
  8. ^ Montgomery, Keith (2003). "Siccar Point and Teaching the History of Geology" (PDF). University of Wisconsin. Retrieved 26 March 2008.
  9. ^ "Hutton's Unconformity - Lochranza, Isle of Arran, UK - Places of Geologic Significance on Waymarking.com". Waymarking.com. Retrieved 20 October 2008.
  10. ^ Gillen (2003) pp. 89–90
  11. ^ Roch, John (27 October 2004) "Puffins Return to Scottish Island Famous for Curling Stones". National Geographic News. Retrieved 29 August 2010
  12. ^ Gillen (2003) pp. 174–86
  13. ^ McKirdy et al. (2007) pp. 297- 301.
  14. ^ McKirdy et al. (2007) p. 28.
  15. ^ Ritchie, W. "Beaches of Cowal, Bute & Arran" (1975) Scottish Natural Heritage. (Originally published by the Countryside Commission for Scotland). pp. 6–9
  16. ^ "Bute's Geology & Geomorphology" Bute-gateway.org. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  17. ^ "Bute Map 6: Garroch Head to Stravannan Bay" 28 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine (pdf) scapetrust.org. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  18. ^ Gillen (2003) p. 177
  19. ^ "Lighthouse Library" Northern Lighthouse Board. Retrieved 14 July 2007.
  20. ^ a b "Regional mapped climate averages" Archived 4 August 2012 at archive.today Met Office. Retrieved 4 September 2009.
  21. ^ Noble (2006) p. 30
  22. ^ a b Noble (2006) pp. 104–05
  23. ^ a b Murray (1973) pp. 113–131
  24. ^ Morris, John H. "Sailing through Scottish Antiquities" 11 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine scottish.antiquities.ukonline.co.uk. Retrieved 4 February 2011.
  25. ^ "Arran, Monamore, Meallach's Grave" Scotland's Places.Retrieved 4 February 2011.
  26. ^ "Great Cumbrae Island, Craigengour" Scotland's Places.Retrieved 4 February 2011.
  27. ^ a b Cowie, Trevor "The Bronze Age" in Omand (2006) pp. 27–30
  28. ^ Haswell-Smith (2004) p. 22
  29. ^ "The Queen of the Inch Necklace and Facial reconstruction" 19 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Bute Museum. Retrieved 5 September 2010.
  30. ^ Murray (1973) pp. 147–155
  31. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) pp. 241–248.
  32. ^ Forte; Oram; Pedersen (2005) pp. 248–253.
  33. ^ Coventry (2008) p. 545
  34. ^ Keay (1994) p. 597
  35. ^ Hunter (2000) pp. 106–111
  36. ^ Barrett (2008) p. 411
  37. ^ "Agreement between Magnus IV and Alexander III, 1266" isleofman.com. Manx Society vols IV, VII & IX. Retrieved 11 January 2011.
  38. ^ Bridgland, Nick "The Medieval Church in Argyll" in Omand (2006) pp. 86–87
  39. ^ Duncan, P. J. "The Industries of Argyll: Tradition and Improvement" in Omand (2006) pp. 151, 156
  40. ^ Haswell-Smith (2004) p. 12
  41. ^ Mackillop, Dugald "The History of the Highland Clearances: Buteshire – Arran" electricscotland.com. Retrieved 18 July 2009.
  42. ^ "Lagantuine – Isle of Arran, Ayrshire UK" waymarking.com. Retrieved 18 July 2009.
  43. ^ "Lamlash" Ayrshireroots.com. Retrieved 20 January 2011.
  44. ^ "Caledonian Steam Packet Company". Scran – part of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  45. ^ . Paddle Steamer Resources by Tramscape. Archived from the original on 7 July 2011. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  46. ^ Keay (1994) p. 236
  47. ^ "The Puffer" 22 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine. Inveraray Maritime Heritage Museum. Retrieved 4 September 2010.
  48. ^ . West Highland Steamer Club. Archived from the original on 30 January 2010. Retrieved 30 January 2011.
  49. ^ "Summer Timetables". Caledonian MacBrayne. Retrieved 5 February 2011.
  50. ^ "Western Ferries". Retrieved 6 February 2001.
  51. ^ a b General Register Office for Scotland (28 November 2003) Scotland's Census 2001 – Occasional Paper No 10: Statistics for Inhabited Islands. Retrieved 26 February 2012. .
  52. ^ a b National Records of Scotland (15 August 2013). "Appendix 2: Population and households on Scotland's Inhabited Islands" (PDF). Statistical Bulletin: 2011 Census: First Results on Population and Household Estimates for Scotland Release 1C (Part Two) (PDF) (Report). SG/2013/126. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  53. ^ a b c Mac an Tàilleir (2003) various pages.
  54. ^ Haswell-Smith (2004) unless otherwise indicated.
  55. ^ Haswell-Smith (2004) and Ordnance Survey maps.
  56. ^ a b c Ordnance Survey maps.
  57. ^ Haswell-Smith (2004) p. 3
  58. ^ Haswell-Smith (2004) p. 21
  59. ^ a b Haswell-Smith (2004) p. 18
  60. ^ Haswell-Smith (2004) pp. 6–7
  61. ^ All are as identified by Ordnance Survey maps.
  62. ^ "Gare Loch". Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 29 August 2010.
  63. ^ "West Loch Tarbert" Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 13 September 2008.
  64. ^ "Magnus's Saga", chapter 10 in Hollander (1964) pp. 676–677
  65. ^ Murray (1977) p. 100 has the date as 1093
  66. ^ "Tarbert History" 20 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Tarbert.info. Retrieved 13 September 2008.
  67. ^ Woolf, Alex "The Age of the Sea-Kings: 900–1300" in Omand (2006) p. 101
  68. ^ "Gateway to Scotland" University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 29 August 2010.
  69. ^ "History of Lady Isle" ladyisle.com. Quoting Geographical Collections relating to Scotland. Vol.1, pages 412/3. Retrieved 14 October 2007.
  70. ^ "Memories of Old Troon". www.ladyisle.com. Retrieved 29 August 2010.
  71. ^ Barmore Island Gazetteer for Scotland Retrieved 1 December 2007.
  72. ^ Ordnance Survey maps unless otherwise stated.
  73. ^ a b "Natural History". Arran Natural History Society. Retrieved 12 May 2012.
  74. ^ "About Kildalloig Estate and Davaar Island" 17 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine. kintyrecottages.com. Retrieved 4 September 2010.
  75. ^ "Iconic Birds at Risk" (1 Feb 2009) Glasgow. Sunday Herald.
  76. ^ "A6.102a Chough Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax (breeding)" (pdf) JNCC. Retrieved 1 August 2009.
  77. ^ Johnston, Ian (15 June 2007) "Trees on Arran 'are a whole new species' " Edinburgh. The Scotsman. Retrieved 18 June 2007.
  78. ^ a b "Arran Northern Mountains SSSI: Site Management Statement". Scottish Natural Heritage. Retrieved 11 September 2020.
  79. ^ Bignal, Eric (1980). "The endemic whitebeams of North Arran". The Glasgow Naturalist. 20 (1): 60–64.
  80. ^ "New species of tree discovered " (14 June 2007) BBC. Retrieved 18 January 2011.
  81. ^ New species of tree discovered on Arran. Scottish Wildlife. November 2007, ISSN 0143-1234 p. 9
  82. ^ Watson (1994) pp. 44, 71
  83. ^ Watson (1994) pp. 95–86
  84. ^ a b Haswell-Smith (2004) p. 11
  85. ^ Watson (1994) p. 97
  86. ^ Baldi & Page (December 2006) Review of "Europa Vasconica – Europa Semitica", Lingua, 116 Issue 12 pp. 2183–2220
  87. ^ Haswell-Smith (2004) p. 23
  88. ^ a b Haswell-Smith (2004) p. 5

References Edit

  • McDonald, Dan (1977) The Clyde Puffer. Newton Abbot. David & Charles
  • McKirdy, Alan Gordon, John & Crofts, Roger (2007) Land of Mountain and Flood: The Geology and Landforms of Scotland. Edinburgh. Birlinn. ISBN 978-1-84158-357-0
  • Murray, W.H (1973) The Islands of Western Scotland. London. Eyre Methuen.
  • Murray, W.H. (1977) The Companion Guide to the West Highlands of Scotland. London. Collins.
  • Noble, Gordon (2006) Neolithic Scotland: Timber, Stone, Earth and Fire. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0-7486-2338-8
  • Omand, Donald (ed.) (2006) The Argyll Book. Edinburgh. Birlinn. ISBN 1-84158-480-0
  • Ordnance Survey (2009) "Get-a-map". Retrieved 1–31 August 2010.
  • Watson, W. J (1994) The Celtic Place-Names of Scotland. Edinburgh. Birlinn. ISBN 1-84158-323-5. First published 1926.

islands, clyde, islands, firth, clyde, fifth, largest, major, scottish, island, groups, after, inner, outer, hebrides, orkney, shetland, they, situated, firth, clyde, between, ayrshire, argyll, bute, there, about, forty, islands, skerries, only, four, inhabite. The Islands of the Firth of Clyde are the fifth largest of the major Scottish island groups after the Inner and Outer Hebrides Orkney and Shetland They are situated in the Firth of Clyde between Ayrshire and Argyll and Bute There are about forty islands and skerries Only four are inhabited and only nine are larger than 40 hectares 99 acres Note 1 The largest and most populous are Arran and Bute They are served by dedicated ferry routes as are Great Cumbrae and Holy Island 4 5 Unlike the isles in the four larger Scottish archipelagos none of the isles in this group are connected to one another or to the mainland by bridges The islands within the Firth of ClydeHoly Isle seen from ButeThe PS Waverley lying in Brodick Bay in front of Brodick Castle Paddle steamers like this were formerly extremely common on the Clyde 1 The geology and geomorphology of the area is complex and the islands and the surrounding sea lochs each have distinctive features The influence of the Atlantic Ocean and the North Atlantic Drift create a mild damp oceanic climate There is a diversity of wildlife including three species of rare endemic trees The larger islands have been continuously inhabited since Neolithic times The cultures of their inhabitants were influenced by the emergence of the kingdom of Dal Riata beginning in 500 AD The islands were then politically absorbed into the emerging kingdom of Alba led by Kenneth MacAlpin During the early Middle Ages the islands experienced Viking incursions In the 13th century they became part of the Kingdom of Scotland Contents 1 Geology and geography 2 Climate 3 History 3 1 Prehistory 3 2 Early Scots rule 3 3 Viking influence 3 4 Modern Scotland 4 Islands 4 1 Outlying islands 4 2 Non island areas with island in their name 5 Natural history 6 Etymology 7 See also 8 Notes 9 Footnotes 10 ReferencesGeology and geography Edit nbsp The Firth of ClydeThe Highland Boundary Fault runs past Bute and through the northern part of Arran Therefore from a geological perspective some of the islands are in the Highlands and some in the Central Lowlands 6 As a result of Arran s geological similarity to Scotland it is sometimes referred to as Scotland in miniature and the island is a popular destination for geologists They come to Arran to study its intrusive igneous landforms such as sills and dykes as well as its sedimentary and metasedimentary rocks which range widely in age 7 Visiting in 1787 the geologist James Hutton found his first example of an unconformity there The spot where he discovered it is one of the most famous places in the history of the study of geology 8 9 The group of weakly metamorphosed rocks that form the Highland Border Complex lie discontinuously along the Highland Boundary Fault One of the most prominent exposures is along Loch Fad on Bute 10 Ailsa Craig which lies some 25 kilometres 16 mi south of Arran has been quarried for a rare type of micro granite containing riebeckite known as Ailsite It is used by Kays of Scotland to make curling stones As of 2004 60 to 70 of all curling stones in use globally were made from granite quarried on the island 11 Like the rest of Scotland the Firth of Clyde was covered by ice sheets during the Pleistocene ice ages and the landscape has been much affected by glaciation 12 Back then Arran s highest peaks may have been nunataks 13 Sea level changes and the isostatic rise of land after the last retreat of the ice created clifflines behind raised beaches which are a prominent feature of the entire coastline The action of these forces has made charting the post glacial coastlines a complex task 14 15 The various soil types on the islands reflect their diverse geology Bute has the most productive land and it has a pattern of deposits that is typical of the southwest of Scotland In the eroded valleys there is a mixture of boulder clay and other glacial deposits Elsewhere especially to the south and west there are raised beach and marine deposits which in some places such as Stravanan result in a machair landscape inland from the sandy bays 16 17 The Firth of Clyde in which these islands lie is north of the Irish Sea and has numerous branching inlets Some of those inlets including Loch Goil Loch Long Gare Loch Loch Fyne and the estuary of the River Clyde have their own substantial features In places the effect of glaciation on the seabed is pronounced For example the Firth is 320 metres 1 050 ft deep between Arran and Bute even though they are only 8 kilometres 5 0 mi apart 18 The islands all stand exposed to wind and tide Various lighthouses such as those on Ailsa Craig Pladda and Davaar act as an aid to navigation 19 Climate Edit nbsp Castle Island from Little CumbraeThe Firth of Clyde lies between 55 and 56 degrees north latitude This is the same latitude as Labrador in Canada and north of the Aleutian Islands However the influence of the North Atlantic Drift the northern extension of the Gulf Stream moderates the winter weather As a result the area enjoys a mild damp oceanic climate Temperatures are generally cool averaging about 6 C 43 F in January and 14 C 57 F in July at sea level 20 Snow seldom lies at sea level and frosts are generally less frequent than they are on the mainland In common with most islands off the west coast of Scotland the average annual rainfall is generally high between 1 300 mm 51 in on Bute in the Cumbraes and in the south of Arran and 1 900 mm 75 in in the north of Arran The Arran mountains are even wetter Their summits receive over 2 550 mm 100 in of rain annually May June and July are the sunniest months on average there is a total of 200 hours of bright sunshine during that 3 month period each year Southern Bute benefits from a particularly large number of sunny days 20 History EditPrehistory Edit nbsp Machrie Moor standing stones ArranMesolithic humans arrived in the area of the Firth of Clyde during the 4th millennium BC probably from Ireland This initial arrival was followed by another wave of Neolithic peoples using the same route In fact there is some evidence that the Firth of Clyde was a significant route through which mainland Scotland was colonised during the Neolithic period 21 The inhabitants of Argyll the Clyde estuary and elsewhere in western Scotland at that time developed a distinctive style of megalithic structure that is known today as the Clyde cairns About 100 of these structures have been found They were used for interment of the dead They are rectangular or trapezoidal with a small enclosing chamber into which the person s body was placed They are faced with large slabs of stone set on end sometimes subdivided into smaller compartments They also feature a forecourt area which may have been used for displays or rituals associated with interment 22 They are mostly found in Arran Bute and Kintyre It is thought likely that the Clyde cairns were the earliest forms of Neolithic monument constructed by incoming settlers However only a few of the cairns have been radiocarbon dated A cairn at Monamore on Arran has been dated to 3160 BC although other evidence suggests that it was almost certainly built earlier than that possibly around 4000 BC 22 23 24 25 The area also features numerous standing stones dating from prehistoric times including six stone circles on Machrie Moor in Arran and other examples on Great Cumbrae and Bute 26 27 Later Bronze Age settlers also constructed megaliths at various sites Many of them date from the 2nd millennium BC However instead of chambered cairns these peoples constructed burial cists which can be found for example on Inchmarnock Evidence of settlement during this period especially the early part of it is scant 27 28 However one notable artifact has been found on Bute that dates from around 2000 BC Known today as the Queen of the Inch necklace it is an article of jewellery made of lignite commonly called jet During the early Iron Age the Brythonic culture held sway There is no evidence that the Roman occupation of southern Scotland extended into these islands 23 29 Early Scots rule Edit nbsp Map of Dal Riata at its height c 580 600 Pictish regions are marked in yellowBeginning in the 2nd century AD Irish influence was at work in the region and by the 6th century Gaels had established the kingdom of Dal Riata there Unlike earlier inhabitants such as the P Celtic speaking Brythons these Gaels spoke a form of Gaelic a modern version of which is still spoken today in the Hebrides During this period through the efforts of Saint Ninian and others Christianity slowly supplanted Druidism The kingdom of Dal Riata flourished from the rule of Fergus Mor in the late 5th century until the Viking incursions beginning in the late 8th century 30 Islands close to the shores of modern Ayrshire presumably remained part of the Kingdom of Strathclyde during this period whilst the main islands became part of the emerging Kingdom of Alba founded by Kenneth MacAlpin Cinaed mac Ailpin Viking influence Edit nbsp The 13th century curtain wall of Rothesay Castle ButeMain article Kingdom of the Isles Beginning in the 9th century and into the 13th century the Islands of the Clyde constituted a border zone between the Norse Sudreyjar and Scotland and many of them were under Norse hegemony Beginning in the last half of the 12th century and then into the early 1200s the islands may well have served as the power base of Somhairle mac Giolla Brighde and his descendants During this time the islands seem to have come under the sway of the Steward of Scotland s authority and to have been taken over by the expanding Stewart lordship 31 This western extension of Scottish authority appears to have been one of the factors motivating the Norwegian invasion of the region in 1230 during which the invaders seized Rothesay Castle 32 In 1263 Norwegian troops commanded by Haakon Haakonarson repeated the feat but the ensuing Battle of Largs between Scots and Norwegian forces which took place on the shores of the Firth of Clyde was inconclusive as a military contest 33 34 This battle marked an ultimately fatal weakening of Norwegian power in Scotland Haakon retreated to Orkney where he died in December 1263 consoled on his death bed by recitations of the old sagas Following his death under the 1266 Treaty of Perth all rights that the Norwegian Crown had of old therein in relation to the islands were yielded to the Kingdom of Scotland 35 36 37 Modern Scotland Edit nbsp Steam Lighter VIC32 the last seagoing coal fired steam Clyde PufferPolitically from the conclusion of the Treaty of Perth in 1266 to the present day all of the islands of the Clyde have been part of Scotland Ecclesiastically beginning in the early medieval period all of these isles were part of the Diocese of Sodor and Man based at Peel on the Isle of Man After 1387 the seat of the Bishopric of the Isles was relocated to the north first to Snizort on Skye and then to Iona 38 This arrangement continued until the Scottish Reformation in the 16th century when Scotland broke with the Catholic Church The mid 1700s marked the beginning of a century of significant change New forms of transport industry and agriculture brought an end to ways of life that had endured for centuries The Battle of Culloden in 1746 foreshadowed the end of the clan system These changes improved living standards for some but came at a cost for others 39 In the late 18th and early 19th centuries Alexander the 10th Duke of Hamilton 1767 1852 and others implemented a controversial agricultural reform programme called the Highland Clearances that had a devastating effect on many of Arran s inhabitants Whole villages were emptied and the Gaelic culture of the island was dealt a terminal blow A memorial to the tenant farmers evicted from the island by this programme was later erected on the shore at Lamlash funded by a Canadian descendant of some of those evicted 40 41 42 43 From the 1850s to the late 20th century cargo ships known as Clyde Puffers made famous by an early 20th century story collection called the Vital Spark were the workhorses of the islands carrying a great deal of produce and a great variety of products to and from the islands In May 1889 the Caledonian Steam Packet Company CSP was founded and began operating steamer services to and from Gourock for the Caledonian Railway The company soon expanded by taking over rival steamer operators 44 David MacBrayne operated the Glasgow to Ardrishaig steamer service as part of the so called Royal Route to Oban 45 During the 20th century many of the islands were developed as tourist resorts along the lines of mainland resorts such as Largs and Troon but catering for Glaswegians who preferred to holiday Doon the Watter 46 47 In 1973 CSP and MacBraynes combined their Clyde and West Highland operations under the new name of Caledonian MacBrayne 48 A government owned corporation they serve Great Cumbrae Arran and Bute and also run mainland to mainland ferries across the firth 4 49 Private companies operate services from Arran to Holy Isle 5 and from McInroy s Point Gourock to Hunter s Quay on the Cowal peninsula 50 Politically from 1890 to 1975 most of the islands comprised the traditional County of Bute and its inhabitants were represented by the county council Since the 1975 reorganization however the islands have been split more or less equally between two modern council authorities Argyll and Bute and North Ayrshire Only Ailsa Craig and Lady Isle in South Ayrshire are not part of either of these two council areas Islands EditBelow is a table listing the nine islands of the Firth of Clyde that have an area greater than 40 hectares approximately 100 acres showing their population and listing the smaller uninhabited islets adjacent to them including tidal islets separated only when the tide is higher and skerries exposed only when the tide is lower As of 2001 six of the islands were inhabited but that included one with only two residents Davaar and one with only one resident Sanda 51 At the 2011 census there was no one usually resident on either of these islands 52 Island Gaelic Name 53 Location Area ha 54 Population 52 Last inhabited Highest point 55 Height m Note 2 Surrounding islets 56 Ailsa Craig Creag Ealasaid South Ayrshire 99 0 1980s 57 The Cairn 338 NoneArran Arainn Arran 43201 4629 Goat Fell 874 Eilean na h Airde Baine Hamilton Isle PladdaBute Boid Bute 12217 6498 Windy Hill 278 The Burnt Islands Eilean Mor Eilean Fraoich and Eilean Buidhe Eilean Dearg Eilean Dubh Sgat Beag and Sgat MorDavaar Eilean Da Bharr Kintyre 52 51 0 115 NoneGreat Cumbrae Cumaradh Mor Bute 1168 1376 The Glaidstane 127 The Clach The Eileans The Leug The SpoigHoly Island Eilean Mo Laise Arran 253 31 Mullach Mor 314 NoneInchmarnock Innis Mhearnaig Bute 253 0 1980s 58 60 NoneLittle Cumbrae Cumaradh Beag Bute 313 0 1990s 59 Lighthouse Hill 123 The Broad Islands Castle Island Trail IsleSanda Abhainn Kintyre 127 0 123 Glunimore Island Henrietta Reef Scart Rocks Paterson s Rock Sheep IslandOutlying islands Edit nbsp Lady Isle with Ailsa Craig beyond nbsp Three islands of the Clyde The village of Kildonan on Arran Pladda and Ailsa Craig nbsp The Byron Darnton tavern and holiday cottages on Sanda The inn is named after a 1946 shipwreck on the island 60 The islets that lie remote from the larger islands are described separately below 61 There are two islets in Gare Loch Green Island and Perch Rock Gare Loch is small but it hosts the Faslane Naval Base where the UK s Trident nuclear submarines are located At its southern end the loch opens into the Firth of Clyde via the Rhu narrows 62 There are also several islets in the Kilbrannan Sound which lies between Arran and the Kintyre peninsula They are An Struthlag Cour Island Eilean Carrach Carradale Eilean Carrach Skipness Eilean Grianain Eilean Sunadale Gull Isle Island Ross and Thorn Isle The Norse sagas tell a story about the Kintyre peninsula In the late 11th century a king of Norway Magnus Barefoot devised a plan to increase his territorial possessions He persuaded a king of Scotland Malcolm III or Edgar to agree that he could take possession of an area of land on the west coast of Scotland if a ship could sail around it Magnus then arranged for one of his longships to be dragged across the 1 5 kilometres 0 93 mi long isthmus at the northern tip of the Kintyre peninsula which connects Kintyre to the mainland The isthmus lies between East Loch Tarbert and West Loch Tarbert He took command of the ship s tiller himself Then declaring that Kintyre had better land than the best of the Hebrides he claimed that dragging his ship across the isthmus had been equivalent to sailing around the peninsula and thus that the peninsula counted as land around which a ship could sail As a result of this maneuver he was able to claim possession of the peninsula which remained under Norse rule for more than a dozen years 63 64 65 66 Note 3 There are also several islets and skerries in Loch Fyne which extends 65 kilometres 40 mi inland from the Sound of Bute and is the longest of Scotland s sea lochs 68 They are Duncuan Island Eilean Ardgaddan Eilean a Bhuic Eilean Aoghainn Eilean a Chomhraig Eilean an Dunain Eilean Buidhe Ardmarnock Eilean Buidhe Portavadie Eilean Fraoch Eilean Math ghamhna Eilean Mor Glas Eilean Heather Island Inverneil Island Kilbride Island and Liath Eilean There are several islets surrounding Horse Isle in North Ayrshire Broad Rock East Islet Halftide Rock High Rock and North Islet Lady Isle lies off the South Ayrshire coast near Troon At one time it housed ane old chapell with an excellent spring of water 69 However in June 1821 someone set fire to the turf and pasture Once the pasture had burned away gales blew much of the island s soil into the sea This permanently destroyed the island s ability to support grazing 70 There are no islands in Loch Goil or Loch Long which are fjord like arms in the northern part of the firth 56 Non island areas with island in their name Edit Here is a list of places along that shores of the Firth of Clyde that are not islands but have names that misleadingly suggest they are islands eilean being Gaelic for island Eilean na Beithe Portavadie Eilean Beag Cove Eilean Dubh Dalchenna Loch Fyne Eilean nan Gabhar Melldalloch Kyles of Bute Barmore Island just north of Tarbert Kintyre 71 Eilean Aoidh south of Portavadie Eilean Leathan Kilbrannan Sound just south of Torrisdale Bay Island Muller Kilbrannan Sound north of Campbeltown 72 Natural history Edit nbsp The Arran whitebeam in flower at Eglinton Country Park IrvineAround the Firth of Clyde there are populations of red deer red squirrel badger otter adder and common lizard In the Firth itself there are harbour porpoises basking sharks and various species of dolphin 73 Davaar is home to a population of wild goats 74 Over 200 bird species have been recorded as sighted in the area including the black guillemot the eider the peregrine falcon and the golden eagle 73 In 1981 there were 28 ptarmigans sighted on Arran but in 2009 it was reported that extensive surveys had been unable to find any recorded ptarmigans sightings 75 Similarly the red billed chough no longer breeds on the island 76 Arran has three species of the rare endemic trees known as Arran Whitebeams 77 the Scottish or Arran whitebeam the cut leaved whitebeam and the Catacol whitebeam All of them are found only in Gleann Diomhan and they are amongst the most endangered tree species in the world Gleann Diomhan was formerly part of a designated national nature reserve the designation was removed in 2011 and it continues to be part of an area designated as a Site of Special Scientific Interest 78 Only 283 Arran whitebeam and 236 cut leaved whitebeam were recorded as mature trees in 1980 79 and it is thought that grazing pressures and insect damage are preventing regeneration of the woodland 78 The Catacol whitebeam was discovered in 2007 but only two specimens have been found so steps have been taken to protect them 80 81 Etymology Edit nbsp The Cumbraes with Arran and Bute beyondThe Roman historian Tacitus refers to the Clota meaning the Clyde The derivation is not certain but is probably from the Brythonic Clouta which became Clut in Old Welsh The name literally means wash probably referring to a river goddess who is seen as the washer or the strongly flowing one 82 The derivation of the word Bute is also uncertain The Norse name for it is Bot an Old Irish word for fire which might be a reference to signal fires 83 The etymology of Arran is no clearer Haswell Smith 2004 suggests that it derive from a Brythonic word meaning high place 84 although Watson 1926 suggests it may be pre Celtic 85 Note 4 Island Derivation Language Meaning Modern Gaelic name 53 Alternative DerivationsArran Possibly Aran Brythonic high place 84 Arainn Possibly pre CelticBute Bot see above Norse or Gaelic Possibly fire isle Eilean Bhoid or Bod Possibly from Brythonic budh for corn and previously known as Rothesay meaning Roderick s island 87 Davaar Eilean Da Bharr Gaelic Barr s island Eilean Da BharrGreat Cumbrae Cymri English Brythonic place of the Brythonic people Cumaradh Mor Gaelic literally means place of the Cymric people 53 Previously known in English as Great or Greater Cumray 59 Holy Island English Refers to Molaise of Leighlin Eilean Mo Laise Previously known as Lamlash the English name was adopted in 1830 when the Arran village took this name In Gaelic the island is also known as An t Eilean Ard the high island Sanda Sandtange or Havin Old Norse or Danish sandspit or anchorage 88 Abhainn Also known as Sanda Island 88 See also Edit nbsp Scottish Islands portal nbsp Scotland portal nbsp Islands portalScottish island names Rathlin Island Sleeping Warrior Arran Single Malt Mount Stuart House Cathedral of the Isles Earl of Arran Scotland Marquess of Bute Mull of Kintyre testNotes Edit The definition of an island used is that it is land that is surrounded by seawater on a daily basis but not necessarily at all stages of the tide excluding human devices such as bridges and causeways Various other definitions are used in the Scottish context For example the General Register Office for Scotland define an island as a mass of land surrounded by water separate from the Scottish mainland but although they include islands linked by bridges etc this is not clear from this definition 2 Haswell Smith 2004 uses an Island is a piece of land or group of pieces of land which is entirely surrounded by water at Lowest Astronomical Tide and to which there is no permanent means of dry access This consciously excludes bridged islands which most other sources include 3 Note that the Ordnance Survey maps mark the height above sea level of a high point on most islands but in a small number of cases this may not be the highest point 56 This tale is related in the Norse sagas but the context is confused They assert that the arrangement was made with King Malcolm but in fact it was Edgar who was King of Scots at the time 67 In support of the controversial Vasconic substratum hypothesis Theo Vennemann notes the recurrence of the element aran Unified Basque haran meaning valley in names like Val d Aran Arundel or Arendal 86 Footnotes Edit Waverley Archived 8 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine Clyde Waterfront Heritage Retrieved 5 September 2010 General Register Office for Scotland 2003 Appendix Haswell Smith 2004 Preface p xi a b Destinations Caledonian MacBrayne Retrieved 22 January 2011 a b Getting Here The Holy Isle Project Retrieved 12 May 2012 Gillen 2003 p 28 McKirdy et al 2007 pp 297 301 Montgomery Keith 2003 Siccar Point and Teaching the History of Geology PDF University of Wisconsin Retrieved 26 March 2008 Hutton s Unconformity Lochranza Isle of Arran UK Places of Geologic Significance on Waymarking com Waymarking com Retrieved 20 October 2008 Gillen 2003 pp 89 90 Roch John 27 October 2004 Puffins Return to Scottish Island Famous for Curling Stones National Geographic News Retrieved 29 August 2010 Gillen 2003 pp 174 86 McKirdy et al 2007 pp 297 301 McKirdy et al 2007 p 28 Ritchie W Beaches of Cowal Bute amp Arran 1975 Scottish Natural Heritage Originally published by the Countryside Commission for Scotland pp 6 9 Bute s Geology amp Geomorphology Bute gateway org Retrieved 20 January 2011 Bute Map 6 Garroch Head to Stravannan Bay Archived 28 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine pdf scapetrust org Retrieved 20 January 2011 Gillen 2003 p 177 Lighthouse Library Northern Lighthouse Board Retrieved 14 July 2007 a b Regional mapped climate averages Archived 4 August 2012 at archive today Met Office Retrieved 4 September 2009 Noble 2006 p 30 a b Noble 2006 pp 104 05 a b Murray 1973 pp 113 131 Morris John H Sailing through Scottish Antiquities Archived 11 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine scottish antiquities ukonline co uk Retrieved 4 February 2011 Arran Monamore Meallach s Grave Scotland s Places Retrieved 4 February 2011 Great Cumbrae Island Craigengour Scotland s Places Retrieved 4 February 2011 a b Cowie Trevor The Bronze Age in Omand 2006 pp 27 30 Haswell Smith 2004 p 22 The Queen of the Inch Necklace and Facial reconstruction Archived 19 June 2010 at the Wayback Machine Bute Museum Retrieved 5 September 2010 Murray 1973 pp 147 155 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 241 248 Forte Oram Pedersen 2005 pp 248 253 Coventry 2008 p 545 Keay 1994 p 597 Hunter 2000 pp 106 111 Barrett 2008 p 411 Agreement between Magnus IV and Alexander III 1266 isleofman com Manx Society vols IV VII amp IX Retrieved 11 January 2011 Bridgland Nick The Medieval Church in Argyll in Omand 2006 pp 86 87 Duncan P J The Industries of Argyll Tradition and Improvement in Omand 2006 pp 151 156 Haswell Smith 2004 p 12 Mackillop Dugald The History of the Highland Clearances Buteshire Arran electricscotland com Retrieved 18 July 2009 Lagantuine Isle of Arran Ayrshire UK waymarking com Retrieved 18 July 2009 Lamlash Ayrshireroots com Retrieved 20 January 2011 Caledonian Steam Packet Company Scran part of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland Retrieved 30 January 2011 PS Columba Paddle Steamer Resources by Tramscape Archived from the original on 7 July 2011 Retrieved 30 January 2011 Keay 1994 p 236 The Puffer Archived 22 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine Inveraray Maritime Heritage Museum Retrieved 4 September 2010 History of Caledonian MacBrayne West Highland Steamer Club Archived from the original on 30 January 2010 Retrieved 30 January 2011 Summer Timetables Caledonian MacBrayne Retrieved 5 February 2011 Western Ferries Retrieved 6 February 2001 a b General Register Office for Scotland 28 November 2003 Scotland s Census 2001 Occasional Paper No 10 Statistics for Inhabited Islands Retrieved 26 February 2012 a b National Records of Scotland 15 August 2013 Appendix 2 Population and households on Scotland s Inhabited Islands PDF Statistical Bulletin 2011 Census First Results on Population and Household Estimates for Scotland Release 1C Part Two PDF Report SG 2013 126 Retrieved 14 August 2020 a b c Mac an Tailleir 2003 various pages Haswell Smith 2004 unless otherwise indicated Haswell Smith 2004 and Ordnance Survey maps a b c Ordnance Survey maps Haswell Smith 2004 p 3 Haswell Smith 2004 p 21 a b Haswell Smith 2004 p 18 Haswell Smith 2004 pp 6 7 All are as identified by Ordnance Survey maps Gare Loch Gazetteer for Scotland Retrieved 29 August 2010 West Loch Tarbert Gazetteer for Scotland Retrieved 13 September 2008 Magnus s Saga chapter 10 in Hollander 1964 pp 676 677 Murray 1977 p 100 has the date as 1093 Tarbert History Archived 20 December 2008 at the Wayback Machine Tarbert info Retrieved 13 September 2008 Woolf Alex The Age of the Sea Kings 900 1300 in Omand 2006 p 101 Gateway to Scotland University of Edinburgh Retrieved 29 August 2010 History of Lady Isle ladyisle com Quoting Geographical Collections relating to Scotland Vol 1 pages 412 3 Retrieved 14 October 2007 Memories of Old Troon www ladyisle com Retrieved 29 August 2010 Barmore Island Gazetteer for Scotland Retrieved 1 December 2007 Ordnance Survey maps unless otherwise stated a b Natural History Arran Natural History Society Retrieved 12 May 2012 About Kildalloig Estate and Davaar Island Archived 17 July 2010 at the Wayback Machine kintyrecottages com Retrieved 4 September 2010 Iconic Birds at Risk 1 Feb 2009 Glasgow Sunday Herald A6 102a Chough Pyrrhocorax pyrrhocorax breeding pdf JNCC Retrieved 1 August 2009 Johnston Ian 15 June 2007 Trees on Arran are a whole new species Edinburgh The Scotsman Retrieved 18 June 2007 a b Arran Northern Mountains SSSI Site Management Statement Scottish Natural Heritage Retrieved 11 September 2020 Bignal Eric 1980 The endemic whitebeams of North Arran The Glasgow Naturalist 20 1 60 64 New species of tree discovered 14 June 2007 BBC Retrieved 18 January 2011 New species of tree discovered on Arran Scottish Wildlife November 2007 ISSN 0143 1234 p 9 Watson 1994 pp 44 71 Watson 1994 pp 95 86 a b Haswell Smith 2004 p 11 Watson 1994 p 97 Baldi amp Page December 2006 Review of Europa Vasconica Europa Semitica Lingua 116 Issue 12 pp 2183 2220 Haswell Smith 2004 p 23 a b Haswell Smith 2004 p 5References EditBarrett James H The Norse in Scotland in Brink Stefan ed 2008 The Viking World Abingdon Routledge ISBN 0 415 33315 6 Coventry Martin 2008 Castles of the Clans Musselburgh Goblinshead ISBN 978 1 899874 36 1 Forte A Oram RD Pedersen F 2005 Viking Empires Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 82992 2 Gillen Con 2003 Geology and landscapes of Scotland Harpenden Terra Haswell Smith Hamish 2004 The Scottish Islands Edinburgh Canongate ISBN 978 1 84195 454 7 Hollander Lee M ed amp tr 1964 Heimskringla History of the Kings of Norway Austin University of Texas Press Hunter James 2000 Last of the Free A History of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland Edinburgh Mainstream ISBN 1 84018 376 4 Keay J amp Keay J 1994 Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland London HarperCollins Mac an Tailleir Iain 2003 Ainmean aite Placenames pdf Parlamaid na h Alba Retrieved 26 August 2012 McDonald Dan 1977 The Clyde Puffer Newton Abbot David amp Charles McKirdy Alan Gordon John amp Crofts Roger 2007 Land of Mountain and Flood The Geology and Landforms of Scotland Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 357 0 Murray W H 1973 The Islands of Western Scotland London Eyre Methuen Murray W H 1977 The Companion Guide to the West Highlands of Scotland London Collins Noble Gordon 2006 Neolithic Scotland Timber Stone Earth and Fire Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 2338 8 Omand Donald ed 2006 The Argyll Book Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 1 84158 480 0 Ordnance Survey 2009 Get a map Retrieved 1 31 August 2010 Watson W J 1994 The Celtic Place Names of Scotland Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 1 84158 323 5 First published 1926 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Islands of the Clyde amp oldid 1140339828, 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