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Islay

Islay (/ˈlə/ EYE-lə; Scottish Gaelic: Ìle, Scots: Ila) is the southernmost island of the Inner Hebrides of Scotland. Known as "The Queen of the Hebrides",[8] it lies in Argyll just south west of Jura and around 40 kilometres (22 nautical miles) north of the Northern Irish coast. The island's capital is Bowmore where the distinctive round Kilarrow Parish Church and a distillery are located.[9] Port Ellen is the main port.[10]

Islay
Scottish Gaelic nameÌle
Pronunciation[ˈiːlə]
Scots nameIla[1]
Old Norse nameÍl[2]
Meaning of nameUnknown

Port Ellen
Location
Islay
Islay shown within Argyll and Bute
OS grid referenceNR370598
Coordinates55°46′N 6°09′W / 55.77°N 6.15°W / 55.77; -6.15
Physical geography
Island groupIslay
Area61,956 ha (239+14 sq mi)[3]
Area rank5 [5]
Highest elevationBeinn Bheigeir, 491 m (1,611 ft)[4]
Administration
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
CountryScotland
Council areaArgyll and Bute
Demographics
Population3,228[6]
Population rank7[6][5]
Population density5.2/km2 (13/sq mi)[3][6]
Largest settlementPort Ellen[7]

Islay is the fifth-largest Scottish island and the eighth-largest island of the British Isles, with a total area of almost 620 square kilometres (240 sq mi).[Note 1] There is ample evidence of the prehistoric settlement of Islay and the first written reference may have come in the first century AD. The island had become part of the Gaelic Kingdom of Dál Riata during the Early Middle Ages before being absorbed into the Norse Kingdom of the Isles.

The later medieval period marked a "cultural high point" with the transfer of the Hebrides to the Kingdom of Scotland and the emergence of the Clan Donald Lordship of the Isles, originally centred at Finlaggan.[13] During the 17th century the power of Clan Donald waned, but improvements to agriculture and transport led to a rising population, which peaked in the mid-19th century.[3] This was followed by substantial forced displacements and declining resident numbers.

Today, Islay has over 3,000 inhabitants, and the main commercial activities are agriculture, malt whisky distillation and tourism. The island has a long history of religious observance, and Scottish Gaelic is spoken by about a quarter of the population.[14] Its landscapes have been celebrated through various art forms, and there is a growing interest in renewable energy in the form of wave power. Islay is home to many bird species such as the wintering populations of Greenland white-fronted and barnacle goose, and is a popular destination throughout the year for birdwatchers. The climate is mild and ameliorated by the Gulf Stream.

Name edit

 
Port Charlotte, founded in 1828[15]

Islay was probably recorded by Ptolemy as Epidion,[16] the use of the "p" suggesting a Brittonic or Pictish tribal name.[17] In the 7th century Adomnán referred to the island as Ilea,[18] and the name occurs in early Irish records as Ile and as Íl in Old Norse. The root is not Gaelic and is of unknown origin.[2][Note 2]

In 17th-century maps, the spelling appears as "Yla" or "Ila", a form still used in the name of the whisky Caol Ila.[20][21] In poetic language, Islay is known as Banrìgh Innse Gall,[8] or Banrìgh nan Eilean[22] usually translated as "Queen of the Hebrides"[Note 3] and Eilean uaine Ìle – the "green isle of Islay"[19] A native of Islay is called an Ìleach, pronounced [ˈiːləx].[19]

The obliteration of pre-Norse names is almost total, and placenames on the island are a mixture of Norse and later Gaelic and English influences.[23][24]

Port Askaig is from the Norse ask-vík, meaning "ash tree bay" and the common suffix -bus is from the Norse bólstaðr, meaning "farm".[25]

Gaelic names, or their anglicised versions such as Ardnave Point, from Àird an Naoimh "height of the saint" ,are very common.[26]

Several of the villages were developed in the 18th or 19th centuries, and English is a stronger influence in their names as a result. Port Charlotte for example, was named after Lady Charlotte Campbell, daughter of 5th Duke of Argyll and wife of the island's then-owner, Colonel John Campbell (1770–1809) of Shawfield and Islay.[27]

Geography edit

 
Topographic map

Islay is 40 kilometres (25 mi) long from north to south and 24 kilometres (15 mi) broad. The east coast is rugged and mountainous, rising steeply from the Sound of Islay, the highest peak being Beinn Bheigier, which is a Marilyn at 1,612 feet (491 m). The western peninsulas are separated from the main bulk of the island by the waters of Loch Indaal to the south and Loch Gruinart to the north.[28] The fertile and windswept southwestern arm is called The Rinns, and Ardnave Point is a conspicuous promontory on the northwest coast. The south coast is sheltered from the prevailing winds and, as a result, relatively wooded.[29][30][31] The fractal coast has numerous bays and sea lochs, including Loch an t-Sailein, Aros Bay and Claggain Bay.[29] In the far southwest is a rocky and now largely uninhabited peninsula called The Oa, the closest point in the Hebrides to Ireland.[32]

The island's population is concentrated mainly in and around the villages of Bowmore and Port Ellen. Other smaller villages include Bridgend, Ballygrant, Port Charlotte, Portnahaven and Port Askaig. The rest of the island is sparsely populated and mainly agricultural.[33] There are several small freshwater lochs in the interior including Loch Finlaggan, Loch Ballygrant, Loch Lossit and Loch Gorm, and numerous burns throughout the island, many of which bear the name "river" despite their small size. The most significant of these are the River Laggan which discharges into the sea at the north end of Laggan Bay, and the River Sorn which, draining Loch Finlaggan, enters the head of Loch Indaal at Bridgend.[29]

There are numerous small uninhabited islands around the coasts, the largest of which are Eilean Mhic Coinnich and Orsay off the Rinns, Nave Island on the northwest coast, Am Fraoch Eilean in the Sound of Islay, and Texa off the south coast.[29]

Geology and geomorphology edit

 
Geological map of Islay

The underlying geology of Islay is intricate for such a small area.[3] The deformed Palaeoproterozoic igneous rock of the Rhinns complex is dominated by a coarse-grained gneiss cut by large intrusions of deformed gabbro. Once thought to be part of the Lewisian complex, it lies beneath the Colonsay Group of metasedimentary rocks[34][35] that forms the bedrock at the northern end of the Rinns. It is a quartz-rich metamorphic marine sandstone that may be unique to Scotland and which is nearly 5,000 m (16,400 ft) thick.[36] South of Rubh' a' Mhail there are outcrops of quartzite, and a strip of mica schist and limestone cuts across the centre of the island from The Oa to Port Askaig. Further south is a band of metamorphic quartzite and granites, a continuation of the beds that underlie Jura. The geomorphology of these last two zones is dominated by a fold known as the Islay Anticline. To the south is a "shattered coastline" formed from mica schist and hornblende.[3][37][38] The older Bowmore Group sandstones in the west centre of the island are rich in feldspar and may be of Dalradian origin.[39][Note 4]

 
Rocks of the Rhinns complex at Claddach Bay on the southernmost tip of the Rinns

Loch Indaal was formed along a branch of the Great Glen Fault called the Loch Gruinart Fault; its main line passes just to the north of Colonsay. This separates the limestone, igneous intrusions and Bowmore sandstones from the Colonsay Group rocks of the Rhinns.[40] The result is occasional minor earth tremors.[41]

There is a tillite bed near Port Askaig that provides evidence of an ice age in the Precambrian.[38][42] In comparatively recent times the island was ice-covered during the Pleistocene glaciations save for Beinn Tart a' Mhill on the Rinns, which was a nunatak on the edge of the ice sheet.[43] The complex changes of sea level due to melting ice caps and isostasy since then have left a series of raised beaches around the coast.[33] Throughout much of late prehistory the low-lying land between the Rinns and the rest of the island was flooded, creating two islands.[44]

Climate edit

The influence of the Gulf Stream keeps the climate mild compared to mainland Scotland. Snow is rarely seen at sea level and frosts are light and short-lived.[45] However, wind speeds average 19 to 28 kilometres per hour (10 to 15 knots) annually[46] and winter gales sweep in off the Atlantic, gusting up to 185 km/h (115 mph).[47] This can make travelling and living on the island during the winter difficult,[48] while ferry and air links to the mainland can suffer delays. The driest months are April to July and the warmest are May to September, which as a result are the busiest times for tourism.[49][50] Sunshine hours are typically highest around the coasts, especially to the west.[45]

Climate data for Islay: Port Ellen climate station (17m elevation) 1981–2010 averages
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 7.8
(46.0)
7.6
(45.7)
9.1
(48.4)
11.0
(51.8)
13.9
(57.0)
15.8
(60.4)
17.1
(62.8)
17.1
(62.8)
15.6
(60.1)
12.9
(55.2)
10.0
(50.0)
8.2
(46.8)
12.2
(54.0)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 2.6
(36.7)
2.2
(36.0)
3.1
(37.6)
4.2
(39.6)
6.4
(43.5)
8.9
(48.0)
10.9
(51.6)
11.0
(51.8)
9.6
(49.3)
7.5
(45.5)
4.9
(40.8)
3.0
(37.4)
6.2
(43.2)
Average rainfall mm (inches) 138.2
(5.44)
98.2
(3.87)
118.8
(4.68)
77.9
(3.07)
62.4
(2.46)
73.3
(2.89)
78.8
(3.10)
106.7
(4.20)
114.6
(4.51)
148.7
(5.85)
132.3
(5.21)
132.9
(5.23)
1,282.7
(50.50)
Average rainy days (≥ 1.0 mm) 19.9 14.8 17.8 13.3 11.6 11.4 13.8 15.4 15.5 19.7 19.3 18.6 191.1
Source: metoffice.gov.uk[51]

Prehistory edit

 
Dun Nosebridge from the south

The earliest settlers on Islay were nomadic hunter-gatherers who may have first arrived during the Mesolithic period after the retreat of the Pleistocene ice caps. A flint arrowhead, which was found in a field near Bridgend in 1993 and dates from 10,800 BC, is amongst the earliest evidence of a human presence found so far in Scotland.[52][Note 5] Stone implements of the Ahrensburgian culture found at Rubha Port an t-Seilich near Port Askaig by foraging pigs in 2015 probably came from a summer camp used by hunters travelling round the coast in boats.[55][56] Mesolithic finds have been dated to 7000 BC using radiocarbon dating of shells and debris from kitchen middens.[57][58] By the Neolithic, settlements had become more permanent,[59] allowing for the construction of several communal monuments.[60]

The most spectacular prehistoric structure on the island is Dun Nosebridge. This 375-square-metre (4,040 sq ft) Iron Age fort occupies a prominent crag and has commanding views of the surrounding landscape. The name's origin is probably a mixture of Gaelic and Old Norse: Dun in the former language means "fort" and knaus-borg in the latter means "fort on the crag".[61] There is no evidence that Islay was ever subject to Roman military control although small numbers of finds such as a coin and a brooch from the third century AD suggest links of some kind with the intermittent Roman presence on the mainland.[62] The ruins of a broch at Dùn Bhoraraic south east of Ballygrant and the remains of numerous Atlantic roundhouses indicate the influences of northern Scotland, where these forms of building originate.[63][64] There are also various crannogs on Islay, including sites in Loch Ardnave, Loch Ballygrant and Loch Allallaidh in the south east where a stone causeway leading out to two adjacent islands is visible beneath the surface of the water.[29][63]

History edit

 
Port nan Gallan, The Oa, with the shadowy outline of Kintyre (mainland Scotland) in the far distance

Dál Riata edit

By the sixth century AD Islay, along with much of the nearby mainland and adjacent islands, lay within the Gaelic kingdom of Dál Riata with strong links to Ireland. The widely accepted opinion is that Dál Riata was established by Gaelic migrants from Ulster, displacing a native Brythonic culture (such as the Picts), but some scholars claim that the Gaels in this part of Scotland were indigenous to the area.[65] Dál Riata was divided into a small number of regions, each controlled by a particular kin group; according to the Senchus fer n-Alban ("The History of the Men of Scotland"), it was the Cenél nÓengusa for Islay and Jura.

In 627, the son of a king of the Irish Uí Chóelbad, a branch of the Dál nAraidi kingdom of Ulster (not to be confused with Dál Riata), was killed on Islay at the unidentified location of Ard-Corann by a warrior in an army led by King Connad Cerr of the Corcu Réti (the collective term for the Cenél nGabráin and Cenél Comgaill, before they split), based at Dunadd.[66] The Senchus also lists what is believed to be the oldest reference to a naval battle in the British Isles—a brief record of an engagement between rival Dál Riatan groups in 719.[67]

There is evidence of another kin group on Islay – the Cenél Conchride, supposedly descended from a brother of the legendary founder of Dál Riata, king Fergus Mór, but the existence of the Cenél Conchride seems to have been brief and the 430 households of the island are later said to have been comprised from the families of just three great-grandsons of the eponymous founder of Cenél nÓengus: Lugaid, Connal and Galán.[66]

Norse influence and the Kingdom of the Isles edit

 
Standing stone at Carragh Bhan, said to mark the grave of Godred Crovan, King of the Isles[68]

The ninth-century arrival of Scandinavian settlers on the western seaboard of the mainland had a long-lasting effect, beginning with the destruction of Dál Riata. As is the case in the Northern Isles, the derivation of place names suggests a complete break from the past. Jennings and Kruse conclude that although there were settlements prior to the Norse arrival "there is no evidence from the onomasticon that the inhabitants of these settlements ever existed".[69] Gaelic continued to exist as a spoken language in the southern Hebrides throughout the Norse period, but the place name evidence suggests it had a lowly status, possibly indicating an enslaved population.[70]

Consolidating their gains, the Norse settlers established the Kingdom of the Isles, which became part of the crown of Norway following Norwegian unification. To Norway, the islands became known as Suðreyjar (Old Norse, traditionally anglicised as Sodor, or Sudreys), meaning southern isles. For the next four centuries and more this Kingdom was under the control of rulers of mostly Norse origin.

Godred Crovan was one of the most significant of the rulers of this sea kingdom. Though his origins are obscure, it is known that Godred was a Norse-Gael, with a connection to Islay. The Chronicles of Mann call Godred the son of Harald the Black of Ysland, (his place or origin variously interpreted as Islay, Ireland or Iceland) and state he "so tamed the Scots that no one who built a ship or boat dared use more than three iron bolts".[71][72]

Godred also became King of Dublin at an unknown date, although in 1094 he was driven out of the city by Muircheartach Ua Briain, later known as High King of Ireland, according to the Annals of the Four Masters. He died on Islay "of pestilence", during the following year.[71][73][74] A local tradition suggests that a standing stone at Carragh Bhan near Kintra marks Godred Crovan's grave.[68][75] A genuine 11th-century Norse grave-slab was found at Dóid Mhàiri in 1838, although it was not associated with a burial. The slab is decorated with foliage in the style of Ringerike Viking art and an Irish-style cross, the former being unique in Scandinavian Scotland.[68]

Following Godred's death, the local population resisted Norway's choice of replacement, causing Magnus, the Norwegian king, to launch a military campaign to assert his authority. In 1098, under pressure from Magnus, the king of Scotland quitclaimed to Magnus all sovereign authority over the isles.

Somerled edit

 
The remains of Claig Castle, a vital stronghold of Somerled

In the mid 12th century, a granddaughter of Godred Crovan's married the ambitious Somerled, a Norse-Gaelic Argyle nobleman. Godred Olafsson, grandson of Godred Crovan, was an increasingly unpopular King of the Isles at the time, spurring Somerled into action. The two fought the Battle of Epiphany in the seas off Islay in January 1156.[Note 6] The result was a bloody stalemate, and the island kingdom was temporarily divided, with Somerled taking control of the southern Hebrides. Two years later Somerled completely ousted Godred Olafsson and re-united the kingdom.

Somerled built the sea fortress of Claig Castle on an island between Islay and Jura, to establish control of the Sound of Islay. On account of the Corryvreckan whirlpool to the north of Jura, the Sound was the main safe sea route between the mainland and the rest of the Hebrides; Claig Castle essentially gave Somerled control of sea traffic. Following Somerled's 1164 death, the realm was divided between Godred's heirs, and Somerled's sons,[76][77][78] whose descendants continued to describe themselves as King of the Sudreys until the 13th century. Somerled's grandson, Donald received Islay, along with Claig Castle, and the adjacent part of Jura as far north as Loch Tarbert.

Nominal Norwegian authority had been re-established after Somerled's death, but by the mid 13th century, increased tension between Norway and Scotland led to a series of battles, culminating in the Battle of Largs, shortly after which the Norwegian king died. In 1266, his more peaceable successor ceded his nominal authority over Suðreyjar to the Scottish king (Alexander III) by the Treaty of Perth, in return for a very large sum of money.[79][80] Alexander generally acknowledged the semi-independent authority of Somerled's heirs; the former Suðreyjar had become a Scottish crown dependency, rather than part of Scotland.

Scottish rule edit

Lords of the Isles edit

 
The descent of Amie Macruari and John of Islay from Somerled

By this point, Somerled's descendants had formed into three families – the heirs of Donald (the MacDonalds, led by Aonghas Óg MacDonald), those of Donald's brother (the Macruari, led by Ruaidhri mac Ailein), and those of Donald's uncle (the MacDougalls, led by Alexander MacDougall). At the end of the 13th century, when king John Balliol was challenged for the throne by Robert the Bruce, the MacDougalls backed Balliol, while the Macruari and MacDonalds backed Robert. When Robert won, he declared the MacDougall lands forfeit, and distributed them between the MacDonalds and Macruari (the latter already owning much of Lorne, Uist, parts of Lochaber, and Garmoran).[81]

The Macruari territories were eventually inherited by Amy of Garmoran.,[82][83][84] who married her MacDonald cousin John of Islay in the 1330s;[85] having succeeded Aonghus Óg as head of the MacDonalds, he now controlled significant stretches of the western seaboard of Scotland from Morvern to Loch Hourn, and the whole of the Hebrides save for Skye (which Robert had given to Hugh of Ross instead).[84] From 1336 onwards John began to style himself Dominus Insularum—"Lord of the Isles", a title that implied a connection to the earlier Kings of the Isles and by extension a degree of independence from the Scottish crown;[84][85][86] this honorific was claimed by his heirs for several generations.[87] The MacDonalds had thus achieved command of a strong semi-independent maritime realm, and considered themselves equals of the kings of Scotland, Norway, and England.[88]

 
The ruins of Finlaggan castle, traditional capital of the Lordship of the Isles

Initially, their power base was on the shores of Loch Finlaggan in northeastern Islay, near the present-day village of Caol Ila. Successive chiefs of Clan Donald were proclaimed Lord of the Isles there, upon an ancient seven-foot-square coronation stone bearing footprint impressions in which the new ruler stood barefoot and was anointed by the Bishop of Argyll and seven priests.[89] The Lord's advisory "Council of the Isles" met on Eilean na Comhairle[Note 7] (Council Island), in Loch Finlaggan on Islay, within a timber framed crannog that had originally been constructed in the first century BC.

The Islay Charter, a record of lands granted to an Islay resident in 1408, Brian Vicar MacKay, by Domhnall of Islay, Lord of the Isles, is one of the earliest records of Gaelic in public use, and is a significant historical document.[92] In 1437, the Lordship was substantially expanded when Alexander, the Lord of the Isles, inherited the rule of Ross maternally; this included Skye. The expansion of MacDonald control caused the "heart of the Lordship" to move to the twin castles of Aros and Ardtornish, in the Sound of Mull.[93]

 
The ruins of Dunnyvaig Castle, a MacDonald stronghold in the 16th century

In 1462, the last and most ambitious of the Lords, John MacDonald II, struck an alliance with Edward IV of England under terms of the Treaty of Ardtornish-Westminster with the goal of conquering Scotland. The onset of the Wars of the Roses prevented the treaty from being discovered by Scottish agents, and Edward from fulfilling his obligations as an ally. A decade later, in 1475, it had come to the attention of the Scottish court, but calls for forfeiture of the Lordship were calmed when John quitclaimed his mainland territories, and Skye. However, ambition wasn't given up so easily, and John's nephew launched a severe raid on Ross, but it ultimately failed. Within 2 years of the raid, in 1493, MacDonald was compelled to forfeit his estates and titles to James IV of Scotland; by this forfeiture, the lands became part of Scotland, rather than a crown dependency.

James ordered Finlaggan demolished, its buildings razed, and the coronation stone destroyed, to discourage any attempts at restoration of the Lordship.[94][95][Note 8] When Martin Martin visited Islay in the late 17th century he recorded a description of the coronations Finlaggan had once seen.[Note 9]. John was exiled from his former lands, and his former subjects now considered themselves to have no superior except the king. A charter was soon sent from the Scottish King confirming this state of affairs; it declares that Skye and the Outer Hebrides are to be considered independent from the rest of the former Lordship, leaving only Islay and Jura remaining in the comital unit.

16th and 17th centuries edit

 
Islay House

James V sent gunners to garrison forts in Islay in 1540.[98] Initially dispossessed in the wake of royal opposition to the Lordship, Clan MacDonald of Dunnyveg's holdings in Islay were restored in 1545.[99] The MacLean family had been granted land in Jura in 1390, by the MacDonalds, and in 1493 had thus been seen as the natural replacement for them, leading to a branch of the MacLeans being granted Dunyvaig Castle by king James, and expanding into Islay. Naturally, the restoration of the MacDonalds created some hostility with the MacLeans; in 1549, after observing that Islay was fertile, fruitful, and full of natural pastures, with good hunting and plentiful salmon and seals, Dean Monro describes Dunyvaig, and Loch Gorm Castle "now usurped be M’Gillayne of Doward".[100][Note 10]. The dispute continued for decades, and in 1578 the Macleans were expelled from Loch Gorm by force, and in 1598 their branch was finally defeated at the Battle of Traigh Ghruinneart.

However, when Sorley Boy MacDonnell (of the Islay MacDonalds) had a clash with the Irish branch of the Macleans, and the unpopularity of the MacDonalds in Edinburgh (where their use of Gaelic was regarded as barbaric), weakened their grip on their southern Hebridean possessions. In 1608, Coupled with MacDonald hostility to the Scottish reformation, this led the Scottish-English crown to mount an expedition to subdue them. In 1614 the crown handed Islay to Sir John Campbell of Cawdor, in return for an undertaking to pacify it;[101][102] this the Campbells eventually achieved. Under Campbell influence, shrieval authority was established under the sheriff of Argyll. With inherited Campbell control of the sheriffdom, comital authority was relatively superfluous, and the provincial identity (medieval Latin: provincia) of Islay-Jura faded away.

The situation was soon complicated by the Civil War, when Archibald, the head of the most powerful branch of the Campbells, was the de facto head of Covenanter government, while other branches (and even Archibald's son) were committed Royalists. A Covenanter army under Sir David Leslie arrived on Islay in 1647, and besieged the royalist garrison at Dunnyvaig, laying waste to the island.[103] It was not until 1677 that the Campbells felt sufficiently at ease to construct Islay House at Bridgend to be their principal, and unfortified, island residence.[104][Note 11]

Martin Martin recorded that Sir Hugh Campbell of Caddell was the king's steward of Islay in the late seventeenth century.[107]

British era edit

18th and 19th centuries edit

 
A cottage on Islay from Thomas Pennant's A Tour in Scotland and Voyage to the Hebrides, published in 1774.

At the beginning of the 18th century much of the population of Argyll was to be found dispersed in small clachans of farming families[108] and only two villages of any size, Killarow near Bridgend and Lagavulin, existed on Islay at the time.[109] (Killarow had a church and tolbooth and houses for merchants and craft workers but was razed in the 1760s to "improve" the grounds of Islay House.)[109] The agricultural economy was dependent on arable farming including staples such as barley and oats supplemented with stock-rearing. The carrying capacity of the island was recorded at over 6,600 cows and 2,200 horses in a 1722 rental listing.[110]

In 1726 Islay was purchased by John Campbell of Mamore using compensation from Glasgow Town Council (£9000) for damages during the Malt tax riots.[111] When he died in 1729 the island passed to his son, Daniel Campbell of Shawfield.[112][113] Following the Jacobite insurrections of 1745–6, the Heritable Jurisdictions Act 1746 abolished comital authority, and the Campbell's control of the sheriffdom; thereafter they could now only assert their influence in their role as Landlords.

A defining aspect of 19th-century Argyll was the gradual improvement of transport infrastructure.[114] Roads were built, the Crinan canal shortened the sea distance to Glasgow and the numerous traditional ferry crossings were augmented by new quays. Rubble piers were built at several locations on Islay and a new harbour was constructed at Port Askaig.[115] Initially, a sense of optimism in the fishing and cattle trades prevailed and the population expanded, partly as a result of the 18th-century kelp boom and the introduction of the potato as a staple.[116] The population of the island had been estimated at 5,344 in 1755 and grew to over 15,000 by 1841.

Islay remained with the Campbells of Shawfield until 1853 when it was sold to James Morrison of Berkshire, ancestor of the third Baron Margadale, who still owns a substantial portion of the island.[113] The sundering of the relationship between the landowners and the island's residents proved consequential. When the estate owners realised they could make more money from sheep farming than from the indigenous small farmers, wholesale Clearances became commonplace. Four hundred people emigrated from Islay in 1863 alone, some for purely economic reasons, but many others having been forced off the land their predecessors had farmed for centuries. In 1891 the census recorded only 7,375 citizens, with many evictees making new homes in Canada, the United States and elsewhere. The population continued to decline for much of the 20th century and today is about 3,500.[3][117][118]

In 1899, counties were formally created, on shrieval boundaries, by a Scottish Local Government Act; Islay therefore became part of the County of Argyll.

World wars edit

 
The American Monument on the Mull of Oa commemorates the sinking of two troop ships during World War I.

During World War I two troop ships foundered off Islay within a few months of each other in 1918.[119] The SS Tuscania, a converted British liner carrying American Doughboys to France, was torpedoed by SM UB-77 on 5 February with the loss of over 160 lives and now lies in deep water 6.4 km (4 mi) west of the Mull of Oa.[120] On 6 October HMS Otranto was involved in a collision with HMS Kashmir in heavy seas while similarly transporting American Doughboys from New York Harbor. Otranto lost steering and drifted towards the west coast of the Rinns. Answering her SOS the destroyer HMS Mounsey attempted to come alongside and managed to rescue over 350 men. Nonetheless, the Otranto was wrecked on the shore near Machir Bay with a total loss of 431 lives.[121] A monument was erected on the coast of The Oa by the American Red Cross to commemorate the sinking of these two ships.[122] A military cemetery was created at Kilchoman where the dead from both nations in the latter disaster were buried (all but one of the American bodies were later exhumed and returned home).[119][123]

During World War II, the RAF built an airfield at Glenegedale which later became the civil airport for Islay. There was also an RAF Coastal Command flying boat base at Bowmore from 13 March 1941 using Loch Indaal.[124] In 1944 an RCAF 422 Squadron Sunderland flying boat's crew were rescued after their aircraft landed off Bowmore but broke from her moorings in a gale and sank.[125] There was an RAF Chain Home radar station at Saligo Bay and RAF Chain Home Low station at Kilchiaran.[126][127]

Economy edit

The mainstays of the modern Islay economy are agriculture, fishing, distilling, and tourism.[128]

Agriculture and fishing edit

 
Looking over to the Paps of Jura from Port Askaig

Much of Islay remains owned by a few non-resident estate owners; sheep farming and the few dairy cattle herds are run by tenant farmers.[128] The island's web site indicates that some cultivation is also being done while some areas of high moorlands include estates for shooting deer. Some bogs are cut for fuel used by a few distilleries and some homeowners. The southeast and eastern areas of Islay also have some plantations growing coniferous trees.[129]

Islay has some fine wild brown trout and salmon fishing[130] and in September 2003 the European Fishing Competition was held on five of the island's numerous lochs; this was "the biggest fishing event ever to be held in Scotland".[131] Sea angling is also popular, especially off the west coast and over the many shipwrecks around the coast.[131] There are about 20 commercial boats with crab, lobster and scallop fishing undertaken from Port Askaig, Port Ellen and Portnahaven.[132][133]

Distilling edit

 
Islay's distilleries

Islay is one of five whisky distilling localities and regions in Scotland whose identities are protected by law.[134] There are nine active distilleries and one inactive, with plans to begin construction on an eleventh.[135] This industry is the island's second largest employer after agriculture.[136][137] Those on the south of the island produce malts with a very strong peaty flavour, considered to be the most intensely flavoured of all whiskies. From east to west they are Ardbeg, Lagavulin, and Laphroaig. On the north of the island, Bowmore, Bruichladdich, Caol Ila, Bunnahabhain and Ardnahoe are produced, which are substantially lighter in taste.[138][139] Kilchoman opened in 2005 toward the west coast of the Rinns.[140]

 
Lagavulin distillery (2015)

The oldest record of a legal distillery on the island refers to Bowmore in 1779 and at one time there were up to 23 distilleries in operation.[141] For example, Port Charlotte distillery operated from 1829 to 1929[142] and Port Ellen is also closed although it remains in business as a malting.[141] In March 2007, Bruichladdich announced that they would reopen Port Charlotte distillery using equipment from the Inverleven distillery.[142]

 
Laphroaig Distillery (2008)

In general, the whiskies from this island are known for "pungent peaty, smoky and oily flavours, with just a hint of salty sea air and seaweed" because of the use of peat and the maritime climate, according to one report.[143] The island's own web site is more specific. Distilleries in the south make whisky which is "medium-bodied ... saturated with peat-smoke, brine and iodine" because they use malt that is heavy with peat as well as peaty water. Whisky from the northern area is milder because it is made using spring water for a "lighter flavoured, mossy (rather than peaty), with some seaweed, some nuts..." characteristic.[144]

Tourism edit

Some 45,000 summer visitors arrive each year by ferry and a further 11,000 by air.[145] The main attractions are the scenery, history, bird watching and the world-famous whiskies.[146] The distilleries operate various shops, tours and visitor centres,[147] and the Finlaggan Trust has a visitor centre which is open daily during the summer.[148]

Golf is available on the 116-year-old Machrie golf course now owned by Gavyn Davies and his wife Susan Nye, Baroness Nye; the course was redesigned and reopened in 2017. (The adjoining Macrhie Hotel, with 47 bedrooms, was recently rebuilt.)[149] Walkers and cyclists appreciate the 210 kilometres of coastline. Bird watchers should also be satisfied.[150]

The web site Trip Advisor rates the following as the top ten Sights & Landmarks on the island: Kildalton Cross in Port Ellen, Finlaggan in Ballygrant, Kildalton High Cross and Old Parish Church in Port Ellen, the American Monument, Kilchoman Military Cemetery, The Round Church in Bowmore, Kilnave Cross, Dunyvaig Castle in Lagavulin, Portnahaven Harbour, and Kilchoman Church.[151]

According to a July 2018 report, some summer days see nearly 6,000 tourists on the island and over 15,000 during the Feis Ile whisky festival in May. Those are very high numbers for an island with approximately 3,200 residents. That has led to some concern that the unique flavour of Islay is being negatively affected.[152] Still, there are no large hotels on the island yet, with tourist accommodation provided by guest houses, B&Bs, small hotels such as the Port Charlotte Hotel and the Harbour Inn at Bowmore,[150] self catering cottages and a youth hostel. Two campsites are available; one of them can accommodate motorhomes.[153][154]

Renewable energy edit

 

The location of Islay, exposed to the full force of the North Atlantic, has led to it being the site of a pioneering, and Scotland's first, wave power station near Portnahaven. The Islay LIMPET (Land Installed Marine Powered Energy Transformer) wave power generator was designed and built by Wavegen and researchers from the Queen's University of Belfast, and was financially backed by the European Union. Known as Limpet 500, due to cabling constraints its capacity was limited to providing up to 150 kW of electricity into the island's grid.[155] In 2000 it became the world's first commercial wave power station. It has since been decommissioned.

In March 2011 the largest tidal array in the world was approved by the Scottish Government with 10 planned turbines predicted to generate enough power for over 5,000 homes. The project will be located in the Sound of Islay which offers both strong currents and shelter from storms.[156]

Transport edit

 
Caledonian MacBrayne's MV Finlaggan

Many of the roads on the island are single-track with passing places. The two main roads are the A846 from Ardbeg to Port Askaig via Port Ellen and Bowmore, and the A847 which runs down the east coast of the Rhinns.[29] The island has its own bus service provided by Islay Coaches, and Glenegedale Airport offers flights to and from Glasgow International Airport and on a less regular basis to Oban and Colonsay.[157]

Caledonian MacBrayne operate regular ferry services to Port Ellen and Port Askaig from Kennacraig, taking about two hours. Ferries to Port Askaig also run on to Scalasaig on Colonsay and, on summer Wednesdays, to Oban. The purpose-built vessel, MV Finlaggan entered service in 2011.[158] ASP Ship Management Ltd operate a small car ferry on behalf of Argyll & Bute Council from Port Askaig to Feolin on Jura.[159] Kintyre Express will begin operating passenger only services between Port Ellen and Ballycastle in Northern Ireland from Fridays to Mondays through June, July and August.

 
The lighthouse at Carraig Fhada, Port Ellen

There are various lighthouses on and around Islay as an aid to navigation. These include the Rinns of Islay light built on Orsay in 1825 by Robert Stevenson,[160] Ruvaal at the north eastern tip of Islay constructed in 1859,[161] Carraig Fhada at Port Ellen, which has an unusual design,[162] and Dubh Artach, an isolated rock tower some 35 km (22 mi) northwest of Ruvaal.

Other activities edit

Since 1973 the Ileach has been delivering news to the people of Islay every fortnight and was named community newspaper of the year in 2007.[163][164] The Islay Ales Brewery brews various real ales at its premises near Bridgend.[165] In the early 21st century a campus of Sabhal Mòr Ostaig was set up on Islay, Ionad Chaluim Chille Ìle, which teaches Gaelic language, culture and heritage.[166] The Port Mòr community centre at Port Charlotte, which is equipped with a micro wind turbine and a ground-source heating system, is the creation of local development trust Iomairt Chille Chomain.[167][168]

Infrastructure edit

Telecommunications edit

A 16 miles (26 km) submarine telegraph cable was laid in July 1871 between Ardenistle near Port Ellen on Islay and Kintyre using the SS Robert Lowe.[169] The schooner Catherine and Mary of Leith arrived at the end of July with poles, wires and other equipment to extend the telegraph throughout the island.[170] but there was a delay in starting work. It was reported in September 1871 that Lieutenant Turner, provisional engineer with six Royal Engineers had just commenced operations to lay a line from Port Ellen to Port Askaig which was scheduled to be completed within 3 months.[171] The telegraph office opened in Port Ellen for business on 12 December 1871.[172] A branch line from Bridgend to Bowmore was completed in January 1872[173] and telegraph offices in Bowmore and Port Askaig opened on 1 April 1872.

In 1935 a submarine cable 17 miles (27 km) long was laid from Glencardock Point on Kintyre to Port Ellen. The first telephone exchange was built in Port Ellen and 200 miles of telephone wires erected across the island. The first call was made on 19 September 1935 when Mr A. Kerr Murray of the Scottish Western District of the Post Office Telephone Department inaugurated the trunk service in Port Ellen with a call to Provost A. MacEachran of Campbeltown. To meet the cost of providing the service a fee of 6d was charged in addition to the ordinary trunk charge.[174] Expansion of the service took place in 1936 with the first automatic exchange opening in Bowmore on 23 September and at Kidalton on 24 September[175] and in 1937 in Port Charlotte and Port Askaig.[176]

Electricity edit

The earliest records of the use of electricity on Islay are from 1894 when the Bunnahabhain Distillery was provided with electric light.[177] The other distilleries followed suit fairly shortly after this, but except for a few people who could afford to install generating plant themselves, electricity was not provided generally for domestic consumption until after the Second World War.

In 1937 it was reported in the Oban Times and Argyllshire Advertiser of 22 May 1937 that on Coronation Day in Bowmore through the ingenuity of Mr Allan Cameron, chemist, part of the village was floodlit for two nights by electricity from his private plant. This was a source of great admiration and attraction in a village which depends almost entirely on paraffin for light.[178]

In January 1945 the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board began a survey of Islay to provide electricity. This showed that the generating plant at RAF Bowmore would prove suitable for temporary use in providing supplies in the early stages of a distribution scheme for the island. The Air Ministry agreed and the Board purchased the whole of the Bowmore plant.[179]

In September 1948 the North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board switched on the first supply of electricity in Bowmore. Forty houses were connected to the local network which was supplied from a diesel engine.[180] Another 50 premises including the church were connected shortly afterwards and the distribution line from Bowmore to Port Ellen was also under construction.

In 1961 Islay was connected to the mainland with a cable which was submarine for 6 miles from the mainland to Jura and then again for 1.5 miles (2.4 km) from Jura to Islay. The project also involved 42 miles (68 km) of overhead lines.[181]

Gaelic language edit

Islay has historically been a very strong Gaelic-speaking area. In both the 1901 and 1921 censuses, all parishes in Islay were reported to be over 75 per cent Gaelic-speaking. By 1971, the Rhinns had dropped to 50–74 per cent Gaelic speakers and the rest of Islay to 25–49 per cent Gaelic speaker overall.[14] By 1991 about a third of the island's population were Gaelic speakers.[182] In the 2001 census this had dropped to 24 per cent, which, while a low figure overall, nonetheless made it the most strongly Gaelic-speaking island in Argyll and Bute after Tiree, with the highest percentage recorded in Portnahaven (32 per cent) and the lowest in Gortontaoid (17 per cent), with the far north and south of the island being the weakest areas in general.[14]

The Islay dialect is distinctive. It patterns strongly with other Argyll dialects, especially those of Jura, Colonsay and Kintyre.[183] Amongst its distinctive phonological features are the shift from long /aː/ to /ɛː/, a high degree of retention of long /eː/, the shift of dark /l̪ˠ/ to /t̪/, the lack of intrusive /t̪/ in sr groups (for example /s̪ɾoːn/ "nose" rather than /s̪t̪ɾoːn/)[184] and the retention of the unlenited past-tense particle d' (for example, d'èirich "rose" instead of dh'èirich).[185] It sits within a group of lexical isoglosses (i.e. words distinctive to a certain area) with strong similarities to the southern Scottish Gaelic and Ulster Irish dialects. Examples are dhuit "to you" (instead of the more common dhut),[186] the formula gun robh math agad "thank you" (instead of the more common mòran taing or tapadh leat but compare Irish go raibh maith agat),[187] mand "able to" (instead of the more common urrainn)[188] or deifir "hurry" (instead of the more common cabhag, Irish deifir).[189]

Religion edit

 
Kildalton Cross

Associated with various Islay churches are cupstones of uncertain age; these can be seen at Kilchoman Church, where the carved cross there is erected on one, and at Kilchiaran Church on the Rhinns. In historic times some may have been associated with pre-Christian wishing ceremonies or pagan beliefs in the "wee folk".[190]

The early pioneers of Christianity in Dál Riata were Columba of Iona and Moluag of Lismore.[191] The legacy of this period includes the eighth century Kildalton Cross, Islay's "most famous treasure",[192] carved out of local epidiorite.[193] A carved cross of similar age, but much more heavily weathered can be found at Kilnave,[194] which may have served as a site of lay worship.[195] Although the first Norse settlers were pagan, Islay has a substantial number of sites of drystone or clay-mortared chapels with small burial grounds from the later Norse era.[196] In the 12th century the island became part of the Diocese of Sodor and the Isles, which was re-established by King Olaf Godredsson.[197] The diocese fell within the jurisdiction of the Archdiocese of Nidaros and there were four principal churches on Islay in the Norwegian prestegjeld model: Kilnaughton, Kildalton, Kilarrow and Kilmany.[198] In 1472 Islay became part of the Archdiocese of St Andrews.[198]

 
Kilarrow Parish Church, Bowmore

Archibald Campbell, 5th Earl of Argyll was a strong supporter of the Reformation, but there is little evidence that his beliefs were greeted with much enthusiasm by the islanders initially. At first there were only two Protestant churches but in 1642 three parishes were created, based at Kilchoman, Kilarrow and a new church at Dunyvaig. By the end of the century there were seven churches including one on Nave Island.[199] Kilarrow Parish Church, built in 1767 by Daniel Campbell when laird of Islay, is round and such, as local folklore has it, has no corner in which the devil could hide.[200] The kirk on the Rhinns of Islay is St Kiaran's, located just outside the village of Port Charlotte and Port Ellen is served by St John's. There are a variety of other Church of Scotland churches and various other congregations on the island. Baptists meet in Port Ellen and in Bowmore, the Scottish Episcopal Church of St. Columba is located in Bridgend and the Islay Roman Catholic congregation also uses St Columba's for its services.[201]

Media and the arts edit

Islay was featured in some of the scenes of the 1954 film The Maggie,[202] and the 1942 documentary "Coastal Command" was partly filmed in Bowmore.[203]

In 1967–68, folk-rock songwriter and singer Donovan included "Isle of Islay" in his album, A Gift from a Flower to a Garden, a song praising the pastoral beauties of the island.[Note 12] "Westering Home" is a 20th-century Scottish song about Islay written by Hugh S. Roberton, derived from an earlier Gaelic song.[205][206]

In the 1990s the BBC adaptation of Para Handy was partly filmed in Port Charlotte and Bruichladdich and featured a race between the Vital Spark (Para Handy's puffer) and a rival along the length of Loch Indaal. In 2007, parts of the BBC Springwatch programme were recorded on Islay with Simon King being based on Islay. The British Channel 4 archaeological television programme Time Team excavated at Finlaggan, the episode being first broadcast in 1995.[207][208][209]

In 2000, Japanese author Haruki Murakami visited the island to sample seven single malt whiskies on the island and later wrote a travel book called If our language were whisky.

Wildlife edit

 
Bridgend woods in January

Islay is home to many species of wildlife and is especially known for its birds. Winter-visiting barnacle goose numbers have reached 35,000 in recent years with as many as 10,000 arriving in a single day. There are also up to 12,000 Greenland white-fronted geese, and smaller numbers of brent, pinkfooted and Canada geese are often found amongst these flocks. Other waterfowl include whooper and mute swans, eider duck, Slavonian grebe, goldeneye, long-tailed duck and wigeon.[210] The elusive corncrake and sanderling, ringed plover and curlew sandpiper are amongst the summer visitors.[210] Resident birds include red-billed chough, hen harrier, golden eagle, peregrine falcon, barn owl, raven, oystercatcher and guillemot.[210] The re-introduced white-tailed sea eagle is now seen regularly around the coasts.[211] In all, about 105 species breed on the island each year and between 100 and 120 different species can be seen at any one time.[210]

A population of several thousand red deer inhabit the moors and hills. Fallow deer can be found in the southeast, and roe deer are common on low-lying ground. Otters are common around the coasts along Nave Island, and common and grey seals breed on Nave Island. Offshore, a variety of cetaceans are regularly recorded including minke whales, pilot whales, killer whales and bottle-nosed dolphins. The only snake on Islay is the adder and the common lizard is widespread although not commonly seen.[212] The island supports a significant population of the marsh fritillary along with numerous other moths and butterflies.[213] The mild climate supports a diversity of flora, typical of the Inner Hebrides.[214]

Notable natives edit

 
Port Ellen

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Haswell-Smith (2004) has a table of Scottish "islands arranged in order of magnitude" that lists Islay as fifth in rank, although this excludes Skye as it is a bridged island and includes South Uist as fourth on the grounds that it is connected to other islands such as Benbecula and North Uist by causeways that give it a large area.[11] Rick Livingstone’s Tables provide all the relevant area data although the information is not ranked.[12] Ireland is the largest of the islands surrounding Great Britain and Anglesey the sixth largest.
  2. ^ Mac an Tàilleir (2003) suggests that "if this is a Gaelic name it may be 'flank shaped'."[19]
  3. ^ Banrìgh Innse Gall is literally "Queen of the islands of the foreigners" and Banrìgh nan Eilean means "Queen of the islands".
  4. ^ The Rhinns complex, named after the Islay peninsula which hosts its largest outcrop, is predominantly Palaeoproterozoic syenitic gneiss. It lies unconformably beneath the Colonsay Group.[34]
  5. ^ At the time this Ahrensburgian flint was the oldest find in Scotland[53] but a subsequent discovery at Biggar predates it by over a millennium.[54]
  6. ^ Various locations have been suggested for the battle, including west of the Rinns and north of Rubh' a' Mhail. Marsden (2008) concludes that a location at the north end of the Sound of Islay is most likely.[76]
  7. ^ Loch Finlaggan has two main islands. Eilean Mòr was probably an early Christian centre and was fortified in the 13th and 14th centuries.[90][91]
  8. ^ While the Lordship itself did not survive, the title did; today, the heir to the British throne, who is known as the Prince of Wales in all other parts of the British Commonwealth, bears the title Lord of the Isles within Scotland.[96]
  9. ^ Martin wrote of the "isle Finlagan", that it is "famous for being once the court in which the great Macdonald, King of the Isles, had his residence; his houses, chapel, etc., are now ruinous. His guards de corps, called Lucht-taeh, kept guard on the lake side nearest to the isle; the walls of their houses are still to be seen there. The High Court of Judicature, consisting of fourteen, sat always here; and there was an appeal to them from all the Courts in the isles: the eleventh share of the sum in debate was due to the principal judge. There was a big stone of seven feet square, in which there was a deep impression made to receive the feet of Macdonald; for he was crowned King of the Isles standing in this stone, and swore that he would continue his vassals in the possession of their lands, and do exact justice to all his subjects: and then his father’s sword was put into his hand. The Bishop of Argyll and seven priests anointed him king, in presence of all the heads of the tribes in the isles and continent, and were his vassals; at which time the orator rehearsed a catalogue of his ancestors, etc."[97]
  10. ^ With regard to the castles of Islay Monro wrote: "In this iyle there is strenths castells; the first is callit Dunowaik, biggit on ane craig at the sea side, on the southeist part of the countery pertaining to the Clandonald of Kintyre; second is callit the castle of Lochgurne, quhilk is biggit ill ane iyle within the said fresche water loche far fra land, pertaining of auld to the Clandonald of Kintyre, now usurped be M’Gillayne of Doward. Ellan Forlagan, in the middle of Ila, ane faire iyle in fresche water.[100]
  11. ^ The structure was built for Sir Hugh Campbell of Cawdor and is now used as a hotel.[105] It is a Category A listed building.[106]
  12. ^ It is claimed that Donovan wrote the song after being arrested for possession of marijuana and that "I had to leave, I had to get away from the publicity, so I took a plane north to Scotland, and on a northern island I found the peace, and I wrote this song."[204]

Footnotes edit

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  2. ^ a b Gammeltoft 2007, p. 487
  3. ^ a b c d e f Haswell-Smith 2004, p. 41
  4. ^ Haswell-Smith 2004, p. 42
  5. ^ a b Area and population ranks: there are c. 300 islands over 20 ha in extent and 93 permanently inhabited islands were listed in the 2011 census.
  6. ^ a b c 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.
  7. ^ National Records of Scotland. "Table KS101SC – Usual Resident Population, all people; Settlement/Locality 2010; Port Ellen". Scotland's Census 2011. Archived from the original on 13 June 2016. From the main page select Results, Standard Outputs, year 2011, table KS101SC,area type locality 2010. On the map click Bowmore and Port Ellen for comparison.
  8. ^ a b Newton 1995, p. 11
  9. ^ Newton 1995, p. 20
  10. ^ Newton 1995, p. 31
  11. ^ Haswell-Smith 2004, p. 502
  12. ^ Rick Livingstone’s Tables of the Islands of Scotland (pdf) Argyll Yacht Charters. Retrieved 12 December 2011.
  13. ^ Caldwell 2011, p. 58
  14. ^ a b c Mac an Tàilleir, Iain (2004) 1901–2001 Gaelic in the Census 7 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine (PowerPoint) Linguae Celticae. Retrieved 19 September 2012.
  15. ^ Caldwell 2011, p. 91
  16. ^ Watson (1994) p. 37
  17. ^ Watson (1994) p. 45
  18. ^ Watson (1994) p. 85-86
  19. ^ a b c Mac an Tàilleir 2003, p. 67
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  24. ^ King & Cotter 2012, p. 4
  25. ^ King & Cotter 2012, p. 6
  26. ^ King & Cotter 2012, pp. 34, 36–43
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  28. ^ Murray (1966) pp. 22–23
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  37. ^ Haswell-Smith 2004, p. 47
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  39. ^ Strachan, R. A, Smith, M., Harris, A. L., Fettes, D. J. "The Northern Highland and Grampian Terranes" in Trewin 2002, p. 96
  40. ^ Thomas, Christopher W.; Graham, Colin M.; Ellam, Robert M.; Fallick, Anthony E. "Sr chemostratigraphy of Neoproterozoic Dalradian limestones of Scotland and Ireland: constraints on depositional ages and time scales" (PDF). Journal of the Geological Society. 161: 229–242. doi:10.1144/0016-764903-001. Retrieved 22 March 2012.
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  42. ^ Keay & Keay 1994, p. 547
  43. ^ Mithen 2006, p. 197
  44. ^ Caldwell 2011, p. 4
  45. ^ a b "Regional mapped climate averages: W Scotland" Archived 4 August 2012 at archive.today. Met office. Retrieved 22 March 2012.
  46. ^ "UK mapped climate averages" 30 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine. Met office. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
  47. ^ "Weather". Islayjura.com. Retrieved 16 September 2012.
  48. ^ Newton 1995, p. 9
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  58. ^ Jupp 1994, p. 10
  59. ^ Storrie (1997) p. 29
  60. ^ Jupp 1994, p. 11
  61. ^ Newton 1995, p. 26
  62. ^ Caldwell 2011, p. 17
  63. ^ a b Caldwell 2011, pp. 137–38
  64. ^ Armit, Ian "The Iron Age" in Omand (2006) pp. 52–53
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  68. ^ a b c Graham-Campbell & Batey 1998, p. 89
  69. ^ Jennings & Kruse 2009b, p. 140
  70. ^ Jennings & Kruse 2009a, p. 86
  71. ^ a b Duffy 2004, Godred Crovan (d. 1095)
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General references edit

  • Baird, Bob (1995). Shipwrecks of the West of Scotland. Glasgow: Nekton Books. ISBN 978-1-897995-02-0.
  • Caldwell, David H. (2011). Islay, Jura and Colonsay: A Historical Guide. Edinburgh: Birlinn. ISBN 978-1-84158-961-9.
  • Duffy, Seán (1992). "Irishmen and Islesmen in the Kingdom of Dublin and Man 1052–1171". Ériu. 43 (43): 93–133. JSTOR 30007421.
  • —— (2004). "Godred Crovan (d. 1095)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Gammeltoft, Peder (2007). "Scandinavian Naming-Systems in the Hebrides—A Way of Understanding how the Scandinavians were in Contact with Gaels and Picts?". In Ballin-Smith, Beverley; Taylor, Simon; Williams, Gareth (eds.). West over Sea: Studies in Scandinavian Sea-Borne Expansion and Settlement Before 1300. Leiden: Brill.
  • Gillen, Con (2003). Geology and landscapes of Scotland. Harpenden: Terra Publishing. ISBN 978-1903544099.
  • Graham-Campbell, James; Batey, Colleen E. (1998). Vikings in Scotland: An Archaeological Survey. Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 978-0-7486-0641-2.
  • Grannd, Seumas (2000). The Gaelic of Islay: A Comparative Study. Scottish Gaelic Studies Monograph Series 2. Department of Celtic, University of Aberdeen. ISBN 978-0-9523911-4-2.
  • Gregory, Donald (1881). The history of the Western Highlands and Isles of Scotland, from A.D. 1493 to A.D. 1625, with a brief introductory sketch, from A.D. 80 to A.D. 1493 (2nd ed.). London; Glasgow: Hamilton, Adams & Co.; Thomas D. Morison.
  • Haswell-Smith, Hamish (2004). The Scottish Islands. Edinburgh: Canongate. ISBN 978-1-84195-454-7.
  • Hunter, James (2000). Last of the Free: A History of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland. Edinburgh: Mainstream. ISBN 978-1-84018-376-4.
  • Jennings, Andrew; Kruse, Arne (2009a). "One Coast-Three Peoples: Names and Ethnicity in the Scottish West during the Early Viking period". In Woolf, Alex (ed.). Scandinavian Scotland – Twenty Years After: The Proceedings of a Day Conference held on 19 February 2007. St John's House Papers No 12. St. Andrews: University of St. Andrews, Committee for Dark Age Studies. pp. 75–102. ISBN 978-0-9512573-7-1.
  • ——; —— (2009b). "From Dál Riata to the Gall-Ghàidheil". Viking and Medieval Scandinavia. 5: 123–149. doi:10.1484/J.VMS.1.100676. hdl:20.500.11820/762e78fe-2a9c-43cf-8173-8300892b31cb.
  • Jupp, Clifford (1994). The History of Islay: From earliest times to 1848. Port Charlotte: Museum of Islay Life. ASIN B0000COS6B.
  • Keay, John; Keay, Julie, eds. (1994). Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland (1st ed.). Hammersmith, London: HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0-00-255082-6.
  • King, Jacob; Cotter, Michelle (2012). Place-names in Islay and Jura. Perth: Scottish Natural Heritage.
  • Lee, Henry James (1920). History of the clan Donald, the families of MacDonald, McDonald and McDonnell. New York: Polk and Company.
  • Mac an Tàilleir, Iain (2003). "Ainmean-àite" [Placenames: Faddoch – Jura] (PDF). www.scottish.parliament.uk/gd/visitandlearn/40900.aspx (in Scottish Gaelic and English). Pàrlamaid na h-Alba / Parliament of Scotland. Retrieved 18 June 2015.
  • MacDonald, R. Andrew (2007). Manx kingship in its Irish Sea setting, 1187–1229: King Rognvaldr and the Crovan dynasty. Dublin: Four Courts Press. ISBN 978-1-84682-047-2.
  • Martin, Martin (1703). A Description of The Western Islands of Scotland (1st ed.). London: Andrew Bell.
  • Mithen, Steven (2006). After the ice: a global human history, 20,000–5000 BC. Cambridge: Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-01570-8.
  • Moffat, Alistair (2005). Before Scotland: The Story of Scotland Before History. London: Thames & Hudson.
  • Monro, Donald (1774) [1773]. "A Description of the Western Isles of Scotland, Called Hybrides". A Description of the Western Isles of Scotland, Called Hybrides (and other works). Edinburgh: William Auld. Date of composition without publishing is 1549. Date of first independent publication is 1582.
  • Murray, W. H. (1966). The Hebrides. London: Heinemann.
  • Newton, Norman (1995). Islay. Devon: David & Charles PLC. ISBN 978-0-907115-90-8.
  • Omand, Donald (ed.) (2006) The Argyll Book. Edinburgh. Birlinn. ISBN 978-1-84158-480-5
  • Rodger, N. A. M. (1997). The Safeguard of the Sea: A Naval History of Britain. Vol. One 660–1649. London: Harper Collins.
  • Storrie, Margaret (1997). Islay: Biography of an Island. Colonsay: House of Lochar. ISBN 978-0-907651-03-1.
  • Trewin, Nigel H. (2002). The Geology of Scotland (4th ed.). Bath: The Geology Society. ISBN 978-1862391260.
  • Watson, W. J. (1994) The Celtic Place-Names of Scotland. Edinburgh. Birlinn. ISBN 1-84158-323-5. First published 1926.
  • Woolf, Alex (2012) "Ancient Kindred? Dál Riata and the Cruthin". St Andrews University. Academia.edu. Retrieved 19 September 2012.

External links edit

  • Map sources for Islay
  • "Isle of Islay". Islay Info. 2014. Provides additional information on the demographics and culture of Islay and the Hebrides.
  • . Port Charlotte, Islay: The Natural History Centre. Archived from the original on 27 August 2019. Retrieved 22 July 2009. Provides additional detailed information on the terrain and the species inhabiting niches on Islay.
  • Van Ells, Mark D. (13 June 2013). . Stars & Stripes. Archived from the original on 3 July 2016. Retrieved 12 April 2014. Specialized information on the maritime hazards of the coastline.

islay, this, article, about, island, scotland, other, uses, disambiguation, scottish, gaelic, Ìle, scots, southernmost, island, inner, hebrides, scotland, known, queen, hebrides, lies, argyll, just, south, west, jura, around, kilometres, nautical, miles, north. This article is about the island in Scotland For other uses see Islay disambiguation Islay ˈ aɪ l e EYE le Scottish Gaelic Ile Scots Ila is the southernmost island of the Inner Hebrides of Scotland Known as The Queen of the Hebrides 8 it lies in Argyll just south west of Jura and around 40 kilometres 22 nautical miles north of the Northern Irish coast The island s capital is Bowmore where the distinctive round Kilarrow Parish Church and a distillery are located 9 Port Ellen is the main port 10 IslayScottish Gaelic nameIlePronunciation ˈiːle Scots nameIla 1 Old Norse nameIl 2 Meaning of nameUnknownPort EllenLocationIslayIslay shown within Argyll and ButeOS grid referenceNR370598Coordinates55 46 N 6 09 W 55 77 N 6 15 W 55 77 6 15Physical geographyIsland groupIslayArea61 956 ha 239 1 4 sq mi 3 Area rank5 5 Highest elevationBeinn Bheigeir 491 m 1 611 ft 4 AdministrationSovereign stateUnited KingdomCountryScotlandCouncil areaArgyll and ButeDemographicsPopulation3 228 6 Population rank7 6 5 Population density5 2 km2 13 sq mi 3 6 Largest settlementPort Ellen 7 Islay is the fifth largest Scottish island and the eighth largest island of the British Isles with a total area of almost 620 square kilometres 240 sq mi Note 1 There is ample evidence of the prehistoric settlement of Islay and the first written reference may have come in the first century AD The island had become part of the Gaelic Kingdom of Dal Riata during the Early Middle Ages before being absorbed into the Norse Kingdom of the Isles The later medieval period marked a cultural high point with the transfer of the Hebrides to the Kingdom of Scotland and the emergence of the Clan Donald Lordship of the Isles originally centred at Finlaggan 13 During the 17th century the power of Clan Donald waned but improvements to agriculture and transport led to a rising population which peaked in the mid 19th century 3 This was followed by substantial forced displacements and declining resident numbers Today Islay has over 3 000 inhabitants and the main commercial activities are agriculture malt whisky distillation and tourism The island has a long history of religious observance and Scottish Gaelic is spoken by about a quarter of the population 14 Its landscapes have been celebrated through various art forms and there is a growing interest in renewable energy in the form of wave power Islay is home to many bird species such as the wintering populations of Greenland white fronted and barnacle goose and is a popular destination throughout the year for birdwatchers The climate is mild and ameliorated by the Gulf Stream Contents 1 Name 2 Geography 2 1 Geology and geomorphology 2 2 Climate 3 Prehistory 4 History 4 1 Dal Riata 4 2 Norse influence and the Kingdom of the Isles 4 2 1 Somerled 4 3 Scottish rule 4 3 1 Lords of the Isles 4 3 2 16th and 17th centuries 4 4 British era 4 4 1 18th and 19th centuries 4 4 2 World wars 5 Economy 5 1 Agriculture and fishing 5 2 Distilling 5 3 Tourism 5 4 Renewable energy 5 5 Transport 5 6 Other activities 6 Infrastructure 6 1 Telecommunications 6 2 Electricity 7 Gaelic language 8 Religion 9 Media and the arts 10 Wildlife 11 Notable natives 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Notes 13 2 Footnotes 13 3 General references 14 External linksName edit nbsp Port Charlotte founded in 1828 15 Islay was probably recorded by Ptolemy as Epidion 16 the use of the p suggesting a Brittonic or Pictish tribal name 17 In the 7th century Adomnan referred to the island as Ilea 18 and the name occurs in early Irish records as Ile and as Il in Old Norse The root is not Gaelic and is of unknown origin 2 Note 2 In 17th century maps the spelling appears as Yla or Ila a form still used in the name of the whisky Caol Ila 20 21 In poetic language Islay is known as Banrigh Innse Gall 8 or Banrigh nan Eilean 22 usually translated as Queen of the Hebrides Note 3 and Eilean uaine Ile the green isle of Islay 19 A native of Islay is called an Ileach pronounced ˈiːlex 19 The obliteration of pre Norse names is almost total and placenames on the island are a mixture of Norse and later Gaelic and English influences 23 24 Port Askaig is from the Norse ask vik meaning ash tree bay and the common suffix bus is from the Norse bolstadr meaning farm 25 Gaelic names or their anglicised versions such as Ardnave Point from Aird an Naoimh height of the saint are very common 26 Several of the villages were developed in the 18th or 19th centuries and English is a stronger influence in their names as a result Port Charlotte for example was named after Lady Charlotte Campbell daughter of 5th Duke of Argyll and wife of the island s then owner Colonel John Campbell 1770 1809 of Shawfield and Islay 27 Geography edit nbsp Topographic map Islay is 40 kilometres 25 mi long from north to south and 24 kilometres 15 mi broad The east coast is rugged and mountainous rising steeply from the Sound of Islay the highest peak being Beinn Bheigier which is a Marilyn at 1 612 feet 491 m The western peninsulas are separated from the main bulk of the island by the waters of Loch Indaal to the south and Loch Gruinart to the north 28 The fertile and windswept southwestern arm is called The Rinns and Ardnave Point is a conspicuous promontory on the northwest coast The south coast is sheltered from the prevailing winds and as a result relatively wooded 29 30 31 The fractal coast has numerous bays and sea lochs including Loch an t Sailein Aros Bay and Claggain Bay 29 In the far southwest is a rocky and now largely uninhabited peninsula called The Oa the closest point in the Hebrides to Ireland 32 The island s population is concentrated mainly in and around the villages of Bowmore and Port Ellen Other smaller villages include Bridgend Ballygrant Port Charlotte Portnahaven and Port Askaig The rest of the island is sparsely populated and mainly agricultural 33 There are several small freshwater lochs in the interior including Loch Finlaggan Loch Ballygrant Loch Lossit and Loch Gorm and numerous burns throughout the island many of which bear the name river despite their small size The most significant of these are the River Laggan which discharges into the sea at the north end of Laggan Bay and the River Sorn which draining Loch Finlaggan enters the head of Loch Indaal at Bridgend 29 There are numerous small uninhabited islands around the coasts the largest of which are Eilean Mhic Coinnich and Orsay off the Rinns Nave Island on the northwest coast Am Fraoch Eilean in the Sound of Islay and Texa off the south coast 29 Geology and geomorphology edit nbsp Geological map of Islay The underlying geology of Islay is intricate for such a small area 3 The deformed Palaeoproterozoic igneous rock of the Rhinns complex is dominated by a coarse grained gneiss cut by large intrusions of deformed gabbro Once thought to be part of the Lewisian complex it lies beneath the Colonsay Group of metasedimentary rocks 34 35 that forms the bedrock at the northern end of the Rinns It is a quartz rich metamorphic marine sandstone that may be unique to Scotland and which is nearly 5 000 m 16 400 ft thick 36 South of Rubh a Mhail there are outcrops of quartzite and a strip of mica schist and limestone cuts across the centre of the island from The Oa to Port Askaig Further south is a band of metamorphic quartzite and granites a continuation of the beds that underlie Jura The geomorphology of these last two zones is dominated by a fold known as the Islay Anticline To the south is a shattered coastline formed from mica schist and hornblende 3 37 38 The older Bowmore Group sandstones in the west centre of the island are rich in feldspar and may be of Dalradian origin 39 Note 4 nbsp Rocks of the Rhinns complex at Claddach Bay on the southernmost tip of the Rinns Loch Indaal was formed along a branch of the Great Glen Fault called the Loch Gruinart Fault its main line passes just to the north of Colonsay This separates the limestone igneous intrusions and Bowmore sandstones from the Colonsay Group rocks of the Rhinns 40 The result is occasional minor earth tremors 41 There is a tillite bed near Port Askaig that provides evidence of an ice age in the Precambrian 38 42 In comparatively recent times the island was ice covered during the Pleistocene glaciations save for Beinn Tart a Mhill on the Rinns which was a nunatak on the edge of the ice sheet 43 The complex changes of sea level due to melting ice caps and isostasy since then have left a series of raised beaches around the coast 33 Throughout much of late prehistory the low lying land between the Rinns and the rest of the island was flooded creating two islands 44 Climate edit The influence of the Gulf Stream keeps the climate mild compared to mainland Scotland Snow is rarely seen at sea level and frosts are light and short lived 45 However wind speeds average 19 to 28 kilometres per hour 10 to 15 knots annually 46 and winter gales sweep in off the Atlantic gusting up to 185 km h 115 mph 47 This can make travelling and living on the island during the winter difficult 48 while ferry and air links to the mainland can suffer delays The driest months are April to July and the warmest are May to September which as a result are the busiest times for tourism 49 50 Sunshine hours are typically highest around the coasts especially to the west 45 Climate data for Islay Port Ellen climate station 17m elevation 1981 2010 averages Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year Mean daily maximum C F 7 8 46 0 7 6 45 7 9 1 48 4 11 0 51 8 13 9 57 0 15 8 60 4 17 1 62 8 17 1 62 8 15 6 60 1 12 9 55 2 10 0 50 0 8 2 46 8 12 2 54 0 Mean daily minimum C F 2 6 36 7 2 2 36 0 3 1 37 6 4 2 39 6 6 4 43 5 8 9 48 0 10 9 51 6 11 0 51 8 9 6 49 3 7 5 45 5 4 9 40 8 3 0 37 4 6 2 43 2 Average rainfall mm inches 138 2 5 44 98 2 3 87 118 8 4 68 77 9 3 07 62 4 2 46 73 3 2 89 78 8 3 10 106 7 4 20 114 6 4 51 148 7 5 85 132 3 5 21 132 9 5 23 1 282 7 50 50 Average rainy days 1 0 mm 19 9 14 8 17 8 13 3 11 6 11 4 13 8 15 4 15 5 19 7 19 3 18 6 191 1 Source metoffice gov uk 51 Prehistory edit nbsp Dun Nosebridge from the south The earliest settlers on Islay were nomadic hunter gatherers who may have first arrived during the Mesolithic period after the retreat of the Pleistocene ice caps A flint arrowhead which was found in a field near Bridgend in 1993 and dates from 10 800 BC is amongst the earliest evidence of a human presence found so far in Scotland 52 Note 5 Stone implements of the Ahrensburgian culture found at Rubha Port an t Seilich near Port Askaig by foraging pigs in 2015 probably came from a summer camp used by hunters travelling round the coast in boats 55 56 Mesolithic finds have been dated to 7000 BC using radiocarbon dating of shells and debris from kitchen middens 57 58 By the Neolithic settlements had become more permanent 59 allowing for the construction of several communal monuments 60 The most spectacular prehistoric structure on the island is Dun Nosebridge This 375 square metre 4 040 sq ft Iron Age fort occupies a prominent crag and has commanding views of the surrounding landscape The name s origin is probably a mixture of Gaelic and Old Norse Dun in the former language means fort and knaus borg in the latter means fort on the crag 61 There is no evidence that Islay was ever subject to Roman military control although small numbers of finds such as a coin and a brooch from the third century AD suggest links of some kind with the intermittent Roman presence on the mainland 62 The ruins of a broch at Dun Bhoraraic south east of Ballygrant and the remains of numerous Atlantic roundhouses indicate the influences of northern Scotland where these forms of building originate 63 64 There are also various crannogs on Islay including sites in Loch Ardnave Loch Ballygrant and Loch Allallaidh in the south east where a stone causeway leading out to two adjacent islands is visible beneath the surface of the water 29 63 History edit nbsp Port nan Gallan The Oa with the shadowy outline of Kintyre mainland Scotland in the far distance Dal Riata edit By the sixth century AD Islay along with much of the nearby mainland and adjacent islands lay within the Gaelic kingdom of Dal Riata with strong links to Ireland The widely accepted opinion is that Dal Riata was established by Gaelic migrants from Ulster displacing a native Brythonic culture such as the Picts but some scholars claim that the Gaels in this part of Scotland were indigenous to the area 65 Dal Riata was divided into a small number of regions each controlled by a particular kin group according to the Senchus fer n Alban The History of the Men of Scotland it was the Cenel noengusa for Islay and Jura In 627 the son of a king of the Irish Ui Choelbad a branch of the Dal nAraidi kingdom of Ulster not to be confused with Dal Riata was killed on Islay at the unidentified location of Ard Corann by a warrior in an army led by King Connad Cerr of the Corcu Reti the collective term for the Cenel nGabrain and Cenel Comgaill before they split based at Dunadd 66 The Senchus also lists what is believed to be the oldest reference to a naval battle in the British Isles a brief record of an engagement between rival Dal Riatan groups in 719 67 There is evidence of another kin group on Islay the Cenel Conchride supposedly descended from a brother of the legendary founder of Dal Riata king Fergus Mor but the existence of the Cenel Conchride seems to have been brief and the 430 households of the island are later said to have been comprised from the families of just three great grandsons of the eponymous founder of Cenel noengus Lugaid Connal and Galan 66 Norse influence and the Kingdom of the Isles edit nbsp Standing stone at Carragh Bhan said to mark the grave of Godred Crovan King of the Isles 68 The ninth century arrival of Scandinavian settlers on the western seaboard of the mainland had a long lasting effect beginning with the destruction of Dal Riata As is the case in the Northern Isles the derivation of place names suggests a complete break from the past Jennings and Kruse conclude that although there were settlements prior to the Norse arrival there is no evidence from the onomasticon that the inhabitants of these settlements ever existed 69 Gaelic continued to exist as a spoken language in the southern Hebrides throughout the Norse period but the place name evidence suggests it had a lowly status possibly indicating an enslaved population 70 Consolidating their gains the Norse settlers established the Kingdom of the Isles which became part of the crown of Norway following Norwegian unification To Norway the islands became known as Sudreyjar Old Norse traditionally anglicised as Sodor or Sudreys meaning southern isles For the next four centuries and more this Kingdom was under the control of rulers of mostly Norse origin Godred Crovan was one of the most significant of the rulers of this sea kingdom Though his origins are obscure it is known that Godred was a Norse Gael with a connection to Islay The Chronicles of Mann call Godred the son of Harald the Black of Ysland his place or origin variously interpreted as Islay Ireland or Iceland and state he so tamed the Scots that no one who built a ship or boat dared use more than three iron bolts 71 72 Godred also became King of Dublin at an unknown date although in 1094 he was driven out of the city by Muircheartach Ua Briain later known as High King of Ireland according to the Annals of the Four Masters He died on Islay of pestilence during the following year 71 73 74 A local tradition suggests that a standing stone at Carragh Bhan near Kintra marks Godred Crovan s grave 68 75 A genuine 11th century Norse grave slab was found at Doid Mhairi in 1838 although it was not associated with a burial The slab is decorated with foliage in the style of Ringerike Viking art and an Irish style cross the former being unique in Scandinavian Scotland 68 Following Godred s death the local population resisted Norway s choice of replacement causing Magnus the Norwegian king to launch a military campaign to assert his authority In 1098 under pressure from Magnus the king of Scotland quitclaimed to Magnus all sovereign authority over the isles Somerled edit nbsp The remains of Claig Castle a vital stronghold of Somerled In the mid 12th century a granddaughter of Godred Crovan s married the ambitious Somerled a Norse Gaelic Argyle nobleman Godred Olafsson grandson of Godred Crovan was an increasingly unpopular King of the Isles at the time spurring Somerled into action The two fought the Battle of Epiphany in the seas off Islay in January 1156 Note 6 The result was a bloody stalemate and the island kingdom was temporarily divided with Somerled taking control of the southern Hebrides Two years later Somerled completely ousted Godred Olafsson and re united the kingdom Somerled built the sea fortress of Claig Castle on an island between Islay and Jura to establish control of the Sound of Islay On account of the Corryvreckan whirlpool to the north of Jura the Sound was the main safe sea route between the mainland and the rest of the Hebrides Claig Castle essentially gave Somerled control of sea traffic Following Somerled s 1164 death the realm was divided between Godred s heirs and Somerled s sons 76 77 78 whose descendants continued to describe themselves as King of the Sudreys until the 13th century Somerled s grandson Donald received Islay along with Claig Castle and the adjacent part of Jura as far north as Loch Tarbert Nominal Norwegian authority had been re established after Somerled s death but by the mid 13th century increased tension between Norway and Scotland led to a series of battles culminating in the Battle of Largs shortly after which the Norwegian king died In 1266 his more peaceable successor ceded his nominal authority over Sudreyjar to the Scottish king Alexander III by the Treaty of Perth in return for a very large sum of money 79 80 Alexander generally acknowledged the semi independent authority of Somerled s heirs the former Sudreyjar had become a Scottish crown dependency rather than part of Scotland Scottish rule edit Lords of the Isles edit nbsp The descent of Amie Macruari and John of Islay from Somerled By this point Somerled s descendants had formed into three families the heirs of Donald the MacDonalds led by Aonghas og MacDonald those of Donald s brother the Macruari led by Ruaidhri mac Ailein and those of Donald s uncle the MacDougalls led by Alexander MacDougall At the end of the 13th century when king John Balliol was challenged for the throne by Robert the Bruce the MacDougalls backed Balliol while the Macruari and MacDonalds backed Robert When Robert won he declared the MacDougall lands forfeit and distributed them between the MacDonalds and Macruari the latter already owning much of Lorne Uist parts of Lochaber and Garmoran 81 The Macruari territories were eventually inherited by Amy of Garmoran 82 83 84 who married her MacDonald cousin John of Islay in the 1330s 85 having succeeded Aonghus og as head of the MacDonalds he now controlled significant stretches of the western seaboard of Scotland from Morvern to Loch Hourn and the whole of the Hebrides save for Skye which Robert had given to Hugh of Ross instead 84 From 1336 onwards John began to style himself Dominus Insularum Lord of the Isles a title that implied a connection to the earlier Kings of the Isles and by extension a degree of independence from the Scottish crown 84 85 86 this honorific was claimed by his heirs for several generations 87 The MacDonalds had thus achieved command of a strong semi independent maritime realm and considered themselves equals of the kings of Scotland Norway and England 88 nbsp The ruins of Finlaggan castle traditional capital of the Lordship of the Isles Initially their power base was on the shores of Loch Finlaggan in northeastern Islay near the present day village of Caol Ila Successive chiefs of Clan Donald were proclaimed Lord of the Isles there upon an ancient seven foot square coronation stone bearing footprint impressions in which the new ruler stood barefoot and was anointed by the Bishop of Argyll and seven priests 89 The Lord s advisory Council of the Isles met on Eilean na Comhairle Note 7 Council Island in Loch Finlaggan on Islay within a timber framed crannog that had originally been constructed in the first century BC The Islay Charter a record of lands granted to an Islay resident in 1408 Brian Vicar MacKay by Domhnall of Islay Lord of the Isles is one of the earliest records of Gaelic in public use and is a significant historical document 92 In 1437 the Lordship was substantially expanded when Alexander the Lord of the Isles inherited the rule of Ross maternally this included Skye The expansion of MacDonald control caused the heart of the Lordship to move to the twin castles of Aros and Ardtornish in the Sound of Mull 93 nbsp The ruins of Dunnyvaig Castle a MacDonald stronghold in the 16th century In 1462 the last and most ambitious of the Lords John MacDonald II struck an alliance with Edward IV of England under terms of the Treaty of Ardtornish Westminster with the goal of conquering Scotland The onset of the Wars of the Roses prevented the treaty from being discovered by Scottish agents and Edward from fulfilling his obligations as an ally A decade later in 1475 it had come to the attention of the Scottish court but calls for forfeiture of the Lordship were calmed when John quitclaimed his mainland territories and Skye However ambition wasn t given up so easily and John s nephew launched a severe raid on Ross but it ultimately failed Within 2 years of the raid in 1493 MacDonald was compelled to forfeit his estates and titles to James IV of Scotland by this forfeiture the lands became part of Scotland rather than a crown dependency James ordered Finlaggan demolished its buildings razed and the coronation stone destroyed to discourage any attempts at restoration of the Lordship 94 95 Note 8 When Martin Martin visited Islay in the late 17th century he recorded a description of the coronations Finlaggan had once seen Note 9 John was exiled from his former lands and his former subjects now considered themselves to have no superior except the king A charter was soon sent from the Scottish King confirming this state of affairs it declares that Skye and the Outer Hebrides are to be considered independent from the rest of the former Lordship leaving only Islay and Jura remaining in the comital unit 16th and 17th centuries edit nbsp Islay House James V sent gunners to garrison forts in Islay in 1540 98 Initially dispossessed in the wake of royal opposition to the Lordship Clan MacDonald of Dunnyveg s holdings in Islay were restored in 1545 99 The MacLean family had been granted land in Jura in 1390 by the MacDonalds and in 1493 had thus been seen as the natural replacement for them leading to a branch of the MacLeans being granted Dunyvaig Castle by king James and expanding into Islay Naturally the restoration of the MacDonalds created some hostility with the MacLeans in 1549 after observing that Islay was fertile fruitful and full of natural pastures with good hunting and plentiful salmon and seals Dean Monro describes Dunyvaig and Loch Gorm Castle now usurped be M Gillayne of Doward 100 Note 10 The dispute continued for decades and in 1578 the Macleans were expelled from Loch Gorm by force and in 1598 their branch was finally defeated at the Battle of Traigh Ghruinneart However when Sorley Boy MacDonnell of the Islay MacDonalds had a clash with the Irish branch of the Macleans and the unpopularity of the MacDonalds in Edinburgh where their use of Gaelic was regarded as barbaric weakened their grip on their southern Hebridean possessions In 1608 Coupled with MacDonald hostility to the Scottish reformation this led the Scottish English crown to mount an expedition to subdue them In 1614 the crown handed Islay to Sir John Campbell of Cawdor in return for an undertaking to pacify it 101 102 this the Campbells eventually achieved Under Campbell influence shrieval authority was established under the sheriff of Argyll With inherited Campbell control of the sheriffdom comital authority was relatively superfluous and the provincial identity medieval Latin provincia of Islay Jura faded away The situation was soon complicated by the Civil War when Archibald the head of the most powerful branch of the Campbells was the de facto head of Covenanter government while other branches and even Archibald s son were committed Royalists A Covenanter army under Sir David Leslie arrived on Islay in 1647 and besieged the royalist garrison at Dunnyvaig laying waste to the island 103 It was not until 1677 that the Campbells felt sufficiently at ease to construct Islay House at Bridgend to be their principal and unfortified island residence 104 Note 11 Martin Martin recorded that Sir Hugh Campbell of Caddell was the king s steward of Islay in the late seventeenth century 107 British era edit 18th and 19th centuries edit nbsp A cottage on Islay from Thomas Pennant s A Tour in Scotland and Voyage to the Hebrides published in 1774 At the beginning of the 18th century much of the population of Argyll was to be found dispersed in small clachans of farming families 108 and only two villages of any size Killarow near Bridgend and Lagavulin existed on Islay at the time 109 Killarow had a church and tolbooth and houses for merchants and craft workers but was razed in the 1760s to improve the grounds of Islay House 109 The agricultural economy was dependent on arable farming including staples such as barley and oats supplemented with stock rearing The carrying capacity of the island was recorded at over 6 600 cows and 2 200 horses in a 1722 rental listing 110 In 1726 Islay was purchased by John Campbell of Mamore using compensation from Glasgow Town Council 9000 for damages during the Malt tax riots 111 When he died in 1729 the island passed to his son Daniel Campbell of Shawfield 112 113 Following the Jacobite insurrections of 1745 6 the Heritable Jurisdictions Act 1746 abolished comital authority and the Campbell s control of the sheriffdom thereafter they could now only assert their influence in their role as Landlords A defining aspect of 19th century Argyll was the gradual improvement of transport infrastructure 114 Roads were built the Crinan canal shortened the sea distance to Glasgow and the numerous traditional ferry crossings were augmented by new quays Rubble piers were built at several locations on Islay and a new harbour was constructed at Port Askaig 115 Initially a sense of optimism in the fishing and cattle trades prevailed and the population expanded partly as a result of the 18th century kelp boom and the introduction of the potato as a staple 116 The population of the island had been estimated at 5 344 in 1755 and grew to over 15 000 by 1841 Islay remained with the Campbells of Shawfield until 1853 when it was sold to James Morrison of Berkshire ancestor of the third Baron Margadale who still owns a substantial portion of the island 113 The sundering of the relationship between the landowners and the island s residents proved consequential When the estate owners realised they could make more money from sheep farming than from the indigenous small farmers wholesale Clearances became commonplace Four hundred people emigrated from Islay in 1863 alone some for purely economic reasons but many others having been forced off the land their predecessors had farmed for centuries In 1891 the census recorded only 7 375 citizens with many evictees making new homes in Canada the United States and elsewhere The population continued to decline for much of the 20th century and today is about 3 500 3 117 118 In 1899 counties were formally created on shrieval boundaries by a Scottish Local Government Act Islay therefore became part of the County of Argyll World wars edit nbsp The American Monument on the Mull of Oa commemorates the sinking of two troop ships during World War I During World War I two troop ships foundered off Islay within a few months of each other in 1918 119 The SS Tuscania a converted British liner carrying American Doughboys to France was torpedoed by SM UB 77 on 5 February with the loss of over 160 lives and now lies in deep water 6 4 km 4 mi west of the Mull of Oa 120 On 6 October HMS Otranto was involved in a collision with HMS Kashmir in heavy seas while similarly transporting American Doughboys from New York Harbor Otranto lost steering and drifted towards the west coast of the Rinns Answering her SOS the destroyer HMS Mounsey attempted to come alongside and managed to rescue over 350 men Nonetheless the Otranto was wrecked on the shore near Machir Bay with a total loss of 431 lives 121 A monument was erected on the coast of The Oa by the American Red Cross to commemorate the sinking of these two ships 122 A military cemetery was created at Kilchoman where the dead from both nations in the latter disaster were buried all but one of the American bodies were later exhumed and returned home 119 123 During World War II the RAF built an airfield at Glenegedale which later became the civil airport for Islay There was also an RAF Coastal Command flying boat base at Bowmore from 13 March 1941 using Loch Indaal 124 In 1944 an RCAF 422 Squadron Sunderland flying boat s crew were rescued after their aircraft landed off Bowmore but broke from her moorings in a gale and sank 125 There was an RAF Chain Home radar station at Saligo Bay and RAF Chain Home Low station at Kilchiaran 126 127 Economy editThe mainstays of the modern Islay economy are agriculture fishing distilling and tourism 128 Agriculture and fishing edit nbsp Looking over to the Paps of Jura from Port Askaig Much of Islay remains owned by a few non resident estate owners sheep farming and the few dairy cattle herds are run by tenant farmers 128 The island s web site indicates that some cultivation is also being done while some areas of high moorlands include estates for shooting deer Some bogs are cut for fuel used by a few distilleries and some homeowners The southeast and eastern areas of Islay also have some plantations growing coniferous trees 129 Islay has some fine wild brown trout and salmon fishing 130 and in September 2003 the European Fishing Competition was held on five of the island s numerous lochs this was the biggest fishing event ever to be held in Scotland 131 Sea angling is also popular especially off the west coast and over the many shipwrecks around the coast 131 There are about 20 commercial boats with crab lobster and scallop fishing undertaken from Port Askaig Port Ellen and Portnahaven 132 133 Distilling edit Main article Islay whisky nbsp Islay s distilleries Islay is one of five whisky distilling localities and regions in Scotland whose identities are protected by law 134 There are nine active distilleries and one inactive with plans to begin construction on an eleventh 135 This industry is the island s second largest employer after agriculture 136 137 Those on the south of the island produce malts with a very strong peaty flavour considered to be the most intensely flavoured of all whiskies From east to west they are Ardbeg Lagavulin and Laphroaig On the north of the island Bowmore Bruichladdich Caol Ila Bunnahabhain and Ardnahoe are produced which are substantially lighter in taste 138 139 Kilchoman opened in 2005 toward the west coast of the Rinns 140 nbsp Lagavulin distillery 2015 The oldest record of a legal distillery on the island refers to Bowmore in 1779 and at one time there were up to 23 distilleries in operation 141 For example Port Charlotte distillery operated from 1829 to 1929 142 and Port Ellen is also closed although it remains in business as a malting 141 In March 2007 Bruichladdich announced that they would reopen Port Charlotte distillery using equipment from the Inverleven distillery 142 nbsp Laphroaig Distillery 2008 In general the whiskies from this island are known for pungent peaty smoky and oily flavours with just a hint of salty sea air and seaweed because of the use of peat and the maritime climate according to one report 143 The island s own web site is more specific Distilleries in the south make whisky which is medium bodied saturated with peat smoke brine and iodine because they use malt that is heavy with peat as well as peaty water Whisky from the northern area is milder because it is made using spring water for a lighter flavoured mossy rather than peaty with some seaweed some nuts characteristic 144 Tourism edit Some 45 000 summer visitors arrive each year by ferry and a further 11 000 by air 145 The main attractions are the scenery history bird watching and the world famous whiskies 146 The distilleries operate various shops tours and visitor centres 147 and the Finlaggan Trust has a visitor centre which is open daily during the summer 148 Golf is available on the 116 year old Machrie golf course now owned by Gavyn Davies and his wife Susan Nye Baroness Nye the course was redesigned and reopened in 2017 The adjoining Macrhie Hotel with 47 bedrooms was recently rebuilt 149 Walkers and cyclists appreciate the 210 kilometres of coastline Bird watchers should also be satisfied 150 The web site Trip Advisor rates the following as the top ten Sights amp Landmarks on the island Kildalton Cross in Port Ellen Finlaggan in Ballygrant Kildalton High Cross and Old Parish Church in Port Ellen the American Monument Kilchoman Military Cemetery The Round Church in Bowmore Kilnave Cross Dunyvaig Castle in Lagavulin Portnahaven Harbour and Kilchoman Church 151 According to a July 2018 report some summer days see nearly 6 000 tourists on the island and over 15 000 during the Feis Ile whisky festival in May Those are very high numbers for an island with approximately 3 200 residents That has led to some concern that the unique flavour of Islay is being negatively affected 152 Still there are no large hotels on the island yet with tourist accommodation provided by guest houses B amp Bs small hotels such as the Port Charlotte Hotel and the Harbour Inn at Bowmore 150 self catering cottages and a youth hostel Two campsites are available one of them can accommodate motorhomes 153 154 Renewable energy edit nbsp The location of Islay exposed to the full force of the North Atlantic has led to it being the site of a pioneering and Scotland s first wave power station near Portnahaven The Islay LIMPET Land Installed Marine Powered Energy Transformer wave power generator was designed and built by Wavegen and researchers from the Queen s University of Belfast and was financially backed by the European Union Known as Limpet 500 due to cabling constraints its capacity was limited to providing up to 150 kW of electricity into the island s grid 155 In 2000 it became the world s first commercial wave power station It has since been decommissioned In March 2011 the largest tidal array in the world was approved by the Scottish Government with 10 planned turbines predicted to generate enough power for over 5 000 homes The project will be located in the Sound of Islay which offers both strong currents and shelter from storms 156 Transport edit nbsp Caledonian MacBrayne s MV Finlaggan Many of the roads on the island are single track with passing places The two main roads are the A846 from Ardbeg to Port Askaig via Port Ellen and Bowmore and the A847 which runs down the east coast of the Rhinns 29 The island has its own bus service provided by Islay Coaches and Glenegedale Airport offers flights to and from Glasgow International Airport and on a less regular basis to Oban and Colonsay 157 Caledonian MacBrayne operate regular ferry services to Port Ellen and Port Askaig from Kennacraig taking about two hours Ferries to Port Askaig also run on to Scalasaig on Colonsay and on summer Wednesdays to Oban The purpose built vessel MV Finlaggan entered service in 2011 158 ASP Ship Management Ltd operate a small car ferry on behalf of Argyll amp Bute Council from Port Askaig to Feolin on Jura 159 Kintyre Express will begin operating passenger only services between Port Ellen and Ballycastle in Northern Ireland from Fridays to Mondays through June July and August nbsp The lighthouse at Carraig Fhada Port Ellen There are various lighthouses on and around Islay as an aid to navigation These include the Rinns of Islay light built on Orsay in 1825 by Robert Stevenson 160 Ruvaal at the north eastern tip of Islay constructed in 1859 161 Carraig Fhada at Port Ellen which has an unusual design 162 and Dubh Artach an isolated rock tower some 35 km 22 mi northwest of Ruvaal Other activities edit Since 1973 the Ileach has been delivering news to the people of Islay every fortnight and was named community newspaper of the year in 2007 163 164 The Islay Ales Brewery brews various real ales at its premises near Bridgend 165 In the early 21st century a campus of Sabhal Mor Ostaig was set up on Islay Ionad Chaluim Chille Ile which teaches Gaelic language culture and heritage 166 The Port Mor community centre at Port Charlotte which is equipped with a micro wind turbine and a ground source heating system is the creation of local development trust Iomairt Chille Chomain 167 168 Infrastructure editTelecommunications edit A 16 miles 26 km submarine telegraph cable was laid in July 1871 between Ardenistle near Port Ellen on Islay and Kintyre using the SS Robert Lowe 169 The schooner Catherine and Mary of Leith arrived at the end of July with poles wires and other equipment to extend the telegraph throughout the island 170 but there was a delay in starting work It was reported in September 1871 that Lieutenant Turner provisional engineer with six Royal Engineers had just commenced operations to lay a line from Port Ellen to Port Askaig which was scheduled to be completed within 3 months 171 The telegraph office opened in Port Ellen for business on 12 December 1871 172 A branch line from Bridgend to Bowmore was completed in January 1872 173 and telegraph offices in Bowmore and Port Askaig opened on 1 April 1872 In 1935 a submarine cable 17 miles 27 km long was laid from Glencardock Point on Kintyre to Port Ellen The first telephone exchange was built in Port Ellen and 200 miles of telephone wires erected across the island The first call was made on 19 September 1935 when Mr A Kerr Murray of the Scottish Western District of the Post Office Telephone Department inaugurated the trunk service in Port Ellen with a call to Provost A MacEachran of Campbeltown To meet the cost of providing the service a fee of 6d was charged in addition to the ordinary trunk charge 174 Expansion of the service took place in 1936 with the first automatic exchange opening in Bowmore on 23 September and at Kidalton on 24 September 175 and in 1937 in Port Charlotte and Port Askaig 176 Electricity edit The earliest records of the use of electricity on Islay are from 1894 when the Bunnahabhain Distillery was provided with electric light 177 The other distilleries followed suit fairly shortly after this but except for a few people who could afford to install generating plant themselves electricity was not provided generally for domestic consumption until after the Second World War In 1937 it was reported in the Oban Times and Argyllshire Advertiser of 22 May 1937 that on Coronation Day in Bowmore through the ingenuity of Mr Allan Cameron chemist part of the village was floodlit for two nights by electricity from his private plant This was a source of great admiration and attraction in a village which depends almost entirely on paraffin for light 178 In January 1945 the North of Scotland Hydro Electric Board began a survey of Islay to provide electricity This showed that the generating plant at RAF Bowmore would prove suitable for temporary use in providing supplies in the early stages of a distribution scheme for the island The Air Ministry agreed and the Board purchased the whole of the Bowmore plant 179 In September 1948 the North of Scotland Hydro Electric Board switched on the first supply of electricity in Bowmore Forty houses were connected to the local network which was supplied from a diesel engine 180 Another 50 premises including the church were connected shortly afterwards and the distribution line from Bowmore to Port Ellen was also under construction In 1961 Islay was connected to the mainland with a cable which was submarine for 6 miles from the mainland to Jura and then again for 1 5 miles 2 4 km from Jura to Islay The project also involved 42 miles 68 km of overhead lines 181 Gaelic language editIslay has historically been a very strong Gaelic speaking area In both the 1901 and 1921 censuses all parishes in Islay were reported to be over 75 per cent Gaelic speaking By 1971 the Rhinns had dropped to 50 74 per cent Gaelic speakers and the rest of Islay to 25 49 per cent Gaelic speaker overall 14 By 1991 about a third of the island s population were Gaelic speakers 182 In the 2001 census this had dropped to 24 per cent which while a low figure overall nonetheless made it the most strongly Gaelic speaking island in Argyll and Bute after Tiree with the highest percentage recorded in Portnahaven 32 per cent and the lowest in Gortontaoid 17 per cent with the far north and south of the island being the weakest areas in general 14 The Islay dialect is distinctive It patterns strongly with other Argyll dialects especially those of Jura Colonsay and Kintyre 183 Amongst its distinctive phonological features are the shift from long aː to ɛː a high degree of retention of long eː the shift of dark l ˠ to t the lack of intrusive t in sr groups for example s ɾoːn nose rather than s t ɾoːn 184 and the retention of the unlenited past tense particle d for example d eirich rose instead of dh eirich 185 It sits within a group of lexical isoglosses i e words distinctive to a certain area with strong similarities to the southern Scottish Gaelic and Ulster Irish dialects Examples are dhuit to you instead of the more common dhut 186 the formula gun robh math agad thank you instead of the more common moran taing or tapadh leat but compare Irish go raibh maith agat 187 mand able to instead of the more common urrainn 188 or deifir hurry instead of the more common cabhag Irish deifir 189 Religion edit nbsp Kildalton Cross Associated with various Islay churches are cupstones of uncertain age these can be seen at Kilchoman Church where the carved cross there is erected on one and at Kilchiaran Church on the Rhinns In historic times some may have been associated with pre Christian wishing ceremonies or pagan beliefs in the wee folk 190 The early pioneers of Christianity in Dal Riata were Columba of Iona and Moluag of Lismore 191 The legacy of this period includes the eighth century Kildalton Cross Islay s most famous treasure 192 carved out of local epidiorite 193 A carved cross of similar age but much more heavily weathered can be found at Kilnave 194 which may have served as a site of lay worship 195 Although the first Norse settlers were pagan Islay has a substantial number of sites of drystone or clay mortared chapels with small burial grounds from the later Norse era 196 In the 12th century the island became part of the Diocese of Sodor and the Isles which was re established by King Olaf Godredsson 197 The diocese fell within the jurisdiction of the Archdiocese of Nidaros and there were four principal churches on Islay in the Norwegian prestegjeld model Kilnaughton Kildalton Kilarrow and Kilmany 198 In 1472 Islay became part of the Archdiocese of St Andrews 198 nbsp Kilarrow Parish Church Bowmore Archibald Campbell 5th Earl of Argyll was a strong supporter of the Reformation but there is little evidence that his beliefs were greeted with much enthusiasm by the islanders initially At first there were only two Protestant churches but in 1642 three parishes were created based at Kilchoman Kilarrow and a new church at Dunyvaig By the end of the century there were seven churches including one on Nave Island 199 Kilarrow Parish Church built in 1767 by Daniel Campbell when laird of Islay is round and such as local folklore has it has no corner in which the devil could hide 200 The kirk on the Rhinns of Islay is St Kiaran s located just outside the village of Port Charlotte and Port Ellen is served by St John s There are a variety of other Church of Scotland churches and various other congregations on the island Baptists meet in Port Ellen and in Bowmore the Scottish Episcopal Church of St Columba is located in Bridgend and the Islay Roman Catholic congregation also uses St Columba s for its services 201 Media and the arts editIslay was featured in some of the scenes of the 1954 film The Maggie 202 and the 1942 documentary Coastal Command was partly filmed in Bowmore 203 In 1967 68 folk rock songwriter and singer Donovan included Isle of Islay in his album A Gift from a Flower to a Garden a song praising the pastoral beauties of the island Note 12 Westering Home is a 20th century Scottish song about Islay written by Hugh S Roberton derived from an earlier Gaelic song 205 206 In the 1990s the BBC adaptation of Para Handy was partly filmed in Port Charlotte and Bruichladdich and featured a race between the Vital Spark Para Handy s puffer and a rival along the length of Loch Indaal In 2007 parts of the BBC Springwatch programme were recorded on Islay with Simon King being based on Islay The British Channel 4 archaeological television programme Time Team excavated at Finlaggan the episode being first broadcast in 1995 207 208 209 In 2000 Japanese author Haruki Murakami visited the island to sample seven single malt whiskies on the island and later wrote a travel book called If our language were whisky Wildlife edit nbsp Bridgend woods in January Islay is home to many species of wildlife and is especially known for its birds Winter visiting barnacle goose numbers have reached 35 000 in recent years with as many as 10 000 arriving in a single day There are also up to 12 000 Greenland white fronted geese and smaller numbers of brent pinkfooted and Canada geese are often found amongst these flocks Other waterfowl include whooper and mute swans eider duck Slavonian grebe goldeneye long tailed duck and wigeon 210 The elusive corncrake and sanderling ringed plover and curlew sandpiper are amongst the summer visitors 210 Resident birds include red billed chough hen harrier golden eagle peregrine falcon barn owl raven oystercatcher and guillemot 210 The re introduced white tailed sea eagle is now seen regularly around the coasts 211 In all about 105 species breed on the island each year and between 100 and 120 different species can be seen at any one time 210 A population of several thousand red deer inhabit the moors and hills Fallow deer can be found in the southeast and roe deer are common on low lying ground Otters are common around the coasts along Nave Island and common and grey seals breed on Nave Island Offshore a variety of cetaceans are regularly recorded including minke whales pilot whales killer whales and bottle nosed dolphins The only snake on Islay is the adder and the common lizard is widespread although not commonly seen 212 The island supports a significant population of the marsh fritillary along with numerous other moths and butterflies 213 The mild climate supports a diversity of flora typical of the Inner Hebrides 214 Notable natives edit nbsp Port Ellen Glenn Campbell born 1976 Scottish political reporter for the BBC was brought up on Islay and attended Islay High School 215 John Francis Campbell 1821 1885 authority on Scottish folklore and joint inventor of the Campbell Stokes recorder The son of Daniel Campbell of Shawfield his father s bankruptcy prevented him inheriting the Islay estate There is however a monument commemorating him at Bridgend 216 Alistair Carmichael born 1965 the Liberal Democrat Deputy Chief Whip was born on Islay to hill farming parents He has represented Orkney and Shetland at Westminster since 2001 217 Donald Caskie 1902 1983 was born on Islay He became known as the Tartan Pimpernel for his exploits in France during World War II 218 John Crawfurd 1783 1868 was born on Islay and during a long career as a colonial administrator he became governor of Singapore He also wrote a number of books including Journal of an Embassy from the Governor General of India to the Courts of Siam and Cochin China 1828 219 William Livingstone Scottish Gaelic Uilleam Mac Dhunleibhe 1808 1870 an important figure in 19th century Scottish Gaelic literature and chronicler in verse of the Highland Clearances upon Islay was born upon the Gartmain farm near Bowmore 220 David MacIntyre 1895 1967 from Portnahaven recipient of the Victoria Cross 221 General Alexander McDougall 1732 1786 a figure in the American War of Independence and the first president of the Bank of New York was born in Kildalton in 1731 222 Bernard MacLaverty born 1942 Irish author who lived on the island prior to moving to Glasgow 223 George Robertson born 1946 formerly secretary general of NATO and British Defence Secretary In 1999 he was made Lord Robertson of Port Ellen 224 Sir William Stewart born 1935 became the UK government s Chief Scientific Adviser in the late 1980s and early 1990s 225 See also edit nbsp Scottish islands portal List of islands of Scotland Lewisian complex Scottish island names Snowball Earth Timeline of prehistoric ScotlandReferences editNotes edit Haswell Smith 2004 has a table of Scottish islands arranged in order of magnitude that lists Islay as fifth in rank although this excludes Skye as it is a bridged island and includes South Uist as fourth on the grounds that it is connected to other islands such as Benbecula and North Uist by causeways that give it a large area 11 Rick Livingstone s Tables provide all the relevant area data although the information is not ranked 12 Ireland is the largest of the islands surrounding Great Britain and Anglesey the sixth largest Mac an Tailleir 2003 suggests that if this is a Gaelic name it may be flank shaped 19 Banrigh Innse Gall is literally Queen of the islands of the foreigners and Banrigh nan Eilean means Queen of the islands The Rhinns complex named after the Islay peninsula which hosts its largest outcrop is predominantly Palaeoproterozoic syenitic gneiss It lies unconformably beneath the Colonsay Group 34 At the time this Ahrensburgian flint was the oldest find in Scotland 53 but a subsequent discovery at Biggar predates it by over a millennium 54 Various locations have been suggested for the battle including west of the Rinns and north of Rubh a Mhail Marsden 2008 concludes that a location at the north end of the Sound of Islay is most likely 76 Loch Finlaggan has two main islands Eilean Mor was probably an early Christian centre and was fortified in the 13th and 14th centuries 90 91 While the Lordship itself did not survive the title did today the heir to the British throne who is known as the Prince of Wales in all other parts of the British Commonwealth bears the title Lord of the Isles within Scotland 96 Martin wrote of the isle Finlagan that it is famous for being once the court in which the great Macdonald King of the Isles had his residence his houses chapel etc are now ruinous His guards de corps called Lucht taeh kept guard on the lake side nearest to the isle the walls of their houses are still to be seen there The High Court of Judicature consisting of fourteen sat always here and there was an appeal to them from all the Courts in the isles the eleventh share of the sum in debate was due to the principal judge There was a big stone of seven feet square in which there was a deep impression made to receive the feet of Macdonald for he was crowned King of the Isles standing in this stone and swore that he would continue his vassals in the possession of their lands and do exact justice to all his subjects and then his father s sword was put into his hand The Bishop of Argyll and seven priests anointed him king in presence of all the heads of the tribes in the isles and continent and were his vassals at which time the orator rehearsed a catalogue of his ancestors etc 97 With regard to the castles of Islay Monro wrote In this iyle there is strenths castells the first is callit Dunowaik biggit on ane craig at the sea side on the southeist part of the countery pertaining to the Clandonald of Kintyre second is callit the castle of Lochgurne quhilk is biggit ill ane iyle within the said fresche water loche far fra land pertaining of auld to the Clandonald of Kintyre now usurped be M Gillayne of Doward Ellan Forlagan in the middle of Ila ane faire iyle in fresche water 100 The structure was built for Sir Hugh Campbell of Cawdor and is now used as a hotel 105 It is a Category A listed building 106 It is claimed that Donovan wrote the song after being arrested for possession of marijuana and that I had to leave I had to get away from the publicity so I took a plane north to Scotland and on a northern island I found the peace and I wrote this song 204 Footnotes edit Map of Scotland in Scots Guide and gazetteer PDF a b Gammeltoft 2007 p 487 a b c d e f Haswell Smith 2004 p 41 Haswell Smith 2004 p 42 a b Area and population ranks there are c 300 islands over 20 ha in extent and 93 permanently inhabited islands were listed in the 2011 census a b c 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 National Records of Scotland Table KS101SC Usual Resident Population all people Settlement Locality 2010 Port Ellen Scotland s Census 2011 Archived from the original on 13 June 2016 From the main page select Results Standard Outputs year 2011 table KS101SC area type locality 2010 On the map click Bowmore and Port Ellen for comparison a b Newton 1995 p 11 Newton 1995 p 20 Newton 1995 p 31 Haswell Smith 2004 p 502 Rick Livingstone s Tables of the Islands of Scotland pdf Argyll Yacht Charters Retrieved 12 December 2011 Caldwell 2011 p 58 a b c Mac an Tailleir Iain 2004 1901 2001 Gaelic in the Census Archived 7 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine PowerPoint Linguae Celticae Retrieved 19 September 2012 Caldwell 2011 p 91 Watson 1994 p 37 Watson 1994 p 45 Watson 1994 p 85 86 a b c Mac an Tailleir 2003 p 67 Atlas of Scotland 1654 ILA INSVLA The Isle of Ila Wikimedia Commons Retrieved 20 July 2013 Atlas of Scotland 1654 IVRA INSVLA The Isle of Jura Wikimedia Commons Retrieved 20 July 2013 Visitors Archived 1 June 2020 at the Wayback Machine Highlands and Islands Airports Retrieved 22 March 2012 Jennings amp Kruse 2009a pp 83 84 King amp Cotter 2012 p 4 King amp Cotter 2012 p 6 King amp Cotter 2012 pp 34 36 43 King amp Cotter 2012 p 31 Murray 1966 pp 22 23 a b c d e f Get a map Sheet 60Islay Map Ordnance Survey Retrieved 18 March 2012 Murray 1966 p 32 Newton 1995 p 42 Murray 1966 p 30 a b Caldwell 2011 p xxv a b J S Daly R j Muir R A Cliff 1991 A precise U Pb zircon age for the Inishtrahull syenitic gneiss County Donegal Ireland Journal of the Geological Society 148 4 639 642 Bibcode 1991JGSoc 148 639D doi 10 1144 gsjgs 148 4 0639 S2CID 129740602 Retrieved 15 September 2012 R J Muir W R Fitches A J Maltman M R Bentley 1994 Precambrian rocks of the southern Inner Hebrides Malin Sea region Colonsay west Islay Inishtrahull and Iona In Harris A L amp Gibbons W ed A Revised Correlation of Precambrian Rocks in the British Isles Special Report Vol 22 2 ed London Geological Society pp 54 56 ISBN 9781897799116 Retrieved 15 September 2012 Gillen 2003 p 65 Haswell Smith 2004 p 47 a b Islay Geology Archived 19 October 2012 at the Wayback Machine Islay Natural History Trust Retrieved 18 September 2012 Strachan R A Smith M Harris A L Fettes D J The Northern Highland and Grampian Terranes in Trewin 2002 p 96 Thomas Christopher W Graham Colin M Ellam Robert M Fallick Anthony E Sr chemostratigraphy of Neoproterozoic Dalradian limestones of Scotland and Ireland constraints on depositional ages and time scales PDF Journal of the Geological Society 161 229 242 doi 10 1144 0016 764903 001 Retrieved 22 March 2012 Jura Earthquake 3 May 1998 British Geological Survey Archived from the original on 2 January 2008 Retrieved 23 January 2008 Keay amp Keay 1994 p 547 Mithen 2006 p 197 Caldwell 2011 p 4 a b Regional mapped climate averages W Scotland Archived 4 August 2012 at archive today Met office Retrieved 22 March 2012 UK mapped climate averages Archived 30 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Met office Retrieved 16 September 2012 Weather Islayjura com Retrieved 16 September 2012 Newton 1995 p 9 The 30 year average for Islay Islay Info Retrieved 14 February 2008 Newton 1995 p 12 Climate Normals 1981 2010 Met Office Mithen 2006 pp 197 98 Moffat 2005 p 42 Howburn Farm Excavating Scotland s first people Current Archaeology Retrieved 21 August 2011 Kennedy Maev 9 October 2015 Swine team pigs help uncover ice age tools on Scottish island The Guardian London Retrieved 11 October 2015 Ice Age tools found on Islay thanks to herd of pigs 9 October 2015 BBC News Retrieved 11 October 2015 Storrie 1997 p 28 Jupp 1994 p 10 Storrie 1997 p 29 Jupp 1994 p 11 Newton 1995 p 26 Caldwell 2011 p 17 a b Caldwell 2011 pp 137 38 Armit Ian The Iron Age in Omand 2006 pp 52 53 Woolf 2012 p 1 referring to Ewan Campbell Saints and Sea Kings the First Kingdom of the Scots Edinburgh 1999 pp 11 15 Were the Scots Irish Antiquity 75 2001 pp 285 92 a b Caldwell 2011 pp 21 22 Rodger 1997 p 5 a b c Graham Campbell amp Batey 1998 p 89 Jennings amp Kruse 2009b p 140 Jennings amp Kruse 2009a p 86 a b Duffy 2004 Godred Crovan d 1095 MacDonald 2007 p 62 Duffy 1992 p 108 Woolf 2005 p 13 Islay Carragh Bhan Canmore retrieved 1 August 2013 a b Marsden 2008 p 84 Caldwell 2011 p 31 Gregory 1881 pp 9 17 Hunter 2000 pp 110 111 Woolf Alex The Age of the Sea Kings 900 1300 in Omand 2006 pp 108 09 Gregory 1881 p 24 Gregory 1881 pp 26 27 Lee 1920 p 82 a b c Oram Richard The Lordship of the Isles 1336 1545 in Omand 2006 pp 124 26 a b Hunter 2000 p 127 Oram Richard The Lordship of the Isles 1336 1545 in Omand 2006 p 123 Caldwell 2011 p 38 Casey Dan Finlaggan and the Lordship IslayInfo com Retrieved 5 October 2010 Bord Janet amp Colin 1976 The Secret Country London Paul Elek ISBN 0 236 40048 7 pp 66 67 Caldwell 2011 p 169 Caldwell 2011 p 20 David Ross 10 May 2007 Gaelic documents may return north The Herald Retrieved 23 January 2008 Oram Richard The Lordship of the Isles 1336 1545 in Omand 2006 p 132 Caldwell 2011 p 59 Caldwell David April 1996 Urbane savages of the Western Isles British Archaeology No 13 Retrieved 26 April 2012 Dunbar J 1981 The Lordship of the Isles in The Middle Ages in the Highlands Inverness Field Club ISBN 978 0 9502612 1 8 Martin 1703 p 240 Jurah James Balfour Paul Accounts of the Treasurer of Scotland vol 7 Edinburgh 1907 p 328 Caldwell 2011 p 61 a b Monro 1774 pp 12 13 55 Ila Caldwell 2011 pp 62 64 Haswell Smith 2004 pp 42 43 Caldwell 2011 p 68 Caldwell 2011 pp 66 74 Islay House Hotel Accommodation Isle of Islay Scotland islayhouse Historic Environment Scotland Islay House Category A Listed Building LB12142 Retrieved 28 March 2019 Martin Martin 2018 A Description of the Western Islands of Scotland circa 1695 and A Late Voyage to St Kilda Birlinn Limited Edinburgh p 163 ISBN 9781780275468 Morrison Alex Rural Settlement an Archaeological Viewpoint in Omand 2006 p 110 a b Caldwell 2011 pp 75 76 Caldwell 2011 p 70 14 Towns gt Glasgow gt 1787 Reprint of Jones s directory or Useful pocket companion for the year 1787 Scottish Directories National Library of Scotland Campbell Daniel 1671 1753 Dictionary of National Biography 1904 Retrieved 19 April 2012 a b Caldwell 2011 p 79 Duncan P J The Industries of Argyll Tradition and Improvement in Omand 2006 p 151 Duncan P J The Industries of Argyll Tradition and Improvement in Omand 2006 pp 152 4 Duncan P J The Industries of Argyll Tradition and Improvement in Omand 2006 pp 156 57 The Clearances on Islay in the 1800s IslayInfo Retrieved 20 April 2012 Highland Clearances Cranntara Retrieved 20 April 2012 a b Campbell Glenn 1 May 2018 The Scottish island that buried America s dead BBC News Retrieved 1 May 2018 Baird 1995 pp 57 58 Baird 1995 pp 80 83 The Oa Peninsula Archived 20 August 2021 at the Wayback Machine IslayInfo Retrieved 21 April 2012 1 CWGC Cemetery report Kilchoman Military Cemetery No 119 Squadron RAF Archived 11 March 2007 at the Wayback Machine RAF Commands Retrieved 23 January 2008 422 Faces Castle Archdale Northern Ireland Coastal Command Retrieved 21 April 2012 Islay Saligo Chain Home and Type 7000 Chain Radar Station Scotland s Places Retrieved 21 April 2012 Islay Kilchirian Radar Station Canmore Retrieved 21 April 2012 a b Caldwell 2011 p 95 Islay Facts and Figures An overview of the island www islayinfo com Fishing on Islay Where to catch Brown Trout IslayInfo Retrieved 13 April 2012 a b Isle of Islay Archived 16 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine Fishing Argyll Retrieved 13 April 2012 Newton 1995 p 82 Islay and the Sea Geography and History IslayInfo Retrieved 13 April 2012 The Scotch Whisky Regulations 2009 The National Archives Retrieved 22 April 2012 Islay s 11th Whisky Distillery Gets the Green Light WhiskyCast whiskycast com 9 February 2021 Retrieved 8 March 2021 Newton 1995 p 32 Whisky Regions amp Tours Archived 26 July 2018 at the Wayback Machine Scotch Whisky Association Retrieved 22 April 2012 Islay Whisky information britain co uk Retrieved 4 January 2009 Home Islay Whisky Retrieved 22 April 2012 Kilchoman Scotch Whisky Distillery ScotchWhisky net Retrieved 22 April 2012 a b Newton 1995 p 33 a b Port Charlotte Distillery Archived 28 May 2017 at the Wayback Machine IslayInfo Retrieved 22 April 2012 Islay Distilleries Whisky Tours Tastings amp Map www visitscotland com Islay Malt Whisky and Islay Whisky Distilleries Map www islayinfo com Keay amp Keay 1994 p 548 The Isle of Islay Visit Scotland Retrieved 22 April 2012 Islay Malt Whisky amp Islay Distilleries IslayInfo Retrieved 22 April 2012 Visit Finlaggan Archived 30 April 2012 at the Wayback Machine The Finlaggan Trust Retrieved 22 April 2012 The Machrie Golf Links Top 100 Golf Courses of Scotland www top100golfcourses com a b Beaumont Stephen 29 September 2007 Beyond the single malt Scotch The Globe and Mail THE 10 BEST Islay Sights amp Landmarks Tripadvisor Insight Visitor numbers drive Highlands into tourist trap www scotsman com Islay Ultimate Online Guide Isle of Islay Queen of the Hebrides www islayinfo com Hotels permanent dead link Tom Heath The Construction Commissioning and Operation of the LIMPET Wave Energy Collector PDF Wavegen Archived from the original PDF on 26 June 2011 Retrieved 27 April 2011 Islay to get major tidal power scheme 17 March 2011 BBC Scotland Retrieved 17 March 2011 Islay Travel and Local Transport Information IslayInfo Retrieved 22 April 2012 MV Finlaggan PDF Caledonian MacBrayne Retrieved 21 April 2012 Travelling to Islay amp Jura Visit Islay Jura Retrieved 21 April 2012 Rinns of Islay Northern Lighthouse Board Retrieved 20 April 2011 Ruvaal Northern Lighthouse Board Retrieved 20 April 2011 Newton 1995 p 16 Shetland Times Retains Newspaper of the Year Award Highland Council 18 January 2007 Archived from the original on 2 January 2008 Retrieved 23 January 2008 Islay amp Jura Council for Voluntary Service Bowmore Archived 2 August 2012 at archive today Firstport Retrieved 13 April 2012 Ales from the Isle of Malts Islay Ales Retrieved 23 January 2008 An open door to Gaelic language and culture Archived 21 July 2013 at the Wayback Machine Ionad Chaluim Chille Ile Retrieved 13 April 2012 About Us Iomairt Chille Chomain Retrieved 15 April 2012 Iomairt Chille Chomain Archived 8 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine DTA Scotland Retrieved 15 April 2012 Telegraph Extension in the West Highlands John o Groat Journal Scotland 13 July 1871 Retrieved 28 September 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Islay Telegraphy Greenock Telegraph and Clyde Shipping Gazette Scotland 1 August 1871 Retrieved 28 September 2023 via British Newspaper Archive A Canal through Kintyre The Scotsman Scotland 20 September 1871 Retrieved 28 September 2023 via British Newspaper Archive New Scotch Telegraph Offices Greenock Telegraph and Clyde Shipping Gazette Scotland 13 December 1871 Retrieved 29 September 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Port Ellen Local Notes Greenock Telegraph and Clyde Shipping Gazette Scotland 26 January 1872 Retrieved 28 September 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Islay now on the phone Aberdeen Press and Journal Scotland 20 September 1935 Retrieved 16 October 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Telephone Improvement in Islay Oban Times and Argyllshire Advertiser Scotland 17 October 1936 Retrieved 16 October 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Phone services to Western Isles Aberdeen Press and Journal Scotland 30 November 1937 Retrieved 16 October 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Enterprise in Islay Oban Times and Argyllshire Advertiser Scotland 3 February 1894 Retrieved 28 September 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Isle of Islay Bowmore Oban Times and Argyllshire Advertiser Scotland 22 May 1937 Retrieved 28 September 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Highland Electric Schemes Oban Times and Argyllshire Advertiser Scotland 15 December 1945 Retrieved 28 September 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Electricity Switched on in Islay Oban Times and Argyllshire Advertiser Scotland 25 September 1948 Retrieved 28 September 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Power Line for Islay The Scotsman Scotland 19 April 1961 Retrieved 28 September 2023 via British Newspaper Archive Boost for Islay Gaelic centre 11 September 2001 Scottish Government Retrieved 3 August 2008 Grannd 2000 pp 61 65 Grannd 2000 pp 14 73 54 55 139 59 146 51 134 Grannd 2000 p 135 Grannd 2000 pp 17 78 Grannd 2000 pp 22 86 Grannd 2000 pp 26 27 94 Grannd 2000 pp 33 107 Morris Ronald W B 1969 The Cup and Ring Marks and Similar Sculptures of Scotland a Survey of the Southern Counties Part II Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland 100 pp 53 55 63 Fisher Ian The early Christian Period in Omand 2006 p 71 Newton 1995 p 37 Kildalton Great Cross RCAHMS Retrieved 10 April 2012 Archaeology Notes on Kilnave RCAHMS Archived from the original on 28 September 2007 Retrieved 23 January 2008 Fisher Ian The early Christian Period in Omand 2006 p 82 Fisher Ian The early Christian Period in Omand 2006 p 83 Bridgland Nick The Medieval Church in Argyll in Omand 2006 p 86 a b Bridgland Nick The Medieval Church in Argyll in Omand 2006 pp 88 9 Caldwell 2011 pp 68 69 Newton 1995 pp 20 21 Churches and Services on the Isle of Islay IslayInfo Retrieved 23 March 2012 The Maggie Imdb Retrieved 10 April 2012 Filming locations for Coastal Command IMDb Retrieved 23 January 2008 Isle of Islay Donovan Unofficial Retrieved 11 April 2012 Westering Home Scottish Poetry Library Retrieved 11 April 2012 Westering Home Celtic Arts Center Retrieved 11 April 2012 Springwatch BBC Retrieved 23 January 2008 Mid Argyll Kintyre amp Islay Visit Scotland Retrieved 12 April 2012 Time Teak Series 2 Channel 4 Retrieved 12 April 2012 a b c d Birdwatching on Islay Archived 19 January 2013 at the Wayback Machine Scottish Ornithologists Club Scottish Bird News Retrieved 23 April 2012 Islay and Jura Naturetrek Retrieved 23 April 2012 Mammals Reptiles and Amphibians Archived 2 August 2012 at archive today Islay Natural History Trust Retrieved 23 April 2012 Islay Wildlife Records Moths and Butterflies Index Archived 4 August 2012 at archive today Islay Natural History Trust Retrieved 23 April 2012 Islay Wildlife Records Flowering plants Index Archived 2 August 2012 at archive today Islay Natural History Trust Retrieved 23 April 2012 Meet presenter Glenn Campbell BBC News 2 March 2003 Retrieved 23 January 2008 Haswell Smith 2004 p 43 Alistair Carmichael Archived 1 February 2013 at the Wayback Machine Scottish Liberal Democrats Retrieved 23 March 2012 Our man in Marseilles 27 December 2001 Edinburgh The Scotsman Retrieved 19 September 2012 Turnbull C M 2004 Crawfurd John 1783 1868 orientalist and colonial administrator Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Retrieved 19 September 2012 Edited by Donald E Meek 2019 The Wiles of the World Caran an t Saohgail Anthology of 19th century Scottish Gaelic Verse Birlinn Limited Page 478 Grave Location For Holders of the Victoria Cross in the City Of Edinburgh Archived 25 December 2004 at the Wayback Machine Prestel Retrieved 30 January 2014 McDougall Alexander 1731 1786 United States Congress Retrieved 23 March 2012 Biography Bernard MacLaverty Retrieved 20 August 2021 NATO Secretary General 1999 2003 The Rt Hon Lord Robertson of Port Ellen Who is who at NATO NATO 6 January 2004 Retrieved 19 September 2012 Sir William Stewart Doctor of Science Edinburgh Napier University Retrieved 19 September 2012 General references edit Baird Bob 1995 Shipwrecks of the West of Scotland Glasgow Nekton Books ISBN 978 1 897995 02 0 Caldwell David H 2011 Islay Jura and Colonsay A Historical Guide Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 961 9 Duffy Sean 1992 Irishmen and Islesmen in the Kingdom of Dublin and Man 1052 1171 Eriu 43 43 93 133 JSTOR 30007421 2004 Godred Crovan d 1095 Oxford Dictionary of National Biography Oxford Oxford University Press Gammeltoft Peder 2007 Scandinavian Naming Systems in the Hebrides A Way of Understanding how the Scandinavians were in Contact with Gaels and Picts In Ballin Smith Beverley Taylor Simon Williams Gareth eds West over Sea Studies in Scandinavian Sea Borne Expansion and Settlement Before 1300 Leiden Brill Gillen Con 2003 Geology and landscapes of Scotland Harpenden Terra Publishing ISBN 978 1903544099 Graham Campbell James Batey Colleen E 1998 Vikings in Scotland An Archaeological Survey Edinburgh University Press ISBN 978 0 7486 0641 2 Grannd Seumas 2000 The Gaelic of Islay A Comparative Study Scottish Gaelic Studies Monograph Series 2 Department of Celtic University of Aberdeen ISBN 978 0 9523911 4 2 Gregory Donald 1881 The history of the Western Highlands and Isles of Scotland from A D 1493 to A D 1625 with a brief introductory sketch from A D 80 to A D 1493 2nd ed London Glasgow Hamilton Adams amp Co Thomas D Morison Haswell Smith Hamish 2004 The Scottish Islands Edinburgh Canongate ISBN 978 1 84195 454 7 Hunter James 2000 Last of the Free A History of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland Edinburgh Mainstream ISBN 978 1 84018 376 4 Jennings Andrew Kruse Arne 2009a One Coast Three Peoples Names and Ethnicity in the Scottish West during the Early Viking period In Woolf Alex ed Scandinavian Scotland Twenty Years After The Proceedings of a Day Conference held on 19 February 2007 St John s House Papers No 12 St Andrews University of St Andrews Committee for Dark Age Studies pp 75 102 ISBN 978 0 9512573 7 1 2009b From Dal Riata to the Gall Ghaidheil Viking and Medieval Scandinavia 5 123 149 doi 10 1484 J VMS 1 100676 hdl 20 500 11820 762e78fe 2a9c 43cf 8173 8300892b31cb Jupp Clifford 1994 The History of Islay From earliest times to 1848 Port Charlotte Museum of Islay Life ASIN B0000COS6B Keay John Keay Julie eds 1994 Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland 1st ed Hammersmith London HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 255082 6 King Jacob Cotter Michelle 2012 Place names in Islay and Jura Perth Scottish Natural Heritage Lee Henry James 1920 History of the clan Donald the families of MacDonald McDonald and McDonnell New York Polk and Company Mac an Tailleir Iain 2003 Ainmean aite Placenames Faddoch Jura PDF www scottish parliament uk gd visitandlearn 40900 aspx in Scottish Gaelic and English Parlamaid na h Alba Parliament of Scotland Retrieved 18 June 2015 MacDonald R Andrew 2007 Manx kingship in its Irish Sea setting 1187 1229 King Rognvaldr and the Crovan dynasty Dublin Four Courts Press ISBN 978 1 84682 047 2 Martin Martin 1703 A Description of The Western Islands of Scotland 1st ed London Andrew Bell Mithen Steven 2006 After the ice a global human history 20 000 5000 BC Cambridge Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 01570 8 Moffat Alistair 2005 Before Scotland The Story of Scotland Before History London Thames amp Hudson Monro Donald 1774 1773 A Description of the Western Isles of Scotland Called Hybrides A Description of the Western Isles of Scotland Called Hybrides and other works Edinburgh William Auld Date of composition without publishing is 1549 Date of first independent publication is 1582 Murray W H 1966 The Hebrides London Heinemann Newton Norman 1995 Islay Devon David amp Charles PLC ISBN 978 0 907115 90 8 Omand Donald ed 2006 The Argyll Book Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 480 5 Rodger N A M 1997 The Safeguard of the Sea A Naval History of Britain Vol One 660 1649 London Harper Collins Storrie Margaret 1997 Islay Biography of an Island Colonsay House of Lochar ISBN 978 0 907651 03 1 Trewin Nigel H 2002 The Geology of Scotland 4th ed Bath The Geology Society ISBN 978 1862391260 Watson W J 1994 The Celtic Place Names of Scotland Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 1 84158 323 5 First published 1926 Woolf Alex 2012 Ancient Kindred Dal Riata and the Cruthin St Andrews University Academia edu Retrieved 19 September 2012 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Islay nbsp Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Islay Map sources for Islay Isle of Islay Islay Info 2014 Provides additional information on the demographics and culture of Islay and the Hebrides The Islay Natural History Trust Port Charlotte Islay The Natural History Centre Archived from the original on 27 August 2019 Retrieved 22 July 2009 Provides additional detailed information on the terrain and the species inhabiting niches on Islay Van Ells Mark D 13 June 2013 Isle of Islay Cliffs Prove Deadly in WWI Shipwrecks Stars amp Stripes Archived from the original on 3 July 2016 Retrieved 12 April 2014 Specialized information on the maritime hazards of the coastline Portal nbsp Scotland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Islay amp oldid 1218441827, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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