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Outer Hebrides

The Outer Hebrides (/ˈhɛbrɪdz/) or Western Isles (Scottish Gaelic: Na h-Eileanan Siar [nə ˈhelanən ˈʃiəɾ] (listen) or Na h-Eileanan an Iar [nə ˈhelanən əˈɲiəɾ] (listen) or Na h-Innse Gall ("islands of the strangers"); Scots: Waster Isles), sometimes known as the Long Isle/Long Island (Scottish Gaelic: An t-Eilean Fada), is an island chain off the west coast of mainland Scotland.[Note 1] The islands are geographically coextensive with Comhairle nan Eilean Siar, one of the 32 unitary council areas of Scotland. They form part of the archipelago of the Hebrides, separated from the Scottish mainland and from the Inner Hebrides by the waters of the Minch, the Little Minch, and the Sea of the Hebrides. Scottish Gaelic is the predominant spoken language, although in a few areas English speakers form a majority.

Outer Hebrides
Scottish Gaelic nameNa h-Eileanan Siar
Meaning of nameWestern Isles
Coat of arms
Location
Outer Hebrides
Outer Hebrides shown within Scotland
OS grid referenceNB426340
Coordinates57°46′N 7°01′W / 57.76°N 7.02°W / 57.76; -7.02Coordinates: 57°46′N 7°01′W / 57.76°N 7.02°W / 57.76; -7.02
Physical geography
Area3,059 km2 (1,181 sq mi)[1]
Highest elevationClisham 799 m (2,621 ft)[2]
Administration
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
CountryScotland
Council areaComhairle nan Eilean Siar
Demographics
Population26,830[3]
Population density9/km2
Largest settlementStornoway

Most of the islands have a bedrock formed from ancient metamorphic rocks, and the climate is mild and oceanic. The 15 inhabited islands have a total population of 26,830[3] and there are more than 50 substantial uninhabited islands. The distance from Barra Head to the Butt of Lewis is roughly 210 kilometres (130 mi).

There are various important prehistoric structures, many of which pre-date the first written references to the islands by Roman and Greek authors. The Western Isles became part of the Norse kingdom of the Suðreyjar, which lasted for over 400 years, until sovereignty over the Outer Hebrides was transferred to Scotland by the Treaty of Perth in 1266. Control of the islands was then held by clan chiefs, principal amongst whom were the MacLeods, MacDonalds, Mackenzies and MacNeils. The Highland Clearances of the 19th century had a devastating effect on many communities, and it is only in recent years that population levels have ceased to decline. Much of the land is now under local control, and commercial activity is based on tourism, crofting, fishing, and weaving.

Sea transport is crucial, and a variety of ferry services operate between the islands and to mainland Scotland. Modern navigation systems now minimise the dangers, but in the past the stormy seas have claimed many ships. Religion, music and sport are important aspects of local culture, and there are numerous designated conservation areas to protect the natural environment.

Etymology

The earliest written references that have survived relating to the islands were made by Pliny the Elder in his Natural History, where he states that there are 30 Hebudes, and makes a separate reference to Dumna, which Watson (1926) concludes is unequivocally the Outer Hebrides. Writing about 80 years later, in 140–150 AD, Ptolemy, drawing on the earlier naval expeditions of Agricola, also distinguished between the Ebudes, of which he writes there were only five (and thus possibly meaning the Inner Hebrides) and Dumna.[5][6] Dumna is cognate with the Early Celtic dumnos and means the "deep-sea isle".[6] Pliny probably took his information from Pytheas of Massilia who visited Britain sometime between 322 and 285 BC. It is possible that Ptolemy did as well, as Agricola's information about the west coast of Scotland was of poor quality.[5][6] Breeze also suggests that Dumna might be Lewis and Harris, the largest island of the Outer Hebrides although he conflates this single island with the name "Long Island".[5] Watson (1926) states that the meaning of Ptolemy's Eboudai is unknown and that the root may be pre-Celtic.[7] Murray (1966) claims that Ptolemy's Ebudae was originally derived from the Old Norse Havbredey, meaning "isles on the edge of the sea". This idea is often repeated but no firm evidence of this derivation has emerged.[8]

Other early written references include the flight of the Nemed people from Ireland to Domon, which is mentioned in the 12th-century Lebor Gabála Érenn and a 13th-century poem concerning Raghnall mac Gofraidh, then the heir to the throne of Mann and the Isles, who is said to have "broken the gate of Magh Domhna". Magh Domhna means "the plain of Domhna (or Domon)", but the precise meaning of the text is not clear.[6]

In Irish mythology the islands were the home of the Fomorians, described as "huge and ugly" and "ship men of the sea". They were pirates, extracting tribute from the coasts of Ireland and one of their kings was Indech mac Dé Domnand (i.e. Indech, son of the goddess Domnu, who ruled over the deep seas).[9]

Geography

 
Satellite image of Outer Hebrides
 
Nicolson's Leap on the east coast of South Uist. In the background are Beinn Mhòr at left, and Hecla on the right.

The islands form an archipelago whose major islands are Lewis and Harris, North Uist, Benbecula, South Uist, and Barra. Lewis and Harris has an area of 2,178.98 square kilometres (841 sq mi)[10] and is the largest island in Scotland and the third-largest in the British Isles, after Great Britain and Ireland.[11] It incorporates Lewis in the north and Harris in the south, both of which are frequently referred to as individual islands, although they are connected by land. The island does not have a single name in either English or Gaelic, and is referred to as "Lewis and Harris", "Lewis with Harris", "Harris with Lewis" etc.[12]

The largest islands are deeply indented by arms of the sea such as Loch Ròg, Loch Seaforth and Loch nam Madadh. There are also more than 7,500 freshwater lochs in the Outer Hebrides, about 24% of the total for the whole of Scotland.[13] North and South Uist and Lewis, in particular, have landscapes with a high percentage of fresh water and a maze and complexity of loch shapes. Harris has fewer large bodies of water but has innumerable small lochans. Loch Langavat on Lewis is 11 kilometres (7 mi) long, and has several large islands in its midst, including Eilean Mòr. Although Loch Suaineabhal has only 25% of Loch Langavat's surface area, it has a mean depth of 33 metres (108 ft) and is the most voluminous on the island.[14] Of Loch Sgadabhagh on North Uist it has been said that "there is probably no other loch in Britain which approaches Loch Scadavay in irregularity and complexity of outline."[15] Loch Bì is South Uist's largest loch and at 8 kilometres (5 mi) long it all but cuts the island in two.[16]

Much of the western coastline of the islands is machair, a fertile low-lying dune pastureland.[17] Lewis is comparatively flat, and largely consists of treeless moors of blanket peat. The highest eminence is Mealisval at 574 m (1,883 ft) in the south west. Most of Harris is mountainous, with large areas of exposed rock and Clisham, the archipelago's only Corbett, reaches 799 m (2,621 ft) in height.[2][10] North and South Uist and Benbecula (sometimes collectively referred to as The Uists) have sandy beaches and wide cultivated areas of machair to the west and virtually uninhabited mountainous areas to the east. The highest peak here is Beinn Mhòr at 620 metres (2,034 ft).[18] The Uists and their immediate outliers have a combined area of 745.4 square kilometres (288 sq mi). This includes the Uists themselves and the islands linked to them by causeways and bridges.[19] Barra is 58.75 square kilometres (23 sq mi) in extent and has a rugged interior, surrounded by machair and extensive beaches.[20][21]

The scenic qualities of the islands are reflected in the fact that three of Scotland's forty national scenic areas (NSAs) are located here. The national scenic areas are defined so as to identify areas of exceptional scenery and to ensure its protection from inappropriate development,[22] and are considered to represent the type of scenic beauty "popularly associated with Scotland and for which it is renowned".[23] The three NSA within the Outer Hebrides are:

Flora and fauna

 
The open landscapes of Benbecula
 
Bàgh Mòr, Grimsay

Much of the archipelago is a protected habitat, including both the islands and the surrounding waters. There are 53 Sites of Special Scientific Interest of which the largest are Loch an Duin, North Uist (151 square kilometres (37,000 acres)) and North Harris (127 square kilometres (31,000 acres)).[27][28] South Uist is considered the best place in the UK for the aquatic plant Slender Naiad, which is a European Protected Species.[29][30]

There has been considerable controversy over hedgehogs on the Uists. Hedgehogs are not native to the islands but were introduced in the 1970s to reduce garden pests. Their spread posed a threat to the eggs of ground-nesting wading birds. In 2003 Scottish Natural Heritage undertook culls of hedgehogs in the area, but these were halted in 2007; trapped animals are now relocated to the mainland.[31][32]

Nationally important populations of breeding waders are present in the Outer Hebrides, including common redshank, dunlin, lapwing and ringed plover. The islands also provide a habitat for other important species such as corncrake, hen harrier, golden eagle and otter. Offshore, basking shark and various species of whale and dolphin can often be seen,[33] and the remoter islands' seabird populations are of international significance. St Kilda has 60,000 northern gannets, amounting to 24% of the world population; 49,000 breeding pairs of Leach's petrel, up to 90% of the European population; and 136,000 pairs of puffin and 67,000 northern fulmar pairs, about 30% and 13% of the respective UK totals.[34] Mingulay is an important breeding ground for razorbills, with 9,514 pairs, 6.3% of the European population.[35]

The bumblebee Bombus jonellus var. hebridensis is endemic to the Hebrides and there are local variants of the dark green fritillary and green-veined white butterflies.[36] The St Kilda wren is a subspecies of wren whose range is confined to the islands whose name it bears.[37]

Population

Historical population
YearPop.±%
1861 36,319—    
1901 46,172+27.1%
1951 35,591−22.9%
1961 32,609−8.4%
1971 29,891−8.3%
1981 30,702+2.7%
1991 29,600−3.6%
2001 26,502−10.5%
2011 27,684+4.5%
[38][39][40]

The islands' total population was 26,502 at the 2001 census, and the 2011 figure was 27,684.[38] During the same period Scottish island populations as a whole grew by 4% to 103,702.[41] The largest settlement in the Outer Hebrides is Stornoway on Lewis,[42][43] which has a population of about 8,100.[44]

The population estimate for 2019 was 26,720 according to a Comhairle nan Eilean Siar report which added that "the population of the Outer Hebrides is ageing" and that "young adults [...] leave the islands for further education or employment purposes". Of the total population, 6,953 people reside in the "Stornoway settlement Laxdale (Lacasdal), Sandwick (Sanndabhaig) and Newmarket" with the balance distributed over 280 townships.[45]

In addition to the major North Ford (Oitir Mhòr) and South Ford causeways that connect North Uist to Benbecula via the northern of the Grimsays, and another causeway from Benbecula to South Uist, several other islands are linked by smaller causeways or bridges. Great Bernera and Scalpay have bridge connections to Lewis and Harris respectively, with causeways linking Baleshare and Berneray to North Uist; Eriskay to South Uist; Flodaigh, Fraoch-Eilean and the southern Grimsay to Benbecula; and Vatersay to Barra.[16][46][47] This means that all the inhabited islands are now connected to at least one other island by a land transport route.

 
Geographic distribution of Gaelic speakers in Scotland (2011)
Island Gaelic name 2011 population[38] 2001 population[43] 2011 Gaelic speakers[48]
Lewis and Harris Leòdhas 21,031 18,500 (Lewis)
Parish
Steòrnabhagh 43% (5,492)
Barabhas 64% (2,037)
Ceann a Tuath nan Loch 53% (942)
Ùig 56% (873)
TOTAL 49% (9,344)
Hearadh 1,916 (Harris) 60% (1,212)
South Uist Uibhist a Deas 1,754 1,818 60% (1,888 incl. Benbecula)
North Uist Uibhist a Tuath 1,254 1,271 61% (887)
Benbecula Beinn nam Fadhla 1,303 1,219 60% (1,888 with South Uist)
Barra Barraigh 1,174 1,078 62% (761)
Scalpay Sgalpaigh 291 322
Great Bernera Beàrnaraigh Mòr 252 233
Grimsay (north) Griomasaigh 169 201
Berneray Beàrnaraigh 138 136
Eriskay Èirisgeigh 143 133
Vatersay Bhatarsaigh 90 94
Baleshare Baile Sear 58 49
Grimsay (south) Griomasaigh 20 19
Flodaigh Flodaigh 7 11
Fraoch-Eilean Fraoch-Eilean ?[Note 2] ?
TOTAL 27,684 26,502 52% (14,248)

Uninhabited islands

 
View of the Barra Isles from Heaval. The village of Castlebay is in the foreground, with Vatersay, and the uninhabited islands of Sandray, Pabbay, Mingulay and Berneray beyond.

There are more than fifty uninhabited islands greater in size than 40 hectares (99 acres) in the Outer Hebrides, including the Barra Isles, Flannan Isles, Monach Islands, the Shiant Islands and the islands of Loch Ròg.[49] In common with the other main island chains of Scotland, many of the more remote islands were abandoned during the 19th and 20th centuries, in some cases after continuous habitation since the prehistoric period. More than 35 such islands have been identified in the Outer Hebrides alone.[50] On Barra Head, for example, Historic Scotland have identified eighty-three archaeological sites on the island, the majority being of a pre-medieval date. In the 18th century, the population was over fifty, but the last native islanders had left by 1931. The island became completely uninhabited by 1980 with the automation of the lighthouse.[51]

Some of the smaller islands continue to contribute to modern culture. The "Mingulay Boat Song", although evocative of island life, was written after the abandonment of the island in 1938[52] and Taransay hosted the BBC television series Castaway 2000. Others have played a part in Scottish history. On 4 May 1746, the "Young Pretender" Charles Edward Stuart hid on Eilean Liubhaird with some of his men for four days whilst Royal Navy vessels patrolled the Minch.[53]

Smaller isles and skerries and other island groups pepper the North Atlantic surrounding the main islands. Some are not geologically part of the Outer Hebrides, but are administratively and in most cases culturally, part of Comhairle nan Eilean Siar. 73 kilometres (45 mi) to the west of Lewis lies St Kilda, now uninhabited except for a small military base.[54] A similar distance to the north of Lewis are North Rona and Sula Sgeir, two small and remote islands. While Rona used to support a small population who grew grain and raised cattle, Sula Sgeir is an inhospitable rock. Thousands of northern gannets nest here, and by special arrangement some of their young, known as gugas, are harvested annually by the men of Ness.[55] The status of Rockall, which is 367 kilometres (228 mi) to the west of North Uist and which the Island of Rockall Act 1972 decreed to be a part of the Western Isles, remains a matter of international dispute.[56][57]

Geology

 
Geological map of the Hebridean Terrane
 
The "Old Boy" — the gneiss cliffs of Sloc na Bèiste, Barra Head, the southernmost point of the Outer Hebrides

Most of the islands have a bedrock formed from Lewisian gneiss. These are amongst the oldest rocks in Europe, having been formed in the Precambrian period up to three billion years ago. In addition to the Outer Hebrides, they form basement deposits on the Scottish mainland west of the Moine Thrust and on the islands of Coll and Tiree.[58] These rocks are largely igneous in origin, mixed with metamorphosed marble, quartzite and mica schist and intruded by later basaltic dykes and granite magma.[59] The gneiss's delicate pink colours are exposed throughout the islands and it is sometimes referred to by geologists as "The Old Boy".[60][Note 3]

Granite intrusions are found in the parish of Barvas in west Lewis, and another forms the summit plateau of the mountain Roineabhal in Harris. The granite here is anorthosite, and is similar in composition to rocks found in the mountains of the Moon. There are relatively small outcrops of Triassic sandstone at Broad Bay near Stornoway. The Shiant Islands and St Kilda are formed from much later tertiary basalt and basalt and gabbros respectively. The sandstone at Broad Bay was once thought to be Torridonian or Old Red Sandstone.[12][62][63]

Climate

The Outer Hebrides have a cool temperate climate that is remarkably mild and steady for such a northerly latitude, due to the influence of the North Atlantic Current. The average temperature for the year is 6 °C (44 °F) in January and 14 °C (57 °F) in summer. The average annual rainfall in Lewis is 1,100 millimetres (43 in) and sunshine hours range from 1,100 to 1,200 per year. The summer days are relatively long and May to August is the driest period.[64] Winds are a key feature of the climate and even in summer there are almost constant breezes. According to the writer W. H. Murray if a visitor asks an islander for a weather forecast "he will not, like a mainlander answer dry, wet or sunny, but quote you a figure from the Beaufort Scale."[65] There are gales one day in six at the Butt of Lewis and small fish are blown onto the grass on top of 190 metre (620 ft) high cliffs at Barra Head during winter storms.[66]

Prehistory

The Hebrides were originally settled in the Mesolithic era and have a diversity of important prehistoric sites. Eilean Dòmhnuill in Loch Olabhat on North Uist was constructed around 3200–2800 BC and may be Scotland's earliest crannog (a type of artificial island).[67][68] The Callanish Stones, dating from about 2900 BC, are the finest example of a stone circle in Scotland, the 13 primary monoliths of between one and five metres high creating a circle about 13 metres (43 ft) in diameter.[69][70][71][72] Cladh Hallan on South Uist, the only site in the UK where prehistoric mummies have been found, and the impressive ruins of Dun Carloway broch on Lewis both date from the Iron Age.[73][74][75]

History

In Scotland, the Celtic Iron Age way of life, often troubled but never extinguished by Rome, re-asserted itself when the legions abandoned any permanent occupation in 211 AD.[76] Hanson (2003) writes: "For many years it has been almost axiomatic in studies of the period that the Roman conquest must have had some major medium or long-term impact on Scotland. On present evidence that cannot be substantiated either in terms of environment, economy, or, indeed, society. The impact appears to have been very limited. The general picture remains one of broad continuity, not of disruption ... The Roman presence in Scotland was little more than a series of brief interludes within a longer continuum of indigenous development."[77] The Romans' direct impact on the Highlands and Islands was scant and there is no evidence that they ever actually landed in the Outer Hebrides.[78]

The later Iron Age inhabitants of the northern and western Hebrides were probably Pictish, although the historical record is sparse. Hunter (2000) states that in relation to King Bridei I of the Picts in the sixth century AD: "As for Shetland, Orkney, Skye and the Western Isles, their inhabitants, most of whom appear to have been Pictish in culture and speech at this time, are likely to have regarded Bridei as a fairly distant presence."[79] The island of Pabbay is the site of the Pabbay Stone, the only extant Pictish symbol stone in the Outer Hebrides. This 6th century stele shows a flower, V-rod and lunar crescent to which has been added a later and somewhat crude cross.[80]

Norse control

 
Location of the Kingdom of the Isles at the end of the eleventh century

Viking raids began on Scottish shores towards the end of the 8th century AD and the Hebrides came under Norse control and settlement during the ensuing decades, especially following the success of Harald Fairhair at the Battle of Hafrsfjord in 872.[81][82] In the Western Isles Ketill Flatnose was the dominant figure of the mid 9th century, by which time he had amassed a substantial island realm and made a variety of alliances with other Norse leaders. These princelings nominally owed allegiance to the Norwegian crown, although in practice the latter's control was fairly limited.[83] Norse control of the Hebrides was formalised in 1098 when Edgar, King of Scotland formally signed the islands over to Magnus III of Norway.[84] The Scottish acceptance of Magnus III as King of the Isles came after the Norwegian king had conquered Orkney, the Hebrides and the Isle of Man in a swift campaign earlier the same year, directed against the local Norwegian leaders of the various islands‘ petty kingdoms. By capturing the islands Magnus imposed a more direct royal control, although at a price. His skald Bjorn Cripplehand recorded that in Lewis "fire played high in the heaven" as "flame spouted from the houses" and that in the Uists "the king dyed his sword red in blood".[84] Thompson (1968) provides a more literal translation: "Fire played in the fig-trees of Liodhus; it mounted up to heaven. Far and wide the people were driven to flight. The fire gushed out of the houses".[85]

The Hebrides were now part of Kingdom of the Isles, whose rulers were themselves vassals of the Kings of Norway. The Kingdom had two parts: the Suðr-eyjar or South Isles encompassing the Hebrides and the Isle of Man; and the Norðr-eyjar or North Isles of Orkney and Shetland. This situation lasted until the partitioning of the Western Isles in 1156, at which time the Outer Hebrides remained under Norwegian control while the Inner Hebrides broke out under Somerled, the Norse-Celtic kinsman of the Manx royal house.[86]

Following the ill-fated 1263 expedition of Haakon IV of Norway, the Outer Hebrides along with the Isle of Man, were yielded to the Kingdom of Scotland a result of the 1266 Treaty of Perth.[87] Although their contribution to the islands can still be found in personal and placenames, the archaeological record of the Norse period is very limited. The best known find from this time is the Lewis chessmen, which date from the mid 12th century.[88]

Scots rule

 

As the Norse era drew to a close the Norse-speaking princes were gradually replaced by Gaelic-speaking clan chiefs including the MacLeods of Lewis and Harris, the MacDonalds of the Uists and MacNeil of Barra.[85][89][Note 4] This transition did little to relieve the islands of internecine strife although by the early 14th century the MacDonald Lords of the Isles, based on Islay, were in theory these chiefs' feudal superiors and managed to exert some control.[93]

The growing threat that Clan Donald posed to the Scottish crown led to the forcible dissolution of the Lordship of the Isles by James IV in 1493, but although the king had the power to subdue the organised military might of the Hebrides, he and his immediate successors lacked the will or ability to provide an alternative form of governance.[94] The House of Stuart's attempts to control the Outer Hebrides were then at first desultory and little more than punitive expeditions. In 1506 the Earl of Huntly besieged and captured Stornoway Castle using cannon. In 1540 James V himself conducted a royal tour, forcing the clan chiefs to accompany him. There followed a period of peace, but all too soon the clans were at loggerheads again.[95]

In 1598 King James VI authorised some "Gentleman Adventurers" from Fife to civilise the "most barbarous Isle of Lewis". Initially successful, the colonists were driven out by local forces commanded by Murdoch and Neil MacLeod, who based their forces on Bearasaigh in Loch Ròg. The colonists tried again in 1605 with the same result but a third attempt in 1607 was more successful, and in due course Stornoway became a Burgh of Barony.[96][97] By this time Lewis was held by the Mackenzies of Kintail, (later the Earls of Seaforth), who pursued a more enlightened approach, investing in fishing in particular. The historian W. C. MacKenzie was moved to write:[98]

At the end of the 17th century, the picture we have of Lewis that of a people pursuing their avocation in peace, but not in plenty. The Seaforths ..., besides establishing orderly Government in the island.. had done a great deal to rescue the people from the slough of ignorance and incivility in which they found themselves immersed. But in the sphere of economics their policy apparently was of little service to the community.

The Seaforth's royalist inclinations led to Lewis becoming garrisoned during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms by Cromwell's troops, who destroyed the old castle in Stornoway and in 1645 Lewismen fought on the royalist side at the Battle of Auldearn.[99] A new era of Hebridean involvement in the affairs of the wider world was about to commence.

British era

 
Abandoned school house, Mingulay

With the implementation of the Treaty of Union in 1707 the Hebrides became part of the new Kingdom of Great Britain, but the clans' loyalties to a distant monarch were not strong. A considerable number of islandmen "came out" in support of the Jacobite Earl of Mar in the "15" although the response to the 1745 rising was muted.[99] Nonetheless the aftermath of the decisive Battle of Culloden, which effectively ended Jacobite hopes of a Stuart restoration, was widely felt. The British government's strategy was to estrange the clan chiefs from their kinsmen and turn their descendants into English-speaking landlords whose main concern was the revenues their estates brought rather than the welfare of those who lived on them. This may have brought peace to the islands, but in the following century it came at a terrible price.

The Highland Clearances of the 19th century destroyed communities throughout the Highlands and Islands as the human populations were evicted and replaced with sheep farms.[100] For example, Colonel Gordon of Cluny, owner of Barra, South Uist and Benbecula, evicted thousands of islanders using trickery and cruelty and even offered to sell Barra to the government as a penal colony.[101] Islands such as Fuaigh Mòr were completely cleared of their populations and even today the subject is recalled with bitterness and resentment in some areas.[102] The position was exacerbated by the failure of the islands' kelp industry, which thrived from the 18th century until the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815[103] and large scale emigration became endemic. For example, hundreds left North Uist for Cape Breton, Nova Scotia.[104] The pre-clearance population of the island had been almost 5,000, although by 1841 it had fallen to 3,870 and was only 2,349 by 1931.[105][106]

The Highland potato famine (Gaiseadh a’ bhuntàta, in Scottish Gaelic), caused by a blight, started in 1846 and had a serious impact, because many islanders were crofters; potatoes were a staple of their diet.[107] Violent riots became common.[108] Charities, encouraged by George Pole[109] and others in the Commissariat (a military agency) encouraged charities to come to the rescue. The Free Church was particularly helpful, "delivering oatmeal to famine-affected families all across the West Highlands and Islands", according to one report. Another report states that the Church "was prompt in organising an efficient system of private charity across the Hebrides and on the Western seaboard. It cooperated with the Edinburgh and Glasgow Relief Committees".[110][111]

An interdenominational charity was in place by early 1847 and took the most significant role in famine relief.[112] Some landowners also provided a great deal of assistance, according to one history of the region: "MacLeod of Dunvegan bought in food for his people, some eight thousand of them" ... MacLean of Ardgour provided food, and introduced new crops into the area - peas, cabbages and carrots ... Sir James Matheson on Lewis spent £329,000 on improving his lands, hoping to provide a more secure future for his people". The government of Britain provided some assistance, thanks to Sir Charles Trevelyan, who arranged for food distribution at Portree and Tobermory. The British Association for the Relief of Distress in Ireland and the Highlands and Islands of Scotland also helped as did donations received from North America. The blight struck again over the next two years, requiring an extra tax on landowners to help feed the population. The British government began encouraging mass emigration.[113][114]

For those who remained new economic opportunities emerged through the export of cattle, commercial fishing and tourism. During the summer season in the 1860s and 1870s five thousand inhabitants of Lewis could be found in Wick on the mainland of Scotland, employed on the fishing boats and at the quaysides.[115] Nonetheless emigration and military service became the choice of many[116] and the archipelago's populations continued to dwindle throughout the late 19th and 20th centuries. By 2001 the population of North Uist was only 1,271.[43][106]

The work of the Napier Commission and the Congested Districts Board, and the passing of the Crofting Act of 1886 helped, but social unrest continued.[117] In July 1906 grazing land on Vatersay was raided by landless men from Barra and its isles. Lady Gordon Cathcart took legal action against the "raiders" but the visiting judge took the view that she had neglected her duties as a landowner and that "long indifference to the necessities of the cottars had gone far to drive them to exasperation".[118] Millennia of continuous occupation notwithstanding, many of the remoter islands were abandoned — Mingulay in 1912, Hirta in 1930, and Ceann Iar in 1942 among them. This process involved a transition from these places being perceived as relatively self-sufficient agricultural economies[119] to a view becoming held by both island residents and outsiders alike that they lacked the essential services of a modern industrial economy.[120]

There were gradual economic improvements, among the most visible of which was the replacement of the traditional thatched blackhouse with accommodation of a more modern design.[when?] The creation of the Highlands and Islands Development Board and the discovery of substantial deposits of North Sea oil in 1965, the establishment of a unitary local authority for the islands in 1975 and more recently the renewables sector have all contributed to a degree of economic stability in recent decades. The Arnish yard has had a chequered history but has been a significant employer in both the oil and renewables industries.[121] Comhairle nan Eilean Siar, the local authority, employs 2,000 people, making it the largest employer in the Outer Hebrides.[122] See also the "Innse Gall area plan 2010"[123] and the Comhairle's "Factfile – Economy".[124]

Economy

 
Stornoway Harbour

Modern commercial activities centre on tourism, crofting, fishing, and weaving including the manufacture of Harris tweed. Crofting remains popular especially on Lewis and Harris (population 21,000) with over 920 active crofters according to a 2020 report: "with crofts ranging in size from as small as a single hectare to having access to thousands of hectares through the medium of community grazing". Crofters can apply for subsidy grants; some of these are intended to help them find other avenues to supplement their incomes.[125] Some of the funding schemes available to crofters in the Hebrides include the "Basic Payment Scheme, the suckler beef support scheme, the upland sheep support scheme and the Less Favoured Area support scheme and the Crofting Agricultural Grant Scheme (CAGS), as of March 2020.[126]

According to the Scottish Government, "tourism is by far and away the mainstay industry" of the Outer Hebrides, "generating £65m in economic value for the islands, sustaining around 1000 jobs" The report adds that the "islands receive 219,000 visitors per year".[127]

Some of the larger islands have development trusts that support the local economy and, in striking contrast to the 19th and 20th century domination by absentee landlords, more than two thirds of the Western Isles population now lives on community-owned estates.[128][129] However the economic position of the islands remains relatively precarious. The Western Isles, including Stornoway, are defined by Highlands and Islands Enterprise as an economically "Fragile Area" and they have an estimated trade deficit of some £163.4 million. Overall, the area is relatively reliant on primary industries and the public sector, and fishing and fish farming in particular are vulnerable to environmental impacts, changing market pressures, and European legislation.[124]

There is some optimism about the possibility of future developments in, for example, renewable energy generation, tourism, and education, and after declines in the 20th century the population has stabilised since 2003, although it is ageing.[124][130] A 2019 report, using key assumptions, (mortality, fertility and migration) was less optimistic. It predicted that the population is "projected to fall to 22,709 by 2043"; that translates to a 16% decline, or 4,021 people, between 2018 and 2043.[131]

The UK’s largest community-owned wind farm, the 9MW Beinn Ghrideag, a "3 turbine, 9MW scheme" is located outside Stornoway and is operated by Point and Sandwick Trust (PST). [132][133][134]

The Isle of Lewis web site states that Stornoway's sheltered harbour has been important for centuries; it was named Steering Bay by Vikings who often visited.[135] A December 2020 report stated that a new deep water terminal was to be developed, the Stornoway Deep Water Terminal, using a £49 million investment. The plan included berths for cruise ships as long as 360 meters, berths for large cargo vessels, and a freight ferry berth.[136]

Politics and local government

 
Sir Edward Scott Secondary School, Tarbert, Isle of Harris

From the passing of the Local Government (Scotland) Act 1889 to 1975 Lewis formed part of the county of Ross and Cromarty and the rest of the archipelago, including Harris, was part of Inverness-shire.[137]

The Outer Hebrides became a unitary council area in 1975, although in most of the rest of Scotland similar unitary councils were not established until 1996.[138][139] Since then, the islands have formed one of the 32 unitary council areas that now cover the whole country, with the council officially known by its Gaelic name, Comhairle nan Eilean Siar under the terms of the Local Government (Gaelic Names) (Scotland) Act 1997. The council has its base in Stornoway on Lewis and is often known locally simply as "the Comhairle" or a' Chomhairle.[140] The Comhairle is one of only three Councils in Scotland with a majority of elected members who are independents. The other independent-run councils are Shetland and Orkney. Moray is run by a Conservative/Independent coalition.[141][142]

The name for the British Parliament constituency covering this area is Na h-Eileanan an Iar, the seat being held by Angus MacNeil MP since 2005, while the Scottish Parliament constituency for the area is Na h-Eileanan an Iar, the incumbent being Alasdair Allan MSP.

During the 2014 Scottish independence referendum the area voted against independence by a margin of 53.42% (10,544) to 46.58% (9,195) in favour on a turnout of 86.2%[143]

In 2022, as part of the Levelling Up White Paper, an "Island Forum" was proposed, which would allow local policymakers and residents in the Outer Hebrides to work alongside their counterparts in Shetland, Orkney, Anglesey and the Isle of Wight on common issues, such as broadband connectivity, and provide a platform for them to communicate directly with the government on the challenges island communities face in terms of levelling up.[144][145]

Scottish Gaelic language

The Outer Hebrides have historically been a very strong Scottish Gaelic (Gàidhlig) speaking area. Both the 1901 and 1921 census reported that all parishes were over 75% Gaelic speaking, including areas of high population density such as Stornoway. However, the Education (Scotland) Act 1872 mandated English-only education, and is now recognised as having dealt a major blow to the language. People still living can recall being beaten for speaking Gaelic in school.[146] Nonetheless, by 1971 most areas were still more than 75% Gaelic speaking – with the exception of Stornoway, Benbecula and South Uist at 50–74%.[147]

In the 2001 census, each island overall was over 50% Gaelic speaking – South Uist (71%), Harris (69%), Barra (68%), North Uist (67%), Lewis (56%) and Benbecula (56%). With 59.3% of Gaelic speakers or a total of 15,723 speakers, this made the Outer Hebrides the most strongly coherent Gaelic speaking area in Scotland.[147][148]

Most areas were between 60-74% Gaelic speaking and the areas with the highest density of over 80% are Scalpay near Harris, Newtonferry and Kildonan, whilst Daliburgh, Linshader, Eriskay, Brue, Boisdale, West Harris, Ardveenish, Soval, Ness, and Bragar all have more than 75%. The areas with the lowest density of speakers are Stornoway (44%), Braigh (41%), Melbost (41%), and Balivanich (37%).[147]

The Gaelic Language (Scotland) Act was enacted by the Scottish Parliament in 2005 to provide continuing support for the language.[149] However, by 2011 the overall percentage of Gaelic speakers in the Outer Hebrides had fallen to 52%.[150]

In modern Gaelic the islands are sometimes referred to collectively as An t-Eilean Fada (the Long Island)[60] or Na h-Eileanan a-Muigh (the Outer Isles).[151] Innse Gall (islands of the foreigners or strangers) is also heard occasionally, a name that was originally used by mainland Highlanders when the islands were ruled by the Norse.[152]

The individual island and place names in the Outer Hebrides have mixed Gaelic and Norse origins. Various Gaelic terms are used repeatedly:[153]

Gaelic root Derived forms Anglicised as Origin and meaning
-aigh -ay/-ey generally from the Norse øy meaning "island"
beag bheag, bige, bhige, beaga, bheaga beg small
dearg dhearg, deirge, dheirge, deirg, dheirg, dearga, dhearga derg red
dubh dhubh, duibh, dhuibh, duibhe, dhuibhe, dubha, dhubha black; hidden
glas ghlas, glais, ghlais, glaise, ghlaise, glasa, ghlasa grey, green
ear east, eastern
eilean eilein, eileanan island
iar west, western
mòr mhòr, mòire, mhòire, mòra, mhòra, mòir, mhòir more big, great
rubha rubhannan promontory
sgeir sgeirean skerry skerry; often refers to a rock or rocks that lie submerged at high tide. From Old Norse sker.

There are also several islands called Orasaigh from the Norse Örfirirsey meaning "tidal" or "ebb island".[153]

Transport

 

Scheduled ferry services between the Outer Hebrides and the Scottish Mainland and Inner Hebrides operate on the following routes:

Other ferries operate between some of the islands.[154]

National Rail services are available for onward journeys, from stations at Oban and Mallaig, which has direct services to Glasgow. However, parliamentary approval notwithstanding, plans in the 1890s to lay a railway connection to Ullapool were unable to obtain sufficient funding.[155]

There are scheduled flights from Stornoway, Benbecula and Barra airports both inter-island and to the mainland. Barra's airport is claimed to be the only one in the world to have scheduled flights landing on a beach. At high water the runways are under the sea so flight times vary with the tide.[156][157]

 
Bus Na Comhairle Optare Solo YJ14 BDY seen in Sandwick - May 2020

Bus na Comhairle

Bus na Comhairle (meaning "Bus of the Council") is the council-owned local bus company of the Western Isles of Scotland. The company serves the Broadbay area of Lewis with 7 buses - 6 Optare Solos and 1 ADL Enviro 200.

Shipwrecks

 

The archipelago is exposed to wind and tide, and lighthouses are sited as an aid to navigation at locations from Barra Head in the south to the Butt of Lewis in the north.[158] There are numerous sites of wrecked ships, and the Flannan Isles are the location of an enduring mystery that occurred in December 1900, when all three lighthouse keepers vanished without trace.[159]

Annie Jane, a three-masted immigrant ship out of Liverpool bound for Montreal, Canada, struck rocks off the West Beach of Vatersay during a storm on Tuesday 28 September 1853. Within ten minutes the ship began to founder and break up casting 450 people into the raging sea. In spite of the conditions, islanders tried to rescue the passengers and crew. The remains of 350 men, women and children were buried in the dunes behind the beach and a small cairn and monument marks the site.[160]

The tiny Beasts of Holm off the east coast of Lewis were the site of the sinking of HMS Iolaire during the first few hours of 1919,[161] one of the worst maritime disasters in United Kingdom waters during the 20th century. Calvay in the Sound of Barra provided the inspiration for Compton Mackenzie's novel Whisky Galore after the SS Politician ran aground there with a cargo of single malt in 1941.

Culture

Christianity has deep roots in the Western Isles, but owing mainly to the different allegiances of the clans in the past, the people in the northern islands (Lewis, Harris, North Uist) have historically been predominantly Presbyterian, and those of the southern islands (Benbecula, South Uist, Barra) predominantly Roman Catholic.[162]

At the time of the 2001 Census, 42% of the population identified themselves as being affiliated with the Church of Scotland, with 13% Roman Catholic and 28% with other Christian churches. Many of this last group belong to the Free Church of Scotland, known for its strict observance of the Sabbath.[163] 11% stated that they had no religion.[Note 5] This made the Western Isles the Scottish council area with the smallest percentage of non-religious in the population. There are also small Episcopalian congregations in Lewis and Harris and the Outer Hebrides are part of the Diocese of Argyll and The Isles in both the Episcopalian and Catholic traditions.[165][166]

Gaelic music is popular in the islands and the Lewis and Harris Traditional Music Society plays an active role in promoting the genre.[167] Fèis Bharraigh began in 1981 with the aim of developing the practice and study of the Gaelic language, literature, music, drama and culture on the islands of Barra and Vatersay. A two-week festival, it has inspired 43 other feisean throughout Scotland.[168] The Lewis Pipe Band was founded in 1904 and the Lewis and Harris Piping Society in 1977.[167]

Outdoor activities including rugby, football, golf, shinty, fishing, riding, canoeing, athletics, and multi-sports are popular in the Western Isles. The Hebridean Challenge is an adventure race run in five daily stages, which takes place along the length of the islands and includes hill and road running, road and mountain biking, short sea swims and demanding sea kayaking sections. There are four main sports centres: Ionad Spors Leodhais in Stornoway, which has a 25 m swimming pool; Harris Sports Centre; Lionacleit Sports Centre on Benbecula; and Castlebay Sports Centre on Barra. The Western Isles is a member of the International Island Games Association.[169][170]

South Uist is home to the Askernish Golf Course. The oldest links in the Outer Hebrides, it was designed by Old Tom Morris. Although it was in use until the 1930s, its existence was largely forgotten until 2005 and it is now being restored to Morris's original design.[171][172]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Murray (1973) notes that "Western Isles" has tended to mean "Outer Hebrides" since the creation of the Na h-Eileanan an Iar or Western Isles parliamentary constituency in 1918. The phrase can also be used to refer to the Hebrides in general. Murray also notes that "Gneiss Islands"—a reference to the underlying geology – is another name used to refer to the Outer Hebrides but that its use is "confined to books".[4]
  2. ^ This tidal isle is at (grid reference NF860580) and the evidence of both Ordnance Survey maps and photographs (e.g. "Houses on Seana Bhaile" Geograph. Retrieved 10 August 2009) indicates a resident population. There is even a name, Seana Bhaile (English: "Old Town") for the main settlement. However, neither the census nor the main reference work (Haswell-Smith 2004) refer to the island. Its population is presumably included in nearby Grimsay by the census.
  3. ^ Lewisian gneiss is sometimes described as the oldest rock found in Europe, but trondhjemite gneiss recently measured at Siurua in Finland has been dated to 3.4–3.5 Ga.[61]
  4. ^ The transitional relationships between Norse and Gaelic-speaking rulers are complex. The Gall-Ghàidhels who dominated much of the Irish Sea region and western Scotland at this time were of joint Gaelic and Scandinavian origin. When Somerled wrested the southern Inner Hebrides from Godred the Black in 1156, this was the beginnings of a break with nominal Norse rule in the Hebrides. Godred remained the ruler of Mann and the Outer Hebrides, but two years later Somerled's invasion of the former caused him to flee to Norway. Norse control was further weakened in the ensuring century, but the Hebrides were not formally ceded by Norway until 1266.[90][91] The transitions from one language to another are also complex. For example, many Scandinavian sources from this period of time typically refer to individuals as having a Scandinavian first name and a Gaelic by-name.[92]
  5. ^ The 2001 census statistics used are based on local authority areas but do not specifically identify Free Church or Episcopal adherents. 4% of the respondents did not answer this census question and the total for all other religions combined is 1 per cent.[164]

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  • Armit, Ian (1998) Scotland's Hidden History. Tempus (in association with Historic Scotland). ISBN 0-7486-6067-4
  • Ballin Smith, B. and Banks, I. (eds) (2002) In the Shadow of the Brochs, the Iron Age in Scotland. Stroud. Tempus. ISBN 0-7524-2517-X
  • Ballin Smith, Beverley; Taylor, Simon; Williams, Gareth (eds) (2007) West Over Sea: Studies in Scandinavian Sea-Borne Expansion and Settlement Before 1300. Leiden. Koninklijke Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-15893-1
  • Benvie, Neil (2004) Scotland's Wildlife. London. Aurum Press. ISBN 1-85410-978-2
  • Buxton, Ben (1995) Mingulay: An Island and Its People. Edinburgh. Birlinn. ISBN 1-874744-24-6
  • Downham, Clare (2007) Viking Kings of Britain and Ireland: The Dynasty of Ívarr to A.D. 1014. Edinburgh. Dunedin Academic Press. ISBN 978-1-903765-89-0
  • Gillen, Con (2003) Geology and landscapes of Scotland. Harpenden. Terra Publishing. ISBN 1-903544-09-2
  • Gregory, Donald (1881) The History of the Western Highlands and Isles of Scotland 1493–1625. Edinburgh. Birlinn. 2008 reprint – originally published by Thomas D. Morrison. ISBN 1-904607-57-8
  • Hanson, William S. "The Roman Presence: Brief Interludes", in Edwards, Kevin J. & Ralston, Ian B.M. (Eds) (2003) Scotland After the Ice Age: Environment, Archaeology and History, 8000 BC – AD 1000. Edinburgh. Edinburgh University Press.
  • Haswell-Smith, Hamish. (2004) The Scottish Islands. Edinburgh. Canongate. ISBN 1-84195-454-3
  • Hunter, James (2000) Last of the Free: A History of the Highlands and Islands of Scotland. Edinburgh. Mainstream. ISBN 1-84018-376-4
  • Keay, J. & Keay, J. (1994) Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland. London. HarperCollins. ISBN 0-00-255082-2
  • Mac an Tàilleir, Iain (2003). "Ainmean-àite le buidheachas do dh' Iain Mac an Tailleir / Place-names collected by Iain Mac an Tailleir". The Scottish Parliament / Pàrlamaid na h-Alba. Retrieved 26 August 2012. "A'Chleit – Butt of Lewis" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. "Cabaan – Eyre" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. "Faddoch – Jura" (PDF). Archived (PDF) from the original on 9 October 2022. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 November 2018. Retrieved 9 March 2018. (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 May 2016. Retrieved 9 March 2018.
  • McKirdy, Alan Gordon, John & Crofts, Roger (2007) Land of Mountain and Flood: The Geology and Landforms of Scotland. Edinburgh. Birlinn. ISBN 978-1-84158-357-0
  • Maclean, Charles (1977) Island on the Edge of the World: the Story of St. Kilda. Edinburgh. Canongate. ISBN 0-903937-41-7
  • Malhotra, R. (1992) Anthropology of Development: Commemoration Volume in Honour of Professor I.P. Singh. New Delhi. Mittal. ISBN 81-7099-328-8
  • Li, Martin (2005) Adventure Guide to Scotland. Hunter Publishing. Retrieved 19 May 2010.
  • Miers, Mary (2008) The Western Seaboard: An Illustrated Architectural Guide. The Rutland Press. ISBN 978-1-873190-29-6
  • Murray, Sir John and Pullar, Laurence (1910). Bathymetrical Survey of the Fresh-Water Lochs of Scotland, 1897–1909. National Library of Scotland. Edinburgh: Challenger Office. Retrieved 8 March 2018.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: uses authors parameter (link)
  • Murray, W.H. (1966) The Hebrides. London. Heinemann.
  • Murray, W.H. (1973) The Islands of Western Scotland: the Inner and Outer Hebrides. London. Eyre Methuen. ISBN 0-413-30380-2
  • Ross, David (2005) Scotland – History of a Nation. Lomond. ISBN 0-947782-58-3
  • Rotary Club of Stornoway (1995) The Outer Hebrides Handbook and Guide. Machynlleth. Kittiwake. ISBN 0-9511003-5-1
  • Thompson, Francis (1968) Harris and Lewis, Outer Hebrides. Newton Abbot. David & Charles. ISBN 0-7153-4260-6
  • Watson, W. J. (1994) The Celtic Place-Names of Scotland. Edinburgh; Birlinn. ISBN 1-84158-323-5. First published 1926.

External links

  • Western Isles at Curlie
  • Stornoway Port Authority
  • Comhairle nan Eilean Siar
  • MacTV
  • Reefnet
  • Hebrides.com Photographic website from ex-Eolas Sam Maynard
  • www.visithebrides.com Western Isles Tourist Board site from Reefnet
  • Virtual Hebrides.com Content from the VH, which went its own way and became Virtual Scotland.
  • hebrides.ca Home of the Quebec-Hebridean Scots who were cleared from Lewis to Quebec 1838–1920s

outer, hebrides, eileanan, redirects, here, parliamentary, constituencies, eileanan, scottish, parliament, constituency, eileanan, parliament, constituency, western, isles, scottish, gaelic, eileanan, siar, ˈhelanən, ˈʃiəɾ, listen, eileanan, ˈhelanən, əˈɲiəɾ, . Na h Eileanan an Iar redirects here For the parliamentary constituencies see Na h Eileanan an Iar Scottish Parliament constituency and Na h Eileanan an Iar UK Parliament constituency The Outer Hebrides ˈ h ɛ b r ɪ d iː z or Western Isles Scottish Gaelic Na h Eileanan Siar ne ˈhelanen ˈʃieɾ listen or Na h Eileanan an Iar ne ˈhelanen eˈɲieɾ listen or Na h Innse Gall islands of the strangers Scots Waster Isles sometimes known as the Long Isle Long Island Scottish Gaelic An t Eilean Fada is an island chain off the west coast of mainland Scotland Note 1 The islands are geographically coextensive with Comhairle nan Eilean Siar one of the 32 unitary council areas of Scotland They form part of the archipelago of the Hebrides separated from the Scottish mainland and from the Inner Hebrides by the waters of the Minch the Little Minch and the Sea of the Hebrides Scottish Gaelic is the predominant spoken language although in a few areas English speakers form a majority Outer HebridesScottish Gaelic nameNa h Eileanan SiarMeaning of nameWestern IslesFlag of Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Coat of armsLocationOuter HebridesOuter Hebrides shown within ScotlandOS grid referenceNB426340Coordinates57 46 N 7 01 W 57 76 N 7 02 W 57 76 7 02 Coordinates 57 46 N 7 01 W 57 76 N 7 02 W 57 76 7 02Physical geographyArea3 059 km2 1 181 sq mi 1 Highest elevationClisham 799 m 2 621 ft 2 AdministrationSovereign stateUnited KingdomCountryScotlandCouncil areaComhairle nan Eilean SiarDemographicsPopulation26 830 3 Population density9 km2Largest settlementStornowayMost of the islands have a bedrock formed from ancient metamorphic rocks and the climate is mild and oceanic The 15 inhabited islands have a total population of 26 830 3 and there are more than 50 substantial uninhabited islands The distance from Barra Head to the Butt of Lewis is roughly 210 kilometres 130 mi There are various important prehistoric structures many of which pre date the first written references to the islands by Roman and Greek authors The Western Isles became part of the Norse kingdom of the Sudreyjar which lasted for over 400 years until sovereignty over the Outer Hebrides was transferred to Scotland by the Treaty of Perth in 1266 Control of the islands was then held by clan chiefs principal amongst whom were the MacLeods MacDonalds Mackenzies and MacNeils The Highland Clearances of the 19th century had a devastating effect on many communities and it is only in recent years that population levels have ceased to decline Much of the land is now under local control and commercial activity is based on tourism crofting fishing and weaving Sea transport is crucial and a variety of ferry services operate between the islands and to mainland Scotland Modern navigation systems now minimise the dangers but in the past the stormy seas have claimed many ships Religion music and sport are important aspects of local culture and there are numerous designated conservation areas to protect the natural environment Contents 1 Etymology 2 Geography 2 1 Flora and fauna 3 Population 3 1 Uninhabited islands 4 Geology 5 Climate 6 Prehistory 7 History 7 1 Norse control 7 2 Scots rule 7 3 British era 8 Economy 9 Politics and local government 10 Scottish Gaelic language 11 Transport 11 1 Bus na Comhairle 11 2 Shipwrecks 12 Culture 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Sources 17 External linksEtymology EditThe earliest written references that have survived relating to the islands were made by Pliny the Elder in his Natural History where he states that there are 30 Hebudes and makes a separate reference to Dumna which Watson 1926 concludes is unequivocally the Outer Hebrides Writing about 80 years later in 140 150 AD Ptolemy drawing on the earlier naval expeditions of Agricola also distinguished between the Ebudes of which he writes there were only five and thus possibly meaning the Inner Hebrides and Dumna 5 6 Dumna is cognate with the Early Celtic dumnos and means the deep sea isle 6 Pliny probably took his information from Pytheas of Massilia who visited Britain sometime between 322 and 285 BC It is possible that Ptolemy did as well as Agricola s information about the west coast of Scotland was of poor quality 5 6 Breeze also suggests that Dumna might be Lewis and Harris the largest island of the Outer Hebrides although he conflates this single island with the name Long Island 5 Watson 1926 states that the meaning of Ptolemy s Eboudai is unknown and that the root may be pre Celtic 7 Murray 1966 claims that Ptolemy s Ebudae was originally derived from the Old Norse Havbredey meaning isles on the edge of the sea This idea is often repeated but no firm evidence of this derivation has emerged 8 Other early written references include the flight of the Nemed people from Ireland to Domon which is mentioned in the 12th century Lebor Gabala Erenn and a 13th century poem concerning Raghnall mac Gofraidh then the heir to the throne of Mann and the Isles who is said to have broken the gate of Magh Domhna Magh Domhna means the plain of Domhna or Domon but the precise meaning of the text is not clear 6 In Irish mythology the islands were the home of the Fomorians described as huge and ugly and ship men of the sea They were pirates extracting tribute from the coasts of Ireland and one of their kings was Indech mac De Domnand i e Indech son of the goddess Domnu who ruled over the deep seas 9 Geography Edit Satellite image of Outer Hebrides Nicolson s Leap on the east coast of South Uist In the background are Beinn Mhor at left and Hecla on the right Main article List of Outer Hebrides The islands form an archipelago whose major islands are Lewis and Harris North Uist Benbecula South Uist and Barra Lewis and Harris has an area of 2 178 98 square kilometres 841 sq mi 10 and is the largest island in Scotland and the third largest in the British Isles after Great Britain and Ireland 11 It incorporates Lewis in the north and Harris in the south both of which are frequently referred to as individual islands although they are connected by land The island does not have a single name in either English or Gaelic and is referred to as Lewis and Harris Lewis with Harris Harris with Lewis etc 12 The largest islands are deeply indented by arms of the sea such as Loch Rog Loch Seaforth and Loch nam Madadh There are also more than 7 500 freshwater lochs in the Outer Hebrides about 24 of the total for the whole of Scotland 13 North and South Uist and Lewis in particular have landscapes with a high percentage of fresh water and a maze and complexity of loch shapes Harris has fewer large bodies of water but has innumerable small lochans Loch Langavat on Lewis is 11 kilometres 7 mi long and has several large islands in its midst including Eilean Mor Although Loch Suaineabhal has only 25 of Loch Langavat s surface area it has a mean depth of 33 metres 108 ft and is the most voluminous on the island 14 Of Loch Sgadabhagh on North Uist it has been said that there is probably no other loch in Britain which approaches Loch Scadavay in irregularity and complexity of outline 15 Loch Bi is South Uist s largest loch and at 8 kilometres 5 mi long it all but cuts the island in two 16 Much of the western coastline of the islands is machair a fertile low lying dune pastureland 17 Lewis is comparatively flat and largely consists of treeless moors of blanket peat The highest eminence is Mealisval at 574 m 1 883 ft in the south west Most of Harris is mountainous with large areas of exposed rock and Clisham the archipelago s only Corbett reaches 799 m 2 621 ft in height 2 10 North and South Uist and Benbecula sometimes collectively referred to as The Uists have sandy beaches and wide cultivated areas of machair to the west and virtually uninhabited mountainous areas to the east The highest peak here is Beinn Mhor at 620 metres 2 034 ft 18 The Uists and their immediate outliers have a combined area of 745 4 square kilometres 288 sq mi This includes the Uists themselves and the islands linked to them by causeways and bridges 19 Barra is 58 75 square kilometres 23 sq mi in extent and has a rugged interior surrounded by machair and extensive beaches 20 21 The scenic qualities of the islands are reflected in the fact that three of Scotland s forty national scenic areas NSAs are located here The national scenic areas are defined so as to identify areas of exceptional scenery and to ensure its protection from inappropriate development 22 and are considered to represent the type of scenic beauty popularly associated with Scotland and for which it is renowned 23 The three NSA within the Outer Hebrides are South Lewis Harris and North Uist National Scenic Area covers the mountainous south west of Lewis all of Harris the Sound of Harris and the northern part of North Uist 24 An area of the south west coast of South Uist is designated as the South Uist Machair National Scenic Area 25 The archipelago of St Kilda is also listed as an NSA alongside many other conservation designations 26 Flora and fauna Edit Main article Flora and fauna of the Outer Hebrides The open landscapes of Benbecula Bagh Mor Grimsay Much of the archipelago is a protected habitat including both the islands and the surrounding waters There are 53 Sites of Special Scientific Interest of which the largest are Loch an Duin North Uist 151 square kilometres 37 000 acres and North Harris 127 square kilometres 31 000 acres 27 28 South Uist is considered the best place in the UK for the aquatic plant Slender Naiad which is a European Protected Species 29 30 There has been considerable controversy over hedgehogs on the Uists Hedgehogs are not native to the islands but were introduced in the 1970s to reduce garden pests Their spread posed a threat to the eggs of ground nesting wading birds In 2003 Scottish Natural Heritage undertook culls of hedgehogs in the area but these were halted in 2007 trapped animals are now relocated to the mainland 31 32 Nationally important populations of breeding waders are present in the Outer Hebrides including common redshank dunlin lapwing and ringed plover The islands also provide a habitat for other important species such as corncrake hen harrier golden eagle and otter Offshore basking shark and various species of whale and dolphin can often be seen 33 and the remoter islands seabird populations are of international significance St Kilda has 60 000 northern gannets amounting to 24 of the world population 49 000 breeding pairs of Leach s petrel up to 90 of the European population and 136 000 pairs of puffin and 67 000 northern fulmar pairs about 30 and 13 of the respective UK totals 34 Mingulay is an important breeding ground for razorbills with 9 514 pairs 6 3 of the European population 35 The bumblebee Bombus jonellus var hebridensis is endemic to the Hebrides and there are local variants of the dark green fritillary and green veined white butterflies 36 The St Kilda wren is a subspecies of wren whose range is confined to the islands whose name it bears 37 Population Edit Lews Castle Stornoway Historical populationYearPop 186136 319 190146 172 27 1 195135 591 22 9 196132 609 8 4 197129 891 8 3 198130 702 2 7 199129 600 3 6 200126 502 10 5 201127 684 4 5 38 39 40 The islands total population was 26 502 at the 2001 census and the 2011 figure was 27 684 38 During the same period Scottish island populations as a whole grew by 4 to 103 702 41 The largest settlement in the Outer Hebrides is Stornoway on Lewis 42 43 which has a population of about 8 100 44 The population estimate for 2019 was 26 720 according to a Comhairle nan Eilean Siar report which added that the population of the Outer Hebrides is ageing and that young adults leave the islands for further education or employment purposes Of the total population 6 953 people reside in the Stornoway settlement Laxdale Lacasdal Sandwick Sanndabhaig and Newmarket with the balance distributed over 280 townships 45 In addition to the major North Ford Oitir Mhor and South Ford causeways that connect North Uist to Benbecula via the northern of the Grimsays and another causeway from Benbecula to South Uist several other islands are linked by smaller causeways or bridges Great Bernera and Scalpay have bridge connections to Lewis and Harris respectively with causeways linking Baleshare and Berneray to North Uist Eriskay to South Uist Flodaigh Fraoch Eilean and the southern Grimsay to Benbecula and Vatersay to Barra 16 46 47 This means that all the inhabited islands are now connected to at least one other island by a land transport route Geographic distribution of Gaelic speakers in Scotland 2011 Island Gaelic name 2011 population 38 2001 population 43 2011 Gaelic speakers 48 Lewis and Harris Leodhas 21 031 18 500 Lewis ParishSteornabhagh 43 5 492 Barabhas 64 2 037 Ceann a Tuath nan Loch 53 942 Uig 56 873 TOTAL 49 9 344 Hearadh 1 916 Harris 60 1 212 South Uist Uibhist a Deas 1 754 1 818 60 1 888 incl Benbecula North Uist Uibhist a Tuath 1 254 1 271 61 887 Benbecula Beinn nam Fadhla 1 303 1 219 60 1 888 with South Uist Barra Barraigh 1 174 1 078 62 761 Scalpay Sgalpaigh 291 322Great Bernera Bearnaraigh Mor 252 233Grimsay north Griomasaigh 169 201Berneray Bearnaraigh 138 136Eriskay Eirisgeigh 143 133Vatersay Bhatarsaigh 90 94Baleshare Baile Sear 58 49Grimsay south Griomasaigh 20 19Flodaigh Flodaigh 7 11Fraoch Eilean Fraoch Eilean Note 2 TOTAL 27 684 26 502 52 14 248 Uninhabited islands Edit View of the Barra Isles from Heaval The village of Castlebay is in the foreground with Vatersay and the uninhabited islands of Sandray Pabbay Mingulay and Berneray beyond There are more than fifty uninhabited islands greater in size than 40 hectares 99 acres in the Outer Hebrides including the Barra Isles Flannan Isles Monach Islands the Shiant Islands and the islands of Loch Rog 49 In common with the other main island chains of Scotland many of the more remote islands were abandoned during the 19th and 20th centuries in some cases after continuous habitation since the prehistoric period More than 35 such islands have been identified in the Outer Hebrides alone 50 On Barra Head for example Historic Scotland have identified eighty three archaeological sites on the island the majority being of a pre medieval date In the 18th century the population was over fifty but the last native islanders had left by 1931 The island became completely uninhabited by 1980 with the automation of the lighthouse 51 Some of the smaller islands continue to contribute to modern culture The Mingulay Boat Song although evocative of island life was written after the abandonment of the island in 1938 52 and Taransay hosted the BBC television series Castaway 2000 Others have played a part in Scottish history On 4 May 1746 the Young Pretender Charles Edward Stuart hid on Eilean Liubhaird with some of his men for four days whilst Royal Navy vessels patrolled the Minch 53 Smaller isles and skerries and other island groups pepper the North Atlantic surrounding the main islands Some are not geologically part of the Outer Hebrides but are administratively and in most cases culturally part of Comhairle nan Eilean Siar 73 kilometres 45 mi to the west of Lewis lies St Kilda now uninhabited except for a small military base 54 A similar distance to the north of Lewis are North Rona and Sula Sgeir two small and remote islands While Rona used to support a small population who grew grain and raised cattle Sula Sgeir is an inhospitable rock Thousands of northern gannets nest here and by special arrangement some of their young known as gugas are harvested annually by the men of Ness 55 The status of Rockall which is 367 kilometres 228 mi to the west of North Uist and which the Island of Rockall Act 1972 decreed to be a part of the Western Isles remains a matter of international dispute 56 57 Geology Edit Geological map of the Hebridean Terrane The Old Boy the gneiss cliffs of Sloc na Beiste Barra Head the southernmost point of the Outer Hebrides Most of the islands have a bedrock formed from Lewisian gneiss These are amongst the oldest rocks in Europe having been formed in the Precambrian period up to three billion years ago In addition to the Outer Hebrides they form basement deposits on the Scottish mainland west of the Moine Thrust and on the islands of Coll and Tiree 58 These rocks are largely igneous in origin mixed with metamorphosed marble quartzite and mica schist and intruded by later basaltic dykes and granite magma 59 The gneiss s delicate pink colours are exposed throughout the islands and it is sometimes referred to by geologists as The Old Boy 60 Note 3 Granite intrusions are found in the parish of Barvas in west Lewis and another forms the summit plateau of the mountain Roineabhal in Harris The granite here is anorthosite and is similar in composition to rocks found in the mountains of the Moon There are relatively small outcrops of Triassic sandstone at Broad Bay near Stornoway The Shiant Islands and St Kilda are formed from much later tertiary basalt and basalt and gabbros respectively The sandstone at Broad Bay was once thought to be Torridonian or Old Red Sandstone 12 62 63 Climate EditThe Outer Hebrides have a cool temperate climate that is remarkably mild and steady for such a northerly latitude due to the influence of the North Atlantic Current The average temperature for the year is 6 C 44 F in January and 14 C 57 F in summer The average annual rainfall in Lewis is 1 100 millimetres 43 in and sunshine hours range from 1 100 to 1 200 per year The summer days are relatively long and May to August is the driest period 64 Winds are a key feature of the climate and even in summer there are almost constant breezes According to the writer W H Murray if a visitor asks an islander for a weather forecast he will not like a mainlander answer dry wet or sunny but quote you a figure from the Beaufort Scale 65 There are gales one day in six at the Butt of Lewis and small fish are blown onto the grass on top of 190 metre 620 ft high cliffs at Barra Head during winter storms 66 Prehistory Edit The Callanish Stones The Hebrides were originally settled in the Mesolithic era and have a diversity of important prehistoric sites Eilean Domhnuill in Loch Olabhat on North Uist was constructed around 3200 2800 BC and may be Scotland s earliest crannog a type of artificial island 67 68 The Callanish Stones dating from about 2900 BC are the finest example of a stone circle in Scotland the 13 primary monoliths of between one and five metres high creating a circle about 13 metres 43 ft in diameter 69 70 71 72 Cladh Hallan on South Uist the only site in the UK where prehistoric mummies have been found and the impressive ruins of Dun Carloway broch on Lewis both date from the Iron Age 73 74 75 History EditMain article History of the Outer Hebrides In Scotland the Celtic Iron Age way of life often troubled but never extinguished by Rome re asserted itself when the legions abandoned any permanent occupation in 211 AD 76 Hanson 2003 writes For many years it has been almost axiomatic in studies of the period that the Roman conquest must have had some major medium or long term impact on Scotland On present evidence that cannot be substantiated either in terms of environment economy or indeed society The impact appears to have been very limited The general picture remains one of broad continuity not of disruption The Roman presence in Scotland was little more than a series of brief interludes within a longer continuum of indigenous development 77 The Romans direct impact on the Highlands and Islands was scant and there is no evidence that they ever actually landed in the Outer Hebrides 78 The later Iron Age inhabitants of the northern and western Hebrides were probably Pictish although the historical record is sparse Hunter 2000 states that in relation to King Bridei I of the Picts in the sixth century AD As for Shetland Orkney Skye and the Western Isles their inhabitants most of whom appear to have been Pictish in culture and speech at this time are likely to have regarded Bridei as a fairly distant presence 79 The island of Pabbay is the site of the Pabbay Stone the only extant Pictish symbol stone in the Outer Hebrides This 6th century stele shows a flower V rod and lunar crescent to which has been added a later and somewhat crude cross 80 Norse control Edit Location of the Kingdom of the Isles at the end of the eleventh century Viking raids began on Scottish shores towards the end of the 8th century AD and the Hebrides came under Norse control and settlement during the ensuing decades especially following the success of Harald Fairhair at the Battle of Hafrsfjord in 872 81 82 In the Western Isles Ketill Flatnose was the dominant figure of the mid 9th century by which time he had amassed a substantial island realm and made a variety of alliances with other Norse leaders These princelings nominally owed allegiance to the Norwegian crown although in practice the latter s control was fairly limited 83 Norse control of the Hebrides was formalised in 1098 when Edgar King of Scotland formally signed the islands over to Magnus III of Norway 84 The Scottish acceptance of Magnus III as King of the Isles came after the Norwegian king had conquered Orkney the Hebrides and the Isle of Man in a swift campaign earlier the same year directed against the local Norwegian leaders of the various islands petty kingdoms By capturing the islands Magnus imposed a more direct royal control although at a price His skald Bjorn Cripplehand recorded that in Lewis fire played high in the heaven as flame spouted from the houses and that in the Uists the king dyed his sword red in blood 84 Thompson 1968 provides a more literal translation Fire played in the fig trees of Liodhus it mounted up to heaven Far and wide the people were driven to flight The fire gushed out of the houses 85 The Hebrides were now part of Kingdom of the Isles whose rulers were themselves vassals of the Kings of Norway The Kingdom had two parts the Sudr eyjar or South Isles encompassing the Hebrides and the Isle of Man and the Nordr eyjar or North Isles of Orkney and Shetland This situation lasted until the partitioning of the Western Isles in 1156 at which time the Outer Hebrides remained under Norwegian control while the Inner Hebrides broke out under Somerled the Norse Celtic kinsman of the Manx royal house 86 Following the ill fated 1263 expedition of Haakon IV of Norway the Outer Hebrides along with the Isle of Man were yielded to the Kingdom of Scotland a result of the 1266 Treaty of Perth 87 Although their contribution to the islands can still be found in personal and placenames the archaeological record of the Norse period is very limited The best known find from this time is the Lewis chessmen which date from the mid 12th century 88 Scots rule Edit Kisimul Castle the ancient seat of Clan MacNeil Castlebay Barra As the Norse era drew to a close the Norse speaking princes were gradually replaced by Gaelic speaking clan chiefs including the MacLeods of Lewis and Harris the MacDonalds of the Uists and MacNeil of Barra 85 89 Note 4 This transition did little to relieve the islands of internecine strife although by the early 14th century the MacDonald Lords of the Isles based on Islay were in theory these chiefs feudal superiors and managed to exert some control 93 The growing threat that Clan Donald posed to the Scottish crown led to the forcible dissolution of the Lordship of the Isles by James IV in 1493 but although the king had the power to subdue the organised military might of the Hebrides he and his immediate successors lacked the will or ability to provide an alternative form of governance 94 The House of Stuart s attempts to control the Outer Hebrides were then at first desultory and little more than punitive expeditions In 1506 the Earl of Huntly besieged and captured Stornoway Castle using cannon In 1540 James V himself conducted a royal tour forcing the clan chiefs to accompany him There followed a period of peace but all too soon the clans were at loggerheads again 95 In 1598 King James VI authorised some Gentleman Adventurers from Fife to civilise the most barbarous Isle of Lewis Initially successful the colonists were driven out by local forces commanded by Murdoch and Neil MacLeod who based their forces on Bearasaigh in Loch Rog The colonists tried again in 1605 with the same result but a third attempt in 1607 was more successful and in due course Stornoway became a Burgh of Barony 96 97 By this time Lewis was held by the Mackenzies of Kintail later the Earls of Seaforth who pursued a more enlightened approach investing in fishing in particular The historian W C MacKenzie was moved to write 98 At the end of the 17th century the picture we have of Lewis that of a people pursuing their avocation in peace but not in plenty The Seaforths besides establishing orderly Government in the island had done a great deal to rescue the people from the slough of ignorance and incivility in which they found themselves immersed But in the sphere of economics their policy apparently was of little service to the community The Seaforth s royalist inclinations led to Lewis becoming garrisoned during the Wars of the Three Kingdoms by Cromwell s troops who destroyed the old castle in Stornoway and in 1645 Lewismen fought on the royalist side at the Battle of Auldearn 99 A new era of Hebridean involvement in the affairs of the wider world was about to commence British era Edit Abandoned school house Mingulay With the implementation of the Treaty of Union in 1707 the Hebrides became part of the new Kingdom of Great Britain but the clans loyalties to a distant monarch were not strong A considerable number of islandmen came out in support of the Jacobite Earl of Mar in the 15 although the response to the 1745 rising was muted 99 Nonetheless the aftermath of the decisive Battle of Culloden which effectively ended Jacobite hopes of a Stuart restoration was widely felt The British government s strategy was to estrange the clan chiefs from their kinsmen and turn their descendants into English speaking landlords whose main concern was the revenues their estates brought rather than the welfare of those who lived on them This may have brought peace to the islands but in the following century it came at a terrible price The Highland Clearances of the 19th century destroyed communities throughout the Highlands and Islands as the human populations were evicted and replaced with sheep farms 100 For example Colonel Gordon of Cluny owner of Barra South Uist and Benbecula evicted thousands of islanders using trickery and cruelty and even offered to sell Barra to the government as a penal colony 101 Islands such as Fuaigh Mor were completely cleared of their populations and even today the subject is recalled with bitterness and resentment in some areas 102 The position was exacerbated by the failure of the islands kelp industry which thrived from the 18th century until the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 103 and large scale emigration became endemic For example hundreds left North Uist for Cape Breton Nova Scotia 104 The pre clearance population of the island had been almost 5 000 although by 1841 it had fallen to 3 870 and was only 2 349 by 1931 105 106 The Highland potato famine Gaiseadh a bhuntata in Scottish Gaelic caused by a blight started in 1846 and had a serious impact because many islanders were crofters potatoes were a staple of their diet 107 Violent riots became common 108 Charities encouraged by George Pole 109 and others in the Commissariat a military agency encouraged charities to come to the rescue The Free Church was particularly helpful delivering oatmeal to famine affected families all across the West Highlands and Islands according to one report Another report states that the Church was prompt in organising an efficient system of private charity across the Hebrides and on the Western seaboard It cooperated with the Edinburgh and Glasgow Relief Committees 110 111 An interdenominational charity was in place by early 1847 and took the most significant role in famine relief 112 Some landowners also provided a great deal of assistance according to one history of the region MacLeod of Dunvegan bought in food for his people some eight thousand of them MacLean of Ardgour provided food and introduced new crops into the area peas cabbages and carrots Sir James Matheson on Lewis spent 329 000 on improving his lands hoping to provide a more secure future for his people The government of Britain provided some assistance thanks to Sir Charles Trevelyan who arranged for food distribution at Portree and Tobermory The British Association for the Relief of Distress in Ireland and the Highlands and Islands of Scotland also helped as did donations received from North America The blight struck again over the next two years requiring an extra tax on landowners to help feed the population The British government began encouraging mass emigration 113 114 For those who remained new economic opportunities emerged through the export of cattle commercial fishing and tourism During the summer season in the 1860s and 1870s five thousand inhabitants of Lewis could be found in Wick on the mainland of Scotland employed on the fishing boats and at the quaysides 115 Nonetheless emigration and military service became the choice of many 116 and the archipelago s populations continued to dwindle throughout the late 19th and 20th centuries By 2001 the population of North Uist was only 1 271 43 106 The work of the Napier Commission and the Congested Districts Board and the passing of the Crofting Act of 1886 helped but social unrest continued 117 In July 1906 grazing land on Vatersay was raided by landless men from Barra and its isles Lady Gordon Cathcart took legal action against the raiders but the visiting judge took the view that she had neglected her duties as a landowner and that long indifference to the necessities of the cottars had gone far to drive them to exasperation 118 Millennia of continuous occupation notwithstanding many of the remoter islands were abandoned Mingulay in 1912 Hirta in 1930 and Ceann Iar in 1942 among them This process involved a transition from these places being perceived as relatively self sufficient agricultural economies 119 to a view becoming held by both island residents and outsiders alike that they lacked the essential services of a modern industrial economy 120 There were gradual economic improvements among the most visible of which was the replacement of the traditional thatched blackhouse with accommodation of a more modern design when The creation of the Highlands and Islands Development Board and the discovery of substantial deposits of North Sea oil in 1965 the establishment of a unitary local authority for the islands in 1975 and more recently the renewables sector have all contributed to a degree of economic stability in recent decades The Arnish yard has had a chequered history but has been a significant employer in both the oil and renewables industries 121 Comhairle nan Eilean Siar the local authority employs 2 000 people making it the largest employer in the Outer Hebrides 122 See also the Innse Gall area plan 2010 123 and the Comhairle s Factfile Economy 124 Economy Edit Stornoway Harbour Modern commercial activities centre on tourism crofting fishing and weaving including the manufacture of Harris tweed Crofting remains popular especially on Lewis and Harris population 21 000 with over 920 active crofters according to a 2020 report with crofts ranging in size from as small as a single hectare to having access to thousands of hectares through the medium of community grazing Crofters can apply for subsidy grants some of these are intended to help them find other avenues to supplement their incomes 125 Some of the funding schemes available to crofters in the Hebrides include the Basic Payment Scheme the suckler beef support scheme the upland sheep support scheme and the Less Favoured Area support scheme and the Crofting Agricultural Grant Scheme CAGS as of March 2020 126 According to the Scottish Government tourism is by far and away the mainstay industry of the Outer Hebrides generating 65m in economic value for the islands sustaining around 1000 jobs The report adds that the islands receive 219 000 visitors per year 127 Some of the larger islands have development trusts that support the local economy and in striking contrast to the 19th and 20th century domination by absentee landlords more than two thirds of the Western Isles population now lives on community owned estates 128 129 However the economic position of the islands remains relatively precarious The Western Isles including Stornoway are defined by Highlands and Islands Enterprise as an economically Fragile Area and they have an estimated trade deficit of some 163 4 million Overall the area is relatively reliant on primary industries and the public sector and fishing and fish farming in particular are vulnerable to environmental impacts changing market pressures and European legislation 124 There is some optimism about the possibility of future developments in for example renewable energy generation tourism and education and after declines in the 20th century the population has stabilised since 2003 although it is ageing 124 130 A 2019 report using key assumptions mortality fertility and migration was less optimistic It predicted that the population is projected to fall to 22 709 by 2043 that translates to a 16 decline or 4 021 people between 2018 and 2043 131 The UK s largest community owned wind farm the 9MW Beinn Ghrideag a 3 turbine 9MW scheme is located outside Stornoway and is operated by Point and Sandwick Trust PST 132 133 134 The Isle of Lewis web site states that Stornoway s sheltered harbour has been important for centuries it was named Steering Bay by Vikings who often visited 135 A December 2020 report stated that a new deep water terminal was to be developed the Stornoway Deep Water Terminal using a 49 million investment The plan included berths for cruise ships as long as 360 meters berths for large cargo vessels and a freight ferry berth 136 Politics and local government EditMain article Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Sir Edward Scott Secondary School Tarbert Isle of Harris From the passing of the Local Government Scotland Act 1889 to 1975 Lewis formed part of the county of Ross and Cromarty and the rest of the archipelago including Harris was part of Inverness shire 137 The Outer Hebrides became a unitary council area in 1975 although in most of the rest of Scotland similar unitary councils were not established until 1996 138 139 Since then the islands have formed one of the 32 unitary council areas that now cover the whole country with the council officially known by its Gaelic name Comhairle nan Eilean Siar under the terms of the Local Government Gaelic Names Scotland Act 1997 The council has its base in Stornoway on Lewis and is often known locally simply as the Comhairle or a Chomhairle 140 The Comhairle is one of only three Councils in Scotland with a majority of elected members who are independents The other independent run councils are Shetland and Orkney Moray is run by a Conservative Independent coalition 141 142 The name for the British Parliament constituency covering this area is Na h Eileanan an Iar the seat being held by Angus MacNeil MP since 2005 while the Scottish Parliament constituency for the area is Na h Eileanan an Iar the incumbent being Alasdair Allan MSP During the 2014 Scottish independence referendum the area voted against independence by a margin of 53 42 10 544 to 46 58 9 195 in favour on a turnout of 86 2 143 In 2022 as part of the Levelling Up White Paper an Island Forum was proposed which would allow local policymakers and residents in the Outer Hebrides to work alongside their counterparts in Shetland Orkney Anglesey and the Isle of Wight on common issues such as broadband connectivity and provide a platform for them to communicate directly with the government on the challenges island communities face in terms of levelling up 144 145 Scottish Gaelic language EditPronunciationScottish Gaelic A ChomhairlePronunciation e ˈxo erˠʎe listen Scottish Gaelic An t Eilean FadaPronunciation eɲ tʰʲelan fat e listen Scottish Gaelic Comhairle nan Eilean SiarPronunciation ˈkʰo erˠʎe ne ˈɲelan ˈʃieɾ listen Scottish Gaelic gugaPronunciation ˈkuke listen Scottish Gaelic Innse GallPronunciation ˈĩːʃe ˈkaulˠ listen Scottish Gaelic Na h Eileanan A muighPronunciation ne ˈhelanen eˈmuj listen Scottish Gaelic Na h Eileanan an IarPronunciation ne ˈhelanen e ˈɲieɾ listen Scottish Gaelic Na h Eileanan SiarPronunciation ne ˈhelanen ˈʃieɾ listen Scottish Gaelic Oitir MhorPronunciation ˈɔʰtʲɪɾʲ ˈvoːɾ listen Scottish Gaelic Sloc na BeistePronunciation ˈs lˠ ɔʰk ne ˈpeːʃtʲe listen The Outer Hebrides have historically been a very strong Scottish Gaelic Gaidhlig speaking area Both the 1901 and 1921 census reported that all parishes were over 75 Gaelic speaking including areas of high population density such as Stornoway However the Education Scotland Act 1872 mandated English only education and is now recognised as having dealt a major blow to the language People still living can recall being beaten for speaking Gaelic in school 146 Nonetheless by 1971 most areas were still more than 75 Gaelic speaking with the exception of Stornoway Benbecula and South Uist at 50 74 147 In the 2001 census each island overall was over 50 Gaelic speaking South Uist 71 Harris 69 Barra 68 North Uist 67 Lewis 56 and Benbecula 56 With 59 3 of Gaelic speakers or a total of 15 723 speakers this made the Outer Hebrides the most strongly coherent Gaelic speaking area in Scotland 147 148 Most areas were between 60 74 Gaelic speaking and the areas with the highest density of over 80 are Scalpay near Harris Newtonferry and Kildonan whilst Daliburgh Linshader Eriskay Brue Boisdale West Harris Ardveenish Soval Ness and Bragar all have more than 75 The areas with the lowest density of speakers are Stornoway 44 Braigh 41 Melbost 41 and Balivanich 37 147 The Gaelic Language Scotland Act was enacted by the Scottish Parliament in 2005 to provide continuing support for the language 149 However by 2011 the overall percentage of Gaelic speakers in the Outer Hebrides had fallen to 52 150 In modern Gaelic the islands are sometimes referred to collectively as An t Eilean Fada the Long Island 60 or Na h Eileanan a Muigh the Outer Isles 151 Innse Gall islands of the foreigners or strangers is also heard occasionally a name that was originally used by mainland Highlanders when the islands were ruled by the Norse 152 The individual island and place names in the Outer Hebrides have mixed Gaelic and Norse origins Various Gaelic terms are used repeatedly 153 Gaelic root Derived forms Anglicised as Origin and meaning aigh ay ey generally from the Norse oy meaning island beag bheag bige bhige beaga bheaga beg smalldearg dhearg deirge dheirge deirg dheirg dearga dhearga derg reddubh dhubh duibh dhuibh duibhe dhuibhe dubha dhubha black hiddenglas ghlas glais ghlais glaise ghlaise glasa ghlasa grey greenear east easterneilean eilein eileanan islandiar west westernmor mhor moire mhoire mora mhora moir mhoir more big greatrubha rubhannan promontorysgeir sgeirean skerry skerry often refers to a rock or rocks that lie submerged at high tide From Old Norse sker There are also several islands called Orasaigh from the Norse Orfirirsey meaning tidal or ebb island 153 Transport Edit Caledonian MacBrayne ferry MV Hebrides leaving Lochmaddy North Uist en route for Skye Scheduled ferry services between the Outer Hebrides and the Scottish Mainland and Inner Hebrides operate on the following routes Oban to Castlebay on Barra Oban to Lochboisdale on South Uist Winter Only Mallaig to Lochboisdale on South Uist Uig on Skye to Tarbert on Harris Uig on Skye to Lochmaddy on North Uist Ullapool to Stornoway on Lewis Tiree to Castlebay Barra summer only Other ferries operate between some of the islands 154 National Rail services are available for onward journeys from stations at Oban and Mallaig which has direct services to Glasgow However parliamentary approval notwithstanding plans in the 1890s to lay a railway connection to Ullapool were unable to obtain sufficient funding 155 There are scheduled flights from Stornoway Benbecula and Barra airports both inter island and to the mainland Barra s airport is claimed to be the only one in the world to have scheduled flights landing on a beach At high water the runways are under the sea so flight times vary with the tide 156 157 Bus Na Comhairle Optare Solo YJ14 BDY seen in Sandwick May 2020 Bus na Comhairle Edit Bus na Comhairle meaning Bus of the Council is the council owned local bus company of the Western Isles of Scotland The company serves the Broadbay area of Lewis with 7 buses 6 Optare Solos and 1 ADL Enviro 200 Shipwrecks Edit The Admiralty yacht HMS Iolaire The archipelago is exposed to wind and tide and lighthouses are sited as an aid to navigation at locations from Barra Head in the south to the Butt of Lewis in the north 158 There are numerous sites of wrecked ships and the Flannan Isles are the location of an enduring mystery that occurred in December 1900 when all three lighthouse keepers vanished without trace 159 Annie Jane a three masted immigrant ship out of Liverpool bound for Montreal Canada struck rocks off the West Beach of Vatersay during a storm on Tuesday 28 September 1853 Within ten minutes the ship began to founder and break up casting 450 people into the raging sea In spite of the conditions islanders tried to rescue the passengers and crew The remains of 350 men women and children were buried in the dunes behind the beach and a small cairn and monument marks the site 160 The tiny Beasts of Holm off the east coast of Lewis were the site of the sinking of HMS Iolaire during the first few hours of 1919 161 one of the worst maritime disasters in United Kingdom waters during the 20th century Calvay in the Sound of Barra provided the inspiration for Compton Mackenzie s novel Whisky Galore after the SS Politician ran aground there with a cargo of single malt in 1941 Culture EditMain article Religion in the Outer Hebrides Christianity has deep roots in the Western Isles but owing mainly to the different allegiances of the clans in the past the people in the northern islands Lewis Harris North Uist have historically been predominantly Presbyterian and those of the southern islands Benbecula South Uist Barra predominantly Roman Catholic 162 At the time of the 2001 Census 42 of the population identified themselves as being affiliated with the Church of Scotland with 13 Roman Catholic and 28 with other Christian churches Many of this last group belong to the Free Church of Scotland known for its strict observance of the Sabbath 163 11 stated that they had no religion Note 5 This made the Western Isles the Scottish council area with the smallest percentage of non religious in the population There are also small Episcopalian congregations in Lewis and Harris and the Outer Hebrides are part of the Diocese of Argyll and The Isles in both the Episcopalian and Catholic traditions 165 166 Gaelic music is popular in the islands and the Lewis and Harris Traditional Music Society plays an active role in promoting the genre 167 Feis Bharraigh began in 1981 with the aim of developing the practice and study of the Gaelic language literature music drama and culture on the islands of Barra and Vatersay A two week festival it has inspired 43 other feisean throughout Scotland 168 The Lewis Pipe Band was founded in 1904 and the Lewis and Harris Piping Society in 1977 167 Outdoor activities including rugby football golf shinty fishing riding canoeing athletics and multi sports are popular in the Western Isles The Hebridean Challenge is an adventure race run in five daily stages which takes place along the length of the islands and includes hill and road running road and mountain biking short sea swims and demanding sea kayaking sections There are four main sports centres Ionad Spors Leodhais in Stornoway which has a 25 m swimming pool Harris Sports Centre Lionacleit Sports Centre on Benbecula and Castlebay Sports Centre on Barra The Western Isles is a member of the International Island Games Association 169 170 South Uist is home to the Askernish Golf Course The oldest links in the Outer Hebrides it was designed by Old Tom Morris Although it was in use until the 1930s its existence was largely forgotten until 2005 and it is now being restored to Morris s original design 171 172 See also EditConstitutional status of Orkney Shetland and the Western Isles Hebridean Myths and Legends Leod List of Category A listed buildings in the Western Isles List of places in the Western Isles List of rulers of the Kingdom of the Isles List of islands of Scotland Ljotolfr Solar eclipse of 1 May 1185 2012 Comhairle nan Eilean Siar election Virtual HebridesNotes Edit Murray 1973 notes that Western Isles has tended to mean Outer Hebrides since the creation of the Na h Eileanan an Iar or Western Isles parliamentary constituency in 1918 The phrase can also be used to refer to the Hebrides in general Murray also notes that Gneiss Islands a reference to the underlying geology is another name used to refer to the Outer Hebrides but that its use is confined to books 4 This tidal isle is at grid reference NF860580 and the evidence of both Ordnance Survey maps and photographs e g Houses on Seana Bhaile Geograph Retrieved 10 August 2009 indicates a resident population There is even a name Seana Bhaile English Old Town for the main settlement However neither the census nor the main reference work Haswell Smith 2004 refer to the island Its population is presumably included in nearby Grimsay by the census Lewisian gneiss is sometimes described as the oldest rock found in Europe but trondhjemite gneiss recently measured at Siurua in Finland has been dated to 3 4 3 5 Ga 61 The transitional relationships between Norse and Gaelic speaking rulers are complex The Gall Ghaidhels who dominated much of the Irish Sea region and western Scotland at this time were of joint Gaelic and Scandinavian origin When Somerled wrested the southern Inner Hebrides from Godred the Black in 1156 this was the beginnings of a break with nominal Norse rule in the Hebrides Godred remained the ruler of Mann and the Outer Hebrides but two years later Somerled s invasion of the former caused him to flee to Norway Norse control was further weakened in the ensuring century but the Hebrides were not formally ceded by Norway until 1266 90 91 The transitions from one language to another are also complex For example many Scandinavian sources from this period of time typically refer to individuals as having a Scandinavian first name and a Gaelic by name 92 The 2001 census statistics used are based on local authority areas but do not specifically identify Free Church or Episcopal adherents 4 of the respondents did not answer this census question and the total for all other religions combined is 1 per cent 164 References Edit Standard Area Measurements 2016 for Administrative Areas in the United Kingdom Office for National Statistics 1 February 2017 Retrieved 9 February 2017 a b Thompson 1968 p 14 a b Population Estimates for UK England and Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland 2021 Office for National Statistics 2 November 2022 Retrieved 19 December 2022 Murray 1973 p 32 a b c Breeze David J The ancient geography of Scotland in Smith and Banks 2002 pp 11 13 a b c d Watson 1926 pp 40 41 Watson 1926 p 38 Murray 1966 p 1 Watson 1926 pp 41 42 quoting Lebor na hUidre and the Book of Leinster a b Haswell Smith 2004 p 289 Haswell Smith 2004 p 262 a b Thompson 1968 p 13 Botanical survey of Scottish freshwater lochs Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine SNH Information and Advisory Note Number 4 Retrieved 1 January 2010 Murray and Pullar 1910 Lochs of Lewis Volume II Part II p 216 Retrieved 21 December 2009 Murray and Pullar 1910 Lochs of North Uist Volume II Part II p 188 Retrieved 20 December 2009 a b Get a map Ordnance Survey Retrieved 1 15 August 2009 Murray 1966 pp 171 198 Haswell Smith 2004 pp 236 45 Haswell Smith 2004 p 206 Rotary Club 1995 p 106 Haswell Smith 2004 pp 218 22 National Scenic Areas Scottish Natural Heritage Retrieved 17 January 2018 Countryside and Landscape in Scotland National Scenic Areas Scottish Government 4 July 2017 Archived from the original on 31 January 2018 Retrieved 31 January 2018 South Lewis Harris and North Uist NSA PDF SNH Archived from the original PDF on 14 February 2012 Retrieved 30 August 2009 South Uist Machair NSA 1 50 000 map PDF Scottish Natural Heritage 20 December 2010 Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Retrieved 7 June 2018 Sitelink Map Search Scottish Natural Heritage Retrieved 11 June 2018 Western Isles Transitional Programme Strategy Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Archived from the original on 29 June 2011 Retrieved 19 May 2010 Rotary Club 1995 p 10 Higher plant species 1833 Slender naiad JNCC Retrieved 29 July 2007 Statutory Instrument 1994 No 2716 Office of Public Sector Information Retrieved 5 July 2010 Campaign to stop the slaughter of over 5000 Hedgehogs on the Island of Uist Epping Forest Hedgehog Rescue Archived from the original on 8 August 2002 Retrieved 1 January 2007 Ross John 21 February 2007 Hedgehogs saved from the syringe as controversial Uist cull called off The Scotsman Edinburgh Western Isles Biodiversity Biodiversity Audit Main report Archived 29 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Retrieved 5 July 2010 Benvie 2004 pp 116 121 132 34 Mingulay birds National Trust for Scotland Archived from the original on 22 June 2006 Retrieved 16 February 2007 Thompson 1968 p 21 Maclean 1972 p 21 a b c Statistical Bulletins 2011 Census First Results on Population and Household Estimates for Scotland Release 1C Part Two PDF National Records of Scotland 15 August 2013 Factfile Population of Outer Hebrides Archived from the original on 10 September 2017 Retrieved 10 September 2017 Webarchive url https web archive org web 20150923205035 http www cne siar gov uk factfile documents OHFactCards2012 pdf date 23 September 2015 Outer Hebrides Facts lang gd Fiosrachadh mu Innse Gall nocat y PDF Archived from the original PDF on 23 September 2015 Retrieved 27 July 2014 Scotland s 2011 census Island living on the rise BBC News Retrieved 18 August 2013 Factfile Population Archived 10 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Retrieved 20 July 2013 a b c Scotland s Census 2001 Statistics for Inhabited Islands PDF General Register Office for Scotland 28 November 2003 Archived from the original on 7 April 2012 Retrieved 26 February 2012 Haswell Smith 2004 p 296 Overview Fleet Histories Caledonian MacBrayne Retrieved 3 August 2009 Haswell Smith 2004 pp 205 253 Crionadh mor sa Ghaidhlig anns na h Eileanan A significant decline in Gaelic in the Outer Hebrides Naidheachdan News in Scottish Gaelic BBC 15 November 2013 Haswell Smith 2004 pp 206 262 Haswell Smith 2004 various pages Haswell Smith 2004 pp 207 209 Mingulay Boat Song Cantaria Retrieved 26 December 2006 Haswell Smith 2004 pp 282 83 Thompson 1968 pp 187 89 Thompson 1968 pp 182 85 Oral Questions to the Minister of Foreign Affairs Dail Eireann 1 November 1973 Archived from the original on 22 August 2006 Retrieved 17 January 2007 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Cite journal requires journal help MacDonald Fraser 2006 The last outpost of Empire Rockall and the Cold War Journal of Historical Geography 32 3 627 647 doi 10 1016 j jhg 2005 10 009 Archived from the original on 10 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February 2008 The Prehistoric Village at Cladh Hallan University of Sheffield Retrieved 21 February 2008 AD 200 Valtos brochs and wheelhouses archaeology co uk Retrieved 1 August 2009 Hanson 2003 p 198 Hanson 2003 p 216 Hunter 2000 pp 38 39 Hunter 2000 pp 44 49 Miers 2008 p 367 Hunter 2000 p 74 Rotary Club 1995 p 12 Hunter 2000 p 78 a b Hunter 2000 p 102 a b Thompson 1968 p 39 The Kingdom of Mann and the Isles thevikingworld com Retrieved 6 July 2010 Hunter 2000 pp 109 111 Thompson 1968 p 37 Rotary Club 1995 pp 27 30 Gregory 1881 pp 13 15 20 21 Downham 2007 pp 174 75 Gammeltoft Peder Scandinavian Naming Systems in the Hebrides A Way of Understanding how the Scandinavians were in Contact with Gaels and Picts in Ballin Smith et al 2007 p 480 Hunter 2000 pp 127 166 Hunter 2000 p 143 Thompson 1968 pp 40 41 Rotary Club 1995 pp 12 13 Haswell Smith 2004 p 312 Thompson 1968 p 41 It is not clear from the text which of MacKenzie s five books quoted in the bibliography spanning the years 1903 52 the quote is taken from a b Thompson 1968 pp 41 42 Hunter 2000 p 212 Rotary Club 1995 p 31 Haswell Smith 2004 pp 306 07 Hunter 2000 pp 247 262 Lawson Bill 10 September 1999 From The Outer Hebrides to Cape Breton Part II globalgenealogy com Retrieved 14 October 2007 Haswell Smith 2004 p 236 a b North Uist Uibhist a Tuath Undiscovered Scotland Retrieved 8 July 2010 Harris Tweed and the Highland Potato Famine Book review Insurrection Scotland s Famine Winter by James Hunter 30 October 2019 Scotland s Potato Famine 3 March 2020 Vaughan Geraldine 2015 The Irish Famine in a Scottish Perspective 1845 1851 Memoire S Identite S Marginalite S dans le Monde Occidental Contemporain 12 doi 10 4000 mimmoc 1763 The Highland Tragedy Hunter James 16 July 2020 The other famine Scotland and the potato blight 11 December 2020 RTE ie Vaughan Geraldine 2015 The Irish Famine in a Scottish Perspective 1845 1851 Memoire S Identite S Marginalite S dans le Monde Occidental Contemporain 12 doi 10 4000 mimmoc 1763 The Highland Tragedy Hunter 2000 p 292 Hunter 2000 p 343 Hunter 2000 p 320 Buxton 1995 p 125 See for example Hunter 2000 pp 152 158 See for example Maclean 1977 Chapter 10 Arcady Despoiled pp 125 35 Yard wins biggest wind tower job BBC News Online 10 December 2007 Retrieved 6 January 2011 Jobs and Careers Archived 18 December 2010 at the Wayback Machine Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Retrieved 6 January 2011 Outer Hebrides Innse Gall area overview Archived 3 February 2011 at the Wayback Machine Innse Gall area plan 2010 pdf HIE Retrieved 3 January 2011 a b c Factfile Economy Archived 23 March 2010 at the Wayback Machine Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Retrieved 4 July 2010 A new age of crofting in the Outer Hebrides How small scale crofters in the Hebrides survive the challenges 27 March 2020 The Outer Hebrides Directory of Members DTA Scotland Archived from the original on 19 July 2010 Retrieved 15 July 2007 The quiet revolution 19 January 2007 West Highland Free Press Broadford Skye Factfile Population Archived 29 June 2011 at the Wayback Machine Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Retrieved 4 July 2010 Population Projections Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Point and Sandwick Trust We built amp run the UK s biggest community owned wind farm using funds to provide local support to our island community Renewables recognition for Point and Sandwick Trust 17 February 2021 Award hope for turbine team Stornoway 19 January 2012 Investing in islands infrastructure Keay and Keay 1994 pp 542 821 Areas of Scotland ourscotland co uk Retrieved 1 June 2010 Place names of Scotland scotlandsplaces gov uk Retrieved 1 June 2010 Review of Educational Provision and the Comhairle s Future Strategy for the Schools Estate Daliburgh School Isle of South Uist PDF Comhairle nan Eilean Siar Department of Education January 2008 Archived from the original PDF on 9 July 2010 Retrieved 1 June 2010 MacMahon Peter and Walker Helen 18 May 2007 Winds of change sweep Scots town halls Edinburgh The Scotsman Political Groups Shetland Islands Council Retrieved 23 April 2010 Scotland Decides SCOTLAND VOTES NO Should Scotland be an independent country BBC 19 September 2014 Retrieved 31 March 2017 Cope Chris 3 February 2021 New islands forum should not be box ticking exercise The Shetland News Retrieved 17 February 2022 Paveley Rebecca 11 February 2021 Gove announces Levelling up forum for islands Church Times Retrieved 17 February 2022 Wilson Neil and Murphy Alan Destination Scotland pdf Lonely Planet p 17 Retrieved 20 October 2012 a b c Mac an Tailleir Iain 2004 1901 2001 Gaelic in the Census PowerPoint Linguae Celticae Retrieved 1 June 2008 Census 2001 Scotland Gaelic speakers by council area Comunn na Gaidhlig Retrieved 28 May 2010 The Gaelic Language Act Bord na Gaidhlig Archived from the original on 28 February 2012 Retrieved 12 May 2012 Statistical Bulletins 2011 Census Key Results on Population Ethnicity Identity Language Religion Health Housing and Accommodation in Scotland Release 2A PDF National Records of Scotland 26 September 2013 p 26 Retrieved 20 April 2014 Welcome IslayInfo Retrieved 12 May 2012 Hunter 2000 p 104 a b Mac an Tailleir 2003 various pages Home Caledonian MacBrayne Retrieved 12 May 2012 Garve and Ullapool Railway Bill Hansard Retrieved 26 September 2008 Barra Airport Highlands and Islands Airports Limited Retrieved 6 April 2009 Barra Airport Undiscovered Scotland Retrieved 8 July 2010 Lighthouse Library Northern Lighthouse Board Retrieved 16 April 2016 Haswell Smith 2004 pp 329 31 Historic Environment Scotland Annie Jane Bagh Siar Vatersay Atlantic 102881 Canmore Retrieved 16 April 2016 Thompson 1968 p 76 Clegg E J Fertility and Development in the Outer Hebrides The Confounding Effcets of Religion in Malhotra 1992 p 88 Sunday ferry for Harris opposed by Lord s Day society 19 January 2011 BBC News Retrieved 7 March 2011 Pacione Michael 2005 The Geography of Religious Affiliation in Scotland The Professional Geographer 57 2 Oxford Blackwell Diocese of Argyll and 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376 4 Keay J amp Keay J 1994 Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland London HarperCollins ISBN 0 00 255082 2 Mac an Tailleir Iain 2003 Ainmean aite le buidheachas do dh Iain Mac an Tailleir Place names collected by Iain Mac an Tailleir The Scottish Parliament Parlamaid na h Alba Retrieved 26 August 2012 A Chleit Butt of Lewis PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Cabaan Eyre PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Faddoch Jura PDF Archived PDF from the original on 9 October 2022 Kallin Ovie PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 November 2018 Retrieved 9 March 2018 Pabay Yoker PDF Archived from the original PDF on 26 May 2016 Retrieved 9 March 2018 McKirdy Alan Gordon John amp Crofts Roger 2007 Land of Mountain and Flood The Geology and Landforms of Scotland Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 357 0 Maclean Charles 1977 Island on the Edge of the World the Story of St Kilda Edinburgh Canongate ISBN 0 903937 41 7 Malhotra R 1992 Anthropology of Development Commemoration Volume in Honour of Professor I P Singh New Delhi Mittal ISBN 81 7099 328 8 Li Martin 2005 Adventure Guide to Scotland Hunter Publishing Retrieved 19 May 2010 Miers Mary 2008 The Western Seaboard An Illustrated Architectural Guide The Rutland Press ISBN 978 1 873190 29 6 Murray Sir John and Pullar Laurence 1910 Bathymetrical Survey of the Fresh Water Lochs of Scotland 1897 1909 National Library of Scotland Edinburgh Challenger Office Retrieved 8 March 2018 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Murray W H 1966 The Hebrides London Heinemann Murray W H 1973 The Islands of Western Scotland the Inner and Outer Hebrides London Eyre Methuen ISBN 0 413 30380 2 Ross David 2005 Scotland History of a Nation Lomond ISBN 0 947782 58 3 Rotary Club of Stornoway 1995 The Outer Hebrides Handbook and Guide Machynlleth Kittiwake ISBN 0 9511003 5 1 Thompson Francis 1968 Harris and Lewis Outer Hebrides Newton Abbot David amp Charles ISBN 0 7153 4260 6 Watson W J 1994 The Celtic Place Names of Scotland Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 1 84158 323 5 First published 1926 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Outer Hebrides Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Outer Hebrides Western Isles at Curlie Stornoway Port Authority Comhairle nan Eilean Siar 2001 Census Results for the Outer Hebrides MacTV Reefnet Hebrides com Photographic website from ex Eolas Sam Maynard www visithebrides com Western Isles Tourist Board site from Reefnet Virtual Hebrides com Content from the VH which went its own way and became Virtual Scotland hebrides ca Home of the Quebec Hebridean Scots who were cleared from Lewis to Quebec 1838 1920s Portals Scotland Islands Scottish Islands Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Outer Hebrides amp oldid 1133493094, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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