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Scottish Highlands

The Highlands (Scots: the Hielands; Scottish Gaelic: a’ Ghàidhealtachd [ə ˈɣɛːəl̪ˠt̪ʰəxk], 'the place of the Gaels') is a historical region of Scotland.[1][failed verification] Culturally, the Highlands and the Lowlands diverged from the Late Middle Ages into the modern period, when Lowland Scots replaced Scottish Gaelic throughout most of the Lowlands. The term is also used for the area north and west of the Highland Boundary Fault, although the exact boundaries are not clearly defined, particularly to the east. The Great Glen divides the Grampian Mountains to the southeast from the Northwest Highlands. The Scottish Gaelic name of A' Ghàidhealtachd literally means "the place of the Gaels" and traditionally, from a Gaelic-speaking point of view, includes both the Western Isles and the Highlands.

Highlands
A' Ghàidhealtachd (Scottish Gaelic)
Hielands (Scots)
Lowland–Highland divide
SeatInverness
Population
 • Estimate 
(2019)
600,000
 [citation needed]
DemonymHighlander
Time zoneGMT/BST
The Scottish Highlands are renowned for their natural beauty and are a popular subject in art (here depicted by Henry Bates Joel)

The area is very sparsely populated, with many mountain ranges dominating the region, and includes the highest mountain in the British Isles, Ben Nevis. During the 18th and early 19th centuries the population of the Highlands rose to around 300,000, but from c. 1841 and for the next 160 years, the natural increase in population was exceeded by emigration (mostly to Canada, the United States, Australia and New Zealand, and migration to the industrial cities of Scotland and England.)[2]: xxiii, 414 and passim The area is now one of the most sparsely populated in Europe. At 9.1/km2 (24/sq mi) in 2012,[3] the population density in the Highlands and Islands is less than one seventh of Scotland's as a whole,[3] comparable with that of Bolivia, Chad and Russia.[4][5]

The Highland Council is the administrative body for much of the Highlands, with its administrative centre at Inverness. However, the Highlands also includes parts of the council areas of Aberdeenshire, Angus, Argyll and Bute, Moray, North Ayrshire, Perth and Kinross, Stirling and West Dunbartonshire.

The Scottish Highlands is the only area in the British Isles to have the taiga biome as it features concentrated populations of Scots pine forest: see Caledonian Forest. It is the most mountainous part of the United Kingdom.

History

Culture

 
Map of Scottish Highland clans and lowland families
 
Highland Hospitality, painted by John Frederick Lewis, 1832
 
Stalking in the Highlands by James Giles, 1853

Between the 15th century and the mid-20th century, the area differed from most of the Lowlands in terms of language. In Scottish Gaelic, the region is known as the Gàidhealtachd,[6] because it was traditionally the Gaelic-speaking part of Scotland, although the language is now largely confined to The Hebrides. The terms are sometimes used interchangeably but have different meanings in their respective languages. Scottish English (in its Highland form) is the predominant language of the area today, though Highland English has been influenced by Gaelic speech to a significant extent.[7] Historically, the "Highland line" distinguished the two Scottish cultures. While the Highland line broadly followed the geography of the Grampians in the south, it continued in the north, cutting off the north-eastern areas, that is Eastern Caithness, Orkney and Shetland, from the more Gaelic Highlands and Hebrides.[8][9]

Historically, the major social unit of the Highlands was the clan. Scottish kings, particularly James VI, saw clans as a challenge to their authority; the Highlands was seen by many as a lawless region. The Scots of the Lowlands viewed the Highlanders as backwards and more "Irish". The Highlands were seen as the overspill of Gaelic Ireland. They made this distinction by separating Germanic "Scots" English and the Gaelic by renaming it "Erse" a play on Eire. Following the Union of the Crowns, James VI had the military strength to back up any attempts to impose some control. The result was, in 1609, the Statutes of Iona which started the process of integrating clan leaders into Scottish society. The gradual changes continued into the 19th century, as clan chiefs thought of themselves less as patriarchal leaders of their people and more as commercial landlords. The first effect on the clansmen who were their tenants was the change to rents being payable in money rather than in kind. Later, rents were increased as Highland landowners sought to increase their income. This was followed, mostly in the period 1760–1850, by agricultural improvement that often (particularly in the Western Highlands) involved clearance of the population to make way for large scale sheep farms. Displaced tenants were set up in crofting communities in the process. The crofts were intended not to provide all the needs of their occupiers; they were expected to work in other industries such as kelping and fishing. Crofters came to rely substantially on seasonal migrant work, particularly in the Lowlands. This gave impetus to the learning of English, which was seen by many rural Gaelic speakers to be the essential "language of work".[10]: 105–07 [11]: 1–17, 110–18 [12]: 37–46, 65–73, 132 

Older historiography attributes the collapse of the clan system to the aftermath of the Jacobite risings. This is now thought less influential by historians. Following the Jacobite rising of 1745 the British government enacted a series of laws to try to suppress the clan system, including bans on the bearing of arms and the wearing of tartan, and limitations on the activities of the Scottish Episcopal Church. Most of this legislation was repealed by the end of the 18th century as the Jacobite threat subsided. There was soon a rehabilitation of Highland culture. Tartan was adopted for Highland regiments in the British Army, which poor Highlanders joined in large numbers in the era of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars (1790–1815). Tartan had largely been abandoned by the ordinary people of the region, but in the 1820s, tartan and the kilt were adopted by members of the social elite, not just in Scotland, but across Europe.[13][14] The international craze for tartan, and for idealising a romanticised Highlands, was set off by the Ossian cycle,[15][16] and further popularised by the works of Walter Scott. His "staging" of the visit of King George IV to Scotland in 1822 and the king's wearing of tartan resulted in a massive upsurge in demand for kilts and tartans that could not be met by the Scottish woollen industry. Individual clan tartans were largely designated in this period and they became a major symbol of Scottish identity.[17] This "Highlandism", by which all of Scotland was identified with the culture of the Highlands, was cemented by Queen Victoria's interest in the country, her adoption of Balmoral as a major royal retreat, and her interest in "tartenry".[14]

Economy

Recurrent famine affected the Highlands for much of its history, with significant instances as late as 1817 in the Eastern Highlands and the early 1850s in the West.[2]: 415–16  Over the 18th century, the region had developed a trade of black cattle into Lowland markets, and this was balanced by imports of meal into the area. There was a critical reliance on this trade to provide sufficient food, and it is seen as an essential prerequisite for the population growth that started in the 18th century.[2]: 48–49  Most of the Highlands, particularly in the North and West was short of the arable land that was essential for the mixed, run rig based, communal farming that existed before agricultural improvement was introduced into the region.[a] Between the 1760s and the 1830s there was a substantial trade in unlicensed whisky that had been distilled in the Highlands. Lowland distillers (who were not able to avoid the heavy taxation of this product) complained that Highland whisky made up more than half the market. The development of the cattle trade is taken as evidence that the pre-improvement Highlands was not an immutable system, but did exploit the economic opportunities that came its way.[12]: 24  The illicit whisky trade demonstrates the entrepreneurial ability of the peasant classes.[11]: 119–34 

Agricultural improvement reached the Highlands mostly over the period 1760 to 1850. Agricultural advisors, factors, land surveyors and others educated in the thinking of Adam Smith were keen to put into practice the new ideas taught in Scottish universities.[12]: 141  Highland landowners, many of whom were burdened with chronic debts, were generally receptive to the advice they offered and keen to increase the income from their land.[18]: 417  In the East and South the resulting change was similar to that in the Lowlands, with the creation of larger farms with single tenants, enclosure of the old run rig fields, introduction of new crops (such as turnips), land drainage and, as a consequence of all this, eviction, as part of the Highland clearances, of many tenants and cottars. Some of those cleared found employment on the new, larger farms, others moved to the accessible towns of the Lowlands.[19]: 1–12 

In the West and North, evicted tenants were usually given tenancies in newly created crofting communities, whilst their former holdings were converted into large sheep farms. Sheep farmers could pay substantially higher rents than the run rig farmers and were much less prone to falling into arrears. Each croft was limited in size so that the tenants would have to find work elsewhere. The major alternatives were fishing and the kelp industry. Landlords took control of the kelp shores, deducting the wages earned by their tenants from the rent due and retaining the large profits that could be earned at the high prices paid for the processed product during the Napoleonic wars.[19]: 1–12 

 
Scottish Highland family migrating to New Zealand in 1844

When the Napoleonic wars finished in 1815, the Highland industries were affected by the return to a peacetime economy. The price of black cattle fell, nearly halving between 1810 and the 1830s. Kelp prices had peaked in 1810, but reduced from £9 a ton in 1823 to £3 13s 4d a ton in 1828. Wool prices were also badly affected.[20]: 370–71  This worsened the financial problems of debt-encumbered landlords. Then, in 1846, potato blight arrived in the Highlands, wiping out the essential subsistence crop for the overcrowded crofting communities. As the famine struck, the government made clear to landlords that it was their responsibility to provide famine relief for their tenants. The result of the economic downturn had been that a large proportion of Highland estates were sold in the first half of the 19th century. T M Devine points out that in the region most affected by the potato famine, by 1846, 70 per cent of the landowners were new purchasers who had not owned Highland property before 1800. More landlords were obliged to sell due to the cost of famine relief. Those who were protected from the worst of the crisis were those with extensive rental income from sheep farms.[19]: 93–95  Government loans were made available for drainage works, road building and other improvements and many crofters became temporary migrants – taking work in the Lowlands. When the potato famine ceased in 1856, this established a pattern of more extensive working away from the Highlands.[19]: 146–66 

The unequal concentration of land ownership remained an emotional and controversial subject, of enormous importance to the Highland economy, and eventually became a cornerstone of liberal radicalism. The poor crofters were politically powerless, and many of them turned to religion. They embraced the popularly oriented, fervently evangelical Presbyterian revival after 1800.[21] Most joined the breakaway "Free Church" after 1843. This evangelical movement was led by lay preachers who themselves came from the lower strata, and whose preaching was implicitly critical of the established order. The religious change energised the crofters and separated them from the landlords; it helped prepare them for their successful and violent challenge to the landlords in the 1880s through the Highland Land League.[22] Violence erupted, starting on the Isle of Skye, when Highland landlords cleared their lands for sheep and deer parks. It was quietened when the government stepped in, passing the Crofters' Holdings (Scotland) Act, 1886 to reduce rents, guarantee fixity of tenure, and break up large estates to provide crofts for the homeless.[23] This contrasted with the Irish Land War underway at the same time, where the Irish were intensely politicised through roots in Irish nationalism, while political dimensions were limited. In 1885 three Independent Crofter candidates were elected to Parliament, which listened to their pleas. The results included explicit security for the Scottish smallholders in the "crofting counties"; the legal right to bequeath tenancies to descendants; and the creation of a Crofting Commission. The Crofters as a political movement faded away by 1892, and the Liberal Party gained their votes.[24]

Whisky production

 
Oban distillery from the pier
 
The regions of Scotch whisky

Today, the Highlands are the largest of Scotland's whisky producing regions; the relevant area runs from Orkney to the Isle of Arran in the south and includes the northern isles and much of Inner and Outer Hebrides, Argyll, Stirlingshire, Arran, as well as sections of Perthshire and Aberdeenshire. (Other sources treat The Islands, except Islay, as a separate whisky producing region.) This massive area has over 30 distilleries, or 47 when the Islands sub-region is included in the count.[25] According to one source, the top five are The Macallan, Glenfiddich, Aberlour, Glenfarclas and Balvenie. While Speyside is geographically within the Highlands, that region is specified as distinct in terms of whisky productions.[26] Speyside single malt whiskies are produced by about 50 distilleries.[26]

According to Visit Scotland, Highlands whisky is "fruity, sweet, spicy, malty".[27] Another review[26] states that Northern Highlands single malt is "sweet and full-bodied", the Eastern Highlands and Southern Highlands whiskies tend to be "lighter in texture" while the distilleries in the Western Highlands produce single malts with a "much peatier influence".

Religion

The Scottish Reformation achieved partial success in the Highlands. Roman Catholicism remained strong in some areas, owing to remote locations and the efforts of Franciscan missionaries from Ireland, who regularly came to celebrate Mass. There remain significant Catholic strongholds within the Highlands and Islands such as Moidart and Morar on the mainland and South Uist and Barra in the southern Outer Hebrides. The remoteness of the region and the lack of a Gaelic-speaking clergy undermined the missionary efforts of the established church. The later 18th century saw somewhat greater success, owing to the efforts of the SSPCK missionaries and to the disruption of traditional society after the Battle of Culloden in 1746. In the 19th century, the evangelical Free Churches, which were more accepting of Gaelic language and culture, grew rapidly, appealing much more strongly than did the established church.[28]

For the most part, however, the Highlands are considered predominantly Protestant, belonging to the Church of Scotland. In contrast to the Catholic southern islands, the northern Outer Hebrides islands (Lewis, Harris and North Uist) have an exceptionally high proportion of their population belonging to the Protestant Free Church of Scotland or the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland. The Outer Hebrides have been described as the last bastion of Calvinism in Britain[29] and the Sabbath remains widely observed. Inverness and the surrounding area has a majority Protestant population, with most locals belonging to either The Kirk or the Free Church of Scotland. The church maintains a noticeable presence within the area, with church attendance notably higher than in other parts of Scotland. Religion continues to play an important role in Highland culture, with Sabbath observance still widely practised, particularly in the Hebrides.[30]

Historical geography

 
Inverness, the administrative centre and traditional capital of the Highlands
 
Ben Nevis from the path to the CIC Hut alongside the Allt a' Mhuilinn

In traditional Scottish geography, the Highlands refers to that part of Scotland north-west of the Highland Boundary Fault, which crosses mainland Scotland in a near-straight line from Helensburgh to Stonehaven. However the flat coastal lands that occupy parts of the counties of Nairnshire, Morayshire, Banffshire and Aberdeenshire are often excluded as they do not share the distinctive geographical and cultural features of the rest of the Highlands. The north-east of Caithness, as well as Orkney and Shetland, are also often excluded from the Highlands, although the Hebrides are usually included. The Highland area, as so defined, differed from the Lowlands in language and tradition, having preserved Gaelic speech and customs centuries after the anglicisation of the latter; this led to a growing perception of a divide, with the cultural distinction between Highlander and Lowlander first noted towards the end of the 14th century. In Aberdeenshire, the boundary between the Highlands and the Lowlands is not well defined. There is a stone beside the A93 road near the village of Dinnet on Royal Deeside which states 'You are now in the Highlands', although there are areas of Highland character to the east of this point.

A much wider definition of the Highlands is that used by the Scotch whisky industry. Highland Single Malts are produced at distilleries north of an imaginary line between Dundee and Greenock,[31] thus including all of Aberdeenshire and Angus.

Inverness is regarded as the Capital of the Highlands,[32] although less so in the Highland parts of Aberdeenshire, Angus, Perthshire and Stirlingshire which look more to Aberdeen, Dundee, Perth, and Stirling as their commercial centres.[33]

Highland Council area

The Highland Council area, created as one of the local government regions of Scotland, has been a unitary council area since 1996. The council area excludes a large area of the southern and eastern Highlands, and the Western Isles, but includes Caithness. Highlands is sometimes used, however, as a name for the council area, as in the former Highlands and Islands Fire and Rescue Service. Northern is also used to refer to the area, as in the former Northern Constabulary. These former bodies both covered the Highland council area and the island council areas of Orkney, Shetland and the Western Isles.

Highland Council signs in the Pass of Drumochter, between Glen Garry and Dalwhinnie, say "Welcome to the Highlands".

Highlands and Islands

Much of the Highlands area overlaps the Highlands and Islands area. An electoral region called Highlands and Islands is used in elections to the Scottish Parliament: this area includes Orkney and Shetland, as well as the Highland Council local government area, the Western Isles and most of the Argyll and Bute and Moray local government areas. Highlands and Islands has, however, different meanings in different contexts. It means Highland (the local government area), Orkney, Shetland, and the Western Isles in Highlands and Islands Fire and Rescue Service. Northern, as in Northern Constabulary, refers to the same area as that covered by the fire and rescue service.

Historical crossings

There have been trackways from the Lowlands to the Highlands since prehistoric times. Many traverse the Mounth, a spur of mountainous land that extends from the higher inland range to the North Sea slightly north of Stonehaven. The most well-known and historically important trackways are the Causey Mounth, Elsick Mounth,[34] Cryne Corse Mounth and Cairnamounth.[35]

Courier delivery

Although most of the Highlands is geographically on the British mainland, it is somewhat less accessible than the rest of Britain; thus most UK couriers categorise it separately, alongside Northern Ireland, the Isle of Man, and other offshore islands. They thus charge additional fees for delivery to the Highlands, or exclude the area entirely. Whilst the physical remoteness from the largest population centres inevitably leads to higher transit cost, there is confusion and consternation over the scale of the fees charged and the effectiveness of their communication,[36] and the use of the word Mainland in their justification. Since the charges are often based on postcode areas, many far less remote areas, including some which are traditionally considered part of the lowlands, are also subject to these charges.[36] Royal Mail is the only delivery network bound by a Universal Service Obligation to charge a uniform tariff across the UK. This, however, applies only to mail items and not larger packages which are dealt with by its Parcelforce division.

Geology

 
Liathach seen from Beinn Eighe. With the Munro "Top" of Stuc a' Choire Dhuibh Bhig 915 m (3,001 ft) in the foreground and the two Munro summits in the background.
 
The main ridge of the Cuillin
 
The main geographical divisions of Scotland

The Highlands lie to the north and west of the Highland Boundary Fault, which runs from Arran to Stonehaven. This part of Scotland is largely composed of ancient rocks from the Cambrian and Precambrian periods which were uplifted during the later Caledonian Orogeny. Smaller formations of Lewisian gneiss in the northwest are up to 3 billion years old. The overlying rocks of the Torridon Sandstone form mountains in the Torridon Hills such as Liathach and Beinn Eighe in Wester Ross.

These foundations are interspersed with many igneous intrusions of a more recent age, the remnants of which have formed mountain massifs such as the Cairngorms and the Cuillin of Skye. A significant exception to the above are the fossil-bearing beds of Old Red Sandstone found principally along the Moray Firth coast and partially down the Highland Boundary Fault. The Jurassic beds found in isolated locations on Skye and Applecross reflect the complex underlying geology. They are the original source of much North Sea oil. The Great Glen is formed along a transform fault which divides the Grampian Mountains to the southeast from the Northwest Highlands.[37][38]

The entire region was covered by ice sheets during the Pleistocene ice ages, save perhaps for a few nunataks. The complex geomorphology includes incised valleys and lochs carved by the action of mountain streams and ice, and a topography of irregularly distributed mountains whose summits have similar heights above sea-level, but whose bases depend upon the amount of denudation to which the plateau has been subjected in various places.[39]

Climate

The region is much warmer than other areas at similar latitudes (such as Kamchatka in Russia, or Labrador in Canada) because of the Gulf Stream making it cool, damp and temperate. The Köppen climate classification is “Cfb” at low altitudes, then becoming “Cfc”, “Dfc” and “ET” at higher altitudes.

Places of interest

Gallery

See also

Notes

  1. ^ It has been estimated that only 9% of the land in the Highlands is suitable for cultivation.[12]: 18 

References

  1. ^ "Highlands | region, Scotland, United Kingdom". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 10 May 2017.
  2. ^ a b c Richards, Eric (2000). The Highland Clearances People, Landlords and Rural Turmoil (2013 ed.). Edinburgh: Birlinn Limited. ISBN 978-1-78027-165-1.
  3. ^ a b "Highland profile – key facts and figures". The Highland Council. Retrieved 2 June 2014.
  4. ^ List of sovereign states and dependent territories by population density
  5. ^ "Global Health Facts : Demography & Population : Population Density (Population Per Square Kilometer)". The Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation. Retrieved 2 June 2014.
  6. ^ Martin Ball; James Fife (1993). The Celtic Languages. Routledge. p. 136. ISBN 9780415010351.
  7. ^ Charles Jones (1997). The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language. Edinburgh University Press. pp. 566–67. ISBN 978-0748607549.
  8. ^ . Sue & Marilyn. Archived from the original on 8 August 2017. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  9. ^ "Historical Geography of the Clans of Scotland". Electricscotland.com. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  10. ^ Dodgshon, Robert A. (1998). From Chiefs to Landlords: Social and Economic Change in the Western Highlands and Islands, c. 1493–1820. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. ISBN 0-7486-1034-0.
  11. ^ a b Devine, T M (1994). Clanship to Crofters' War: The social transformation of the Scottish Highlands (2013 ed.). Manchester University Press. ISBN 978-0-7190-9076-9.
  12. ^ a b c d Devine, T M (2018). The Scottish Clearances: A History of the Dispossessed, 1600–1900. London: Allen Lane. ISBN 978-0241304105.
  13. ^ John Lenox Roberts (2002). The Jacobite Wars: Scotland and the Military Campaigns of 1715 and 1745. Polygon at Edinburgh. pp. 193–95. ISBN 9781902930299.
  14. ^ a b Marco Sievers (2007). The Highland Myth as an Invented Tradition of 18th and 19th Century and Its Significance for the Image of Scotland. GRIN Verlag. pp. 22–25. ISBN 9783638816519.
  15. ^ Deidre Dawson; Pierre Morère (2004). Scotland and France in the Enlightenment. Bucknell University Press. pp. 75–76. ISBN 978-0838755266.
  16. ^ William Ferguson (1998). The Identity of the Scottish Nation: An Historic Quest. Edinburgh University Press. p. 227. ISBN 978-0748610716.
  17. ^ Norman C Milne (2010). Scottish Culture and Traditions. Paragon Publishing. p. 138. ISBN 978-1899820795.
  18. ^ Richards, Eric (1985). A History of the Highland Clearances, Volume 2: Emigration, Protest, Reasons. Beckenham, Kent and Sydney, Australia: Croom Helm Ltd. ISBN 978-0709922599.
  19. ^ a b c d Devine, T M (1995). The Great Highland Famine: Hunger, Emigration and the Scottish Highlands in the Nineteenth Century. Edinburgh: Birlinn Limited. ISBN 1-904607-42-X.
  20. ^ Lynch, Michael (1991). Scotland, a New History (1992 ed.). London: Pimlico. ISBN 9780712698931.
  21. ^ Thomas Martin Devine (1999). "Chapter 18". The Scottish Nation. Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0670888115.
  22. ^ James Hunter (1974). "The Emergence of the Crofting Community: The Religious Contribution 1798–1843". Scottish Studies. 18: 95–116.
  23. ^ Ian Bradley (December 1987). "'Having and Holding' – The Highland Land War of the 1880s". History Today. 37 (12): 23–28. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  24. ^ Ewen A. Cameron (June 2005). "Communication or Separation? Reactions to Irish Land Agitation and Legislation in the Highlands of Scotland, c. 1870–1910". English Historical Review. 120 (487): 633–66. doi:10.1093/ehr/cei124.
  25. ^ "Highland Distilleries - Whisky Tours, Tastings & Map". www.visitscotland.com.
  26. ^ a b c "A Comprehensive Guide to Scotland's Whisky Regions". Man of Many. 13 August 2019.
  27. ^ "Whisky Distilleries in the Highlands". VisitScotland. Retrieved 25 August 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  28. ^ George Robb (1990). "Popular Religion and the Christianisation of the Highlands in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries". Journal of Religious History. 16 (1): 18–34. doi:10.1111/j.1467-9809.1990.tb00647.x.
  29. ^ Gerard Seenan (10 April 2006). "Fury at ferry crossing on Sabbath". The Guardian. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  30. ^ Cook, James (29 March 2011). "Battle looms in Outer Hebrides over Sabbath opening". BBC News. Retrieved 3 June 2014.
  31. ^ . Scotch Whisky Association. Archived from the original on 26 July 2018. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  32. ^ "Inverness: Capital of the Scottish Highlands". Internet Guide to Scotland. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  33. ^ "Scottish Highlands Landscape and History – Scotland Info Guide". www.scotlandinfo.eu.
  34. ^ C Michael Hogan (22 November 2007). "Elsick Mounth – Ancient Trackway in Scotland in Aberdeenshire". The Megalithic Portal. Retrieved 8 March 2013.
  35. ^ W. Douglas Simpson (10 December 1928). "The Early Castles of Mar" (PDF). Proceedings of the Society. Retrieved 8 March 2013.[dead link]
  36. ^ a b "3,000 angry Scots respond to CAB survey on rural delivery charges". 2012 The Scottish Association of Citizens Advice Bureaux – Citizens Advice Scotland (Scottish charity SC016637). 25 January 2012. Retrieved 31 July 2013.
  37. ^ John Keay, Julia Keay (1994). Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland. HarperCollins. ISBN 9780007103539.
  38. ^ William Hutchison Murray (1973). The islands of Western Scotland: the Inner and Outer Hebrides. Eyre Methuen.
  39. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Highlands, The". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 455–456.

Further reading

  • Baxter, Colin, and C. J. Tabraham. The Scottish Highlands (2008), heavily illustrated
  • Gray, Malcolm. The Highland Economy, 1750–1850 (Edinburgh, 1957)
  • Humphreys, Rob, and Donald Reid. The Rough Guide to Scottish Highlands and Islands (3rd ed. 2004)
  • Keay, J. and J. Keay. Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland (1994)
  • Kermack, William Ramsay. The Scottish Highlands: a short history, c. 300–1746 (1957)
  • Lister, John Anthony. The Scottish Highlands (1978)

External links

  • Am Baile – Highland History & Culture in English and Gaelic
  • WalkHighland - walking guide
  • National Library of Scotland: SCOTTISH SCREEN ARCHIVE (selection of archive films relating to the Scottish Highlands)

Coordinates: 57°07′N 4°43′W / 57.12°N 4.71°W / 57.12; -4.71

scottish, highlands, highland, line, redirects, here, railway, lines, highland, main, line, west, highland, line, highlands, scots, hielands, scottish, gaelic, ghàidhealtachd, ˈɣɛːəl, ʰəxk, place, gaels, historical, region, scotland, failed, verification, cult. Highland Line redirects here For the railway lines see Highland Main Line and West Highland Line The Highlands Scots the Hielands Scottish Gaelic a Ghaidhealtachd e ˈɣɛːel ˠt ʰexk the place of the Gaels is a historical region of Scotland 1 failed verification Culturally the Highlands and the Lowlands diverged from the Late Middle Ages into the modern period when Lowland Scots replaced Scottish Gaelic throughout most of the Lowlands The term is also used for the area north and west of the Highland Boundary Fault although the exact boundaries are not clearly defined particularly to the east The Great Glen divides the Grampian Mountains to the southeast from the Northwest Highlands The Scottish Gaelic name of A Ghaidhealtachd literally means the place of the Gaels and traditionally from a Gaelic speaking point of view includes both the Western Isles and the Highlands Highlands A Ghaidhealtachd Scottish Gaelic Hielands Scots Lowland Highland divideSeatInvernessPopulation Estimate 2019 600 000 citation needed DemonymHighlanderTime zoneGMT BSTThe Scottish Highlands are renowned for their natural beauty and are a popular subject in art here depicted by Henry Bates Joel The area is very sparsely populated with many mountain ranges dominating the region and includes the highest mountain in the British Isles Ben Nevis During the 18th and early 19th centuries the population of the Highlands rose to around 300 000 but from c 1841 and for the next 160 years the natural increase in population was exceeded by emigration mostly to Canada the United States Australia and New Zealand and migration to the industrial cities of Scotland and England 2 xxiii 414 and passim The area is now one of the most sparsely populated in Europe At 9 1 km2 24 sq mi in 2012 3 the population density in the Highlands and Islands is less than one seventh of Scotland s as a whole 3 comparable with that of Bolivia Chad and Russia 4 5 The Highland Council is the administrative body for much of the Highlands with its administrative centre at Inverness However the Highlands also includes parts of the council areas of Aberdeenshire Angus Argyll and Bute Moray North Ayrshire Perth and Kinross Stirling and West Dunbartonshire The Scottish Highlands is the only area in the British Isles to have the taiga biome as it features concentrated populations of Scots pine forest see Caledonian Forest It is the most mountainous part of the United Kingdom Contents 1 History 1 1 Culture 1 2 Economy 1 2 1 Whisky production 1 3 Religion 2 Historical geography 2 1 Highland Council area 2 2 Highlands and Islands 2 3 Historical crossings 2 4 Courier delivery 3 Geology 4 Climate 5 Places of interest 6 Gallery 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditCulture Edit Map of Scottish Highland clans and lowland families Highland Hospitality painted by John Frederick Lewis 1832 Battle of Alma Sutherland Highlanders Stalking in the Highlands by James Giles 1853 Between the 15th century and the mid 20th century the area differed from most of the Lowlands in terms of language In Scottish Gaelic the region is known as the Gaidhealtachd 6 because it was traditionally the Gaelic speaking part of Scotland although the language is now largely confined to The Hebrides The terms are sometimes used interchangeably but have different meanings in their respective languages Scottish English in its Highland form is the predominant language of the area today though Highland English has been influenced by Gaelic speech to a significant extent 7 Historically the Highland line distinguished the two Scottish cultures While the Highland line broadly followed the geography of the Grampians in the south it continued in the north cutting off the north eastern areas that is Eastern Caithness Orkney and Shetland from the more Gaelic Highlands and Hebrides 8 9 Historically the major social unit of the Highlands was the clan Scottish kings particularly James VI saw clans as a challenge to their authority the Highlands was seen by many as a lawless region The Scots of the Lowlands viewed the Highlanders as backwards and more Irish The Highlands were seen as the overspill of Gaelic Ireland They made this distinction by separating Germanic Scots English and the Gaelic by renaming it Erse a play on Eire Following the Union of the Crowns James VI had the military strength to back up any attempts to impose some control The result was in 1609 the Statutes of Iona which started the process of integrating clan leaders into Scottish society The gradual changes continued into the 19th century as clan chiefs thought of themselves less as patriarchal leaders of their people and more as commercial landlords The first effect on the clansmen who were their tenants was the change to rents being payable in money rather than in kind Later rents were increased as Highland landowners sought to increase their income This was followed mostly in the period 1760 1850 by agricultural improvement that often particularly in the Western Highlands involved clearance of the population to make way for large scale sheep farms Displaced tenants were set up in crofting communities in the process The crofts were intended not to provide all the needs of their occupiers they were expected to work in other industries such as kelping and fishing Crofters came to rely substantially on seasonal migrant work particularly in the Lowlands This gave impetus to the learning of English which was seen by many rural Gaelic speakers to be the essential language of work 10 105 07 11 1 17 110 18 12 37 46 65 73 132 Older historiography attributes the collapse of the clan system to the aftermath of the Jacobite risings This is now thought less influential by historians Following the Jacobite rising of 1745 the British government enacted a series of laws to try to suppress the clan system including bans on the bearing of arms and the wearing of tartan and limitations on the activities of the Scottish Episcopal Church Most of this legislation was repealed by the end of the 18th century as the Jacobite threat subsided There was soon a rehabilitation of Highland culture Tartan was adopted for Highland regiments in the British Army which poor Highlanders joined in large numbers in the era of the Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars 1790 1815 Tartan had largely been abandoned by the ordinary people of the region but in the 1820s tartan and the kilt were adopted by members of the social elite not just in Scotland but across Europe 13 14 The international craze for tartan and for idealising a romanticised Highlands was set off by the Ossian cycle 15 16 and further popularised by the works of Walter Scott His staging of the visit of King George IV to Scotland in 1822 and the king s wearing of tartan resulted in a massive upsurge in demand for kilts and tartans that could not be met by the Scottish woollen industry Individual clan tartans were largely designated in this period and they became a major symbol of Scottish identity 17 This Highlandism by which all of Scotland was identified with the culture of the Highlands was cemented by Queen Victoria s interest in the country her adoption of Balmoral as a major royal retreat and her interest in tartenry 14 Economy Edit Recurrent famine affected the Highlands for much of its history with significant instances as late as 1817 in the Eastern Highlands and the early 1850s in the West 2 415 16 Over the 18th century the region had developed a trade of black cattle into Lowland markets and this was balanced by imports of meal into the area There was a critical reliance on this trade to provide sufficient food and it is seen as an essential prerequisite for the population growth that started in the 18th century 2 48 49 Most of the Highlands particularly in the North and West was short of the arable land that was essential for the mixed run rig based communal farming that existed before agricultural improvement was introduced into the region a Between the 1760s and the 1830s there was a substantial trade in unlicensed whisky that had been distilled in the Highlands Lowland distillers who were not able to avoid the heavy taxation of this product complained that Highland whisky made up more than half the market The development of the cattle trade is taken as evidence that the pre improvement Highlands was not an immutable system but did exploit the economic opportunities that came its way 12 24 The illicit whisky trade demonstrates the entrepreneurial ability of the peasant classes 11 119 34 Agricultural improvement reached the Highlands mostly over the period 1760 to 1850 Agricultural advisors factors land surveyors and others educated in the thinking of Adam Smith were keen to put into practice the new ideas taught in Scottish universities 12 141 Highland landowners many of whom were burdened with chronic debts were generally receptive to the advice they offered and keen to increase the income from their land 18 417 In the East and South the resulting change was similar to that in the Lowlands with the creation of larger farms with single tenants enclosure of the old run rig fields introduction of new crops such as turnips land drainage and as a consequence of all this eviction as part of the Highland clearances of many tenants and cottars Some of those cleared found employment on the new larger farms others moved to the accessible towns of the Lowlands 19 1 12 In the West and North evicted tenants were usually given tenancies in newly created crofting communities whilst their former holdings were converted into large sheep farms Sheep farmers could pay substantially higher rents than the run rig farmers and were much less prone to falling into arrears Each croft was limited in size so that the tenants would have to find work elsewhere The major alternatives were fishing and the kelp industry Landlords took control of the kelp shores deducting the wages earned by their tenants from the rent due and retaining the large profits that could be earned at the high prices paid for the processed product during the Napoleonic wars 19 1 12 Scottish Highland family migrating to New Zealand in 1844 When the Napoleonic wars finished in 1815 the Highland industries were affected by the return to a peacetime economy The price of black cattle fell nearly halving between 1810 and the 1830s Kelp prices had peaked in 1810 but reduced from 9 a ton in 1823 to 3 13s 4d a ton in 1828 Wool prices were also badly affected 20 370 71 This worsened the financial problems of debt encumbered landlords Then in 1846 potato blight arrived in the Highlands wiping out the essential subsistence crop for the overcrowded crofting communities As the famine struck the government made clear to landlords that it was their responsibility to provide famine relief for their tenants The result of the economic downturn had been that a large proportion of Highland estates were sold in the first half of the 19th century T M Devine points out that in the region most affected by the potato famine by 1846 70 per cent of the landowners were new purchasers who had not owned Highland property before 1800 More landlords were obliged to sell due to the cost of famine relief Those who were protected from the worst of the crisis were those with extensive rental income from sheep farms 19 93 95 Government loans were made available for drainage works road building and other improvements and many crofters became temporary migrants taking work in the Lowlands When the potato famine ceased in 1856 this established a pattern of more extensive working away from the Highlands 19 146 66 The unequal concentration of land ownership remained an emotional and controversial subject of enormous importance to the Highland economy and eventually became a cornerstone of liberal radicalism The poor crofters were politically powerless and many of them turned to religion They embraced the popularly oriented fervently evangelical Presbyterian revival after 1800 21 Most joined the breakaway Free Church after 1843 This evangelical movement was led by lay preachers who themselves came from the lower strata and whose preaching was implicitly critical of the established order The religious change energised the crofters and separated them from the landlords it helped prepare them for their successful and violent challenge to the landlords in the 1880s through the Highland Land League 22 Violence erupted starting on the Isle of Skye when Highland landlords cleared their lands for sheep and deer parks It was quietened when the government stepped in passing the Crofters Holdings Scotland Act 1886 to reduce rents guarantee fixity of tenure and break up large estates to provide crofts for the homeless 23 This contrasted with the Irish Land War underway at the same time where the Irish were intensely politicised through roots in Irish nationalism while political dimensions were limited In 1885 three Independent Crofter candidates were elected to Parliament which listened to their pleas The results included explicit security for the Scottish smallholders in the crofting counties the legal right to bequeath tenancies to descendants and the creation of a Crofting Commission The Crofters as a political movement faded away by 1892 and the Liberal Party gained their votes 24 Whisky production Edit Oban distillery from the pier The regions of Scotch whisky Today the Highlands are the largest of Scotland s whisky producing regions the relevant area runs from Orkney to the Isle of Arran in the south and includes the northern isles and much of Inner and Outer Hebrides Argyll Stirlingshire Arran as well as sections of Perthshire and Aberdeenshire Other sources treat The Islands except Islay as a separate whisky producing region This massive area has over 30 distilleries or 47 when the Islands sub region is included in the count 25 According to one source the top five are The Macallan Glenfiddich Aberlour Glenfarclas and Balvenie While Speyside is geographically within the Highlands that region is specified as distinct in terms of whisky productions 26 Speyside single malt whiskies are produced by about 50 distilleries 26 According to Visit Scotland Highlands whisky is fruity sweet spicy malty 27 Another review 26 states that Northern Highlands single malt is sweet and full bodied the Eastern Highlands and Southern Highlands whiskies tend to be lighter in texture while the distilleries in the Western Highlands produce single malts with a much peatier influence Religion Edit Loch Long The Scottish Reformation achieved partial success in the Highlands Roman Catholicism remained strong in some areas owing to remote locations and the efforts of Franciscan missionaries from Ireland who regularly came to celebrate Mass There remain significant Catholic strongholds within the Highlands and Islands such as Moidart and Morar on the mainland and South Uist and Barra in the southern Outer Hebrides The remoteness of the region and the lack of a Gaelic speaking clergy undermined the missionary efforts of the established church The later 18th century saw somewhat greater success owing to the efforts of the SSPCK missionaries and to the disruption of traditional society after the Battle of Culloden in 1746 In the 19th century the evangelical Free Churches which were more accepting of Gaelic language and culture grew rapidly appealing much more strongly than did the established church 28 For the most part however the Highlands are considered predominantly Protestant belonging to the Church of Scotland In contrast to the Catholic southern islands the northern Outer Hebrides islands Lewis Harris and North Uist have an exceptionally high proportion of their population belonging to the Protestant Free Church of Scotland or the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland The Outer Hebrides have been described as the last bastion of Calvinism in Britain 29 and the Sabbath remains widely observed Inverness and the surrounding area has a majority Protestant population with most locals belonging to either The Kirk or the Free Church of Scotland The church maintains a noticeable presence within the area with church attendance notably higher than in other parts of Scotland Religion continues to play an important role in Highland culture with Sabbath observance still widely practised particularly in the Hebrides 30 Historical geography Edit Inverness the administrative centre and traditional capital of the Highlands Ben Nevis from the path to the CIC Hut alongside the Allt a Mhuilinn In traditional Scottish geography the Highlands refers to that part of Scotland north west of the Highland Boundary Fault which crosses mainland Scotland in a near straight line from Helensburgh to Stonehaven However the flat coastal lands that occupy parts of the counties of Nairnshire Morayshire Banffshire and Aberdeenshire are often excluded as they do not share the distinctive geographical and cultural features of the rest of the Highlands The north east of Caithness as well as Orkney and Shetland are also often excluded from the Highlands although the Hebrides are usually included The Highland area as so defined differed from the Lowlands in language and tradition having preserved Gaelic speech and customs centuries after the anglicisation of the latter this led to a growing perception of a divide with the cultural distinction between Highlander and Lowlander first noted towards the end of the 14th century In Aberdeenshire the boundary between the Highlands and the Lowlands is not well defined There is a stone beside the A93 road near the village of Dinnet on Royal Deeside which states You are now in the Highlands although there are areas of Highland character to the east of this point A much wider definition of the Highlands is that used by the Scotch whisky industry Highland Single Malts are produced at distilleries north of an imaginary line between Dundee and Greenock 31 thus including all of Aberdeenshire and Angus Inverness is regarded as the Capital of the Highlands 32 although less so in the Highland parts of Aberdeenshire Angus Perthshire and Stirlingshire which look more to Aberdeen Dundee Perth and Stirling as their commercial centres 33 Highland Council area Edit Main articles Highland council area and Highland Council The Highland Council area created as one of the local government regions of Scotland has been a unitary council area since 1996 The council area excludes a large area of the southern and eastern Highlands and the Western Isles but includes Caithness Highlands is sometimes used however as a name for the council area as in the former Highlands and Islands Fire and Rescue Service Northern is also used to refer to the area as in the former Northern Constabulary These former bodies both covered the Highland council area and the island council areas of Orkney Shetland and the Western Isles Highland Council signs in the Pass of Drumochter between Glen Garry and Dalwhinnie say Welcome to the Highlands Highlands and Islands Edit Isle of Skye Much of the Highlands area overlaps the Highlands and Islands area An electoral region called Highlands and Islands is used in elections to the Scottish Parliament this area includes Orkney and Shetland as well as the Highland Council local government area the Western Isles and most of the Argyll and Bute and Moray local government areas Highlands and Islands has however different meanings in different contexts It means Highland the local government area Orkney Shetland and the Western Isles in Highlands and Islands Fire and Rescue Service Northern as in Northern Constabulary refers to the same area as that covered by the fire and rescue service Historical crossings Edit There have been trackways from the Lowlands to the Highlands since prehistoric times Many traverse the Mounth a spur of mountainous land that extends from the higher inland range to the North Sea slightly north of Stonehaven The most well known and historically important trackways are the Causey Mounth Elsick Mounth 34 Cryne Corse Mounth and Cairnamounth 35 Courier delivery Edit Although most of the Highlands is geographically on the British mainland it is somewhat less accessible than the rest of Britain thus most UK couriers categorise it separately alongside Northern Ireland the Isle of Man and other offshore islands They thus charge additional fees for delivery to the Highlands or exclude the area entirely Whilst the physical remoteness from the largest population centres inevitably leads to higher transit cost there is confusion and consternation over the scale of the fees charged and the effectiveness of their communication 36 and the use of the word Mainland in their justification Since the charges are often based on postcode areas many far less remote areas including some which are traditionally considered part of the lowlands are also subject to these charges 36 Royal Mail is the only delivery network bound by a Universal Service Obligation to charge a uniform tariff across the UK This however applies only to mail items and not larger packages which are dealt with by its Parcelforce division Geology Edit Liathach seen from Beinn Eighe With the Munro Top of Stuc a Choire Dhuibh Bhig 915 m 3 001 ft in the foreground and the two Munro summits in the background The main ridge of the Cuillin The main geographical divisions of Scotland The Highlands lie to the north and west of the Highland Boundary Fault which runs from Arran to Stonehaven This part of Scotland is largely composed of ancient rocks from the Cambrian and Precambrian periods which were uplifted during the later Caledonian Orogeny Smaller formations of Lewisian gneiss in the northwest are up to 3 billion years old The overlying rocks of the Torridon Sandstone form mountains in the Torridon Hills such as Liathach and Beinn Eighe in Wester Ross These foundations are interspersed with many igneous intrusions of a more recent age the remnants of which have formed mountain massifs such as the Cairngorms and the Cuillin of Skye A significant exception to the above are the fossil bearing beds of Old Red Sandstone found principally along the Moray Firth coast and partially down the Highland Boundary Fault The Jurassic beds found in isolated locations on Skye and Applecross reflect the complex underlying geology They are the original source of much North Sea oil The Great Glen is formed along a transform fault which divides the Grampian Mountains to the southeast from the Northwest Highlands 37 38 The entire region was covered by ice sheets during the Pleistocene ice ages save perhaps for a few nunataks The complex geomorphology includes incised valleys and lochs carved by the action of mountain streams and ice and a topography of irregularly distributed mountains whose summits have similar heights above sea level but whose bases depend upon the amount of denudation to which the plateau has been subjected in various places 39 Climate EditThe region is much warmer than other areas at similar latitudes such as Kamchatka in Russia or Labrador in Canada because of the Gulf Stream making it cool damp and temperate The Koppen climate classification is Cfb at low altitudes then becoming Cfc Dfc and ET at higher altitudes Places of interest EditAn Teallach Aonach Mor Nevis Range ski centre Arrochar Alps Balmoral Castle Balquhidder Battlefield of Culloden Beinn Alligin Beinn Eighe Ben Cruachan hydro electric power station Ben Lomond Ben Macdui second highest mountain in Scotland and UK Ben Nevis highest mountain in Scotland and UK Cairngorms National Park Cairngorm Ski centre near Aviemore Cairngorm Mountains Caledonian Canal Cape Wrath Carrick Castle Castle Stalker Castle Tioram Chanonry Point Conic Hill Culloden Moor Dunadd Duart Castle Durness Eilean Donan Fingal s Cave Staffa Fort George Glen Coe Glen Etive Glen Kinglas Glen Lyon Glen Orchy Glenshee Ski Centre Glen Shiel Glen Spean Glenfinnan and its railway station and viaduct Grampian Mountains Hebrides Highland Folk Museum The first open air museum in the UK Highland Wildlife Park Inveraray Castle Inveraray Jail Inverness Castle Inverewe Garden Iona Abbey Isle of staffa Kilchurn Castle Kilmartin Glen Liathach Lecht Ski Centre Loch Alsh Loch Ard Loch Awe Loch Assynt Loch Earn Loch Etive Loch Fyne Loch Goil Loch Katrine Loch Leven Loch Linnhe Loch Lochy Loch Lomond Loch Lomond and the Trossachs National Park Loch Lubnaig Loch Maree Loch Morar Loch Morlich Loch Ness Loch Nevis Loch Rannoch Loch Tay Lochranza Luss Meall a Bhuiridh Glencoe Ski Centre Scottish Sea Life Sanctuary at Loch Creran Rannoch Moor Red Cuillin Rest and Be Thankful stretch of A83 River Carron Wester Ross River Spey River Tay Ross and Cromarty Smoo Cave Stob Coire a Chairn Stac Polly Strathspey Railway Sutherland Tor Castle Torridon Hills Urquhart Castle West Highland Line scenic railway West Highland Way Long distance footpath Wester RossGallery Edit The Glenfinnan Viaduct from below The Saddle Loch Scavaig Isle of Skye Inverness The islands of Loch Maree The interior of Smoo Cave Sutherland Cape Wrath Lighthouse in the far NW of the Highlands Blaven Gair Loch The Kyle of Durness The Quirang Isle of Skye Two hinds in the Highlands Loch an Loin Highland Cattle originates from the Scottish HighlandsSee also Edit Clans of Scotland portal Wikimedia Commons has media related to Scottish Highlands Ben Nevis Buachaille Etive Mor Fauna of Scotland Highland 2007 James Hunter historian historian who wrote several books related to the Scottish Highlands List of fauna of the Scottish Highlands List of towns and villages in the Scottish Highlands Mountains and hills of ScotlandNotes Edit It has been estimated that only 9 of the land in the Highlands is suitable for cultivation 12 18 References Edit Highlands region Scotland United Kingdom Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 10 May 2017 a b c Richards Eric 2000 The Highland Clearances People Landlords and Rural Turmoil 2013 ed Edinburgh Birlinn Limited ISBN 978 1 78027 165 1 a b Highland profile key facts and figures The Highland Council Retrieved 2 June 2014 List of sovereign states and dependent territories by population density Global Health Facts Demography amp Population Population Density Population Per Square Kilometer The Henry J Kaiser Family Foundation Retrieved 2 June 2014 Martin Ball James Fife 1993 The Celtic Languages Routledge p 136 ISBN 9780415010351 Charles Jones 1997 The Edinburgh History of the Scots Language Edinburgh University Press pp 566 67 ISBN 978 0748607549 The Highland Line Sue amp Marilyn Archived from the original on 8 August 2017 Retrieved 8 March 2013 Historical Geography of the Clans of Scotland Electricscotland com Retrieved 8 March 2013 Dodgshon Robert A 1998 From Chiefs to Landlords Social and Economic Change in the Western Highlands and Islands c 1493 1820 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press ISBN 0 7486 1034 0 a b Devine T M 1994 Clanship to Crofters War The social transformation of the Scottish Highlands 2013 ed Manchester University Press ISBN 978 0 7190 9076 9 a b c d Devine T M 2018 The Scottish Clearances A History of the Dispossessed 1600 1900 London Allen Lane ISBN 978 0241304105 John Lenox Roberts 2002 The Jacobite Wars Scotland and the Military Campaigns of 1715 and 1745 Polygon at Edinburgh pp 193 95 ISBN 9781902930299 a b Marco Sievers 2007 The Highland Myth as an Invented Tradition of 18th and 19th Century and Its Significance for the Image of Scotland GRIN Verlag pp 22 25 ISBN 9783638816519 Deidre Dawson Pierre Morere 2004 Scotland and France in the Enlightenment Bucknell University Press pp 75 76 ISBN 978 0838755266 William Ferguson 1998 The Identity of the Scottish Nation An Historic Quest Edinburgh University Press p 227 ISBN 978 0748610716 Norman C Milne 2010 Scottish Culture and Traditions Paragon Publishing p 138 ISBN 978 1899820795 Richards Eric 1985 A History of the Highland Clearances Volume 2 Emigration Protest Reasons Beckenham Kent and Sydney Australia Croom Helm Ltd ISBN 978 0709922599 a b c d Devine T M 1995 The Great Highland Famine Hunger Emigration and the Scottish Highlands in the Nineteenth Century Edinburgh Birlinn Limited ISBN 1 904607 42 X Lynch Michael 1991 Scotland a New History 1992 ed London Pimlico ISBN 9780712698931 Thomas Martin Devine 1999 Chapter 18 The Scottish Nation Penguin Books ISBN 978 0670888115 James Hunter 1974 The Emergence of the Crofting Community The Religious Contribution 1798 1843 Scottish Studies 18 95 116 Ian Bradley December 1987 Having and Holding The Highland Land War of the 1880s History Today 37 12 23 28 Retrieved 8 March 2013 Ewen A Cameron June 2005 Communication or Separation Reactions to Irish Land Agitation and Legislation in the Highlands of Scotland c 1870 1910 English Historical Review 120 487 633 66 doi 10 1093 ehr cei124 Highland Distilleries Whisky Tours Tastings amp Map www visitscotland com a b c A Comprehensive Guide to Scotland s Whisky Regions Man of Many 13 August 2019 Whisky Distilleries in the Highlands VisitScotland Retrieved 25 August 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link George Robb 1990 Popular Religion and the Christianisation of the Highlands in the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries Journal of Religious History 16 1 18 34 doi 10 1111 j 1467 9809 1990 tb00647 x Gerard Seenan 10 April 2006 Fury at ferry crossing on Sabbath The Guardian Retrieved 8 March 2013 Cook James 29 March 2011 Battle looms in Outer Hebrides over Sabbath opening BBC News Retrieved 3 June 2014 Whisky Regions amp Tours Scotch Whisky Association Archived from the original on 26 July 2018 Retrieved 8 March 2013 Inverness Capital of the Scottish Highlands Internet Guide to Scotland Retrieved 8 March 2013 Scottish Highlands Landscape and History Scotland Info Guide www scotlandinfo eu C Michael Hogan 22 November 2007 Elsick Mounth Ancient Trackway in Scotland in Aberdeenshire The Megalithic Portal Retrieved 8 March 2013 W Douglas Simpson 10 December 1928 The Early Castles of Mar PDF Proceedings of the Society Retrieved 8 March 2013 dead link a b 3 000 angry Scots respond to CAB survey on rural delivery charges 2012 The Scottish Association of Citizens Advice Bureaux Citizens Advice Scotland Scottish charity SC016637 25 January 2012 Retrieved 31 July 2013 John Keay Julia Keay 1994 Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland HarperCollins ISBN 9780007103539 William Hutchison Murray 1973 The islands of Western Scotland the Inner and Outer Hebrides Eyre Methuen One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Highlands The Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 13 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 455 456 Further reading EditBaxter Colin and C J Tabraham The Scottish Highlands 2008 heavily illustrated Gray Malcolm The Highland Economy 1750 1850 Edinburgh 1957 Humphreys Rob and Donald Reid The Rough Guide to Scottish Highlands and Islands 3rd ed 2004 Keay J and J Keay Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland 1994 Kermack William Ramsay The Scottish Highlands a short history c 300 1746 1957 Lister John Anthony The Scottish Highlands 1978 External links EditAm Baile Highland History amp Culture in English and Gaelic WalkHighland walking guide National Library of Scotland SCOTTISH SCREEN ARCHIVE selection of archive films relating to the Scottish Highlands Coordinates 57 07 N 4 43 W 57 12 N 4 71 W 57 12 4 71 Portal Scotland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Scottish Highlands amp oldid 1137619396, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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