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Raasay

Raasay (/ˈrɑːs/; Scottish Gaelic: Ratharsair[6]) or the Isle of Raasay[7] is an island between the Isle of Skye and the mainland of Scotland. It is separated from Skye by the Sound of Raasay and from Applecross by the Inner Sound. It is famous for being the birthplace of Gaelic poet Sorley MacLean, an important figure in the Scottish Renaissance.[8]

Raasay
Scottish Gaelic nameRatharsair
Pronunciation[ˈrˠa.arˠs̪əɾʲ] (listen)
Old Norse nameRaa-s-oy or Ross-oy, Rásey or Hrossey
Meaning of nameOld Norse for "roe deer island" or possibly "horse island"
Location
Raasay
Raasay shown within the Skye area
OS grid referenceNG579395
Coordinates57°24′N 6°02′W / 57.400°N 6.033°W / 57.400; -6.033Coordinates: 57°24′N 6°02′W / 57.400°N 6.033°W / 57.400; -6.033
Physical geography
Island groupSkye
Area6,231 ha (24 sq mi)
Area rank19 [1]
Highest elevationDùn Caan 444 m (1,457 ft)
Administration
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
CountryScotland
Council areaHighland
Demographics
Population161[2]
Population rank38 [1]
Population density2.5/km2 (6.5/sq mi)[2][3]
Largest settlementInverarish
References[4][5]

Traditionally the home of Clan MacSween, the island was ruled by the MacLeods from the 15th to the 19th century. Subsequently, a series of private landlords held title to the island, which is now largely in public ownership.[9] Raasay House, which was visited by James Boswell and Samuel Johnson in 1773, is now a hotel, restaurant, bar and outdoor activity centre.[10] Raasay means "Isle of the Roe Deer" and is home to an endemic subspecies of bank vole.[3] The current Chief of the Island is Roderick John Macleod of Raasay.

Geology and geography

 
Dùn Caan from Loch na Mna

About 14 miles (23 kilometres) north to south and 3 miles (5 kilometres) east to west (at its widest), Raasay's terrain is varied. The highest point, at 443 metres (1,453 feet), is Dùn Caan – an unusual, flat-topped peak. The island of Rona lies just off the north coast and the tidal islets of Eilean Fladday and Eilean Tigh are to the northwest. Other smaller surrounding islands are Eilean Aird nan Gobhar, Eilean an Inbhire, Holoman Island, Manish Island, Fraoch Eilean, Glas Eilean, Griana-sgeir and Eilean an Fhraoich. The main village of Inverarish is near the southwest coast.

Geologically interesting, the island is visited by many students engaged in mapping projects. The south is mainly Torridonian sandstone and shale; the north is grey-banded Archaean Lewisian gneiss and granulite. There are also smaller outcrops of Jurassic shales and sandstones occasionally interspersed with limestone. The related ironstone beds contain low grade oolitic siderite and chamosite ores which were worked commercially in the early 20th century. Remaining reserves are estimated at 10 million tonnes. The seas to the east and west are very deep, large troughs having been created by the Skye icecap in the Pleistocene.[11]

Settlements

OS settlements

Places classified as settlements[12] by the Ordnance Survey include:

Not OS settlements

These places aren't classified as settlements by the Ordnance Survey but are shown on the A-Z Great Britain Road atlas 2022[13]

  • Balachuirn
  • Glame
  • North Fearns

Economy and culture

 
Map of Skye and Raasay

The primary employment is in tourism, working for the ferry company, crofting and fishing, or commuting to work on Skye. A twenty-five-minute ride by the car and passenger ferry connects the island with Sconser on Skye. There is a primary school, but older students go to Portree High School by the ferry and bus.

Sites of interest include the remains of a broch, the ruins of Brochel Castle, inscribed stones, abandoned crofting communities, and many walking paths.

There is a shop/post office located in Inverarish. Accommodation is available in the old manor of Raasay House, and at various B&Bs. There are significant numbers of incomers and holiday homes especially in the south of the island. This has helped to arrest the population decline from over 900 in 1803 to 194 in 2001. Some inhabitants belong to the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland, which strictly observes the Sabbath. On Sundays there are no public services, the playground is closed and, until 2004, the ferry did not run.[14][15]

In early 2007 the Raasay Community Association signed a contract with a number of building contractors to construct a community centre, which hosted its first céilidh on 29 May 2010.[16][17] In 2008 construction began on a new £12 million ferry terminal at Churchton Bay, which was officially opened on 17 August 2010. Following the community buyout of Raasay House a £3.5 million refurbishment was undertaken, leading to the temporary closure of the outdoor centre.[18] However, in the early hours of 18 January 2009 the building was severely damaged by fire.[19] Restoration work commenced in August 2010 but was suspended in November when the main contractor, ROK, went into administration.[20][21] Work restarted with a new contractor, Mansell, in late 2011. Raasay House was officially handed over to the community in March 2013[22] and in addition to the 4 star accommodation it provides it is also now an outdoor activity centre with a restaurant, bar and cafe. [10][23]

In September 2017 the Isle of Raasay distillery opened after the conversion of Borodale House.[24] One source described this as transforming the "derelict Gothic hotel ... into a modern whisky distillery, visitor centre and accommodation.[25] The company's Single malt Scotch was described by one source as the island's "first legal single malt" whisky. It released 7,500 bottles of the spirit in 2020, the first year that Raasay Single Malt became available.[26]

Flora and fauna

Raasay is home to the Raasay vole (Clethrionomys glareolus erica),[27] a subspecies of bank vole, which is darker and heavier than the mainland variety and found nowhere else in the world. It is possibly a survivor of a Scandinavian race. Murray (1973) states that a single specimen of a pine marten, otherwise missing from the Hebrides, was found on the island in 1971.[a] No other records for this species exist. Raasay is one of only four of the Inner Hebrides where mountain hares breed.[29] Raasay is regularly visited by white-tailed sea eagles and golden eagles and there are populations of otter, red deer and European rabbit (which were introduced by the island's proprietor in the 19th century). Stoat and weasel are found in small numbers as are water shrew.[3][30][31] It also supports a rich variety of plants, including red broomrape, dark red helleborine, mountain avens and numerous other saxifrages, orchids, alpines and ferns. The carline thistle (Carlina vulgaris) was apparently extant in the 1970s, but a recent survey found no evidence of its continued existence. There are several stands of mixed woodland.[3][32][b]

Prehistory and Archaeology

Between 1999 and 2004 a large scale archaeological project, Scotland's First Settlers, was undertaken in the Inner Sound to locate and examine sites relating to the Mesolithic period in the strait. The entire coastline of the Inner Sound together with its islands was walked by volunteers and archaeologists. On Raasay they found 14 caves and rock shelters with evidence of prehistoric habitation, in the form of both middens and walls. Though only the site at Loch a Sguirr was confirmed as Mesolithic, on the basis of both the stone tools and radiocarbon dating.[33]

History

The spread of Scots culture from Dalriada north of Ardnamurchan is poorly understood and little is recorded of Raasay's early Christian period. The placename Kilmaluag suggests the presence of St Moluag in the late sixth century.[34]

Following Viking expeditions to the islands they called the Suðreyjar in the eighth century, Raasay became part of the Norse Kingdom of the Isles and for much of the period religious observance came under the jurisdiction of the Bishopric of the Isles.[35] The Hebrides were yielded to the Kingdom of Scotland as a result of the 1266 Treaty of Perth,[c] after which time control of the islands north of Ardnamurchan was in the hands of the Earls of Ross.[36] In addition to the name "Raasay" itself, placenames such as Arnish (eagle headland), Suidhisnis (seething headland) and Eyre (beach or sand spit) are a legacy of the Norse presence.[37]

15th to 17th century

 
Castle Broichin on the Isle of Raasay, an 1819 aquatint by William Daniell depicting Brochel Castle

Tradition has it that Clan MacSween originally held title to Raasay but there is no written record of this.[38] It is known that the island was ruled by the MacLeods from 1518 when Gillecallum, younger son of the MacLeod Chief of Lewis was granted title.[3] Martin Martin visited towards the end of the 17th century and noted:

it has some wood on all the quarters of it, the whole is fitter for pasturage than cultivation, the ground being generally very unequal, but very well watered with rivulets and springs. There is a spring running down the face of a high rock on the east side of the isle; it petrifies into a white substance, of which very fine lime is made, and there is a great quantity of it. There is a quarry of good stone on the same side of the isle; there is abundance of caves on the west side, which serve to lodge several families, who for their convenience in grazing, fishing, &c., resort thither in the summer. On the west side, particularly near to the village Clachan, the shore abounds with smooth stones of different sizes, variegated all over. The same cattle, fowl, and fish are produced here that are found in the isle of Skye. There is a law observed by the natives that all their fishing lines must be of equal length, for the longest is always supposed to have best access to the fish, which would prove a disadvantage to such as might have shorter ones.

There are some forts in this isle, the highest is in the south end; it is a natural strength, and in form like the crown of a hat; it is called Dun-Cann, which the natives will needs have to be from one Canne, cousin to the king of Denmark. The other lies on the side, is an artificial fort, three stories high, and is called Castle Vreokle.[39]

Brochel Castle, as it is more commonly known, was built by the MacSweens in the 15th century on the north-east coast of Raasay. Latterly, it became a base for the MacLeod of Lewis's pirating activities prior to Calum Garbh's investiture there. The castle was inhabited until the death by drowning of the Chief Iain Garbh in 1671 and is now a ruin sitting atop a pinnacle. In the meantime the Macleods moved their seat to Raasay House at the south end of the island.[3][40]

18th century

Although Protestant, the MacLeods of Raasay supported Bonnie Prince Charlie in 1745. After the defeat at the Battle of Culloden, the Prince spent 2 days hiding from the British troops on Raasay[41][42] and as a consequence of the island's support for the Jacobite cause the original Raasay House and many dwellings were burnt down by government troops. In conversation with Malcolm MacLeod of Raasay during his short stay on the island the Prince confided that although his life on the run was hard, he would rather live that way for ten years than be captured as he feared assassination. He seemed less aware of the risks his supporters ran. The atrocities perpetrated in the aftermath of Culloden were a shock to him. Of Cumberland he said: "Surely that man who calls himself a duke and pretends to be so great a general cannot be guilty of such cruelties. I cannot believe it."[43]

 
The cliffs of Creag na Bruaich, south of Brochel Castle

In 1773 James Boswell and Samuel Johnson arrived on the island during their Hebridean tour. They visited Raasay House and Johnson wrote:

Our reception exceeded our expectations. We found nothing but civility, elegance, and plenty. After the usual refreshments, and the usual conversation, the evening came upon us. The carpet was then rolled off the floor; the musician was called, and the whole company was invited to dance, nor did ever fairies trip with greater alacrity. The general air of festivity, which predominated in this place, so far remote from all those regions which the mind has been used to contemplate as the mansions of pleasure, struck the imagination with a delightful surprise, analogous to that which is felt at an unexpected emersion from darkness into light.

When it was time to sup, the dance ceased, and six and thirty persons sat down to two tables in the same room. After supper the ladies sung Erse songs, to which I listened as an English audience to an Italian opera, delighted with the sound of words which I did not understand.[44]

Boswell went exploring and described the island as follows:

Having resolved to explore the island of Rasay, which could be done only on foot, I last night obtained my fellow-traveller’s permission to leave him for a day, he being unable to take so hardy a walk. Old Mr Malcolm M’Cleod, who had obligingly promised to accompany me, was at my bedside between five and six. I sprang up immediately, and he and I, attended by two other gentlemen, traversed the country during the whole of this day. Though we had passed over not less than four-and-twenty miles of very rugged ground, and had a Highland dance on the top of Dùn Can, the highest mountain in the island, we returned in the evening not at all fatigued, and piqued ourselves at not being outdone at the nightly ball by our less active friends, who had remained at home.

My survey of Rasay did not furnish much which can interest my readers; I shall therefore put into as short a compass as I can, the observations upon it, which I find registered in my journal. It is about fifteen English miles long, and four broad. On the south side is the laird’s family seat, situated on a pleasing low spot. The old tower of three stories, mentioned by Martin, was taken down soon after 1746, and a modern house supplies its place. There are very good grass-fields and corn-lands about it, well dressed. I observed, however, hardly any inclosures, except a good garden plentifully stocked with vegetables, and strawberries, raspberries, currants, &c.[45]

19th and 20th centuries

 
Raasay House
 
Iron ore mine

In 1843 the last laird, John Macleod, was deep in debt and chose to emigrate to Tasmania[40] having sold Raasay for 35,000 guineas to George Rainy. After the failure of the potato harvests in the 1840s, the new owner decided to convert as much arable land as possible to sheep farming. This required the removal of the islanders, and his solution was to ban marriage. Several townships were cleared including Hallaig and Screapadal. Two boatloads of emigrants left for Portland in Australia in 1854 as a result, and another 165 left for the same destination in 1865. The estate was then sold to Edward Wood, and conflicts between the laird and the islanders grew as he decided to turn the island over to sporting purposes.[46] On 20 September 1862 the steamship Irishman ran aground on "Skernataid Rock" between Raasay and Scalpay. A 9.2 m (30 ft 2 in) vessel Spindrift is also recorded as having become jammed under the ferry pier at the sound end of the island and broken in two by the rising tide at an unspecified date.[47][d]

Near Oskaig, there is a row of six houses which are known as Manitoba.[48] Locals believe that this was a gathering place for people about to embark on emigrating to Canada in the late 19th century.

William Baird and Company signed a deed to purchase the estate of the Island of Raasay on 28 December 1910. The sale completed on 15 May 1911.[49]

In May 1921, a group of crofters from Rona landed on Raasay and attempted to re-occupy their ancestral land. These so-called "Raasay Raiders" were arrested, tried and given prison sentences, but public support for them was strong and they were eventually freed and allowed to remain on Raasay.

The island was purchased by the government in 1922 after the mine closed. In 1949 The Forestry Commission was granted land bringing much-needed employment, and in 1956 The North of Scotland Hydro-Electric Board delivered mains electricity to the island.[50] In the 1960s Raasay House and various other properties were purchased by John Green, a doctor residing Sussex who visited the island only once and whose lack of interest in it earned him the sobriquet "Dr No". Having purchased the property for £8,000 he sold it to the Highlands and Islands Development Board in 1979 for £135,000.[3][40][51][52]

Around this time, Manchester-born Alan Evans (who lived in Loanhead and worked for Ferranti, but owned several small properties around Raasay) set up Isle of Raasay Enterprises, a private initiative intended to encourage local enterprise such as the production of tourist postcards. Little progress was made before his death in 1967 but he is remembered by the Allan Evans Memorial Hostel (closed 2014) at Creachan, a remote cottage he had bequeathed to the SYHA.[53][full citation needed]

The Iron Mine

Nicholson reported an early bloomery on the island.[54] The next record of ironstone on Raasay was by HB Woodward in 1893.[55] Stead investigated the outcrop in 1909 and the subsequent analysis by Tatlock convinced Baird's to buy the island the following year (with completion in 1912).[56]

Baird's original plan was for a railway from the outcrop site down to just south of Suisnish point[e] with the erection of five kilns. Objections led to the plan being revised for two kilns further south, where the current pier is.[49] This pier was a public pier with landing charges regulated by government order.[57] By the outbreak of war Baird's had completed the pier (constructed by Robert McAlpine & Sons), kilns, railway and "other works".[58][59]

To house the workforce Baird's planned the village of Inverarish Houses, today known as Inverarish Terrace. The village consists of two facing rows of houses, each row being two terraces of 16 houses each. Between the terraces is a broad open area. Numbers 1–32 are the western row, 33–64 the eastern. The lower, southern terraces were built first (1–16 and 33–48) between 1912 and 1913. The first terraces were stone built and by 1914–15 were about half occupied.[58] By the time of the 1915–16 valuation some of numbers 1–16 were unoccupied, just over half of numbers 33–48 were occupied and the newly built brick terrace of numbers 17–32 were also vacant.[60] The unoccupied houses were caused by many of the labour force being called to the colours.

With the introduction of unrestricted submarine warfare in 1916 the Ministry of Munitions became concerned about the availability of foreign iron ore.[61] Baird's were one company amongst others which opened up domestic mines in order to supply the war effort. In May 1916 Baird's signed an agreement to run the mine on behalf of the Ministry, although there was a minor skirmish over the amount of processing to be done on the island.[62] The first prisoners were on the island by June and were housed in the upper part of the village, numbers 17–32 and the now completed 49–64. This northern part of the village was converted into a prisoner-of-war camp by the simple expedient of building a barbed wire fence around it and erecting sentry boxes and arc lamps at the corners.[60]

Population

 
The Inner Sound, looking north
Year 1780 1803 1841 1881 1891 1931 1961 1981 1991 2001 2011
Population 400 + 900 + 676 532 489 377 223 152 163 194 161

In 2001 Raasay had the lowest percentage of children of any populated Scottish island,[3] and the island's population fell by over 16% since that time to the date of the 2011 census.[2][63] During the same period Scottish island populations as a whole grew by 4% to 103,702.[64] With 36% in the 2001 census there was still a relatively high density of Gaelic speakers (down from over 75% in 1901 and 1921).[65]

Culture and the arts

Piping tradition

John MacKay, born on Raasay in 1767, was supported by the MacLeod Chief as the foremost island piper of his day and an inheritor of the MacCrimmon tradition. His son Angus published a collection of pibroch music in staff notation and was the first Piper to the Sovereign.[40]

Sorley MacLean

 

The poet Sorley MacLean was born in Osgaig, a small crofting community on the west coast of the island; perhaps his most famous poem is about Hallaig, an abandoned community on the east coast. MacLean's writings often combine an ancient traditional awareness, with a modernist political outlook, in which Raasay, and the areas adjacent to it are frequently referenced. But while MacLean's work dwells on the brutality of war, of the Highland Clearances and modern exploitation, he also writes about nature. Thus, although the Clearances leave an empty landscape populated only by the ghosts of those evicted or forced to emigrate, "Time, the deer, is in the Wood of Hallaig".[66]

Calum's Road

The two miles (3 km) of road between Brochel Castle and Arnish were built using hand-tools by Calum MacLeod BEM over ten years. Only when complete was the road surfaced by the local council; by then Calum and his wife were the last inhabitants of Arnish. Calum's Road has been commemorated in music both by Capercaillie on their 1988 album The Blood is Strong[67] and by Runrig in Wall of China from the album The Stamping Ground, as well as in a book by Roger Hutchinson.[68] The BBC Radio 4 drama Calum's Road, based on Hutchinson's book and dramatised by Colin MacDonald, was first broadcast on 5 October 2013 starring Ian McDiarmid as Calum MacLeod.[69]

Harrison Birtwistle

The composer Sir Harrison Birtwistle lived on Raasay from 1975 to 1983.[70] His Duets for Storab, takes its name from Storab, a Viking prince who was shipwrecked and sought refuge on Raasay.[71] Birtwistle's string quartet, The Tree of Strings, written in 2007, takes its title from a poem by Sorley MacLean.[72]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Murray states "The pine marten, which has been absent from the Hebrides for a hundred years, reappeared on Raasay in 1971, when a single specimen was identified beyond doubt". He attributes this to a 1972 report in The Scotsman by Alison Lambie.[28]
  2. ^ For a comprehensive flora of the island see Bungard 2009
  3. ^ For the text of the treaty and a translation from the Latin to English see "Agreement between Magnus IV and Alexander III, 1266" Manx Society. IV, VII & IX. Retrieved 10 April 2016.
  4. ^ Baird suggests "Skernataid Rock" may be Sgeir Thraid at NG628334
  5. ^ Contemporary spelling was Suishnish

Citations

  1. ^ a b Area and population ranks: there are c. 300 islands over 20 ha in extent and 93 permanently inhabited islands were listed in the 2011 census.
  2. ^ a b c National Records of Scotland 2013.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h Haswell-Smith 2004.
  4. ^ Haswell-Smith 2004, pp. 161–166.
  5. ^ Ordnance Survey 2012.
  6. ^ Mac an Tàilleir 2003.
  7. ^ "Isle of Raasay". Ordnance Survey. Retrieved 7 February 2019.
  8. ^ Gifford, Dunnigan & MacGillivray 2002.
  9. ^ Keay & Keay 1994.
  10. ^ a b Raasay House 2016.
  11. ^ Gillen 2003, p. 176.
  12. ^ "Search". Geograph Britain and Ireland. Retrieved 3 September 2021. put the 1st part of the name into the "near" box
  13. ^ "Great Britain A-Z Road Atlas 2022". Collins. Retrieved 3 September 2021.
  14. ^ MacLeod 2004, p. 182.
  15. ^ BBC 2004.
  16. ^ Raasay Community Association 2007.
  17. ^ Dualchas Architects 2012.
  18. ^ Highland Council 2008.
  19. ^ The Scotsman 2009.
  20. ^ Ross 2010.
  21. ^ BBC 2010.
  22. ^ Raasay House 2013.
  23. ^ Visit Scotland 2016.
  24. ^ Isle of Raasay Distillery 2020.
  25. ^ The lesser known Scottish islands to dream about visiting when lockdown is over
  26. ^ Kanik 2020.
  27. ^ funet.fi 2016.
  28. ^ Murray 1973, pp. 108–109.
  29. ^ Darling & Boyd 1969, p. 71.
  30. ^ Murray 1973, p. 107.
  31. ^ Highland Biological Recording Group.
  32. ^ Slack, Alf "Flora" in Slesser 1970, p. 57
  33. ^ Hardy & Wickham-Jones 2009.
  34. ^ Rixson 2001, p. 19.
  35. ^ MacLeod 2004, p. 12.
  36. ^ MacLeod 2004, p. 13.
  37. ^ Mac an Tàilleir 2003, pp. 8, 47, 110.
  38. ^ MacLeod 2004, p. 17.
  39. ^ Martin 1716, p. 163.
  40. ^ a b c d Keay & Keay 1994, p. 797.
  41. ^ Murray 1966, p. 153.
  42. ^ Fairweather 2015.
  43. ^ Forster 1975, p. 169.
  44. ^ Johnson 1775, pp. 85–86.
  45. ^ Boswell 1785, Sunday, 5 September.
  46. ^ Cooper 1979, pp. 142–143.
  47. ^ Baird 1995, p. 234.
  48. ^ Canmore 132713.
  49. ^ a b Draper & Draper 2003, p. 5.
  50. ^ MacLeod 2004, p. 173.
  51. ^ MacLeod 2004, pp. 174–183.
  52. ^ The Glasgow Herald 1981, p. 15.
  53. ^ "I Remember", memoirs of Donald Alistair MacLeod, published 2010.
  54. ^ Nicholson 1936, p. 78, cited by; Draper & Draper 2003, p. 4.
  55. ^ Woodward 1914, p. 164, cited by; Draper & Draper 2003, p. 4.
  56. ^ Draper & Draper 2003, pp. 4–5.
  57. ^ Draper & Draper 2003, pp. 6.
  58. ^ a b Draper & Draper 2003, pp. 7.
  59. ^ Draper & Draper 2003, pp. 16.
  60. ^ a b Draper & Draper 2003, p. 8.
  61. ^ 'History of the Ministry of Munitions' quoted in Draper & Draper 2003, p. 9
  62. ^ Draper & Draper 2003, p. 15.
  63. ^ General Register Office.
  64. ^ BBC 2013.
  65. ^ Mac an Tàilleir 2005.
  66. ^ MacLean 2002.
  67. ^ Shaw 1987.
  68. ^ Hutchinson 2006.
  69. ^ BBC Radio 4 2014.
  70. ^ Service 2012.
  71. ^ Braun.
  72. ^ Clements 2012.

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  • Murray, W. H. (1966), The Hebrides, London: Heinemann, OCLC 4998389
  • Murray, W. H. (1973), The Islands of Western Scotland, London: Eyre Methuen, ISBN 0-413-30380-2
  • Nicholson, Alexander (1936), Handbook to the Isle of Skye, Glasgow
  • National Records of Scotland (15 August 2013), "2011 Census: First Results on Population and Household Estimates for Scotland – Release 1C (Part Two)" (PDF), Statistical Bulletin, vol. SG/2013/126, retrieved 11 April 2017
  • Ordnance Survey (2012), OS24: Raasay & Applecross (Loch Torridon & Plockton), Landranger, Ordnance Survey, ISBN 978-0-319-23110-4
  • Raasay Community Association (March 2007), , archived from the original on 3 March 2016, retrieved 27 March 2016
  • Raasay House (16 April 2013), , Archive.org, archived from the original on 27 September 2013, retrieved 16 April 2016{{citation}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  • Raasay House (25 March 2016), "Historic", Raasay House, retrieved 25 March 2016
  • Rixson, Denis (2001), The Small Isles: Canna, Rum, Eigg and Muck, Edinburgh: Birlinn, ISBN 978-1-84158-154-5
  • Ross, David (4 August 2010), "Restoration work starts on fire-ravaged Raasay House", The Herald, Glasgow
  • The Scotsman (18 January 2009), Blaze devastates historic isle house, Johnston Publishing, retrieved 27 March 2016
  • Service, Tom (29 June 2012), "Harrison Birtwistle: the music of myth", The Guardian, retrieved 17 April 2012
  • Shaw, Donald (1987), "Calum's Road", nigelgatherer.com, retrieved 27 October 2008
  • Slesser, Malcolm (1970), The Island of Skye, Edinburgh: Scottish Mountaineering Trust, ISBN 978-0-901516-26-8
  • Visit Scotland (2016), Accommodation at Raasay House, retrieved 3 April 2016
  • Woodward, HB (1914), "Notes on the Geology of Raasay", Transactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society, vol. X

Further reading

  • Mackenzie, Julia (2000), Whirligig Beetles And Tackety Boots, Bedale: Blaisdon, ISBN 978-1-902838-07-6
  • Murray, C. W.; Birks, H. J. B. (2005), The Botanist in Skye and Adjacent Islands: An Annotated Check-list of the Vascular Plants of the Islands of Skye, Raasay, Rona, Rum, Eigg, Muck, Canna, Scarpay and Soay, Murray and Birks, ISBN 0-9548971-0-2
  • Nicholson, John (2002), I Remember: Memories of Raasay, Edinburgh: Birlinn
  • Sharpe, Richard (1977), Raasay A Study in Island History, London: Grant and Cutler, ISBN 0-7293-0130-3
  • Sharpe, Richard (1978), Raasay A Study in Island History Documents And Sources, London: Grant and Cutler, ISBN 0-7293-0060-9
  • Stack, Prunella (1979), Island Quest. The Inner Hebrides, London: Collins/Harvill Press, ISBN 0-00-262323-4

External links

  • Raasay Community Association
  • Raasay House

raasay, this, article, about, island, caledonian, macbrayne, calmac, ferry, ɑː, scottish, gaelic, ratharsair, isle, island, between, isle, skye, mainland, scotland, separated, from, skye, sound, from, applecross, inner, sound, famous, being, birthplace, gaelic. This article is about the island For the Caledonian MacBrayne Calmac ferry see MV Raasay Raasay ˈ r ɑː s eɪ Scottish Gaelic Ratharsair 6 or the Isle of Raasay 7 is an island between the Isle of Skye and the mainland of Scotland It is separated from Skye by the Sound of Raasay and from Applecross by the Inner Sound It is famous for being the birthplace of Gaelic poet Sorley MacLean an important figure in the Scottish Renaissance 8 RaasayScottish Gaelic nameRatharsairPronunciation ˈrˠa arˠs eɾʲ listen Old Norse nameRaa s oy or Ross oy Rasey or HrosseyMeaning of nameOld Norse for roe deer island or possibly horse island LocationRaasayRaasay shown within the Skye areaOS grid referenceNG579395Coordinates57 24 N 6 02 W 57 400 N 6 033 W 57 400 6 033 Coordinates 57 24 N 6 02 W 57 400 N 6 033 W 57 400 6 033Physical geographyIsland groupSkyeArea6 231 ha 24 sq mi Area rank19 1 Highest elevationDun Caan 444 m 1 457 ft AdministrationSovereign stateUnited KingdomCountryScotlandCouncil areaHighlandDemographicsPopulation161 2 Population rank38 1 Population density2 5 km2 6 5 sq mi 2 3 Largest settlementInverarishReferences 4 5 Traditionally the home of Clan MacSween the island was ruled by the MacLeods from the 15th to the 19th century Subsequently a series of private landlords held title to the island which is now largely in public ownership 9 Raasay House which was visited by James Boswell and Samuel Johnson in 1773 is now a hotel restaurant bar and outdoor activity centre 10 Raasay means Isle of the Roe Deer and is home to an endemic subspecies of bank vole 3 The current Chief of the Island is Roderick John Macleod of Raasay Contents 1 Geology and geography 1 1 Settlements 1 1 1 OS settlements 1 1 2 Not OS settlements 2 Economy and culture 3 Flora and fauna 4 Prehistory and Archaeology 5 History 5 1 15th to 17th century 5 2 18th century 5 3 19th and 20th centuries 5 4 The Iron Mine 6 Population 7 Culture and the arts 7 1 Piping tradition 7 2 Sorley MacLean 7 3 Calum s Road 7 4 Harrison Birtwistle 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Notes 9 2 Citations 9 3 Bibliography 10 Further reading 11 External linksGeology and geography Edit Dun Caan from Loch na Mna About 14 miles 23 kilometres north to south and 3 miles 5 kilometres east to west at its widest Raasay s terrain is varied The highest point at 443 metres 1 453 feet is Dun Caan an unusual flat topped peak The island of Rona lies just off the north coast and the tidal islets of Eilean Fladday and Eilean Tigh are to the northwest Other smaller surrounding islands are Eilean Aird nan Gobhar Eilean an Inbhire Holoman Island Manish Island Fraoch Eilean Glas Eilean Griana sgeir and Eilean an Fhraoich The main village of Inverarish is near the southwest coast Geologically interesting the island is visited by many students engaged in mapping projects The south is mainly Torridonian sandstone and shale the north is grey banded Archaean Lewisian gneiss and granulite There are also smaller outcrops of Jurassic shales and sandstones occasionally interspersed with limestone The related ironstone beds contain low grade oolitic siderite and chamosite ores which were worked commercially in the early 20th century Remaining reserves are estimated at 10 million tonnes The seas to the east and west are very deep large troughs having been created by the Skye icecap in the Pleistocene 11 Settlements Edit OS settlements Edit Places classified as settlements 12 by the Ordnance Survey include Arnish Brochel Clachan East Suisnish Eyre Inverarish Oskaig Suisnish TorranNot OS settlements Edit These places aren t classified as settlements by the Ordnance Survey but are shown on the A Z Great Britain Road atlas 2022 13 Balachuirn Glame North FearnsEconomy and culture Edit Map of Skye and Raasay The primary employment is in tourism working for the ferry company crofting and fishing or commuting to work on Skye A twenty five minute ride by the car and passenger ferry connects the island with Sconser on Skye There is a primary school but older students go to Portree High School by the ferry and bus Sites of interest include the remains of a broch the ruins of Brochel Castle inscribed stones abandoned crofting communities and many walking paths There is a shop post office located in Inverarish Accommodation is available in the old manor of Raasay House and at various B amp Bs There are significant numbers of incomers and holiday homes especially in the south of the island This has helped to arrest the population decline from over 900 in 1803 to 194 in 2001 Some inhabitants belong to the Free Presbyterian Church of Scotland which strictly observes the Sabbath On Sundays there are no public services the playground is closed and until 2004 the ferry did not run 14 15 In early 2007 the Raasay Community Association signed a contract with a number of building contractors to construct a community centre which hosted its first ceilidh on 29 May 2010 16 17 In 2008 construction began on a new 12 million ferry terminal at Churchton Bay which was officially opened on 17 August 2010 Following the community buyout of Raasay House a 3 5 million refurbishment was undertaken leading to the temporary closure of the outdoor centre 18 However in the early hours of 18 January 2009 the building was severely damaged by fire 19 Restoration work commenced in August 2010 but was suspended in November when the main contractor ROK went into administration 20 21 Work restarted with a new contractor Mansell in late 2011 Raasay House was officially handed over to the community in March 2013 22 and in addition to the 4 star accommodation it provides it is also now an outdoor activity centre with a restaurant bar and cafe 10 23 In September 2017 the Isle of Raasay distillery opened after the conversion of Borodale House 24 One source described this as transforming the derelict Gothic hotel into a modern whisky distillery visitor centre and accommodation 25 The company s Single malt Scotch was described by one source as the island s first legal single malt whisky It released 7 500 bottles of the spirit in 2020 the first year that Raasay Single Malt became available 26 Flora and fauna EditRaasay is home to the Raasay vole Clethrionomys glareolus erica 27 a subspecies of bank vole which is darker and heavier than the mainland variety and found nowhere else in the world It is possibly a survivor of a Scandinavian race Murray 1973 states that a single specimen of a pine marten otherwise missing from the Hebrides was found on the island in 1971 a No other records for this species exist Raasay is one of only four of the Inner Hebrides where mountain hares breed 29 Raasay is regularly visited by white tailed sea eagles and golden eagles and there are populations of otter red deer and European rabbit which were introduced by the island s proprietor in the 19th century Stoat and weasel are found in small numbers as are water shrew 3 30 31 It also supports a rich variety of plants including red broomrape dark red helleborine mountain avens and numerous other saxifrages orchids alpines and ferns The carline thistle Carlina vulgaris was apparently extant in the 1970s but a recent survey found no evidence of its continued existence There are several stands of mixed woodland 3 32 b Prehistory and Archaeology EditBetween 1999 and 2004 a large scale archaeological project Scotland s First Settlers was undertaken in the Inner Sound to locate and examine sites relating to the Mesolithic period in the strait The entire coastline of the Inner Sound together with its islands was walked by volunteers and archaeologists On Raasay they found 14 caves and rock shelters with evidence of prehistoric habitation in the form of both middens and walls Though only the site at Loch a Sguirr was confirmed as Mesolithic on the basis of both the stone tools and radiocarbon dating 33 History EditThe spread of Scots culture from Dalriada north of Ardnamurchan is poorly understood and little is recorded of Raasay s early Christian period The placename Kilmaluag suggests the presence of St Moluag in the late sixth century 34 Following Viking expeditions to the islands they called the Sudreyjar in the eighth century Raasay became part of the Norse Kingdom of the Isles and for much of the period religious observance came under the jurisdiction of the Bishopric of the Isles 35 The Hebrides were yielded to the Kingdom of Scotland as a result of the 1266 Treaty of Perth c after which time control of the islands north of Ardnamurchan was in the hands of the Earls of Ross 36 In addition to the name Raasay itself placenames such as Arnish eagle headland Suidhisnis seething headland and Eyre beach or sand spit are a legacy of the Norse presence 37 15th to 17th century Edit Castle Broichin on the Isle of Raasay an 1819 aquatint by William Daniell depicting Brochel Castle Tradition has it that Clan MacSween originally held title to Raasay but there is no written record of this 38 It is known that the island was ruled by the MacLeods from 1518 when Gillecallum younger son of the MacLeod Chief of Lewis was granted title 3 Martin Martin visited towards the end of the 17th century and noted it has some wood on all the quarters of it the whole is fitter for pasturage than cultivation the ground being generally very unequal but very well watered with rivulets and springs There is a spring running down the face of a high rock on the east side of the isle it petrifies into a white substance of which very fine lime is made and there is a great quantity of it There is a quarry of good stone on the same side of the isle there is abundance of caves on the west side which serve to lodge several families who for their convenience in grazing fishing amp c resort thither in the summer On the west side particularly near to the village Clachan the shore abounds with smooth stones of different sizes variegated all over The same cattle fowl and fish are produced here that are found in the isle of Skye There is a law observed by the natives that all their fishing lines must be of equal length for the longest is always supposed to have best access to the fish which would prove a disadvantage to such as might have shorter ones There are some forts in this isle the highest is in the south end it is a natural strength and in form like the crown of a hat it is called Dun Cann which the natives will needs have to be from one Canne cousin to the king of Denmark The other lies on the side is an artificial fort three stories high and is called Castle Vreokle 39 Brochel Castle as it is more commonly known was built by the MacSweens in the 15th century on the north east coast of Raasay Latterly it became a base for the MacLeod of Lewis s pirating activities prior to Calum Garbh s investiture there The castle was inhabited until the death by drowning of the Chief Iain Garbh in 1671 and is now a ruin sitting atop a pinnacle In the meantime the Macleods moved their seat to Raasay House at the south end of the island 3 40 18th century Edit Although Protestant the MacLeods of Raasay supported Bonnie Prince Charlie in 1745 After the defeat at the Battle of Culloden the Prince spent 2 days hiding from the British troops on Raasay 41 42 and as a consequence of the island s support for the Jacobite cause the original Raasay House and many dwellings were burnt down by government troops In conversation with Malcolm MacLeod of Raasay during his short stay on the island the Prince confided that although his life on the run was hard he would rather live that way for ten years than be captured as he feared assassination He seemed less aware of the risks his supporters ran The atrocities perpetrated in the aftermath of Culloden were a shock to him Of Cumberland he said Surely that man who calls himself a duke and pretends to be so great a general cannot be guilty of such cruelties I cannot believe it 43 The cliffs of Creag na Bruaich south of Brochel Castle In 1773 James Boswell and Samuel Johnson arrived on the island during their Hebridean tour They visited Raasay House and Johnson wrote Our reception exceeded our expectations We found nothing but civility elegance and plenty After the usual refreshments and the usual conversation the evening came upon us The carpet was then rolled off the floor the musician was called and the whole company was invited to dance nor did ever fairies trip with greater alacrity The general air of festivity which predominated in this place so far remote from all those regions which the mind has been used to contemplate as the mansions of pleasure struck the imagination with a delightful surprise analogous to that which is felt at an unexpected emersion from darkness into light When it was time to sup the dance ceased and six and thirty persons sat down to two tables in the same room After supper the ladies sung Erse songs to which I listened as an English audience to an Italian opera delighted with the sound of words which I did not understand 44 Boswell went exploring and described the island as follows Having resolved to explore the island of Rasay which could be done only on foot I last night obtained my fellow traveller s permission to leave him for a day he being unable to take so hardy a walk Old Mr Malcolm M Cleod who had obligingly promised to accompany me was at my bedside between five and six I sprang up immediately and he and I attended by two other gentlemen traversed the country during the whole of this day Though we had passed over not less than four and twenty miles of very rugged ground and had a Highland dance on the top of Dun Can the highest mountain in the island we returned in the evening not at all fatigued and piqued ourselves at not being outdone at the nightly ball by our less active friends who had remained at home My survey of Rasay did not furnish much which can interest my readers I shall therefore put into as short a compass as I can the observations upon it which I find registered in my journal It is about fifteen English miles long and four broad On the south side is the laird s family seat situated on a pleasing low spot The old tower of three stories mentioned by Martin was taken down soon after 1746 and a modern house supplies its place There are very good grass fields and corn lands about it well dressed I observed however hardly any inclosures except a good garden plentifully stocked with vegetables and strawberries raspberries currants amp c 45 19th and 20th centuries Edit Raasay House Iron ore mine In 1843 the last laird John Macleod was deep in debt and chose to emigrate to Tasmania 40 having sold Raasay for 35 000 guineas to George Rainy After the failure of the potato harvests in the 1840s the new owner decided to convert as much arable land as possible to sheep farming This required the removal of the islanders and his solution was to ban marriage Several townships were cleared including Hallaig and Screapadal Two boatloads of emigrants left for Portland in Australia in 1854 as a result and another 165 left for the same destination in 1865 The estate was then sold to Edward Wood and conflicts between the laird and the islanders grew as he decided to turn the island over to sporting purposes 46 On 20 September 1862 the steamship Irishman ran aground on Skernataid Rock between Raasay and Scalpay A 9 2 m 30 ft 2 in vessel Spindrift is also recorded as having become jammed under the ferry pier at the sound end of the island and broken in two by the rising tide at an unspecified date 47 d Near Oskaig there is a row of six houses which are known as Manitoba 48 Locals believe that this was a gathering place for people about to embark on emigrating to Canada in the late 19th century William Baird and Company signed a deed to purchase the estate of the Island of Raasay on 28 December 1910 The sale completed on 15 May 1911 49 In May 1921 a group of crofters from Rona landed on Raasay and attempted to re occupy their ancestral land These so called Raasay Raiders were arrested tried and given prison sentences but public support for them was strong and they were eventually freed and allowed to remain on Raasay The island was purchased by the government in 1922 after the mine closed In 1949 The Forestry Commission was granted land bringing much needed employment and in 1956 The North of Scotland Hydro Electric Board delivered mains electricity to the island 50 In the 1960s Raasay House and various other properties were purchased by John Green a doctor residing Sussex who visited the island only once and whose lack of interest in it earned him the sobriquet Dr No Having purchased the property for 8 000 he sold it to the Highlands and Islands Development Board in 1979 for 135 000 3 40 51 52 Around this time Manchester born Alan Evans who lived in Loanhead and worked for Ferranti but owned several small properties around Raasay set up Isle of Raasay Enterprises a private initiative intended to encourage local enterprise such as the production of tourist postcards Little progress was made before his death in 1967 but he is remembered by the Allan Evans Memorial Hostel closed 2014 at Creachan a remote cottage he had bequeathed to the SYHA 53 full citation needed The Iron Mine Edit Nicholson reported an early bloomery on the island 54 The next record of ironstone on Raasay was by HB Woodward in 1893 55 Stead investigated the outcrop in 1909 and the subsequent analysis by Tatlock convinced Baird s to buy the island the following year with completion in 1912 56 Baird s original plan was for a railway from the outcrop site down to just south of Suisnish point e with the erection of five kilns Objections led to the plan being revised for two kilns further south where the current pier is 49 This pier was a public pier with landing charges regulated by government order 57 By the outbreak of war Baird s had completed the pier constructed by Robert McAlpine amp Sons kilns railway and other works 58 59 To house the workforce Baird s planned the village of Inverarish Houses today known as Inverarish Terrace The village consists of two facing rows of houses each row being two terraces of 16 houses each Between the terraces is a broad open area Numbers 1 32 are the western row 33 64 the eastern The lower southern terraces were built first 1 16 and 33 48 between 1912 and 1913 The first terraces were stone built and by 1914 15 were about half occupied 58 By the time of the 1915 16 valuation some of numbers 1 16 were unoccupied just over half of numbers 33 48 were occupied and the newly built brick terrace of numbers 17 32 were also vacant 60 The unoccupied houses were caused by many of the labour force being called to the colours With the introduction of unrestricted submarine warfare in 1916 the Ministry of Munitions became concerned about the availability of foreign iron ore 61 Baird s were one company amongst others which opened up domestic mines in order to supply the war effort In May 1916 Baird s signed an agreement to run the mine on behalf of the Ministry although there was a minor skirmish over the amount of processing to be done on the island 62 The first prisoners were on the island by June and were housed in the upper part of the village numbers 17 32 and the now completed 49 64 This northern part of the village was converted into a prisoner of war camp by the simple expedient of building a barbed wire fence around it and erecting sentry boxes and arc lamps at the corners 60 Population Edit The Inner Sound looking north Year 1780 1803 1841 1881 1891 1931 1961 1981 1991 2001 2011Population 400 900 676 532 489 377 223 152 163 194 161In 2001 Raasay had the lowest percentage of children of any populated Scottish island 3 and the island s population fell by over 16 since that time to the date of the 2011 census 2 63 During the same period Scottish island populations as a whole grew by 4 to 103 702 64 With 36 in the 2001 census there was still a relatively high density of Gaelic speakers down from over 75 in 1901 and 1921 65 Culture and the arts EditPiping tradition Edit John MacKay born on Raasay in 1767 was supported by the MacLeod Chief as the foremost island piper of his day and an inheritor of the MacCrimmon tradition His son Angus published a collection of pibroch music in staff notation and was the first Piper to the Sovereign 40 Sorley MacLean Edit The poet Sorley MacLean was born in Osgaig a small crofting community on the west coast of the island perhaps his most famous poem is about Hallaig an abandoned community on the east coast MacLean s writings often combine an ancient traditional awareness with a modernist political outlook in which Raasay and the areas adjacent to it are frequently referenced But while MacLean s work dwells on the brutality of war of the Highland Clearances and modern exploitation he also writes about nature Thus although the Clearances leave an empty landscape populated only by the ghosts of those evicted or forced to emigrate Time the deer is in the Wood of Hallaig 66 Calum s Road Edit The two miles 3 km of road between Brochel Castle and Arnish were built using hand tools by Calum MacLeod BEM over ten years Only when complete was the road surfaced by the local council by then Calum and his wife were the last inhabitants of Arnish Calum s Road has been commemorated in music both by Capercaillie on their 1988 album The Blood is Strong 67 and by Runrig in Wall of China from the album The Stamping Ground as well as in a book by Roger Hutchinson 68 The BBC Radio 4 drama Calum s Road based on Hutchinson s book and dramatised by Colin MacDonald was first broadcast on 5 October 2013 starring Ian McDiarmid as Calum MacLeod 69 Harrison Birtwistle Edit The composer Sir Harrison Birtwistle lived on Raasay from 1975 to 1983 70 His Duets for Storab takes its name from Storab a Viking prince who was shipwrecked and sought refuge on Raasay 71 Birtwistle s string quartet The Tree of Strings written in 2007 takes its title from a poem by Sorley MacLean 72 See also Edit Scottish Islands portal Scotland portal Islands portalLand raidReferences EditNotes Edit Murray states The pine marten which has been absent from the Hebrides for a hundred years reappeared on Raasay in 1971 when a single specimen was identified beyond doubt He attributes this to a 1972 report in The Scotsman by Alison Lambie 28 For a comprehensive flora of the island see Bungard 2009 For the text of the treaty and a translation from the Latin to English see Agreement between Magnus IV and Alexander III 1266 Manx Society IV VII amp IX Retrieved 10 April 2016 Baird suggests Skernataid Rock may be Sgeir Thraid at NG628334 Contemporary spelling was Suishnish Citations Edit a b Area and population ranks there are c 300 islands over 20 ha in extent and 93 permanently inhabited islands were listed in the 2011 census a b c National Records of Scotland 2013 a b c d e f g h Haswell Smith 2004 Haswell Smith 2004 pp 161 166 Ordnance Survey 2012 Mac an Tailleir 2003 Isle of Raasay Ordnance Survey Retrieved 7 February 2019 Gifford Dunnigan amp MacGillivray 2002 Keay amp Keay 1994 a b Raasay House 2016 Gillen 2003 p 176 Search Geograph Britain and Ireland Retrieved 3 September 2021 put the 1st part of the name into the near box Great Britain A Z Road Atlas 2022 Collins Retrieved 3 September 2021 MacLeod 2004 p 182 BBC 2004 Raasay Community Association 2007 Dualchas Architects 2012 Highland Council 2008 The Scotsman 2009 Ross 2010 BBC 2010 Raasay House 2013 Visit Scotland 2016 Isle of Raasay Distillery 2020 The lesser known Scottish islands to dream about visiting when lockdown is over Kanik 2020 funet fi 2016 Murray 1973 pp 108 109 Darling amp Boyd 1969 p 71 Murray 1973 p 107 Highland Biological Recording Group Slack Alf Flora in Slesser 1970 p 57 Hardy amp Wickham Jones 2009 Rixson 2001 p 19 MacLeod 2004 p 12 MacLeod 2004 p 13 Mac an Tailleir 2003 pp 8 47 110 MacLeod 2004 p 17 Martin 1716 p 163 a b c d Keay amp Keay 1994 p 797 Murray 1966 p 153 Fairweather 2015 Forster 1975 p 169 Johnson 1775 pp 85 86 Boswell 1785 Sunday 5 September Cooper 1979 pp 142 143 Baird 1995 p 234 Canmore 132713 sfn error no target CITEREFCanmore 132713 help a b Draper amp Draper 2003 p 5 MacLeod 2004 p 173 MacLeod 2004 pp 174 183 The Glasgow Herald 1981 p 15 I Remember memoirs of Donald Alistair MacLeod published 2010 Nicholson 1936 p 78 cited by Draper amp Draper 2003 p 4 Woodward 1914 p 164 cited by Draper amp Draper 2003 p 4 Draper amp Draper 2003 pp 4 5 Draper amp Draper 2003 pp 6 a b Draper amp Draper 2003 pp 7 Draper amp Draper 2003 pp 16 a b Draper amp Draper 2003 p 8 History of the Ministry of Munitions quoted in Draper amp Draper 2003 p 9 Draper amp Draper 2003 p 15 General Register Office BBC 2013 Mac an Tailleir 2005 MacLean 2002 Shaw 1987 Hutchinson 2006 BBC Radio 4 2014 Service 2012 Braun Clements 2012 Bibliography Edit Baird Bob 1995 Shipwrecks of the West of Scotland Glasgow Nekton Books ISBN 1 897995 02 4 BBC 2 May 2004 Sabbath ferry service sets sail BBC News retrieved 26 March 2016 BBC 17 November 2010 Rok boss tells of bid to buyout construction division BBC News retrieved 27 March 2016 BBC 15 August 2013 Scotland s 2011 census Island living on the rise BBC News retrieved 16 April 2016 BBC Radio 4 18 July 2014 Calum s Road BBC retrieved 17 April 2016 Boswell James 1785 Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides with Samuel Johnson LL D archived from the original on 12 August 2008 Braun Gerhard ed Sir Harrison Birtwistle Duets for Storab Universal Edition Bungard Stephen J 2009 A Flora of Raasay and Rona waitrose com retrieved 19 August 2009 Clements Andrew 2 May 2012 Birtwistle Nine Movements The Tree of Strings review The Guardian retrieved 17 April 2016 Cooper Derek 1979 Road to the Isles Travellers in the Hebrides 1770 1914 London Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 978 0 7100 0256 3 Darling Frank Fraser Boyd J Morton 1969 Natural History in the Highlands and Islands London Collins ISBN 978 0 00 213092 9 Draper Laurence Draper Pamela 2003 first published 1990 The Raasay Iron Mine Dingwall Laurence and Pamela Draper ISBN 0 9514870 0 0 Dualchas Architects 2012 Community Centre Isle of Raasay archived from the original on 19 March 2016 retrieved 27 March 2016 Fairweather Nick 2015 Exploring Raasay Forster Margaret 1975 The Rash Adventurer The Rise and Fall of Charles Edward Stuart St Albans Panther ISBN 978 0 586 04082 9 FUNET species list Rodentia funet fi retrieved 3 April 2016 General Register Office for Scotland 28 November 2003 Scotland s Census 2001 Occasional Paper No 10 Statistics for Inhabited Islands Retrieved 26 February 2012 Gifford Douglas Dunnigan Sarah MacGillivray Alan eds 2002 Scottish Literature In English and Scots Edinburgh University Press archived from the original on 13 January 2005 retrieved 2 June 2007 Gillen Con 2003 Geology and landscapes of Scotland Harpenden Terra ISBN 978 1 903544 09 9 The Glasgow Herald 25 May 1981 Mother and daughter to run new hotel on Raasay retrieved 20 December 2020 Hardy Karen Wickham Jones Caroline 1 January 2009 Mesolithic and later sites around the Inner Sound Scotland the work of the Scotland s First Settlers project 1998 2004 Scottish Archaeological Internet Reports 31 2009 retrieved 15 August 2021 Haswell Smith Hamish 2004 The Scottish Islands Edinburgh Canongate ISBN 978 1 84195 454 7 Highland Biological Recording Group Mammal Atlas archived from the original on 12 June 2009 retrieved 19 August 2009 Highland Council 7 March 2008 Work commences on Raasay Ferry Terminal archived from the original on 1 May 2008 retrieved 12 May 2008 Historic Environment Scotland Raasay Oskaig 132713 Canmore retrieved 15 November 2021 Hutchinson Roger 2006 Calum s Road Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 447 8 Isle of Raasay Distillery 2020 Isle of Raasay Distillery retrieved 20 December 2020 Johnson Samuel 1775 A Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland 1924 ed London Chapman amp Dodd Kanik Hannah 18 December 2020 First legal Isle of Raasay single malt unveiled recently The Whiskey Wash retrieved 20 December 2020 Keay John Keay Julia 1994 Collins Encyclopaedia of Scotland London HarperCollins ISBN 978 0 00 255082 6 Mac an Tailleir Iain 2003 Placenames collected by Iain Mac an Tailleir PDF pdf vol part 5 Pabay Yoker The Scottish Parliament retrieved 25 March 2016 Mac an Tailleir Iain 18 April 2005 1901 2001 Gaelic in the Census PowerPoint 542nd ed Linguae Celticae retrieved 16 April 2016 MacLean Sorley 20 November 2002 First published 1954 translated by Heaney Seamus Hallaig The Guardian retrieved 16 April 2016 Also see The Guardian MacLeod Norma 2004 Raasay the island and its people Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 280 1 Martin Martin 1716 A Description of The Western Islands of Scotland 2nd ed London A Bell p 163 retrieved 10 April 2016 Murray W H 1966 The Hebrides London Heinemann OCLC 4998389 Murray W H 1973 The Islands of Western Scotland London Eyre Methuen ISBN 0 413 30380 2 Nicholson Alexander 1936 Handbook to the Isle of Skye Glasgow National Records of Scotland 15 August 2013 2011 Census First Results on Population and Household Estimates for Scotland Release 1C Part Two PDF Statistical Bulletin vol SG 2013 126 retrieved 11 April 2017 Ordnance Survey 2012 OS24 Raasay amp Applecross Loch Torridon amp Plockton Landranger Ordnance Survey ISBN 978 0 319 23110 4 Raasay Community Association March 2007 RCA News March 2007 archived from the original on 3 March 2016 retrieved 27 March 2016 Raasay House 16 April 2013 Open at Last Archive org archived from the original on 27 September 2013 retrieved 16 April 2016 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint unfit URL link Raasay House 25 March 2016 Historic Raasay House retrieved 25 March 2016 Rixson Denis 2001 The Small Isles Canna Rum Eigg and Muck Edinburgh Birlinn ISBN 978 1 84158 154 5 Ross David 4 August 2010 Restoration work starts on fire ravaged Raasay House The Herald Glasgow The Scotsman 18 January 2009 Blaze devastates historic isle house Johnston Publishing retrieved 27 March 2016 Service Tom 29 June 2012 Harrison Birtwistle the music of myth The Guardian retrieved 17 April 2012 Shaw Donald 1987 Calum s Road nigelgatherer com retrieved 27 October 2008 Slesser Malcolm 1970 The Island of Skye Edinburgh Scottish Mountaineering Trust ISBN 978 0 901516 26 8 Visit Scotland 2016 Accommodation at Raasay House retrieved 3 April 2016 Woodward HB 1914 Notes on the Geology of Raasay Transactions of the Edinburgh Geological Society vol XFurther reading EditMackenzie Julia 2000 Whirligig Beetles And Tackety Boots Bedale Blaisdon ISBN 978 1 902838 07 6 Murray C W Birks H J B 2005 The Botanist in Skye and Adjacent Islands An Annotated Check list of the Vascular Plants of the Islands of Skye Raasay Rona Rum Eigg Muck Canna Scarpay and Soay Murray and Birks ISBN 0 9548971 0 2 Nicholson John 2002 I Remember Memories of Raasay Edinburgh Birlinn Sharpe Richard 1977 Raasay A Study in Island History London Grant and Cutler ISBN 0 7293 0130 3 Sharpe Richard 1978 Raasay A Study in Island History Documents And Sources London Grant and Cutler ISBN 0 7293 0060 9 Stack Prunella 1979 Island Quest The Inner Hebrides London Collins Harvill Press ISBN 0 00 262323 4External links EditRaasay Community Association Raasay House Wikimedia Commons has media related to Isle of Raasay Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Raasay amp oldid 1097130783, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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