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Highland |
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Highland![]() Cawdor Castle, in the heart of the Scottish Highlands, is one of the most magnificent and well-preserved strongholds in Scotland. The keep dates to the early 14th century, with the parapet and upper works being added in 1454. Though little is known about the early Thanes of Cawdor, there is no evidence to suggest that Shakespeare's Macbeth was one of them, or that he murdered King Duncan I here. Unitary authority in northern Scotland, created from the region bearing the same name in 1996. Area26,157 sq km/10,100 sq mi (one-third of Scotland)TownsInverness (administrative headquarters), Thurso, Wick, Fort William, AviemorePhysicalmainland Highland consists of a series of glaciated ancient plateau masses dissected by narrow glens and straths (valleys); in the northeast (Caithness), old red sandstone rocks give a softer, lower topography; Ben Nevis (1,343 m/4,406 ft), Cairngorm Mountains; Loch Ness; Cuillin Hills, Skye; includes many of the Inner Hebridean islandsFeaturesCaledonian Canal; John O'Groats; Forth Road Bridge to SkyeIndustrieswinter sports, timber, aluminium smelting, pulp and paper production, whisky distilling, cottage and croft industriesAgriculturesalmon fishing, sheep farming, grouse and deer huntingPopulation(2001) 208,900Historylocation of many key historical moments in Scottish history, including the ‘massacre’ of Glencoe in 1692 and the Battle of Culloden in 1745-6
Highland
Highland
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| In a lonely Highland village more than a hundred and fifty years ago there lived a little boy called James Macpherson. Every partner who had charge of an interior post, and a score of retainers at his Command, felt like the chieftain of a Highland clan, and was almost as important in the eyes of his dependents as of himself. Johnson and others, who had dared to say in their time that the poems of Ossian were not genuine lays of the Gaelic bard, handed down from father to son, and taken from the lips of old women in Highland huts, as Macpherson claimed. |
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