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Highland
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Highland

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Locator map for the Scottish administrative region of Highland.
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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.
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The mountains of the Black Cuillin Hills, as seen from Drynoch, on the main road between Bracadale and the Sligachan. The jagged pinnacles seen on the left form the ridge of Sgurr nan Gillean (‘Peak of the Young Men’), which reaches an altitude of 965 m/3,166 ft.

Unitary authority in northern Scotland, created from the region bearing the same name in 1996.

Area

26,157 sq km/10,100 sq mi (one-third of Scotland)

Towns

Inverness (administrative headquarters), Thurso, Wick, Fort William, Aviemore

Physical

mainland 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 islands

Features

Caledonian Canal; John O'Groats; Forth Road Bridge to Skye

Industries

winter sports, timber, aluminium smelting, pulp and paper production, whisky distilling, cottage and croft industries

Agriculture

salmon fishing, sheep farming, grouse and deer hunting

Population

(2001) 208,900

History

location of many key historical moments in Scottish history, including the ‘massacre’ of Glencoe in 1692 and the Battle of Culloden in 1745–6

Language

Gaelic is spoken by 7.5% of the population.

Economy

Highland is a predominantly rural area comprising of land that is agriculturally marginal, much of which is not amenable to crops or forestry. Subsistence economies in the form of crofting still characterize the least accessible parts of the area. More accessible parts are exploiting their tourist potential and the opportunities afforded by mountain sports, for example, Aviemore and Fort William. Traditional industries, such as whisky distilling and crafts, are sustained by the tourist industry.

Environment

There are many Sites of Special Scientific Interest, National Nature Reserves, Ramsars (wetland sites), Special Protection Areas, Biosphere Reserves, and National Scenic Areas.

Administrative history

Prior to 1975, this area was part of the five counties of Caithness-shire, Sutherlandshire, Ross and Cromarty, Inverness-shire, and Nairnshire.

Highland

City in San Bernardino County, southern California; population (1990) 34,400. Highland stands in the foothills of the San Bernardino Mountains, just east of the city of San Bernardino, of which it is a growing, largely residential, suburb.

Highland

Town in Lake County, in the far northwest of Indiana; population (1990) 23,700. Highland is situated in the industrial area of Calumet, on the Little Calumet River, near Chicago and the Illinois border, and 11 km/7 mi south of Lake Michigan.

Established in 1848 on the site of a trail used by the Potawatomi people, Highland is now a primarily residential community of one-family homes. Among the products made in its factories are metal goods and cement blocks.



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