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18th February 08, 11:32 AM
#1
Great photo's -Hope you enjoyed Scotland
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18th February 08, 11:33 AM
#2
 Originally Posted by David Dalglish
Great photo's -Hope you enjoyed Scotland
You bet, and we had a great time, and plan to go back every 4 years.
Frank
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18th February 08, 11:41 AM
#3
Sunrise of Mull, from Oban
If you really meant 'sunrise', then I'm more turned around than I thought I was. 
Nice images!
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18th February 08, 11:44 AM
#4
Beautiful pictures!!
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18th February 08, 12:17 PM
#5
I didn't know that there had been a nunnery on Iona despite having been there! 
You live and learn! 
[B][COLOR="Red"][SIZE="1"]Reverend Earl Trefor the Sublunary of Kesslington under Ox, Venerable Lord Trefor the Unhyphenated of Much Bottom, Sir Trefor the Corpulent of Leighton in the Bucket, Viscount Mcclef the Portable of Kirkby Overblow.
Cymru, Yr Alban, Iwerddon, Cernyw, Ynys Manau a Lydaw am byth! Yng Nghiltiau Ynghyd!
(Wales, Scotland, Ireland, Cornwall, Isle of Man and Brittany forever - united in the Kilts!)[/SIZE][/COLOR][/B]
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19th February 08, 03:02 AM
#6
Great Photos, I stay in Scotland and never seen half of what you have seen, you make me very envious, but I hope to remedy this within the next year or two.
You seem to have got good weather during your visit because last year was a fairly poor year weather wise.
Again brilliant photos, you obviously had a great time
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21st February 08, 12:26 PM
#7
Well, since I'm not Scottish, other than Iona, none of the sites means anything to me. Do any of them have some special meaning to people? I'm totally confused, e.g., about the Deer Raiders.
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21st February 08, 07:34 PM
#8
 Originally Posted by Galician
Well, since I'm not Scottish, other than Iona, none of the sites means anything to me. Do any of them have some special meaning to people? I'm totally confused, e.g., about the Deer Raiders.
The following was taken from the BBC website.
This monument was erected in memory of the people of Lochs who challenged the authority of the state in order to focus public attention on the poverty and injustice they suffered under the oppression of heartless landlords who dispossessed their forebears from over thirty villages in Park.
Their inspiration was Donald MacRae, schoolmaster at Balallan, who committed his life to the Higland Land Law Reform movement and to the emancipation of the oppressed crofters and landless cottars.
Over a long period of time, Lady Matheson, the proprietrix of Lewis, ignored numerous pleas from landless families throughout Lochs for permission to return to some of the former villages in Park from which their forefathers had been evicted. Instead she converted the former 42,000 acre Park sheepfarm into a sporting deer forest in 1886.
On 22 November 1887, crofters and cottars from Lochs, having made their intentions public, marched into the Park deer forest, led by pipers and carrying flags. They confront Mrs Platt, the lessee, and her gamekeeper at Seaforth Head and continued past them into the deer forest.
The authorities reacted quickly, sending to Lewis a detachment of the Royal Scots and some Naval ships carrying marines. The raiders made their camp at Airidh Dhomhnaill Chaim by the shore of Loch Seaforth, where they assuaged their hunger on roasted and boiled venison.
Sheriff Fraser read the Riot Act at Ruadh Chleit, explaining its significance in Gaelic. By then the raiders felt that they had made their point and they began to disperse, having killed a large number of deer.
Six of the leaders of the raid were committed for trial at the High Court in Edinburgh. They were:
Donald MacRae, school master in Balallan
Roderick MacKenzie, 46 Balallan
Murdo MacDonald, 61 Balallan
John Matheson, 13 Gravir
Malcolm MacKenzie, 26 Crossbost
Donald MacMillan, 6 Crossbost
In January 1888, they were all acquitted of charges of mobbing, rioting and break the law of trespass.
The three entranes to this memorial Cairn symbolise the three communities that participated in the Deer Raid, Kinloch, North Lochs and Pairc.
The three projecting stones around the top of the memorial symbolise the three prominent events in the Pairc Deer Raid.
The eight points of the compass were taken from the homes of the six land raiders who were acquitted in the High Court in Edinburgh in 1888 as well as a stone from both the site of the reading of the Riot Act at RUADH CHLEIT and the raiders’ camp site at AIRIDH DHOMHNAILL CHAIM.
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