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  1. 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.

  2. Nov 3, 2024 · Scottish Highlands, major physiographic and cultural division of Scotland, lying northwest of a line drawn from Dumbarton, near the head of the Firth of Clyde on the western coast, to Stonehaven, on the eastern coast. The western offshore islands of the Inner and Outer Hebrides and Arran and Bute.

    • The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica
  3. Nov 14, 2024 · Scotland - Highlands, Islands, Culture: By 1800 the Highlands had become overpopulated relative to the means of subsistence. Many lairds, seeking to support their tenantry through the kelp industry, were ruined when it collapsed in the period from 1815 to 1825.

  4. Stories abound of jealousies, atrocities, and endless raiding of cattle, goods and women! The clan system was the basis of highland life. Massacres were commonplace but the one that took place at Glen Coe in 1692 will never be forgotten. Eilean Donan, Highlands of Scotland.

  5. The Picts lived throughout the Highlands at the time of the Roman invasion of Scotland in AD 80, which did not succeed in conquering Pictish territory. The Scots came from Northern Ireland around 500 AD to colonise the west of Scotland, bringing with them the Gaelic language and Christianity.

  6. Jun 10, 2016 · A centuries old map of Scotland shines a light on the distribution of Highland clan territories after the crushing Jacobite defeat at Culloden in 1746.

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  8. In earlier times the Scottish Highlands region was dominated by the Gaels and their Gaelic language and culture while the lowlands were Scottish. The dividing line was everything west from the Great Glen (Inverness to Loch Linnhe and the islands) and roughly 50 miles of land east of the Great Glen.

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