Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Loch Rannoch And Schiehallion Mountain Perthshire

Tour Scotland Autumn photograph shot today of Loch Rannoch and Schiehallion mountain, Kinloch Rannoch, Perthshire, Scotland.



Tour Scotland Autumn video shot today of Loch Rannoch and Schiehallion mountain, Kinloch Rannoch, Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Schiehallion Mountain Perthshire


Tour Scotland Autumn photograph shot today of Schiehallion mountain above Kinloch Rannoch, Perthshire, Scotland.



Tour Scotland Autumn video shot today of Schiehallion mountain above Kinloch Rannoch, Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Queen's View Loch Tummel Perthshire

Tour Scotland Autumn photograph shot today of Queen's View above of Loch Tummel, Perthshire, Scotland. This is a long, narrow Scottish loch, located 5 miles north west of Pitlochry. The best known view of the loch is Queen's View from the north shore, which Queen Victoria made famous in 1866. The loch is popular with anglers who fish for trout and for campers and canoeists, and with photographers all year round.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Kirkgate Cemetery Loch Leven Perthshire

Tour Scotland Autumn photograph shot today of Kirkgate graveyard by Loch Leven, Perthshire, Scotland. Many very interesting gravestones as well as views over the loch to Loch Leven Castle Island, where Mary Queen of Scots was imprisoned, and the Lomond Hills.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Loch Leven Perthshire

Tour Scotland Autumn photograph shot today of Loch Leven, Perthshire, Scotland.



Tour Scotland Autumn video shot today of Loch Leven, Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Setting Sun Loch Leven Perthshire

Tour Scotland Autumn photograph shot today of the setting sun at Loch Leven, Perthshire, Scotland.



Tour Scotland Autumn video shot today of the setting sun at Loch Leven, Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Pass Of Killiecrankie

Tour Scotland Autumn photograph of Fall colours the Pass of Killiecrankie, Perthshire, Scotland. Killiecrankie is one of the famous names of Scotland, renowned both for its history and its scenery. The Pass of Killiecrankie lies three miles north of Pitlochry, and for a mile threads the deep, steep, thickly wooded gorge of the River Garry, between a spur of Ben Vrackie and Tenandry Hill, with the village at the north end.



Tour Scotland Autumn video of the Pass of Killiecrankie, Perthshire, Scotland.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Hermitage Falls Perthshire

Tour Scotland photograph of the Hermitage waterfall on the River Braan, Hermitage, Dunkeld, Perthshire, Scotland.



Tour Scotland video of the Hermitage waterfall on the River Braan, Hermitage, Dunkeld, Perthshire, Scotland.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Setting Sun Friarton Bridge Perthshire

Tour Scotland Autumn photograph of the setting sun below Friarton Bridge and River Tay just outside Perth, Perthshire, Scotland.



Tour Scotland Autumn video of the setting sun below Friarton Bridge and River Tay just outside Perth, Perthshire, Scotland. A beautiful Autumn evening in Perthshire.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Haunted Linlithgow Palace Scotland

Tour Haunted Linlithgow Palace, Scotland. This Scottish Palace is haunted by Mary of Guise wife of James V. Her ghost has been seen standing at the top of the palace tower waiting on the return of her husband from battle.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Haunted Craignethan Castle Scotland

Tour Haunted Craignethan Castle, Scotland. This Scottish castle is haunted by Mary Queen of Scots, her ghost normally appears headless.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Haunted Earlshall Castle Scotland

Tour Haunted Earlshall Castle, Fife, Scotland. This Scottish castle built by Sir William Bruce in 1546 is said to be haunted by Sir Andrew Bruce of Earlshall, also known as Bloody Bruce. Andrew was a cruel persecutor of the Covenanters when he took a commission in the Royalist army under Claverhouse. Commander of the force that massacred Richard Cameron and his band of devotees of pure Presbyterianism against the Episcopalism being forced on Scotland by Charles II, the band that inspired the formation of that great Scottish regiment, the Cameronians, Andrew Bruce is recorded as paying a guinea to hack off Cameron's head and hands with a dirk and selling them in Edinburgh for £500.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Haunted Corgarff Castle Scotland

Tour Haunted Corgarff Castle on visit to Aberdeenshire, Scotland. This Scottish castle was occupied by the Forbes family during their feud with the Gordon family. This all came to a head when the Gordon family ravaged their land and laid siege to the Castle in 1571. At this time it was occupied by the Lairds wife, Margaret Campbell, and 26 women and children. The men folk and male servants were away at this time. Margaret would not let the Castle be taken so the Gordons set fire to the Castle and all the many women and children were killed. Since then ghostly screams have been heard in the Castle, especially from the barrack room.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Haunted Kellie Castle Scotland

Tour Haunted Kellie Castle, Fife, Scotland. Mentioned in charter of David I around 1150, Kellie was owned by the Oliphant family from 1360 to 1613 when it was purchased by Sir Thomas Erskine a childhood friend of James VI who created him Earl of Kellie. Restored by the Lorimer family who bought the castle in the 19th century, the building contains magnificent plaster ceilings, painted panelling and furniture designed by Sir Robert Lorimer. This Scottish castle is haunted by the ghost of a woman called Ann Erskine, who fell to her death from one of the castle windows. She is said to haunt a spiral staircase in the castle where you can often hear her footsteps.

All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video Fingask Castle Perthshire



Tour Scotland Autumn video of Fingask Castle, Carse Of Gowrie, Perthshire, Scotland. Fingask is perched 200 feet above Rait, three miles north-east of Errol, in the Braes of the Carse, on the fringes of the Sidlaw Hills. Thus it overlooks both the Carse of Gowrie and the Firth of Tay and beyond into the Kingdom of Fife. Fingask was once an explicitly holy place, a convenient and numinous stop-off between the abbeys at Falkirk and Scone. In the eighteenth century it was a nest of Jacobites. The Bruce family owned the lands of Rait, including Fingask, from the 15th century. The castle itself is dated 1592, and was built around a 12th century structure. In 1672, Sir Patrick Threipland, 1st Baronet, purchased the estate, which was erected into a barony the same year. Sir Patrick renovated the building and laid out the gardens. He died a prisoner at Stirling Castle for adherence to the ousted King James VII, in 1689. His son David, 2nd Baronet, joined the Jacobite rising of 1715, and fought against the government at the Battle of Sheriffmuir. He was attainted when the rising failed, and his forfeited estates were purchased by the York Buildings Company, an English waterworks company which had begun to specialise in forfeited land. Fingask Castle was badly damaged in 1745 by government troops, as the Threiplands once more supported the Jacobites in the second Jacobite rising. and in 1783, it was bought back by the Threiplands, in the person of Dr. Stuart Threipland, physician. Between 1828 and 1840 additions were made to the south and west of the castle. Sir Patrick Threipland, 4th Baronet (1762-1837) laid out the park, and his son planted the topiary gardens and installed statuary. The castle passed out of the Threipland family again in 1917, when it was bought by whisky merchant Sir John Henderson Stewart, 1st Baronet. The estate was bought by H. B. Gilroy of Ballumbie in 1925, who removed many of the 19th century additions, and since 1969 has once more been the home of the Threipland family. The castle is a listed building, and the estate is included on the Inventory of Historic Gardens and Designed Landscapes, the national register of significant gardens.


Tour Scottish Castles, Abbeys, Houses, Towers.

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Tour Scotland Video William Wallace Doorway Kilspindie Perthshire



Tour Scotland video of the William Wallace doorway in the Parish Churchyard at Kilspindie, Perthshire, Scotland. This recently discovered door connected Kilspindie Church to the path to Kilspindie Castle of which there are no remains, though some of the stones are built into Kilspindie Church. The original castle was the home of the uncle of William Wallace and it is known that he spent much of his childhood here and would have often walked through this door to attend church services.

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video King Robert The Bruce Chapel St Conan's Kirk

Tour Scotland Autumn photograph of the King Robert The Bruce Chapel St Conan's Kirk by Loch Awe, Argyll, Scotland.



Tour Scotland Autumn video of the King Robert The Bruce Chapel in St Conan's Kirk by Loch Awe, Argyll, Scotland. This Scottish chapel owes its origins to the fact that it was on a hillside above the church that he dispatched the famous outflanking column under the Earl of Douglas, which inflicted a decisive defeat on John Lorne and his clansmen in the Pass of Brander. The effigy is made of wood, with the hands and face being of alabaster. Beneath the effigy is a small ossuary which contains a bone of Bruce, from Dunfermline Abbey in Fife. The window in the chapel was the original west window from St Mary's Church in Leith, Edinburgh.

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Tour Scotland Photograph Video The Apse St Conan's Kirk

Tour Scotland photograph of the Apse in St Conan's Kirk by Loch Awe, Argyll, Scotland.



Tour Scotland video of the Apse in St Conan's Kirk by Loch Awe, Argyll, Scotland. The semicircular apse and ambulatory with their solid pillars, narrow arches and clear glass windows are perhaps the most distinctive features of St. Conan's. It seems probable that the shape was inspired by those of St. John's Chapel in the Tower of London, but whereas that chapel is dark, this receives the full blaze of daylight and has as its background the mountains of Glenorchy and Glenstrae. The result is most pleasing and almost unique. There is an interesting story current locally that when Mr. Campbell was designing this part of the kirk an engineer friend objected that, although the effect might be beautiful, the design was mechanically unsound. Mr. Campbell disagreed, but, to make quite sure, built a scale model of the apse and passed a steamroller over it. The model stood up to the pressure, and so has the structure itself. Within the curve of the apse is the communion table, made of solid oak. Once again the craftsmen were found locally and are still represented in the village. The wood from which this table was carved weighed over seven hundredweight

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Tour Scotland Autumn Photograph Video St Bride's Chapel St Conan's Kirk

Tour Scotland Autumn photograph of St Bride's Chapel in St Conan's Kirk by Loch Awe, Argyll, Scotland.



Tour Scotland Autumn video of St Bride's Chapel in St Conan's Kirk by Loch Awe, Argyll, Scotland. This chapel contains the tomb of the Fourth Lord Blythswood, who helped to carry on the work on St Conan's Kirk after Walter Campbell and his sister had both died. This chapel is in a very early Norman style and contains two slabs of Levantine marble about which there is a curious little history. Although coming originally from the Mediterranean, they were shaped and polished somewhere near Louvain. The first duly arrived on Loch Awe side in the summer of 1914, but the second had to wait until the end of the First World War before it could join its neighbour.

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