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  2. Blythswood Square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blythswood_Square

    Blythswood Square is the Georgian square on Blythswood Hill in the heart of the City of Glasgow, Scotland. The square is part of the 'Magnificent New Town of Blythswood' built in the 1800s on the rising empty ground west of a very new Buchanan Street. These open grounds were part of the vast Lands of Blythswood stretching to the River Kelvin ...

  3. Blythswood Hill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blythswood_Hill

    Blythswood Square Hotel (2009) conversion of Royal Scottish Automobile Club, remodelled 1923 by James Miller [9] St Vincent Street Church (1859) by Alexander "Greek" Thomson , St Vincent Street, [ 10 ] one of Glasgow's significant ecclesiastical buildings in architectural terms after the Cathedral

  4. Blythswood - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blythswood

    Blythswood Hill, area of Glasgow, Scotland Blythswood Square, square in the Blythswood Hill area; Blythswood House, former neoclassical mansion in Renfrew, Scotland (demolished 1935) Blythswood, Eastern Cape

  5. George Square - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Square

    George Square (Scottish Gaelic: Ceàrnag Sheòrais) is the principal civic square in the city of Glasgow, Scotland. It is one of six squares in the city centre, the others being Cathedral Square , St Andrew's Square , St Enoch Square , Royal Exchange Square , and Blythswood Square on Blythswood Hill .

  6. Glasgow - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glasgow

    Glasgow is Scotland's main locus of Gaelic language use outside the Highlands and Islands. In 2011, 5,878 residents of the city over age 3 spoke Gaelic, amounting to 1.0% of the population. Of Scotland's 25 largest cities and towns, only Inverness, the unofficial capital of the Highlands, has a higher percentage of Gaelic speakers. [184]

  7. Willow Tearooms - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Willow_Tearooms

    The street and surrounding area are part of the New Town of Blythswood created largely by William Harley of Blythswood Square in the early 1800s. The name "Sauchiehall" is derived from "saugh", the Scots word for a willow tree, and "haugh", meadow. This provided the starting point for Mackintosh and Macdonald's ideas for the design theme.

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