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  2. Book of Deer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Book_of_Deer

    While the manuscripts to which the Book of Deer is closest in character are all Irish, most scholars argue for a Scottish origin, although the book was undoubtedly written by an Irish scribe. The book has 86 folios; the leaves measure 157 mm by 108 mm, the text area 108 mm by 71 mm. It is written on vellum in brown ink and is in a modern binding.

  3. Portal:Scotland/Selected articles/92 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Portal:Scotland/Selected...

    While the manuscripts to which the Book of Deer is closest in character are all Irish, most scholars argue for a Scottish origin, although the book was undoubtedly written by an Irish scribe. The book has 86 folios; the leaves measure 157 mm by 108 mm, the text area 108 mm by 71 mm. It is written on vellum in brown ink and is in a modern binding.

  4. Drostan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drostan

    Drostan was an Irish-Scottish abbot who flourished about A.D. 600. All that is known of him is found in the "Breviarium Aberdonense" and in the "Book of Deer", a ninth-century manuscript, now in the Cambridge University Library, but these two accounts do not agree in every particular. He appears to have belonged to the royal family of the Scoti ...

  5. File:The deer forests of Scotland (IA ...

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:The_deer_forests_of...

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  6. Deer of Great Britain - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Deer_of_Great_Britain

    Six species of deer are living wild in Great Britain: [1] Scottish red deer, roe deer, fallow deer, sika deer, Reeves's muntjac, and Chinese water deer. [2] Of those, Scottish red and roe deer are native and have lived in the isles throughout the Holocene. Fallow deer have been reintroduced twice, by the Romans and the Normans, after dying out ...

  7. List of fauna of the Scottish Highlands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_fauna_of_the...

    Download as PDF; Printable version; ... Red deer; Red fox; Red squirrel; Reindeer ... Scotland's Mountain Environment Scottish Mountaineering Trust 2006, ...

  8. Scottish literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scottish_literature

    Book of Deer, folio 5r, containing the text of the Gospel of Matthew from 1:18 through 1:21. Beginning in the later eighth century, Viking raids and invasions may have forced a merger of the Gaelic and Pictish crowns that culminated in the rise of Cínaed mac Ailpín (Kenneth MacAlpin) in the 840s, which brought to power the House of Alpin and the creation of the Kingdom of Alba. [10]

  9. Muckle Hart of Benmore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muckle_Hart_of_Benmore

    The Muckle Hart of Benmore [a] was the name given to a red deer stag that was stalked (hunted) by the 19th-century naturalist and hunter Charles William George St John. [1] In his book Short Sketches of the Wild Sports and Natural History of the Highlands, he described the continuous hunt of the stag for six days and five nights, culminating in its dramatic demise on 1 October 1833. [2]