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  2. Raigmore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raigmore

    Raigmore Hospital. Raigmore (Gaelic: An Ràthaig Mhòr [1]) is an area of Inverness situated in the east of the city. It is in the Highland council area of Scotland.The name is from the Gaelic for "the large fortified dwelling".

  3. Moy, Highland - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Moy,_Highland

    On 16 February 1746 Charles Edward Stuart spent the night at Moy Hall.To prevent the troops from Inverness descending on the estate in surprise during the night, Lady Anne Farquharson-MacKintosh sent Donald Fraser, the blacksmith, [2] and four other retainers to watch the road from Inverness.

  4. List of family seats of Scottish nobility - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_family_seats_of...

    Earl of Morton: Old Mansion House, Dalmahoy near Edinburgh: Aberdour Castle, Dalkeith House, Dalmahoy, Loch Leven Castle and Morton Castle: Earl of Rothes: Dorset: Ballinbreich Castle: Earl of Buchan: Newnham House, Hampshire: Almondell House, Midlothian and Lochindorb Castle Earl of Eglinton: Moffat: Eglinton Castle, Ardrossan Castle and ...

  5. Longman, Inverness - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Longman,_Inverness

    The Longman (Scottish Gaelic: An Longman) is an area in Inverness, Scotland, [1] north of the city centre, bounded by the Moray Firth and River Ness and holding its largest industrial estate. Citadel tower. At Longman's far west is Inverness Harbour, near the citadel built by Oliver Cromwell in 1652. Today, only the clocktower remains.

  6. Raigmore House - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raigmore_House

    The house was designed by Archibald Simpson [1] and constructed for Lachlan Mackintosh of Raigmore, a merchant who had returned from Calcutta, [2] in about 1810. [3] On Lachlan Mackintosh's death in 1845, the estate passed to Aeneas Mackintosh, his son.

  7. Inverness Town Steeple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverness_Town_Steeple

    The first tolbooth in the town, referred to as the "Steeple of Inverness" dated back to at least 1593. After a new stone bridge was built across the River Ness in 1685, prison cells were accommodated in the spandrels of the bridge and offices for civic officials were accommodated in the East Gatehouse to the bridge, leaving the old tolbooth underutilised.

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