Loch Linnhe

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Güiseppi669 (talk | contribs) at 09:14, 20 November 2023. The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Loch Linnhe (/lɒx ˈlɪni/ lokh LIN-ee) is a sea loch on the west coast of Scotland. The part upstream of Corran is known in Gaelic as An Linne Dhubh (the black pool, originally known as Loch Abar), and downstream as An Linne Sheileach (the salty pool). The name Linnhe is derived from the Gaelic word linne, meaning "pool".[1]

Loch Linnhe

Loch Linnhe follows the line of the Great Glen Fault, and is the only sea loch along the fault.[2] About 50 kilometres (30 miles) long, it opens onto the Firth of Lorne at its southwestern end. The part of the loch upstream of Corran is 15 km (9 mi) long and an average of about 2 km (1 mi) wide. The southern part of the loch is wider, and its branch southeast of the island of Lismore is known as the Lynn of Lorne. Loch Eil feeds into Loch Linnhe at the latter's northernmost point, while from the east Loch Leven feeds in the loch just downstream of Corran and Loch Creran feeds into the Lynn of Lorne. The town of Fort William lies at the northeast end of the loch, at the mouth of the River Lochy.

According to the Bard Fr. Allan MacDonald, an important figure in Scottish Gaelic literature, Loch Linnhe was said in local Scottish folklore to be the home of an each-uisge, or "water horse", whose back could accommodate all the children who wished to ride him. But when they did, the water-horse would gallop off into the nearest lake to drown and eat the children on his back. Fr. Allan MacDonald later recalled that during his childhood in nearby Fort William, "Many's the horse I wouldn't get on as a child for fear it would be the each-uisge."[3]

References

Notes

  1. ^ Omand (2004), p. 246
  2. ^ Omand (2004), p. 11
  3. ^ Edited by Ronald Black (2002), Eilein na h-Òige: The Poems of Fr. Allan MacDonald, Mungo Press. Pages 5-6.

Bibliography

  • Omand, Donald (2004), The Argyll Book, Birlinn, ISBN 978-1-84158-253-5

56°42′05″N 5°15′43″W / 56.70139°N 5.26194°W / 56.70139; -5.26194