Cliff, Lewis

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Cliff
Traigh na Clibhe (geograph 3133989).jpg
Traigh na Clibhe, just north of the settlement
Outer Hebrides UK location map.svg
Red pog.svg
Cliff
Location within the Outer Hebrides
Language Scottish Gaelic
English
OS grid reference NB082358
Civil parish
Council area
Lieutenancy area
Country Scotland
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town STORNOWAY
Postcode district HS2
Dialling code 01851
Police Scotland
Fire Scottish
Ambulance Scottish
UK Parliament
Scottish Parliament
List of places
UK
Scotland
58°12′54″N6°58′08″W / 58.215°N 6.969°W / 58.215; -6.969 Coordinates: 58°12′54″N6°58′08″W / 58.215°N 6.969°W / 58.215; -6.969

Cliff (Scottish Gaelic : Cliobh) is a small settlement on the Isle of Lewis, in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Cliff is within the parish of Uig. [1] The settlement is situated on a minor road, off the B8011. [2] The picturesque beach is unsafe for swimming. At low to mid tide holds an excellent barrelling beach break wave. Breaks up to 12 feet (3.7 metres) for experienced surfers and bodyboarders [2]

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Uig, Lewis Human settlement in Scotland

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Skigersta Human settlement in Scotland

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Breasclete Village in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland

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Callanish IV

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Shulishader Human settlement in Scotland

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Garynahine Human settlement in Scotland

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Ardroil Human settlement in Scotland

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Borrowston, Lewis Human settlement in Scotland

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Mealista Human settlement in Scotland

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Breaclete Human settlement in Scotland

Breacleit is the central village on Great Bernera in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Breaclete is within the parish of Uig. Although the village name comes from a geographical feature rather than a steading it is generally believed to be an ancient settlement. The oldest building in the village is the thatched water mill by the shore of Loch Risay which was restored in the 1990s. It was formerly a tiny crofting and fishing settlement of just 12 crofts surrounding the natural harbour of Loch Beag but crofting has now ceased and holiday homes have taken over. The earliest clearly mapped reference is on Murdoch MacKenzie's first Admiralty chart surveyed in 1748. In 1851 J.M. MacKenzie, the Chamberlain to the estate owner Sir James Matheson, proposed that all the tenants of the village were to be evicted and sent to North America on the emigrant ship the SS Marquis of Stafford. This plan was not fully carried through however but it still had a great effect on the village leaving it with a population of just three families. This population was later supplemented through evictions elsewhere notably the clearances of Hacklete and Barragloum villages in the south of Great Bernera.

Brenish Human settlement in Scotland

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Swainbost Human settlement in Scotland

Swainbost is a village on the Isle of Lewis in the district of Ness, in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland. The name Swainbost meaning Sweins steading is of Viking derivation. The settlement is situated in the parish of Barvas. According to Ronald Black, Swainbost was re-settled during the Highland Clearances in 1842. The island's Anglo-Scottish landlord had expected the crofters evicted from Uig to emigrate and only reluctantly granted them land at Swainbost to avert the threat of violence.

Aird Uig Human settlement in Scotland

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Timsgarry Human settlement in Scotland

Timsgarry is a village on the Isle of Lewis, in the Outer Hebrides, Scotland. Timsgarry is home to the Baile na Cille Church and the Uig Museum, noted for its giant Chessmen, discovered in the sands in 1831.

Stac Dhòmhnaill Chaim

Stac Dhòmnuill Chaim, or Stac Dhòmhnaill Chaim, or Stac Domhnuill Chaim, is a fortified promontory located near Mangursta on the Isle of Lewis in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. The stack and its surrounding site is listed and protected as a scheduled monument. The site of the stack is located at grid reference NB00223152. The site is named after Donald Cam Macaulay, the early 17th century hero of the Macaulays of Uig. The site was documented in the late 19th century, but today it is considered inaccessible. In 2003 and 2006, an archaeological team of rock climbers scaled the promontory and documented the site; finding in 2006 a piece of possibly Neolithic pottery.

Tolsta Chaolais Human settlement in Scotland

Tolsta Chaolais is a village on the Isle of Lewis, Scotland. It consists of about forty houses, clustered around Loch a' Bhaile, about 1 mile from the A858 road between Callanish and Carloway. The name has a Norse element, Tolsta, combined with a Gaelic element, Caolas, and means "Farm by the Strait". Tolsta Chaolais is in the parish of Uig, and has a building as a place of worship for all denominations.

References

  1. "Details of Cliff". Scottish Places. Retrieved 24 December 2014.
  2. 1 2 "Uig Peninsula". Travel Scotland. Retrieved 24 December 2014.