Lochindorb: Difference between revisions

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Created page with "right|thumb|300px|Lochindorb Castle in the loch {{county|Morayshire}} '''Lochindorb''' is a freshwater loch in Morayshire, and the largest in..."
 
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[[File:LochindorbCastle.JPG|right|thumb|300px|Lochindorb Castle in the loch]]
[[File:LochindorbCastle.JPG|right|thumb|300px|Lochindorb Castle in the loch]]
{{county|Morayshire}}
{{county|Morayshire}}
'''Lochindorb''' is a freshwater loch in [[Morayshire]], and the largest in the county.  It is found to the north of [[Grantown on Spey]].
'''Lochindorb''' is a freshwater loch in [[Morayshire]], and the largest in the county; it is two miles long and half a mile wide.  It is found to the north of [[Grantown on Spey]].


The name of the lake is from the Gaelic ''Loch nan Doirb'', meaning "loch of the minnows". This loch is home to the ruins of Lochindorb Castle, a former stronghold of the Clan Comyn and is built on what now is said to be an artificially created island. It is also a popular spot with fishers and birdwatchers, the latter of whom come to see the local black-throated divers and greylag geese. At the southeast edge of the loch there is a small patch of coniferous forest and hidden by this Lochindorb Lodge.
The name of the lake is from the Gaelic ''Loch nan Doirb'', meaning "loch of the minnows".
 
Within this loch stand the ruins of Lochindorb Castle, a former stronghold of the Clan Comyn and is built on what now is said to be an artificially created island. It is also a popular spot with fishers and birdwatchers, the latter of whom come to see the local black-throated divers and greylag geese. At the southeast edge of the loch there is a small patch of coniferous forest and hidden by this Lochindorb Lodge.


==Castle==
==Castle==

Revision as of 23:06, 7 May 2015

Lochindorb Castle in the loch

Lochindorb is a freshwater loch in Morayshire, and the largest in the county; it is two miles long and half a mile wide. It is found to the north of Grantown on Spey.

The name of the lake is from the Gaelic Loch nan Doirb, meaning "loch of the minnows".

Within this loch stand the ruins of Lochindorb Castle, a former stronghold of the Clan Comyn and is built on what now is said to be an artificially created island. It is also a popular spot with fishers and birdwatchers, the latter of whom come to see the local black-throated divers and greylag geese. At the southeast edge of the loch there is a small patch of coniferous forest and hidden by this Lochindorb Lodge.

Castle

The castle is first recorded during the Wars of Independence when Sir John ('the Black') Comyn died there in 1300. By 1455 the castle was in the hands of Archibald Douglas, Earl of Moray, The next year, after Douglas's defeat and death at Arkinholm, Lochindorb was again forfeited to the Crown and this time ordered to be slighted, the work of dismantling its defences being entrusted to the Thane of Cawdor. Since then, it has been left as a ruin.

The "Wolf's Lair": Lochindorb Castle

Wildlife

Lochindorb is home to an array of wildlife and is a popular fishing and birdwatching spot.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Lochindorb)

References