Sandsting

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Sandsting
Shetland

Ruins of St Mary's Chapel by Sand
Location: 60.217 -1.4

Sandsting is a parish in the West Mainland of Shetland forming a southern arm of the Walls Peninsula. After the parish of Aithsting was annexed into Sandsting in the sixteenth century, it became known as Sandsting and Aithsting parish. [1] [2] [3]

Summary

The parish includes the settlements of Skeld, Westerwick and Culswick. It contains the islands of Vementry and Papa Little together with a number of smaller islets, on the south side of St Magnus Bay, and comprehends a mainland district of about ten miles by eight between that bay and Scalloway Bay.

The coast is partly bold, and cavernous; the seaboard is cut into sections by long bays; and the interior is mostly an assemblage of knolls and hillocks, with a profusion of heath and interspersions of moss. [4][5]

Antiquities include standing stones, burial monds and Old Norse fortifications, as well as church ruins and burial grounds. St Mary's Chapel in Sandsting was once the main church for the parish of Sandsting. The mediæval church, which was built no later than the sixteenth century, now stands in ruin.

Name

Sandsting is a place name derived from the farm of Sand. 'Ting' is from the Old Norse þing ('assembly' or 'court'), an element in several parish names Shetland. It is a reference to an assembly site or meeting place believed to have once been located within the area.[6]

Outside links

References

  • The Gazetteer of Scotland (Rev. John Wilson, 1882)
  • Graham-Campbell, James and Batey, Colleen E. (1998) Vikings in Scotland: An Archaeological Survey (Edinburgh University Press.) ISBN 978-0-7486-0641-2
  • Jakobsen Jakob (1936) The Dialect and Place Names of Shetland (David Nutt, London)
  • Stewart, John (1987): Shetland Collection of Place-names (Shetland Library and Museum, Lerwick)