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Counties of Great Britain, Inverness-shire

  • Inverness-shire (Inverness, Fort William, Kingussie, Newtonmore, Portree)

Inverness, Capital of the Highlands, became Scotland's fifth city in celebration of the start of the Third Millennium.

It lies at the north end of the Great Glen, where the River Ness flows into the Moray Firth, and has been a natural focus for lines of communication to and through the Highlands for most of the last two thousand years.

By the end of the 18th century Inverness, the largest town of the Highlands, was acknowledged as its capital with its theatre, Assembly Rooms and polite society. Its winter season dazzled the eyes of the townsfolk  balls, concerts and plays all diverted the local gentry and wealthy merchants who made the town their base for the dark winter months.

As the capital of the highlands, Inverness increasingly provided metropolitan sophistication and diversions as the town attracted wealthy families from all over the Highlands to settle.

A ring of mansions and fine houses sprang up around the town where a civilized living style could be enjoyed distant from the noise and bustle of the town yet close enough to enjoy its facilities.

Counties England Wales Scotland Aberdeenshire, Angus, Argyllshire Ayrshire, Banffshire, Berwickshire Buteshire, Cromartyshire, Caithness Clackmannanshire, Dumfriesshire, Dunbartonshire East Lothian, Fife, Inverness-shire, Kincardineshire


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