- tuaman,
grave or mound);
while the main
western outcrops are
Eilean a'
Ghobha (Isle of the Blacksmith),
Roaireim (which has a
natural rock arch), and...
- The
westernmost of the
Flannan Isles:
Eilean a'
Ghobha and
Roareim with
Brona Cleit in the distance...
-
numerous others but none
named by
Ordnance Survey Grimsay (North):
Eilean à
Ghobha,
Eilean Mòr
Grimsay (South):
Caraigh Mhòr,
Eilean na Cille,
Eilean nan Gamhna...
-
administered in this part of
Scotland as late as the 17th century. — Dan Iain
Ghobha: The
poems of John Morison, cit. – Arch. Scot., Vol. V., p. 366 The last...
- The
westernmost of the
Flannan Isles:
Eilean a'
Ghobha and
Roareim with
Brona Cleit in the distance...
- to the west:
Galta Beag, Bodach,
Stacan Laidir,
Galta Mòr,
Sgeir Mhic a'
Ghobha and Damhag. Geologically,
these islands are an
extension of the Trotternish...
- Mackintosh-Shaw.
According to
Charles Fraser-Mackintosh, they are
known as
Sliochd a
Ghobha Chrom and that
Henry had
twelve followers who to keep in his
favor learned...
- of Drumbeg, Sutherland) Loch a'
Ghlinnein (****ynt, Sutherland) Loch a'
Ghobha-D****bh (beneath Ben Hope, Sutherland) Loch a'
Ghobhainn (Shieldaig Forest...
- been
linked with the
parish of
Seagoe –
recorded for
instance as
Teach dho-
Ghobha – in
County Armagh, Ireland.
Gobban find mac
Lugdach (c. 560 – 639) was...
-
Loyalist Gael also
named John MacRae, who was
known in
Gaelic as Iain mac a’
Ghobha, who lost his arm in
combat during the
American Revolution, is particularly...