- Inch
Kenneth (Scottish Gaelic:
Innis Choinnich) is a
small gr****y
island off the west
coast of the Isle of Mull, in Scotland. It is at the
entrance of...
-
Saint Columba, who is said to have
founded a
monastery on the island.
Inchkenneth was
visited in 1773 by
Samuel Johnson and
James Boswell during their...
- Harbour. Inch is a
common Scottish word for an island, such as Inchcolm,
Inchkenneth and na h-Innse Gall (Hebrides), and
derives from the
Scottish Gaelic...
-
tidal island and
connected to Ulva by a bridge.
Little Colonsay and
Inchkenneth (with
Samalan Island) are to Ulva's
south west and
south east respectively...
- body of land by an ayre. The name "Inch" (Innis) can mean
island (e.g.
Inchkenneth, Inchcolm), but is also used for
terra firma surrounded by
marsh e.g...
-
innis meaning island,
often anglicised as "Inch", as in
Inchkeith or
Inchkenneth in Scotland.
State Highway 73 and the
Midland Line
railway both p****...
- Kenneth's
Chapel Inchkenneth 56°26′29″N 6°09′33″W / 56.441258°N 6.159099°W / 56.441258; -6.159099 (St. Kenneth's
Chapel Inchkenneth) Category A 12297...
- 1947 she was sold to Inch
Fishing Co Ltd,
Granton Edinburgh and
renamed Inchkenneth. She was re-registered to
Granton as “GN 26”. On 13
November 1954, George...
- declined.
Boswell said: We were in
hopes to get to Sir
Allan Maclean's at
Inchkenneth, to-night; but the
eight miles [13 km], of
which our road was said to...
- Hebrides, Sir
Allan was
chief of the clan. He
resided at that time on
Inchkenneth, one of his
smaller islands, in the
district of Mull,
where he entertained...