Tour Scotland Photograph Ben Ledi


Tour Scotland photograph of Ben Ledi, Scotland. Ben Ledi is a mountain in Perthshire. It lies about four miles North West of Callander, near the village of Kilmahog. It is situated in the Trossachs hills, which are often regarded as having some of the most romantic scenery in the Scottish Highlands. Ben Ledi is particularly well known through Walter Scott's poem Lady of the Lake. Supposedly in ancient times, Beltane rites were observed on the summit. In 1791 the Rev Doctor James Robertson being minister of the parish at the time, was required to write a description of the parish for the First Statistical Account of Scotland. In his report he mistakenly, due to the similarity to le dia, took the name Ben Ledi to mean " hill of god " which suited the purposes of the kirk of the day. The name is in fact a corruption of Beinn Leitir which translates to " the Hill of the Slope ", which is a very suitable description of the long south shoulder used to access the summit.



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