Dunvegan Castle On Visit To Isle Of Skye Inner Hebrides Scotland

Tour Scotland travel video clip, with Scottish music, of Dunvegan Castle on ancestry visit to the West Coast of the Isle Of Skye, Inner Hebrides. Built on a rock in an idyllic loch side setting, Dunvegan is the oldest continuously inhabited castle in Scotland. It is the seat of the MacLeod of MacLeod, chief of the Clan MacLeod. Probably a fortified site from the earliest times, the castle was first built in the 13th century and developed piecemeal over the centuries. In the 19th century the whole castle was remodelled in a mock medieval style.. Dunvegan Castle has been the home of the chiefs of the Clan MacLeod since 1270. Sir Reginald MacLeod of MacLeod, KCB, born 1st of February 1847, died 20th of August 1935, was the 27th chief of the Scottish clan Clan MacLeod. He was the son of Norman MacLeod of MacLeod, born 1812, died 1898, 25th chief of Clan MacLeod and his wife Louisa Barbara St. John, born 1818, died 1880, only daughter of the 14th Baron St John of Bletso. He was educated at Harrow and Cambridge. On 17th of April 1877, MacLeod of MacLeod married Lady Agnes Mary Cecilia Northcote the daughter of Sir Stafford Northcote, later 1st Earl of Iddesleigh, and Cecilia Frances Farrer. They had two daughters. Sir Reginald became 27th chief of Clan MacLeod in 1929 on the death of his elder brother Norman Magnus and died six years later in 1935. His daughter Olive was noted for her journey of 3,700 miles into the heart of Africa to visit her fiancé's grave. The MacLeod waterfalls on the Moa Kabi river are named after her. The famous Fairy Flag of the MacLeod's was mounted by Sir Reginald. An expert from the Victoria and Albert Museum discussed with Sir Reginald the possible origins of the flag, avoiding reference to the supernatural. The chief listened and said, " You may believe that, but I know that it was given to my ancestor by the fairies. " Sir Reginald was the owner of the island of St Kilda when the last inhabitants left the island in 1930. He sold the island to Lord Dumfries, later Marquess of Bute in 1931. The surname McLeod was first found in on the Isle of Lewis, Scottish Gaelic: Leòdhas, where the Siol Tormod branch held the territories of Harris, Glenelg and Dunvegan Castle in Skye; while the Siol Torquil branch held Assynt and Cadboll, and the Island of Ramasay. McLeod has been spelled MacLeod, MacCleod, MacCloud, MacLoud and many more. Neil McLeod, a Scottish convict from Aberdeen, was transported aboard the Asia on July 29th, 1823, settling in Van Diemen's Land, Australia; Alexander McLeod, a British Convict who was convicted in Edinburgh, Scotland for 7 years, was transported aboard the Asia on 5th November 1835, arriving in Tasmania; Ann McLeod, a Scottish convict from Edinburgh, was transported aboard the Arab on December 14, 1835, settling in Van Diemen's Land, Australia; Frances Mcleod, aged 25, arrived in Auckland, New Zealand aboard the ship Westminster in 1843; Janet McLeod arrived in Nova Scotia, Canada, in 1773; Hector McLeod, aged 19, arrived in Red River, Canada in 1812; Malcolm McLeod, aged 28, a farmer, arrived in Quebec, Canada, aboard the ship Baltic Merchant in 1815; Angus McLeod, aged 30, landed in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, America, in 1774; Duncan McLeod, aged 25, arrived in North Carolina, America, in 1813 All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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