Blue Lights East Bank River Tay On St Andrew’s Day 2021 Visit To Perth Perthshire Scotland

Tour Scotland 4K late Autumn early Winter and St Andrew’s Day 2021, 30th November, travel video of blue lights on the East Bank of the River Tay on rainy ancestry, genealogy, family history visit to Perth, Perthshire. The Flag of Scotland, called The Saltire or Saint Andrew's Cross, is a blue field with a white saltire. Saint Andrew was a Galilean fisherman before he and his brother Simon Peter became disciples of Jesus Christ. He was crucified by the Romans on an X-shaped cross at Patras in Greece and, hundreds of years later, his remains were moved to Constantinople and then, in the 13th century, to Amalfi in southern Italy where they are kept to this day. Saint Andrew is the patron saint of Scotland, Greece, Russia, Romania, and Barbados. St Andrew is celebrated on 30 November every year, the same day he was crucified in 60 AD.. Saint Andrew’s Saltire Cross have been ingrained in Scottish national symbolism since, but he was only properly established as Scotland’s patron saint in 1320 with the Declaration of Arbroath. The River Tay, Scottish Gaelic: Tatha, is the longest river in Scotland and the seventh longest in the United Kingdom. The Tay originates in western Scotland on the slopes of Ben Lui mountain, Scottish Gaelic: Beinn Laoigh, then flows easterly across the Highlands, through Loch Dochart, Loch Iubhair and Loch Tay, then continues east through Strathtay, in the centre of Scotland, then south east through Perth, where it becomes tidal, to its mouth at the Firth of Tay, south of Dundee in Tayside All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.

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