Node what you don't know!!!!!
Scots
Gaelic place name given to many Scottish
portage points
("
tairbeart" meaning "
isthmus" or "
peninsula"). Western
Scotland and the
Hebrides are full of places where two mountainous
areas come together and touch, with two
fjords in between that don't
quite meet up in the middle.
A low, narrow bit of land connects the two mountains, just the thing
for dragging a Viking longship across for a nifty shortcut. Towns
and castles have grown up in many of these strategic places, invariably
called "Tarbert" (T on the map). The fjords (both
of them) are called "Loch Tarbert".
/
/
/
Beinn na ceud |
|
/
West |
/
Loch \________
_______/ East
Tarbert-> _______) T (______ <-Loch
/
\ Tarbert
|
Beinn na dara \
/
/
/
/
In my handy little Routemaster Road Atlas of Great Britain,
I spot at least five of the things:
The last Tarbert is the scene of
Robert the Bruce's portage of a galley
to undo the ghost of King Magnus of Norway's
1098 conquest of Kintyre
via a similar feat.
Sources:
The aforementioned atlas
http://www.mallaigheritage.org.uk/galley.htm