RSSCategory: Munro

The Storehouse of Foulis

The Storehouse of Foulis

| May 13, 2013 | 0 Comments

Sitting on the banks of the Cromarty Firth between Evanton and Dingwall, the Storehouse of Foulis is a fully restored 18th Century building that once housed the rent paid in kind from the Munro estate. Once only visited by horse and cart, the Storehouse now sits alongside the busy A9 with cars zipping past on [...]

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An Expedition to Munro Country

An Expedition to Munro Country

| May 3, 2013 | 2 Comments

The Highlands in the spring time are a busy, bustling place. Tractors hold up traffic on the A9, lambs dot the earthy-coloured countryside and freshly sown fields of barley await the warmth of summer. A few weeks ago I visited the Highlands for the first time to interview my second Clan Chief, traveling about half [...]

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The Battle of Clachnaharry

The Battle of Clachnaharry

| April 23, 2013 | 2 Comments

Perched atop a hill overlooking the Beauly Firth in Inverness, the Clachnaharry Monument commemorates a particularly fierce battle between Clan Munro and Clan Chattan that occurred in 1454. After a day of sunbathing (in April) in the Highlands, I decided to take advantage of the unusually warm evening and take a walk out to the [...]

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Clan Munro Boosts Highlanders Museum Revamp

Clan Munro Boosts Highlanders Museum Revamp

| April 4, 2013 | 1 Comment

Clan Munro has helped to bring a Highland military museum fundraising campaign one step closer to victory. Hector Munro of Foulis, Chief of Clan Munro, has donated £15,000 on behalf of the clan and wider family to the Highlander’s Museum fundraising appeal. The Highlanders are the descendents of Scottish Regiments originally raised from the clans [...]

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The Fyrish Monument

The Fyrish Monument

| June 21, 2011 | 2 Comments

On a hill overlooking the Cromarty Firth is a striking, most un-highland monument. It is a replica of the gates of Negapatam, a port in Madras (now Chennai) in South East India. Negapatam was originally a Dutch colony, but it was won by the British in 1781. Responsible for this success was Sir Hector Munro, [...]

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