http://www.nts.org.uk/NewsStory/2225/
And here's a link to the National Trust for Scotland.
No longer a true island, John Ainslie's maps as late as 1782 and 1821 do show the Isle as an island. The main street was originally a causeway, with the harbour located on what was then the true Isle.
macausland wrote: 'Angles or Angles?'
Anyway on the Dwelly site http://www.dwelly.info/ they give the following for fire .. 'aingeal .... -il, pl -il, -gle, -glean, -glich, (AC) sm Angel. 2 Messenger. 3 Fire. 4 Light. 5 Sunshine.'
Historians are not very sure where the Angles came from and are just as unsure as to the origins of the Saxons.
Perhaps the Angles, like the various orders of the later Druids, were a tribe of specialists keeping watch in the east for what the sun was up to?
People in the Scottish borders in the middle ages referred to their language as 'Inglis' so they had no problem with the word or description.
Just a thought.
macausland wrote:Is that a gigantic face in that photo or is it my imagination once again? The second to last if you want to know.
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