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From Glencoe to Aboyne III: a virtual 17th century migration

NOTE: Please read Parts I and II if you haven’t yet done so, then return here to complete the series. When I first began this exploration as a Covid-driven hobby, I looked at maps of Scotland, tracing possible routes from Glencoe to Aboyne that generally avoided what I assumed to be a pure no-man’s land
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From Glencoe to Aboyne II: surviving the 17th century Highlands

Drone footage of Glencoe in winter | TourScotland Part I of this mini-series explored the Massacre of Glencoe and its aftermath, including possible escape and migration scenarios that may have involved a very young Peter Cromar. Our goal was not to prove the migration, just to demonstrate it was not impossible. Here, we attempt to
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From Glencoe to Aboyne I: reversing the riddle

YE loyal Macdonalds, awaken! awaken!Why sleep ye so soundly in face of the foe?The clouds pass away, and the morning is breaking;But when will awaken the Sons of Glencoe? Mary Maxwell Campbell | Lament for Glencoe So, after around 30 journal entries exploring the origins of the Cromars in Aberdeenshire, and with all of that
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Migrations II: first forays out from Aboyne

A guilty pleasure I’ve made no secret of one of my deeply guilty pleasures: watching Outlander. You’ll find this show somewhere in a demonic Venn diagram intersecting Downton Abbey, Game of Thrones, World on Fire, and H. G. Wells’ The Time Machine, with some generic beach-read romance novel love scenes bordering on female-gaze porn thrown
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Migrations I: from Aboyne to the four corners of the earth

Dunedin On the east coast of New Zealand’s South Island lies the small city of Dunedin (duh-NEE-din), named in honor of the capital of Scotland, Edinburgh (ED-in-bur-ah , not eed-in-burg), which is confusing unless you are aware of the Gàidhlig name of that ancient city: Dùn Èideann (tun-EE-chin). There are other Dunedins in the world






