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SCOTLAND
The Scottish capital, Edinburgh, is a handsome
and ancient city, famous for its magnificent castle
and Palace of Holyroodhouse as well as for a world-acclaimed
international arts festival and some excellent
museums – not least the outstanding National Museum
of Scotland.
A short journey west is Glasgow, a sprawling industrial
metropolis that has done much to improve its image
in recent years and can now boast a range of fine
museums and galleries to complement the impressive
architectural legacy of its eighteenth- and nineteenth-century
heyday.
Southern Scotland, often underrated, features
some gorgeous scenery, but nothing quite to compare
to the shadowy glens and well-walked hills of
the Trossachs, or to the Highlands, whose multitude
of mountains, seacliffs, glens and lochs cover
the northern two-thirds of the country.
Inverness is an obvious base, although Fort William,
at the opposite end of the Great Glen near Ben
Nevis, Britain's highest mountain, is an alternative.
Some of Britain's most thrilling wilderness experiences
are to be had on the Scottish islands, the most
accessible of which extend in a long rocky chain
off the Atlantic coast, from Arran through Skye
(the most visited of the Hebrides) to the Western
Isles, where the remarkably hostile terrain harbours
some of the last bastions of the Gaelic language.
At Britain's northern extreme lie the sea- and
wind-buffeted Orkney and Shetland islands, whose
rich Norse heritage makes them distinct in dialect
and culture from mainland Scotland, while their
wild scenery offers some of Britain's finest birdwatching
and some stunning archeological remains.
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