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Isle of Ewe : ウィキペディア英語版
Isle of Ewe

Isle of Ewe ((スコットランド・ゲール語:Eilean Iùbh)) is a small Scottish island on the west coast of Ross and Cromarty. There are two competing theories about the meaning of the name; it may be derived from the Old Irish ''eo'', "yew tree", or alternatively from the Gaelic ''eubh'', "echo", reflecting a place-name on the adjoining mainland.
The island is inhabited by a single family, the Grants, who have lived at the Main House in the south of the island since the mid-19th century. The island is privately owned by J.I.H. Macdonald-Buchanan and leased to the Grants. The island previously had more families, but these left during the Second World War, when Loch Ewe was used as an important naval anchorage. The isolated position of the island meant that the children had to endure a round trip each day of about by boat and bus to attend school.〔Haswell-Smith (2004) pp. 184–187〕
==Geography and geology==

The Isle of Ewe is located in Loch Ewe, west of Aultbea in the Ross and Cromarty district of the Highland Region. The island is made up of two principal types of sandstone (Torridonian with acidic soil in the north, Permian or Triassic with more fertile soil in the south) and the shore line varies from flat pebble beaches to cliffs. It is part of the Wester Ross National Scenic Area, one of 40 in Scotland.〔("National Scenic Areas" ). SNH. Retrieved 30 Mar 2011.〕
The island was originally wooded, as recorded in 1549 by Donald Monro who wrote in his ''Description of the Western Isles of Scotland'': "Ellan Ew, haffe myle in length, full of woods, guid for thieves to wait upon uther mens gaire. It perteins to M’Enzie."〔Monro (1549) "Ellan Ew" no. 177〕 Similarly, George Buchanan wrote in his ''Rerum Scoticarum Historia'' (''History of Scotland'') of 1579 that the island was "almost all covered with woods, and good for nothing but to harbour thieves, who rob passengers." Both Monro and Buchanan (who probably used Munro as a source) mistakenly located the island in Loch Broom, instead of Loch Ewe.〔Munro (1961) p. 165〕 By the time ''Black's Picturesque Tourist of Scotland'' was published in 1889, the Isle of Ewe was "in a state of high cultivation; the fields large and well fenced, having been all reclaimed from moorland. There is an extensive dairy on the island." Today the southern island is predominately low-lying farmland, while its northern part remains uncultivated.〔
The most elevated part of the Isle of Ewe is its northern peninsula, rising to at Creag Streap ("climbing cliff"); a prominent rock, Sgeir a' Bhuich ("rock of the roe-buck") lies just offshore, with a larger rocky island, Sgeir an Araig, situated further out in the loch to the north-west of the Isle of Ewe. A peaty hilly area called Sitheanan Dubha ("the black fairy hillocks") occupies most of the island's northern peninsula. It reaches a height of and is dominated by coarse grass, heather and sphagnum moss.〔 In the 1880s, a group of boys reported seeing fairies at that spot. Immediately to the south are two bays – Camas Angus ("Angus' bay") and Camas Beithe ("birch-tree bay") – that afford anchorage to boats. The hummock of Cnoc na Gaoithe ("windy knoll") provides shelter to the two bays. The arable land begins a short distance further south beyond Druium nam Freumh ("ridge of roots"), where a small area of woodland stands. A jetty, built after the Second World War, provides boat access to the mainland.〔
The island has no regularly scheduled boat service, but access can be arranged at Aultbea.〔

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