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John o'Groats : ウィキペディア英語版
John o' Groats

John o' Groats (Gaelic: ''Taigh Iain Ghròt'') is a village in the Canisby parish of Caithness, in the far north of Scotland. John o' Groats lies on Britain's northeastern tip, and is popular with tourists as one end of the longest distance between two inhabited British points, with Land's End in Cornwall lying 876 miles to the southwest. It is not quite the most northerly point on the island of Britain; nearby Dunnet Head is further north.
John o' Groats is from London, from Edinburgh, from the Orkney Isles and from the North Pole. It is from the uninhabited island of Stroma.
A passenger ferry operates from John o' Groats to Burwick on South Ronaldsay in Orkney.〔(John O'Groats ferry website )〕
==Name==
The settlement takes its name from Jan de Groote, a Dutchman who once plied a ferry from the Scottish mainland to Orkney, which had recently been acquired from Norway by King James IV. Local legend has that the "o' Groats" refers to John's charge of one groat for use of his ferry, but it actually derives from the Dutch ''de grote'', meaning "the large". People from John o' Groats are known as "Groaters".
The name John o' Groats has a particular resonance because it is often used as a starting or ending point for cycles, walks and charitable events to and from Land's End (at the extreme south-western tip of the Cornish peninsula in England). The phrase ''Land's End to John o' Groats'' is frequently heard both as a literal journey (being the longest possible in Great Britain) and as a metaphor for great or all-encompassing distance, similar to the American phrase ''coast to coast''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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