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Shetlopedia - The Shetland Encyclopaedia
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This Month's Featured Article
Noss as seen from the Ward of Bressay.
Noss is a small and now uninhabited island within the North Sea lying east of Bressay from which it is separated by the narrow Noss Sound. The high cliffs of the east coast and the hillside covered with moorland and heather show a stunning contrast to the gentle and grassy low-lying western half of the island. In historical times the major settlement was at Hametoun, the place which is today known as Gungstie at the west side of the island. The remains of a medieval chapel and burial ground are still visible near the farmhouse of Gungstie which itself was built in the 1670s.
Seabird City or Garden of the Cliffs - both nicknames attributed to the small Isle of Noss was declared a National Nature Reserve under an agreement between Nature Conservancy, the predecessor body of Scottish Natural Heritage (SNH) and Garth Estate which owns the island, as early as in 1955. For more information, click this link. |
Shetland Places
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Explore Shetland step by step When rambling through Shetland To get a taste of what you will see Looking for some indoor leisure activities? Further advice for visitors to Shetland Featured Place
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Shetland Life
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Shetland's best values: The people! Present Day Shetland
Yachts from the Bergen Race in the Peerie Dock, with the Flavour of Shetland
event on Victoria Pierin the background. Picture By:Jeannie. |
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Monthly Spotlight
Robert Alan Jamieson was born in Lerwick on the 28th of January, 1958, one of two Up Helly-Aa babies born that year. He is the third son of Bertie Jamieson of Melby, Sandness and his wife Agnes Christina (Chrissie) Anderson of Grobsness and Gonfirth. He was educated at Sandness Primary School, Aith Junior High School and the Anderson High School, Lerwick. Alan began to publish stories and poems in The New Shetlander and Shetland Life in his late teens and was fortunate to enjoy the encouragement and support of John J. Graham, Laurence I. Graham and others such as Mary Blance and Rhoda Bulter. He was the first person to benefit from an arts development grant from the Shetland Islands Council in 1982, a controversial event which nonetheless helped create the climate for the establishment of the Shetland Arts Trust. His first novel Soor Hearts was published in 1983 and a second, Thin Wealth, set during the North Sea Oil boom, appeared in 1986. He was the recipient of a Scottish Arts Council writer's bursary that year, and a collection of poetry, Shoormal, followed. He was one of the founders of the short-lived broadsheet Briggistanes, along with Anne Dickie and the late John McKee. Alan returned to full-time education in 1988, attending the University of Edinburgh, where he studied English Language and Literature. In 1989, Islesburgh produced his first play, 'An Aald Lion Lies Doon' and his third novel, A Day at the Office, was published in 1991, while he was a student. To read more, click here.
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