*** Welcome to piglix ***

Little Cumbrae

Little Cumbrae
Gaelic name Cumaradh Beag
Meaning of name Little island of the Cymric people
Location
Little Cumbrae is located in North Ayrshire
Little Cumbrae
Little Cumbrae
Little Cumbrae shown within North Ayrshire
OS grid reference NS148517
Coordinates 55°43′N 4°57′W / 55.72°N 4.95°W / 55.72; -4.95
Physical geography
Island group Islands of the Clyde
Area 313 hectares (1.21 sq mi)
Area rank 84 
Highest elevation Lighthouse Hill 123 metres (404 ft)
Administration
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Country Scotland
Council area North Ayrshire
Demographics
Population 0
Lymphad3.svg
References
Cumbrae Lighthouse
Lighthouse on Little Cumbrae.jpg
Little Cumbrae Lighthouse
Location Firth of Clyde
Coordinates 55°43.2179′N 4°58.0236′W / 55.7202983°N 4.9670600°W / 55.7202983; -4.9670600
Year first constructed 1793
Year first lit 1997 (current tower)
Automated 1977
Construction

Traditional white tower (inoperative)

hexagonal/cylindrical tower
Focal height 92 feet (28 m)
Range nautical miles
Characteristic Fl. W 6 sec

Little Cumbrae (Scots: Wee Cumbrae, Scottish Gaelic: Cumaradh Beag) is an island in the Firth of Clyde, in North Ayrshire, Scotland. The island is known locally as Wee Cumbrae.

The Gaelic name Cumaradh means "place of the Cymric people", referring to the Brittonic-speaking inhabitants of the Kingdom of Strathclyde. Alternatively, the name Cumbrae may derive from Kil Maura meaning "cell or church of a female saint".

Little Cumbrae was recorded as Kumbrey circa 1300, Cumbraye circa 1330 and Litill Comeray in 1515 and was also formerly known as Little or Wee Cumray.

The Cumbraes are referred to as the Kumreyiar in the Norse Saga of Haakon Haakonarson.

Little Cumbrae lies barely a kilometre to the south of its larger neighbour, Great Cumbrae, a few kilometres distant from the mainland town of Largs. The islands are collectively referred to as The Cumbraes. In stark contrast to its neighbour, green and fertile Great Cumbrae, Little Cumbrae is a rough and rocky island. With its many cliffs and rocky outcrops, Little Cumbrae bears more of a resemblance to a Hebridean island than to some of its neighbours in the Clyde.

A number of uninhabited islets skirt the island's east coast, Castle Isle, the Broad Islands and Trail Isle.

Today the island's main settlement is at Little Cumbrae House on the eastern shore, facing the Scottish mainland.

Traditional white tower (inoperative)

Robert II is said to have built a castle on the island which was demolished by Cromwell's soldiers in 1653.


...
Wikipedia

...