The Black Isle Peninsula

The Black Isle Peninsula Travel Guide

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Introduction

Cromarty: 37km (23 miles) NW of Inverness (via Kessock Bridge)

The Black Isle is one of Scotland's most enchanting peninsulas, a land rich in history, beauty, and mystery. Part of Ross and Cromarty County, it's northwest of Inverness, a 20-minute drive or bus ride away. A car tour would be about 60km (37 miles), but allow plenty of time for stops and country walks along the way.

There's much confusion about the name of the peninsula, because it's neither black nor an island. In summer, the land is green and fertile, with tropical plants flourishing. It has forests, fields of broom and whin, and scattered coastal villages. The peninsula has been inhabited for 7,000 years, as 60-odd prehistoric sites testify. Pictish kings, whose thrones passed down through the female line, once ruled this land. Then the Vikings held sway, and the evidence of many gallows hills testifies to their harsh justice.

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  • North Kessock Hotel - The Black Isle Peninsula
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    • North Kessock Hotel

    • This is a family run hotel, overlooking Beauly Firth, the Kessock Bridge, and Ben Wyvis mountain. Established back in the early 1980s, it offers...

  • Royal Hotel Cromarty - The Black Isle Peninsula
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    • Royal Hotel Cromarty

    • The only hotel in town sits on an embankment near one of the deepest estuaries in Europe. Around 1940, the British navy combined a series of waterfront...

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