
| Hermetray | |
|---|---|
| Location | |
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Hermetray
|
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| Hermetray shown within Scotland. | |
| OS grid reference: | NF988741 |
| Names | |
| Gaelic name: | Thearnatraigh |
| Norse name: | Hermunðrs ey |
| Meaning of name: | "Herman's Island" |
| Area and Summit | |
| Area: | 72 ha |
| Area rank: | 169= |
| Highest elevation: | Compass Hill 35 m |
| Population | |
| Population (2001): | 0
|
| Groupings | |
| Island Group: | Uists and Barra |
| Local Authority: | Na h-Eileanan Siar |
| References: | [1][2][3] |
| If shown, area and population ranks are for all Scottish islands and all inhabited Scottish islands respectively. | |
Hermetray (Gaelic: Thearnatraigh) is an uninhabited island off North Uist, in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.
Gulls and buzzards nest in the cliffs. The island periodically gets rats.
Hermetray lies in the Sound of Harris on the edge of the Minch. It is on the south side of the sound, but is legally part of Harris. The island is 72 ha in area, and 35 metres at its highest point, Cnoc a' Chombaiste (Compass Hill). The rock is Lewisian gneiss.
Martin Martin visited the island in 1695 and said of it, that it had:
Martin arguably exaggerated the fertility of the island.
Loch Hermetray and several lochans in the south are fishless.
The island's name is Norse, and means "Herman's Island" (Hermunðrs ey), although it is not known who this person was.
Seòlaid na h-Eala, which is south of the island is named after the Eala Bhàn (White Swan), a famous 17th century birlinn.[2] Seòlaid means a sailing channel, "fairway in the sea" or anchorage.[4]
Martin Martin mentions that there is:
Martin was referring to Lord Seaforth's fishery, set up in 1633, but which collapsed a mere seven years later. It was part of Charles I's "Company of the General Fishery of Great Britain & Ireland".
In 1841, a population of 8 was recorded as living on the island (a single household), but it is now uninhabited.
In 1921, a Norwegian ship, the Puritan was wrecked here. Reportedly the three survivors would not partake of a crate of whisky which was wrecked with them, and did not thank their rescuer, Alasdair Beag of Berneray, when he arranged for them to be returned to their home country. Hebrideans explain this by the name of the ship, although it should be pointed out that the ship's survivors spoke neither Scottish Gaelic nor English.[2]
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Coordinates: 57°39.5′N 7°03′W / 57.6583, -7.05
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