Places called "island" etc. that are not islands
Some places in Scotland with names including "isle" or "island" are not islands. They include: Lewis and Harris are separated by a range of hills but form one island, and are sometimes referred to as "
Lewis and Harris". Isle of Whithorn and the Black Isle are peninsulas, and Isleornsay is a village which looks out onto the island of
Ornsay. There is no commonly accepted derivation for "Burntisland" which had numerous other forms in the past, such as "Brintilun" and "Ye Brint Eland". Gluss Isle at the western entrance to
Sullom Voe is one of the many promontories in Orkney and Shetland connected to a larger body of land by an
ayre.
Other elements Farm, on Mainland Shetland, with Isle of Vementry in hinterground The name "Inch" (
Innis) can mean island (e.g.
Inchkenneth,
Inchcolm), but is also used for
terra firma surrounded by marsh e.g.
Markinch,
Insch.
Eilean is
Gaelic for "island". However, Inistrynich, Eilean na Maodail, Eilean Dubh and Liever Island are all
promontories on
Loch Awe as opposed to islands, despite their names. Likewise
Eilean Aoidhe on
Loch Fyne. The Black Isle is also
An t-Eilean Dubh in Gaelic, while
Eilean Glas is part of Scalpay. "-holm" is also common as a suffix in various landlocked placenames, especially in the far south of mainland Scotland e.g.
Langholm,
Kirk Yetholm, Holmhead (by
Cumnock), Holmhill (next to
Thornhill,
Nithsdale). Some of these were river islands in their time, or dry land surrounded by marsh. "Holm" can be found in an element in Holmsgarth, now a suburb of
Lerwick and the
Parish of Holm on
Mainland Shetland and
Mainland Orkney respectively. Neither of these is an island in its own right.
Islands named after mainland areas Likewise, occasionally an island may be named after a location on the nearby mainland, or a major neighbouring island – or vice versa. Examples of this include:
Vementry, which was originally the name of an island, but whose name has been transferred to a nearby farm on Mainland Shetland;
Oldany Island, whose name has been transferred to
Oldany;
Cramond Island which is named after neighbouring
Cramond (a district of
Edinburgh); and
Eilean Mhealasta in the Outer Hebrides, which is named after
Mealista on Lewis. The name
Easdale appears to be the combination of
eas, which is Gaelic for "waterfall" and
dal, the
Norse for "valley". However, it is not clear why either description should apply to this tiny island which is low-lying and has no waterfalls and the name may have come from the nearby
village of the same name on Seil. off the coast of
Boreray, St Kilda ==Stacks==