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Taken 20-Apr-11
Visitors 17


90 of 272 photos
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Categories & Keywords

Category:Architecture and Structures
Subcategory:Castles
Subcategory Detail:
Keywords:Bridge, Bridge over moat, Castle, Castle in Scotland, Children, Grass, Great Britain, Green, Greenery, Heritage, Heritage monument, Heritage structure, Highlands, Historical Building, Historical Monument, Historical Structure, Lake Ness, Lake in Scotland, Loch, Loch Ness, Path, Path inside Urquhart Castle, People walking, Plant, Plants, Remains, Remains of wall, Ruins, Scotland, Scottish Highlands, Stone Bridge, Stone building, Tourist, Tourist Attraction, Tourists, United Kingdom, Urquhart Castle, Walking People, stone wall, tourism, wall
Photo Info

Dimensions5184 x 3456
Original file size13.3 MB
Image typeJPEG
Color spaceProPhoto RGB
Date taken20-Apr-11 16:01
Date modified1-Mar-13 00:47
Shooting Conditions

Camera makeCanon
Camera modelCanon EOS REBEL T2i
Focal length135 mm
Max lens aperturef/5.7
Exposure1/250 at f/5.6
FlashNot fired, compulsory mode
Exposure bias0 EV
Exposure modeAuto
Exposure prog.Normal
ISO speedISO 100
Metering modeCenter-weighted average
Tourists on a stone bridge crossing the moat at Urquhart Castle

Tourists on a stone bridge crossing the moat at Urquhart Castle

Tourists crossing a stone bridge that covers the gap where a moat used to be just outside the structure of Urquhart Castle on the shore of Loch Ness in Scotland. One of the most beautiful castles in Scotland is Urquhart Castle, especially because of its setting with the greenery and also because of Loch Ness. It is located on the shore of Loch Ness, in the Inverness region, along the A82. Though the castle is a high state of ruin, it was a powerful castle in its time, with the earliest account of some structure from the 6th century, mentioned in accounts of St. Columba. There is no definite dating of the time of the origin, although some radiocarbon datings show evidence of some settlement even in the 5th century. Records show the existence of a castle in the 13th century and played its part in the battle between the English and the Scots. The final destruction of the castle happend in the year 1692 during the battle against the Jacobite forces. It was never re-constructed after that, but remains a high profile tourist attraction.