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Taken 19-Apr-11
Visitors 11


62 of 272 photos
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Keywords:Beautiful Buildings, Blue sky, Bridge, Bush, Bushes, Canon, Canon 550D, Canon DSLR, Canon T2i, Castle, Castles in Scotland, Castles of Scotland, Digital SLR, Eilean Donan Castle, Grass, Great Britain, Green, Greenery, Heritage, Heritage monument, Heritage structure, Hill, Historic Building, Historic Monument, Historic structure, Historical Monument, Historical Structure, Image, Lake, Loch, Loch Duich, Path, People, Picture Photo, Rock, Rocks, SLR, Sandy path, Scotland, Scottish Highlands, Stone Bridge, Stones, Tourist, Tourist Attraction, Tourists, Tree, Trees, United Kingdom, Water, White sandy path, tourism
Photo Info

Dimensions5184 x 3456
Original file size9.6 MB
Image typeJPEG
Color spaceProPhoto RGB
Date taken19-Apr-11 17:42
Date modified26-Mar-13 08:09
Shooting Conditions

Camera makeCanon
Camera modelCanon EOS REBEL T2i
Focal length35 mm
Max lens aperturef/4.4
Exposure1/320 at f/10
FlashNot fired, compulsory mode
Exposure bias0 EV
Exposure modeAuto
Exposure prog.Normal
ISO speedISO 100
Metering modeCenter-weighted average
Landscape outside the entrance to the Eilean Doonan Castle in Sc

Landscape outside the entrance to the Eilean Doonan Castle in Sc

Tourists sitting outside the entrance to the Eilean Donan Castle in Scotland. The area around the lake near the castle has a walking path which allows people to move around and get a great view of the castle (very useful to photographers). Towards the left of the photo, you can see the stone bridge that leads to the castle. The Eilean Donan castle is located on the Eilean Donan island, located in the western Highlands of Scotland at a distance of around 1 km from the nearby village of Dornie. The Castle is located on the Loch Duich. The island was named after Donnan of Eigg, a martyred Celtic saint, which was martyred in 617. He was supposed to have built a church here, but there are no remains of this church. The castle was built approximately in the 13th century, and was finally destroyed in the early 18th century after the clan in the castle were involved in the Jacobite uprising. The castle belongs to the Clan Macrae. It is also famous as the castle that is one of the most famous castles of Scotland, being highly photographed. The current structure of the castle is after reconstruction in the twentieth century, this reconstruction being done by Lt. Col. John MacRae-Gilstrap, and to make the whole place more tourist friendly, a bridge was constructed to give easier access to the castle. Now the castle is the 3rd most visited castle in Scotland.