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Milltown of Rothiemay (Scottish Gaelic: Ràth a' Mhuigh) is a small inland village, built mostly of granite, in the north-east of Scotland and is within the Moray council area bordering neighbouring Aberdeenshire across the river to the south-east. Historically part of Banffshire, it is around six miles (ten kilometres) north of Huntly, and 8 miles (13 kilometres) east of Keith. It lies on the banks of the River Deveron, close to where it joins the River Isla. The village has existed for several centuries. Irvine Laidlaw was made a life peer as Baron Laidlaw, of Rothiemay on 14 June 2004.

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rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Milltown of Rothiemay (eu)
  • Ráth a' Mhuigh (ga)
  • Milltown of Rothiemay (fr)
  • Milltown of Rothiemay (en)
rdfs:comment
  • Milltown of Rothiemay, Eskoziako gaeleraz: Ràth a' Mhuigh, Eskoziako herri bat da, Moray eremu administratiboan. (eu)
  • Milltown of Rothiemay est une localité de Moray, en Écosse. La première mention du nom de Rothiemay remonte à 1264.On y trouvait un château qui a été démoli en 1964. (fr)
  • Is sráidbhaile suite i gComhairle Mhoireibh é Ráth a' Mhuigh. (ga)
  • Milltown of Rothiemay (Scottish Gaelic: Ràth a' Mhuigh) is a small inland village, built mostly of granite, in the north-east of Scotland and is within the Moray council area bordering neighbouring Aberdeenshire across the river to the south-east. Historically part of Banffshire, it is around six miles (ten kilometres) north of Huntly, and 8 miles (13 kilometres) east of Keith. It lies on the banks of the River Deveron, close to where it joins the River Isla. The village has existed for several centuries. Irvine Laidlaw was made a life peer as Baron Laidlaw, of Rothiemay on 14 June 2004. (en)
foaf:name
  • (en)
  • Miltown of Rothiemay (en)
  • Ràth a' Mhuigh (en)
geo:lat
geo:long
foaf:depiction
  • http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Milltown_of_Rothiemay.jpg
dcterms:subject
Wikipage page ID
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Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
sameAs
unitary scotland
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thumbnail
country
  • Scotland (en)
label position
  • left (en)
map type
  • Scotland (en)
official name
  • Miltown of Rothiemay (en)
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  • 57.5226 -2.7565
has abstract
  • Milltown of Rothiemay, Eskoziako gaeleraz: Ràth a' Mhuigh, Eskoziako herri bat da, Moray eremu administratiboan. (eu)
  • Milltown of Rothiemay est une localité de Moray, en Écosse. La première mention du nom de Rothiemay remonte à 1264.On y trouvait un château qui a été démoli en 1964. (fr)
  • Milltown of Rothiemay (Scottish Gaelic: Ràth a' Mhuigh) is a small inland village, built mostly of granite, in the north-east of Scotland and is within the Moray council area bordering neighbouring Aberdeenshire across the river to the south-east. Historically part of Banffshire, it is around six miles (ten kilometres) north of Huntly, and 8 miles (13 kilometres) east of Keith. It lies on the banks of the River Deveron, close to where it joins the River Isla. The village has existed for several centuries. The 17th-century cartographer James Gordon (1617–1686) was from Rothiemay. It was the birthplace of James Ferguson FRS (1710–1776), instrument-maker and astronomer. More recently, BBC radio presenter James Naughtie was born and brought up in the village. Rothiemay Castle, partly dating from the 15th century, was rebuilt as a baronial country house in 1788, by James Duff, 2nd Earl Fife. The castle was demolished in 1963. The village has its own primary school, and formerly had a railway station by the River Deveron 2+1⁄8 miles (3.4 kilometres) from the village. Almost all trace of the station has been lost although trains still operate on the Keith to Huntly mainline. Irvine Laidlaw was made a life peer as Baron Laidlaw, of Rothiemay on 14 June 2004. (en)
  • Is sráidbhaile suite i gComhairle Mhoireibh é Ráth a' Mhuigh. (ga)
constituency scottish parliament
constituency westminster
gaelic name
  • Ràth a' Mhuigh (en)
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