| ABER1 | Aberdeen | | Yes |
| ABER2 | Aberchalder | | No |
| ABER3 | Aberdeenshire | | No |
| ABER4 | Aberardar | A hamlet in Inverness-shire. | No |
| ABER5 | Abercairny House | Seat of John Moray, thirteenth of Abercairny. The present house was built in the twentieth century. | No |
| ACAR1 | Acarsaid Fhalaich | | No |
| ACHN1 | Achnacarry Castle | In Lochaber. Destroyed as retribution for Donald Cameron of Lochiel's participation in the rising. | No |
| ACHN2 | Achnasaul | A village on the shore of Loch Arkaig. | No |
| ACHN3 | Achnacarry | A Hamlet in Lochaber. | No |
| ADVO1 | Advocates Library | Library located in Edinburgh | No |
| AIRD1 | The Aird | In the northeast of Skye. | No |
| AIRD2 | The Aird | In Lovat's territory, Inverness-shire. | No |
| AIRT1 | Airth | A village and trading port near Falkirk. | No |
| AIXE1 | Aix-en-Provence | City in southern France. | Yes |
| AIXL1 | Aix-la-Chapelle | 1748 Treaty of Aix-la-Chapelle: France was forced to withdraw support for Charles Edward Stuart https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Aix-la-Chapelle_(1748) | No |
| ALEX1 | Alexander and James | Transport ship. See Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 6, 162. | No |
| ALFO1 | Alford | A village in Aberdeenshire. | Yes |
| ALIS1 | Alisary | A shieling attached to Milton. See Blaikie, Origins of the Forty-Five, note 2 on pp. 250-51. The reference to Alisary in the Lyon in Mourning was used to put a name to the probable remains of Alisary in an archaeological survey of South Uist (Pearson, From Machair to Mountains, p. 169). | No |
| ALLA1 | Allargue | Ancestral house of John Farquharson | Yes |
| ALLO1 | Alloway | A village in Ayrshire. The birthplace of Robert Burns. | No |
| ALLO2 | Alloa | A town on the River Forth, six miles to the east of Stirling. | No |
| ALTH1 | Althash Burn | Identified as such by James Frederick Skinner Gordon, The Book of the Chronicles of Keith [...] (Glasgow: Robert Forrester, 1880), p. 44. | No |
| ALVA1 | Alva | Historically in Stirlingshire. | Yes |
| ALVE1 | Alves | Village in Moray. | Yes |
| AMIE1 | Amiens | France | No |
| ANGU1 | Angus | Shire of Angus, council in Scotland | No |
| ANNA1 | Annan | Town in Dumfries and Galloway, south-west Scotland. | No |
| ANNA2 | River Annan | A river in south-west Scotland. | Yes |
| ANNA3 | Annapolis | Capital of Maryland. | Yes |
| ANTR1 | Antrim | Town in the North of Ireland (County Antrim). | No |
| ANTW1 | Antwerp | | Yes |
| APOS1 | Apostolic Palace | Host to papal conclaves. | No |
| APPI1 | Appin | A coastal district of the Scottish West Highlands | No |
| APPI2 | Appin House | | No |
| APPL1 | Applecross Bay | | No |
| ARBU1 | Arbuthnott | Historically in Kincardineshire (Mearns). | Yes |
| ARDN1 | Ardnamurchan | Peninsula in Lochaber, Scotland | No |
| ARDO1 | Ardoch | Community in Perth and Kinross, Scotland | No |
| ARDO2 | Ardoch Old Bridge | Bridge spanning the River Knaik. | No |
| ARGY1 | Argyleshire | Also called Argyll, Argylleshire | No |
| ARIS1 | Arisaig | Lochaber | Yes |
| ARMA1 | Armadale | On Skye. | Yes |
| ARMA2 | Armathwaite Hall | Home, in 1745, to Benson Highmore. | No |
| ARYN1 | Arnish Point | | Yes |
| ASHB1 | Ashbourne | Ashbourne is a market town in the Derbyshire Dales district in Derbyshire, England. | No |
| ASHL1 | Ashley | Near Bath | No |
| ATHO1 | Atholl | Where the Atholl raids took place | Yes |
| AUCH1 | Auchendinny House | | No |
| AULD1 | Auldearn | Village outside Nairn House. | Yes |
| AUST1 | Austrian Netherlands | A significant theatre in the War of Austrian Succession (1740-48). | No |
| AYRS1 | Ayrshire | | No |
| AYRX1 | Ayr | | Yes |
| BADE1 | Badenoch | Region in the Highlands | Yes |
| BALE1 | Baleshare | North Uist | Yes |
| BALF1 | Balfinlay | Also Bellfinlay, part of Nunton (outer Hebrides) | No |
| BALO1 | Balodingaghabor | Unidentified. A hill near Monkstadt House. | No |
| BALQ1 | Balquhidder | Village in Perthshire | No |
| BALT1 | HMS Baltimore | Ship | No |
| BALT2 | Baltic Sea | | No |
| BANF1 | Banffshire | | No |
| BANF2 | Banff | A town in Aberdeenshire (historically in Banffshire. | No |
| BANN1 | Bannockburn | City in Scotland | No |
| BANN2 | Bannockburn Muir | | No |
| BARB1 | Barbados | | No |
| BARN1 | Berneray | | No |
| BARN2 | Barnhill | A hill near Inverness. | No |
| BARR1 | Barra | | Yes |
| BATH1 | Bath | Seaside resort town in England | Yes |
| BATH2 | Bathgate | Town in West Lothian, Scotland. | Yes |
| BATH3 | Parish of Bathgate | Historically in Linlithgowshire. | No |
| BEDF1 | Bedfordshire | A county in England. | Yes |
| BEIN1 | Beinn Archarain | A hill in Chisholm's territory. | No |
| BEIN2 | Beinn Ruigh Choinnich | Hill near Lochboisdale. | No |
| BELF1 | Belfast Lough | Inlet in the north of Ireland. | Yes |
| BELL1 | Belle-Île | Island off the coast of Brittany. | No |
| BELL2 | Bellone | French privateer ship. | No |
| BELM1 | Belmont House | The present house on this site was built in the nineteenth century. | No |
| BENA1 | Ben Alder | Mountain in the Highlands. | Yes |
| BENB1 | Benbecula | Western Isles | Yes |
| BENC1 | Ben Corodale | Beinn Choradail. A mountain on South Uist. | No |
| BERG1 | Bergues | | No |
| BERL1 | Berlin | In the eighteenth century, the capital city of Prussia. | Yes |
| BERN1 | Canton de Berne | One of the constituent states of Switzerland. | No |
| BERW1 | Berwick-upon-Tweed | A town near the Anglo-Scottish border. | Yes |
| BIEL1 | Bield Inn | Property of Thomas Tweedie of Oliver. | No |
| BLAC1 | Black Barony | House in the Scottish Borders. | No |
| BLAC2 | Blackwell Hall | Residence of Sir Richard Musgrave just south of Carlisle (Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 25). | No |
| BLAI1 | Blair Castle | Perthshire seat of the Dukes of Atholl. | Yes |
| BLAI2 | Blair Atholl | Village in Perthshire, Scotland | No |
| BLAI3 | Blairfettie | Now deserted village near Blair Atholl | No |
| BLAI4 | Blair Inn | Inn at Blair Atholl. Kept by Patrick McGlashan at the time of the 1745 Rising, when it was occupied by the Jacobite army during the siege of Blair Castle. | No |
| BONN1 | Bonnyhaugh | A house attached to the land and mill of Bonnytoun in Edinburgh, where Stewart Carmichael had his linen manufactory. | No |
| BORD1 | Bord Cruin | A broad, flat rock to the east of Fladaigh Chùain. | No |
| BORN1 | Bornesketaig | A settlement in Trotternish. | No |
| BORR1 | Borrodale | Refers to Borrodale Bay or Beach in Lochaber, not to Borrodale on Skye. | No |
| BORR2 | Borrodale House | Angus MacDonald, fourth of Boradale's house, burned by the time of Charles Edward Stuart's return from the Hebrides. | No |
| BOST1 | Boston | | Yes |
| BOTC1 | Botcherby | Botcherby is a former village in Cumbria, England, now considered a suburb of the city of Carlisle. It is located east of the River Petteril south of its confluence with the River Eden, Cumbria. | No |
| BOUC1 | Bouchout | Camp of Bouchout in Brussels. | No |
| BOUL1 | Boulogne | France | No |
| BOUR1 | Bourblach | Formerly a township near the village of Morar. Might also refer to the nearby hill. | No |
| BOWC1 | Bowchell Hall | Not identified. In Glenlivet. Burned in the aftermath of Culloden. | No |
| BOYN1 | River Boyne | River in Leinster, Ireland | No |
| BOYN2 | Boyndie | Village in Aberdeenshire | Yes |
| BRAE2 | Braemar | A village in Aberdeenshire. | No |
| BRAI1 | Braid Hills | In Edinburgh. | No |
| BRAM1 | Brampton | | No |
| BRAN1 | Brandenburg | A Margraviate in Germany roughly corresponding to the modern Province of Brandenburg. | No |
| BRAS1 | Brasenose College | An Oxford college. | No |
| BREA1 | Breagach | A settlement in Banffshire, burned in 1746. | No |
| BREA2 | Breadalbane | Region in the Southern/Central Highlands | No |
| BREC1 | Brechin | Town in Angus, Scotland | No |
| BRES1 | Brest | Port city in Brittany, France. | Yes |
| BRIC1 | Brae | Also known as Brica or Brea | Yes |
| BRID1 | Bridge Street | Street in Inverness continuous with Inverness Bridge. | No |
| BRID2 | Bridge of Don | Five arch bridge in Aberdeen, Scotland. | No |
| BRID3 | Bridgewater | Ship. | No |
| BRID4 | Inverness Bridge | Seven-arched stone bridge spanning the River Ness at Inverness, 1685-1849. | No |
| BRIT1 | The British Coffee-House | In London. A contemporary source observes that “Scots go generally to the British” (Macky, A Journal through England, [London: 1714], p. 108). Citing its appearance in the Lyon in Mourning as evidence, Pittock suggests that this may have been one of a number of coffee-houses used by Jacobites, both to enjoy mixing with others of shared politics and to pass messages (Material Culture and Sedition, p. 101). | No |
| BRIT2 | Britain | A geopolitical entity, distinct from Great Britain, which refers only to the landmass of Great Britain. Excludes Ireland. | No |
| BROA1 | Broadhaugh | The original house, demolished in 1963, stood to the west of the modern Breda House. | No |
| BROA2 | Broadford | Village on Skye. | Yes |
| BROU1 | Broughton House | The house of Sir John Murray of Broughton and later of James Dickson of Broughton. The present house on this site was built in the twentieth century. | No |
| BROU2 | Broughton Muir | Not located, but presumably near the village of Broughton. | No |
| BROU3 | Broughton | A village in the Scottish Borders (formerly Peebleshire). | No |
| BRUS1 | Brussels | In Belgium. | No |
| BUBU1 | The Bu of Burray | The seat of Sir James Stewart of Burray on Burray in Orkney. Now the site of Bow Farmhouse. | No |
| BUCH1 | Buchan | A district in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. | Yes |
| BUCH2 | Buchan Ness Point | In Aberdeenshire. | Yes |
| BUNC1 | Bun Craobh | A village in Inverness-shire. | No |
| BUNR1 | Bunrannoch | Site of an abandoned medieval village in Perthshire. | No |
| BURN1 | Burnhall | | No |
| BURN2 | Burnet's Close | | No |
| BURR1 | Burray | Orkney | Yes |
| BURT1 | Burton Upon Trent | Burton upon Trent, also known as Burton-on-Trent or simply Burton, is a market town in the borough of East Staffordshire in the county of Staffordshire, England. | No |
| CABR1 | Cabrach | A parish in Moray. | No |
| CAGE1 | Cluny’s Cage | “There is a certain amount of obscurity about the exact site of Cluny's Cage. Tradition has grown up round a cave above Ben Alder Lodge, near the south-western end of Loch Ericht, figured on the Ord. Sur. as Prince Charles's Cave. Yet it is not quite certain that this was the veritable site of the Cage, the tradition of which is well known to the shepherds and gamekeepers of the district. The Cage was an artificial structure of two storeys (1), on a southern spur of Ben Alder (2), overlooking Loch Ericht (3), on the face of a rocky hill (4), in a thicket of holly (5), so situated that sentries could give warning (6). It was never discovered by the enemy. All traces of the shanty have naturally disappeared, but the site of the cave fulfils the necessary conditions, excepting that of the thicket of holly ; yet, as trees have disappeared in many parts of the Highlands, the holly may have died out here” (Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 68). According to the Lyon in Mourning, the Cage was in the face of Litir-na-lic (p. 1551). | No |
| CAIR1 | Cairnie | Also spelled Cairney. Village in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. | No |
| CAIR2 | Cairnie Burn | A stream that rises in the Mounth, or eastern range of the Grampian Mountains, north of Netherley, Aberdeenshire, Scotland. | No |
| CAIT1 | Caithness | A county in the far northeast of Scotland. | No |
| CALA1 | Calais | Port city in France. | No |
| CALL1 | Callander | A town in the historic county of Perthshire. | Yes |
| CALV1 | Calvay Castle | | No |
| CAMB1 | Cambridge | | Yes |
| CAMM1 | Camastianavaig | A township on Skye. | Yes |
| CAMP1 | Campbeltown | Town in Argyll and Bute. | No |
| CAMU1 | Camusdarach Beach | Near Mallaig in Morar. | No |
| CANN1 | Canna | Island in the Inner Hebrides; Canaigh, Canna, Eilean Chanaigh, Isle of Canna | Yes |
| CANN2 | River Cannich | River which runs through Glen Cannich | Yes |
| CANO1 | The Canongate | Street and district in Edinburgh | No |
| CANO2 | Canongate Tolbooth | | No |
| CANT1 | Cantray House | House of the Dallas family of Cantray, just east of Culloden Moor. No longer standing. | No |
| CAPE1 | Cape Charles | In Virginia. Cape Charles and Cape Henry are known as the Virginia Capes. | No |
| CAPE2 | Cape Henry | In Virginia. Cape Henry and Cape Charles are known as the Virginia Capes. | No |
| CAPH1 | Cap-Haïtien | Formerly Cap-Français. | No |
| CAPT1 | "Captn. Alexr. MacDonalld's house" | | No |
| CARL1 | Carlisle Castle | | Yes |
| CARL2 | Carlisle | | Yes |
| CARL3 | Carlisle Cathedral | | No |
| CARO1 | Carolina | One of the early English (and later British) colonies in North America, partitioned in 1712. | No |
| CARR1 | Carriden | | No |
| CART1 | Carthage | Ancient city in northern Africa. | No |
| CAST1 | Castlehill | To the east of Inverness (now incorporated into Inverness). The house on site was built or rebuilt after the Rising of 1745. | No |
| CAST2 | Castle Semple | Located in Renfrewshire, Scotland | No |
| CAST3 | Castle Lachlan | Attacked by the government in 1746 and thereafter abandoned. | No |
| CAST4 | Doune Castle | A medieval castle, historically in Perthshire. | No |
| CAST5 | Brahan Castle | Home of Kenneth Mackenzie, Lord Fortrose, south of Dingwall. | No |
| CATE1 | Cateley | Not firmly identified, but probably Catlodge (Caitleag in Gaelic, with alternative spellings of Cattelleitt, Catleak, Catlaig, and Catalach). | No |
| CAVE1 | Prince's Cave, Glen Corodale | A cave in Glen Corodale in which Charles Edward Stuart stayed. | No |
| CHAM1 | Champagne | Historical province in France. | No |
| CHAR1 | Charleville | a commune in France | No |
| CHAR2 | Charing Cross | | No |
| CHEL1 | Chelsea | | Yes |
| CIAA1 | Abhainn Cia-aig | A small river in Lochaber. | No |
| CITA1 | Citadel of Leith | | No |
| CLAD1 | Claddach Carinish | Southeast of Carinish, North Uist. "Cladach" means "beach" or "shore." | Yes |
| CLAS1 | Clashnoir | A settlement in Glenlivet. | No |
| CLEA1 | Cleanhill | A hill and some sort of settlement in Banffshire. In Roy's Military Survey, it appears as Glugyhill. | No |
| CLES1 | Clestrain's house | The house of James Fea of Clestrain at Sound on the Island of Shapinsay (Orkney). Burned in the aftermath of the '45. Apparently unrelated to the later Hall of Clestrain on Orkney Mainland. | No |
| CLIF1 | Clifton | Where the battle of Clifton (Clifton Moor Skirmish) took place | Yes |
| CLUN1 | Cluny's house | The present castle was built between 1800 and 1810, on the site of Ewen Macpherson, eighteenth of Cluny's house destroyed in the aftermath of the Rising. | No |
| CLUN2 | Clunes | A hamlet in Lochaber. | No |
| CLUN3 | Cluny | The estate of Ewen Macpherson, eighteenth of Cluny. | No |
| CLYD1 | River Clyde | A river in Scotland which flows through Glasgow. The eighth longest river in the United Kingdom. | Yes |
| CLYN1 | Hill of Clyne | | No |
| COAL1 | Coalhill | A short street on the Water of Leith in Leith. | No |
| COCH1 | Cochivile | Identity unclear. Mackay Scobie seems to identify Cochivil with Bunrannoch ("Campbell Militia," p. 21), while the Atholl Chronicles has Cushavil and Cosvile (vol. 3, pp. 212, 213). | No |
| COIR1 | Coire Mheadhoin | A cave. | No |
| COIR2 | Coire Dhó | Blaikie notes several variations on the name: "Coiraghoth, as it is spelt by Glenaladale, is a phonetic rendering of the Gaelic Coiredhogha, the last three letters of which are silent, or pronounced as a grunt, while the ‘dh’ has a guttural sound. It means the corry of the river Doe, of which the stream of the Coire Mheadhoin is an affluent. Home spells it Corado (H. H. 253), and Mr. Ross calls it Corriegoe" (Itinerary, p. 61). | No |
| COIR3 | Coire Sgoir adail | Near Loch Hourn. | No |
| COIR4 | Coire nan Gall | | No |
| COIR5 | Coire Beinn nan Cabar | A hollow in Beinn nan Cabar, a hill in Morar. | No |
| COIR6 | Coire Odhar | Also known as "the dun corry," in Lochaber (see Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 59). | No |
| COIR7 | Coire an Iubhair Mòr | At the foot of Ben Alder. | No |
| COIR8 | Coire a Mhaighe | | No |
| COLC1 | Colchester | | Yes |
| COLL1 | College of Arms | London | No |
| COLL2 | Collarig | | No |
| COLT1 | Colt Bridge | In Edinburgh. | No |
| COMM1 | The Commodore | Ship | No |
| CORR1 | Corrieyairack Pass | Through Corrieyairack Hill | Yes |
| CORR2 | Corrybrough | An estate in Inverness-shire. | No |
| COUP1 | Coupar Angus | In Perthshire, formerly in Angus. | No |
| COWA1 | Captain Cowan's ship | Ship belonging to shipmaster James Cowan. Possibly the Leith Pacquet, although Cowan's ownership is only attested from 1753 (NA ADM 106/1110/104-105). | No |
| COWG1 | Cowgate | A street in Edinburgh. | No |
| COWG2 | Cowgate Port | Gateway in Edinburgh. | No |
| CRAI1 | Crail | | Yes |
| CRAI2 | Craighead | A settlement near Mulben in Moray. | No |
| CRAI3 | Craighall Castle | In Perthshire. | No |
| CRAS1 | Craskie | An estate in Glenmoriston. | No |
| CRIE1 | Crieff | | Yes |
| CRIN1 | Cringletie House | House near Eddleston Water. | No |
| CROM1 | Cromwell's Fort | Also known as the Old Citadel, Inverness. | No |
| CROO1 | Crook Inn | | No |
| CROO2 | Crook's Mill | Just outside of Keith. The mill now standing was built in 1895. | No |
| CROS1 | Cross House | Seat of the Laird of Morar in Morar, destroyed in 1746. | No |
| CROS2 | Cross Kirk | Church in Peebles founded by Alexander III in the thirteenth century. It later became a Trinitarian friary. | No |
| CROW1 | Crown Tavern | At the entry to Parliament Close. | No |
| CROY1 | Croy | A village between Inverness and Nairn. | No |
| CUIL1 | Cuillin | A mountain range on Skye. | No |
| CULC1 | Kilravock Castle grounds | Identified as such by Maidment, ed., Spottiswoode Miscellany, vol. 2, p. 496. "Culraick" resembles the Gaelic name: Cill Raithag. | Yes |
| CULL1 | Culloden Moor | Drumossie Moor | Yes |
| CULL2 | Culloden House | | Yes |
| CULL3 | Cullen | In Banffshire | Yes |
| CULL4 | Cullen House | Seat of James Ogilvy, fifth Earl of Findlater and second Earl of Seafield in Cullen. For detailed accounts of the burning of Cullen House, see Cramond, Plundering of Cullen House. | No |
| CULL5 | Cullen Old Market Cross | Stood across from the parish church before being moved some time between 1821 and 1830. | No |
| CULQ1 | Culquoich | | No |
| CUMB1 | Cumbernauld | A town in North Lanarkshire, Scotland | Yes |
| CUMB2 | Cumberland | Historically a county in the northwest of England, incorporated into Cumbria in 1974. | No |
| CUPA1 | Cupar | Town in Fife. | Yes |
| CUST1 | The Custom House | A building designed by Thomas Ripley, standing on the south side of Lower Thames Street (London) from 1717 to 1814. | No |
| DALC1 | Dalchruin | Settlement near Perth, Scotland | No |
| DALE1 | Dalelia | | No |
| DALK1 | Dalkeith | Dalkeith is a town in Midlothian, Scotland, on the River Esk. | No |
| DALM1 | Dul mac Gerraidh | A settlement in Inverness-shire. | No |
| DALN1 | Dalnacardoch | A public house and later a hunting lodge on Wade's Road. Rebuilt in 1774 (Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 11). | No |
| DALR1 | Dalrachney | The land on which Inverlaidnan sits. | No |
| DALW1 | Dalwhinnie | A small village in the Scottish Highlands | No |
| DARI1 | Darien | | No |
| DARL1 | Darlington | A market town in County Durham, England. | No |
| DAWY1 | Dawyck House | Seat of Sir James Nasmyth, second Baronet. Also known as New Posso. | No |
| DEER1 | Deer Sound | A bay on Orkney Mainland. | No |
| DERB1 | Derby | | No |
| DETT1 | Dettingen | Site of a victorious battle for the British and allies against the French in 1743. | No |
| DICK1 | Messenger William Dick's house | In London. It was most likely here that Dr John Burton and John Walkinshaw collected the accounts passed on to Forbes. | No |
| DING1 | Dingwall | Dingwall (Scots: Dingwal,[2] Scottish Gaelic: Inbhir Pheofharain[3] [ˈiɲɪɾʲ ˈfjɔhəɾan]) is a town and a royal burgh in Scotland. | No |
| DONA1 | Donald Campbell's house | In Scalpay. A manse (now the Two Harbours Guest House) is supposed to have been built on the site of the house, which was demolished in the nineteenth century. | No |
| DORN1 | Dornoch | Town in Sutherlandshire. | Yes |
| DOUA1 | Douai | City in northern France. | No |
| DOUG1 | Douglas | Douglas (Scottish Gaelic: Dùbhghlas) is a village in South Lanarkshire, Scotland. | No |
| DOUN1 | Doune | Perthshire | Yes |
| DRUI1 | Druim Chosaidh | | Yes |
| DRUM1 | Drumlanrig Castle | Drumlanrig Castle is situated on the Queensberry Estate in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. | No |
| DRUM2 | Drumelzier Castle | A ruined medieval castle in Drumelzier. | No |
| DRUM3 | Drumelzier | Village in the Scottish Borders. | Yes |
| DRUM4 | Pass of Drumochter | Mountain pass in the Scottish Highlands. | No |
| DRUM5 | Drummond Castle | Castle in Perthshire. It is known for its gardens. | No |
| DRYD1 | Dryden | The Midlothian residence of the Lockharts of Carnwath. | No |
| DRYN1 | Drynachan | A MacDonald estate near Invergarry Castle. | No |
| DUBL1 | Dublin | Co. Leinster, Ireland | Yes |
| DUMA1 | Dumyat | a hill in Ochill Hills, Scotland | No |
| DUMB1 | Dumbarton Castle | Castle overlooking Dumbarton, Scotland. | No |
| DUMF1 | Dumfriesshire | | No |
| DUMF2 | Dumfries | | Yes |
| DUNB1 | Dunblane | Perthshire (until 1994) | Yes |
| DUNB2 | Dunbennan | A settlement in Aberdeenshire. | No |
| DUND1 | Dundee | | Yes |
| DUNF1 | Dunfermline | Town in Scotland | Yes |
| DUNK1 | Dunkeld | Perthshire cathedral city. | Yes |
| DUNK2 | Dunkirk | | No |
| DUNM1 | Dunmore | A village southeast of Stirling, formerly known as Elphinstone Pans. | No |
| DUNR1 | Dunrobin Castle | Seat of the Chief of Clan Sutherland. | Yes |
| DUNV1 | Dunvegan Castle | Seat of the chief of Clan MacLeod in Skye. | No |
| DUPP1 | Dupplin Castle | A former castle (now a country house) in Perthshire. | No |
| DURH1 | Durham | | Yes |
| DUTC1 | Dutch Republic | | No |
| DUTE1 | La Du Teillay | French privateer ship owned by Antoine Vincent Walsh. | No |
| EAGL1 | Eagle | British ship which captured the Bellone. | No |
| EAMO1 | Eamont Bridge | A fifteenth-century bridge spanning the River Eamont to the south of Penrith. | No |
| EARN1 | River Earn | Runs through Perthshire. | No |
| EAST1 | Easter Jaslick | Not identified. | No |
| EAVA1 | Eaval | North Uist. | Yes |
| EDDL1 | Eddleston Water | Small river north of Peebles which joins the River Tweed there. | Yes |
| EDIN1 | Edinburgh Castle | | Yes |
| EDIN2 | Edinburgh | | Yes |
| EDIN3 | Edinburgh Tolbooth | Also known as Edinburgh Gaol or Edinburgh Prison. | No |
| EDIN4 | Edinburgh Mercat Cross | Until 1756, Edinburgh's Mercat Cross was located at the north end of Old Fishmarket Close. | No |
| EDIN5 | Edinburgh | British ship which captured the Bellone. | No |
| EDIN6 | Edindaich Mortifier's School | Built near Keith Old Kirk in 1648. No longer standing. See Keith Grammar School prospectus 1915-16, PDF pp. 6 and 29. | No |
| EIGG1 | Eigg | Island in the Inner Hebrides; | Yes |
| EILE1 | Eilean Loch Arkaig | An island in Locharkaig, also known as Columbkill. | No |
| EILE2 | Eilean na Glaschoille | A small island in Loch Nevis. | No |
| ELGI1 | Elgin | Scotland, within Moray | Yes |
| ELGO1 | Elgol | On Skye. | Yes |
| ELIZ1 | Elizabeth | French ship. | No |
| ELST1 | Elstree | | Yes |
| ELTH1 | Eltham | | No |
| ELWI1 | Elwick Bay | A harbour on Shapinsay. | No |
| EMDE1 | Emden | | No |
| ENGL1 | England | England | Yes |
| ENZI1 | Enzie | An area in Banffshire. | No |
| ERIS1 | Eriskay | | Yes |
| ERRI1 | Errickstane Hill | In Lanarkshire. | No |
| EUIR1 | Eilean Liubhaird | Also Euirn, Iffurt, Iubhard (Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 49). | No |
| EURO1 | Europe | Continent | No |
| EXET1 | Exeter | City in South West England | No |
| EXET2 | Exeter Cathedral | Cathedral in Exeter dedicated to Saint Peter. | No |
| FAIL1 | Faillie | An estate or township in Inverness-shire. | No |
| FALK1 | Falkirk | | Yes |
| FALK2 | Falkirk Old Parish Church | A medieval church at the heart of Falkirk, almost entirely rebuilt in the nineteenth century. | No |
| FALK3 | Falkland | Village in Fife. | Yes |
| FALM1 | Falmouth | Town in England. | Yes |
| FARO1 | Farraline House | | No |
| FASN1 | Fasnakyle | A small settlement. | Yes |
| FASS1 | Fassifern | The house of John Cameron of Fassifern in Lochaber. | No |
| FERN1 | Ferntower | Once the house of Lord John Drummond, seventh Earl of Perth, when it was known as Fairnton (see Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 38). Rebuilt in the twentieth century. | No |
| FERR1 | Ferryden | Ferryden is a village in Angus, Scotland in the community council area of Ferryden and Craig. It is south of Montrose. | No |
| FIFE1 | Fife | Council area in Scotland | No |
| FIND1 | Findhorn | Village in Moray. | Yes |
| FINS1 | Finsbay | A small township on the southeast coast of South Harris. | No |
| FIRT1 | Firth of Forth | | Yes |
| FIRT2 | Dornoch Firth | See Carlisle, "Tain," Topographical Dictionary of Scotland, vol. 2). | No |
| FISH1 | Fisherrow | Fisherrow is a harbour and former fishing village at Musselburgh, East Lothian, Scotland, to the east of Portobello and Joppa, and west of the River Esk. | No |
| FLAD1 | Fladaigh Chùain | A small island in the Inner Hebrides. | No |
| FLAN1 | Flanders | Flemish region of Belgium | No |
| FLOR1 | Florence | Capital of the Grand Duchy of Tuscany | Yes |
| FOCH1 | Fochabers | Fochabers, Fachabair or Fothabair is a village in Moray, Scotland. It is close to the River Spey and the city of Elgin. | No |
| FOCH2 | Fochabers Mercat Cross | | No |
| FONT1 | Fontenoy | | No |
| FORF1 | Forfar | a town in Scotland | No |
| FORR1 | Forres | Town within Moray | Yes |
| FORT1 | Fortrose | Fortrose | Yes |
| FORT2 | Fort William | Lochaber | Yes |
| FORT3 | Fort Augustus | Inverness-shire | Yes |
| FORT4 | River Forth | | No |
| FRAN1 | France | | No |
| FRAO1 | Fraoch Bheinn | A mountain near Locharkaig. | No |
| FRAO2 | Loch Fraon | Unidentified. Supposedly a harbour on the coast of Ross-shire. | No |
| FURN1 | HMS Furnace | Ship. See Prisoners of the '45, pp. 6, 254. | No |
| GALL1 | Galloway | Region in Southwestern Scotland | No |
| GALT1 | Galtrigill | | Yes |
| GARR1 | River Garry | River which flows through Glengarry. | Yes |
| GARV1 | Garvamore | Probably refers to Garvamore barracks. | No |
| GARV2 | Garvock House | The Perthshire seat of the Graemes of Garvick (or Garrick). Rebuilt in the nineteenth century. | No |
| GASK1 | Old Gask House | Seat of the Oliphants of Gask. | No |
| GASK2 | Gask | In Strathnairn, Inverness-shire. | No |
| GEDE1 | Gedern | | No |
| GERM1 | Germany | | Yes |
| GILD1 | Gildart | Ship belonging to Richard Gildart. The name given by Alexander Stewart is confirmed elsewhere by Gildart (Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, p. 46). | No |
| GIVE1 | Givet | Commune in France. | No |
| GLAD1 | Gladsmuir | aka (Battle of) Prestonpans | Yes |
| GLAM1 | Glame | A settlement on Raasay. | No |
| GLAS1 | Glasgow | | Yes |
| GLAS2 | The Glasgow | A Royal Navy ship. | No |
| GLEN1 | Glenaladale | | Yes |
| GLEN10 | Glenelg | | Yes |
| GLEN11 | Glen Cannich | | Yes |
| GLEN12 | Glen Cia-aig | | No |
| GLEN13 | Glenmazeran | | No |
| GLEN14 | Glengarry | | Yes |
| GLEN15 | Glen Beasdale | A corner of MacDonald of Boradale's estate. | No |
| GLEN16 | Glen Lyon | Glen in Perth and Kinross | No |
| GLEN17 | Glen Kingie | A glen or valley in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland | No |
| GLEN18 | Glen Corodale | On the east coast of South Uist | No |
| GLEN19 | Gleann Còsaidh | | Yes |
| GLEN2 | Glenlivet | | No |
| GLEN20 | Glendulichan | Identity unclear. Mackay Scobie has "Glendulichar" ("Campbell Militia," p. 20), while the Atholl Chronicles has Glengoulin, Glendullan, and Glengoulandie (vol. 3, pp. 212, 213, 214). | No |
| GLEN21 | Glensiarich | Not yet identified. P. 515 suggests it should be near Loch Shiel, in which case Glenhurich seems most likely. This part of the account, however, is incorrect in its geography, as noted by Forbes with reference to p. 640. | No |
| GLEN22 | Glen Shiel | In the Highlands of Scotland. The site of a significant Jacobite defeat in 1719. | No |
| GLEN23 | Glen Conglass | | No |
| GLEN24 | Glen Loyne | | No |
| GLEN25 | Glen Orchy | In Argyleshire. | No |
| GLEN26 | Glen Roy | | Yes |
| GLEN27 | Gleann Camgharaidh | At the head of Locharkaig. | No |
| GLEN28 | Glenrinnes | A village in Banffshire | No |
| GLEN3 | Glencoe | A settlement in Lochaber. Site of the Massacre of Glencoe on February 13, 1692. A common refrain in Jacobite memory. | Yes |
| GLEN4 | Glenfinnan | Lochaber | Yes |
| GLEN5 | Glenevis | Lochaber | Yes |
| GLEN6 | Glenpean | | Yes |
| GLEN7 | Glendessary | | Yes |
| GLEN8 | Glenmoriston | | Yes |
| GLEN9 | Glen Strathfarrar | | Yes |
| GOGA1 | Gogar | | Yes |
| GORD1 | Castle Gordon | Seat of the Dukes of Gordon, just north of Fochabers. | No |
| GORT1 | Gorthleck House | The house of Thomas Fraser of Gorthleck, where Simon Fraser of Lovat was staying at the time of the Battle of Culloden Moor. | No |
| GRAM1 | Gramsdale | On Benbecula. | No |
| GRAN1 | Grange House | Residence of George Durie of Grange, Lord Rutherford. | No |
| GRAV1 | Gravelines | Commune in northern France. | No |
| GRAY1 | Gray's Mill | Farmhouse on the Water of Leith in Slateford. | No |
| GREA1 | Great Britain | Refers only to the largest landmass in the British Isles, not to the geopolitical entity of Britain. | Yes |
| GREE1 | Greenhead | British ship which was wrecked off the coast of the Dutch Republic in November 1774. | No |
| GRET1 | Gretna Green | In Dumfries and Galloway. | Yes |
| GREY1 | Grey-Mares-Tail | A waterfall near Moffat. | No |
| GREY2 | HMS Greyhound | Ship | No |
| GUIS1 | Guisachan House | Strathglass residence of William Fraser of Culbokie and eighth of Guisachan and Margaret MacDonell, burned in the aftermath of Culloden. | No |
| HADD1 | Haddington | Town in East Lothian, Scotland. | No |
| HAGG1 | Haggyhall | Unidentified. Supposedly in Liddesdale. | No |
| HAGU1 | Hague | Administrative centre of the Dutch Republic. | No |
| HAIN1 | Hainaut | Province in Wallonia, Belgium. Its capital is Mons. | No |
| HALF1 | Half Moon Battery, Edinburgh Castle | | No |
| HAMI1 | Hamilton | Hamilton is a large town in South Lanarkshire, Scotland. | No |
| HAMM1 | Hammersmith | | Yes |
| HAMP1 | Hampton Roads | Harbour by Virginia. | No |
| HANO1 | Hanover | | Yes |
| HAPP1 | Happy Jennet | A Royal Navy ship. | No |
| HARO1 | Harrogate | Harrogate is a spa town in the district and county of North Yorkshire, England. | No |
| HARR1 | Harris | Isle of Harris, the southern part of the Scottish Hebridean island of Lewis and Harris. | No |
| HARR2 | Harraby | An village now incorporated into Carlisle. | No |
| HARW1 | Harwich | A town in Essex, England. | No |
| HASG1 | Eilean Hasgeir | A small island to the west of North Uist. | No |
| HAST1 | Hastenbeck | Site of a defeat of the British army and allies by the French in 1757. | No |
| HAWI1 | Hawick | Town in Scotland, on the borders of Scotland | No |
| HAWL1 | Henry Hawley's house | In Hedge Lane, St Martin-in-the-Fields, London. | No |
| HAXX1 | Ha | Not identified. A phoenetic rendering of a Gaelic place name. | No |
| HAYM1 | Haymarket | Area in Edinburgh, left of the city-centre. | No |
| HAZA1 | HMS Hazard | A ship temporarily captured by the Jacobites and renamed Le Prince Charles. See Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 138, 237, 328. | No |
| HEBR1 | The Hebrides | An archipelago off the west coast of Scotland. | Yes |
| HEUR1 | L'Heureux | A French frigate. | No |
| HIGH1 | Highlands of Scotland | Not consistently geographically defined, but generally the hilly and mountainous northwest of Scotland, less often including portions of the northeast, and sometimes denoting the Gaelic-speaking portions of Scotland. | No |
| HIGH2 | High Street | Part of the Royal Mile in Edinburgh. | No |
| HOLB1 | Holborn | A district in central London. | No |
| HOLL1 | Holland | | Yes |
| HOLY1 | Palace of Holyroodhouse | Edinburgh | No |
| HOLY2 | Holyrood Abbey | Edinburgh | No |
| HOMI1 | Homie | Not located. Possibly the Allt Homie (a stream) in Banffshire (Ordnance Survey, 1888-1915). | No |
| HOUN1 | HMS Hound | | No |
| HOUR1 | Loch Hourn | | Yes |
| HUMB1 | Humbie | A village in East Lothian. | Yes |
| HUNG1 | Hungary | Country in Central Europe | No |
| HUNT1 | Huntly | A town in Aberdeenshire. | Yes |
| HUNT2 | Huntly Castle | A now-ruined seat of the Gordons in Aberdeenshire. | No |
| INCH1 | The Lees | The estate house at Inshes. | No |
| INCH2 | Inshes | An estate southeast of Inverness. | No |
| INCH3 | Inchnacape | A settlement in Moray (formerly Banffshire). | No |
| INFI1 | Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh | The Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh is the oldest voluntary hospital in Scotland. It was established in 1729. T | No |
| INNI1 | Innishewan | An estate in Glen Dochart, Perthshire. | No |
| INVE1 | Inverlochie | Inverlochie/Inverlochy | Yes |
| INVE10 | Inverness Tolbooth | Rebuilt in 1789-91. | No |
| INVE11 | Inverness Roads | | No |
| INVE12 | Inverness Castle | In Inverness. The castle now on the site is of nineteenth-century construction. | No |
| INVE13 | Inverlaidnan | The eighteenth-century house of the Grants of Dalrachney, now ruined. | No |
| INVE2 | Inverness | | Yes |
| INVE3 | Inverurie | A town in Aberdeenshire. | No |
| INVE4 | Invergarry Castle | Burned shortly after Charles Edward Stuart's stay following Culloden (Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 46 n3). | No |
| INVE5 | Inverness-shire | | No |
| INVE6 | Invermoriston | The house of Patrick Grant of Glenmoriston, burned after Culloden. Also the name of a village, which should receive its own file if it comes up. | No |
| INVE7 | Inverwick | | Yes |
| INVE8 | Inverary | Town in Argyll and Bute. | No |
| INVE9 | Inverness Old Cross | According to Charles Fraser-Mackintosh, the cross was "at the front of the Exchange," near the site of the later Forbes Fountain (also since moved). See Antiquarian Notes: A Series of Papers Regarding Families and Places in the Highlands, 2nd ed. (Stirling: Eneas MacKay, 1913), pp. 218, 222. | No |
| IREL1 | Ireland | | Yes |
| IRVI1 | Irvine | Town in North Ayrshire. | Yes |
| ISLA1 | River Isla | A river flowing from Moray to Aberdeenshire. | Yes |
| ISLA2 | Islay | | Yes |
| ITAL1 | Italy | | No |
| IUIA1 | Wiya | Also Bhuia or Fuidheigh. | No |
| JAMA1 | Jamaica | | Yes |
| JAME1 | James and Mary | A transport ship (see Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 9-10, 161, 164). Possibly the sloop of the same name on the Three Decks database. | No |
| JANE1 | Jane of Leith | Transport ship. See Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 6, 162. | No |
| JEDB1 | Jedburgh | Town in Scotland | No |
| JERU1 | Jerusalem | | No |
| JOHN1 | Johnson | Ship belonging to Richard Gildart. The name given by Alexander Stewart is confirmed elsewhere by Gildart (Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, p. 46). | No |
| KEAB1 | Keaback | Probably A' Chabag (Kebock Head) on Lewis. A' Chabag is not an island as Edward Burk describes, but he was possibly misunderstood by Robert Forbes. | No |
| KEAM1 | Keam | Formerly a village in Moray. | No |
| KEIT1 | Keith | Small town within Moray, site of the Skirmish at Keith | No |
| KEIT2 | Keith Old Kirk | Built in 1569 and demolished and 1819. | No |
| KEIT3 | Keith Old Bridge | Spanning the River Isla. Built in 1609 and still standing. | No |
| KEIT4 | Keith Hall | An estate just outside Inverurie. | No |
| KELS1 | Kelso | Town in Scotland | No |
| KEND1 | Kendal | Market town on the river Kent | Yes |
| KENL1 | Kenlochindale | | No |
| KENN1 | Kennington Common | | No |
| KENN2 | Kennethmont | A village near Huntly in Aberdeenshire | No |
| KENS1 | Kensington Palace | | Yes |
| KENT1 | Kent | A county in England. | No |
| KEPP1 | Keppoch | Referrenced in relation to "Major Donald MacDonell of the Family of Keppoch" | No |
| KERR1 | County Kerry | | No |
| KESS1 | Kessock Ferry | The Kessock Ferry crossed between North Kessock on the Black Isle, and South Kessock in Inverness. In 1982, it was replaced by the Kessock Bridge across the Beauly Firth. | No |
| KILB1 | Kilbride | Town in Trotternish | No |
| KILB2 | Kilbucho | An estate in the Scottish Borders (formerly Peebleshire). | No |
| KILD1 | Kildrummy | Hamlet in Aberdeenshire. | Yes |
| KILL1 | Pass of Killiecrankie | Site of the Jacobite victory and the death of John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount of Dundee in 1689. | No |
| KILM1 | Kilmarnock | | Yes |
| KILM2 | Kilmorack | A parish in Inverness-shire. | Yes |
| KILM3 | Kilmarie | A village on the Isle of Skye. | Yes |
| KILM4 | Kilmory | Village located on the Isle of Arran, Scotland | No |
| KILS1 | Kilsyth | Kilsyth is a town and civil parish in North Lanarkshire, roughly halfway between Glasgow and Stirling in Scotland. | No |
| KINC1 | Kincardineshire | Historic county in Scotland. Sometimes known as "The Mearns." | No |
| KING1 | Kingsburgh House | On Skye. | Yes |
| KING2 | Kingsburgh | A township on Skye. | No |
| KING3 | Kingsmills | Just southeast of Inverness. | No |
| KING4 | Kingsgate Street | A short street in Holborn. | No |
| KING5 | Kinghorn | Town in Fife. | Yes |
| KINL1 | Kinlochmoidart | Lochaber | Yes |
| KINL2 | Kinloch na Dal | Somewhere near the head of Loch na Dal, Sleat. See Warrand, Culloden Papers, vol. 5, pp. 49 and 64; and Scobie, "Highland Independent Companies," p. 26. | No |
| KINM1 | Kinmundy | A hamlet in Aberdeenshire. | No |
| KINT1 | Kintail | Region of mountains in the Northwest Highlands of Scotland | No |
| KINT2 | Kintore | A town in Aberdeenshire. | Yes |
| KIRK1 | Kirkcaldy | Fife | Yes |
| KIRK2 | Kirkgate | A street in Leith. | No |
| KIRK3 | Kirkintilloch | Town in Dunbartonshire, Scotland. | Yes |
| KIRK4 | Kirkcaldy Tolbooth | Built in 1678, rebuilt in 1826, and demolished in 1935, the Kirkcaldy Tolbooth stood at the top of the extant Tolbooth Street (Torrie and Coleman, Historic Kirkcaldy, p. 30). | No |
| KIRK5 | Kirk Street | In Inverness. | No |
| KIRN1 | Kirnag | The house of Mackenzie of Kirnag. Unidentified, but possibly related to Càrn Eighe, a mountain bordering the historic counties of Inverness-shire and Ross-shire. | No |
| KIRT1 | Kirtle Water | A river in Dumfries and Galloway. | No |
| KITT1 | Kittlehall | A ruined medieval tower house in the Scottish Borders. | No |
| KNOY1 | Knoydart | A peninsula in Lochaber. | No |
| KYLE1 | Kyles Stuley | A farmstead or township in South Uist. | No |
| KYLE2 | Caol Àcain | A village on Skye from which a ferry, now replaced by the Skye Bridge, travelled to Caoll Loch Aillse (Kyle of Lochalsh) on Great Britain. | No |
| KYNA1 | Kynachan | A Perthshire estate. The location relative to the nineteenth-century Kynachan Lodge is unclear. | No |
| LADY1 | Lady Bruce's house | In the Citadel of Leith. According to tradition, this may have been the mansion known as Cromwell House (John Russell, The Story of Leith, n.p.). | No |
| LAGG1 | Laggan | Laggan (or Lagan) is a village in Badenoch, in the Highland region of Scotland. It is beside the River Spey. | No |
| LANC1 | Lancaster | City in Lancashire | No |
| LANC2 | Lancaster Castle | | No |
| LANC3 | Lancashire | A county in England. | No |
| LAND1 | Land of Forgetfulness | Mentioned by Mrs. Anne Leith in her narrative, vol. 6, pp. 1284-1307. A reference to Psalm 88:12, describing one biblical conception of the afterlife. Possible reference to Lethe, one of the rivers of the underworld of Hades. Lethe was the spirit of forgetfulness. | No |
| LANG1 | Langholm | Langholm,also known colloquially as the "Muckle Toon", is a burgh in Dumfries and Galloway, southern Scotland. | No |
| LAUD1 | Lauder | Town in Scotland | No |
| LAUR1 | Laurencekirk | Town in Kincardineshire. Known locally as "Lournie" or "The Kirk." | Yes |
| LECK1 | Leckie House | Stirlingshire | No |
| LEED1 | Leeds | A city in Yorkshire. | No |
| LEEK1 | Leek | A market town in Staffordshire. | No |
| LEEK2 | Leek | The seat of Angus MacDonald, fourth of Leek, near Aberchalder. The house was burned in the aftermath of Culloden Moor (according to Mackenzie, History of the Macdonalds, p. 526). | No |
| LEHA1 | Le Hardi Mendiant | A French ship. | No |
| LEID1 | Leiden | | No |
| LEIT1 | Leith | | Yes |
| LEIT2 | Leith Roads | Waterway | No |
| LEIT3 | Leith Links | | No |
| LEIT4 | Leith Tolbooth | Stood from 1565 to 1823. Now the site of modern houses. | No |
| LEIT5 | Leith Wynd | In Edinburgh. | No |
| LEIT6 | Leith Walk | Street in Edinburgh which connects the city centre to Leith. | No |
| LENY1 | Leny | Francis Buchanan's estate (through his wife, Elizabeth Buchanan) near Callander. | No |
| LEPR1 | Le Prince de Conti | A French privateer. | No |
| LESM1 | Lesmahagow | A town in the historic county of Lanarkshire, Scotland. | No |
| LETT1 | Letterfinlay | | Yes |
| LEUC1 | Leuchat | an estate in Fife | No |
| LEVE1 | Leven | Fife | Yes |
| LEWI1 | Lewis | Also known as the Isle of Lewis | No |
| LEWI2 | Lewis and Harris | The island comprising Lewis and Harris. | No |
| LIBE1 | Liberty and Property | Transport ship. See Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 9, 10, 164. | No |
| LIDD1 | Liddesdale | Valley of the Liddel Water, and historical town in Scotland. | No |
| LIDD2 | Liddel Water | A river bordering Scotland and England. | No |
| LIND1 | Lindisfarne | Also known as the Holy Island. Off the coast of north-east England. | No |
| LINL1 | Linlithgow | Town in West Lothian, Scotland | No |
| LINT1 | Linton | Village in the Scottish Borders. | Yes |
| LION1 | HMS Lion | British Royal Navy ship | No |
| LISB1 | Lisbon | Capital of Portugal. | Yes |
| LITI1 | Litir-na-lic | “A very rough, high, rockie Mountain” (p. 1551). | No |
| LIVE1 | Liverpool | Port city in England. | Yes |
| LIVE2 | Liverpool Bay | | Yes |
| LIVI1 | Livingston | Village in West Lothian. | No |
| LIZA1 | Lizard Point | Cornwall. The southernmost point on Great Britain, and historically an important navigational reference point. | No |
| LOCH1 | Lochmaddy | North Uist | Yes |
| LOCH11 | Loch Shiel | A Loch 20 kilometres from Fort-William | No |
| LOCH12 | Loch Leven | Lake in Perth and Kinross | No |
| LOCH13 | Loch Broom | Loch Broom (Scottish Gaelic: Lochbraon, "loch of rain showers") is a sea loch located in northwestern Ross and Cromarty, in the former parish of Lochbroom, on the west coast of Scotland. | No |
| LOCH14 | Loch Nevis | Sea Loch in Lochaber, Scotland | No |
| LOCH15 | Loch Stornoway | | Yes |
| LOCH16 | Loch nan Uabh | A lake in Lochaber. | No |
| LOCH17 | Loch Arnish | | Yes |
| LOCH18 | Loch Finsbay | | Yes |
| LOCH19 | Loch Uskavagh | | Yes |
| LOCH2 | Loch Eil | Lochaber | Yes |
| LOCH20 | Loch Bracadale | | No |
| LOCH21 | Loch Skeen | Loch which feeds into Grey-Mares-Tail. | Yes |
| LOCH22 | Loch Thoirbheartan | | No |
| LOCH23 | Loch Morar | Freshwater loch in Lochaber. | Yes |
| LOCH24 | Loch Quoich | Loch in Lochaber. | Yes |
| LOCH25 | Loch Moy | In Inverness-shire. | No |
| LOCH26 | Loch Ericht | A lake stretching from Inverness-shire to Perthshire. | No |
| LOCH27 | Loch Shell | An inlet on Lewis, at the mouth of which is Eilean Liubhaird. | No |
| LOCH28 | Loch na Dal | Sea loch on Sleat. | Yes |
| LOCH3 | Loch Lochy | Lochaber | Yes |
| LOCH4 | Lochaber | A region in the Highlands. | Yes |
| LOCH5 | Locharkaig | Locharkaig, also known as Loch Arkaig (or Gaelic: Loch Airceig), a body of freshwater in Lochaber, Scotland. | No |
| LOCH6 | Loch Laggan | | Yes |
| LOCH7 | Loch Seaforth | Sea loch in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland. | No |
| LOCH8 | Lochboisdale | Village and port on the island of South Uist, Outer Hebrides | No |
| LOCH9 | Loch Carnon | | No |
| LOCK1 | Lockerbie | Town in Dumfries and Galloway. | Yes |
| LOGI1 | Logie House | At Logie-Almond, a Perthshire estate. | No |
| LOIR1 | Loire | Longest river in France. | No |
| LOND1 | London | Capital of England | Yes |
| LONG1 | Longside | Village in Aberdeenshire | Yes |
| LONG2 | The Long Dykes | Outside of Edinburgh | No |
| LONG3 | Longtown | Longtown is a market town in Cumbria, England, just south of the Scottish Border. | No |
| LONG4 | Longside Old Parish Church | In Longside. | No |
| LORE1 | Loreto | City in the Marche region of Italy, then part of the Papal States. | No |
| LOWL1 | Lowlands | The Lowlands of Scotland. | No |
| LUDE1 | Lude | Estate of the Robertsons of Lude in Perthshire. The present Lude House was built in the 1830s, and it is not clear whether it was built on the site of the old house. | No |
| MACC1 | Macclesfeild | Macclesfield is a market town and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East in Cheshire, England. | No |
| MACD1 | House of James MacDonald | The house of James MacDonald in Leith. | No |
| MACE1 | Macerata | City in the Marche region of Italy, then part of the Papal States. | No |
| MACH1 | Machany House | The Perthshire seat of the Viscounts of Strathallan. | No |
| MACI1 | Moy Hall | Lady Anne Mackintosh's house. | Yes |
| MACL1 | MacLaren's Leap | A hollow in Errickstane Hill. On the tradition of naming places (including this one) after impressive leaps, see Maclean, "Leaps of the Imagination," pp. 37-54. | No |
| MACN1 | MacNab's Inn | Now the site of the Royal Hotel in Portree. | No |
| MADG1 | Madgeburg | An archbishopric in Germany. | No |
| MAIN1 | Main | A tributary of the Rhine. | No |
| MALL1 | Mallaig | A port and village in Morar. | No |
| MAMN1 | Màm nan Calum | A small hill between Glenpean and Glendessary. | No |
| MANC1 | Manchester | | Yes |
| MANN1 | Isle of Man | | No |
| MARI1 | Marischal College and University of Aberdeen | The present building is modern, but on the site of the old College founded in 1593. | No |
| MARS1 | Marshalsea Prison | | No |
| MART1 | Martinique | | No |
| MARY1 | Province of Maryland | English and later British colony in North America (1634-1776). | No |
| MATT1 | Mattox Creek | A tributuary of the Potomac River in Virginia. | No |
| MEAL1 | Meall an Taigraidh | A hill in Lochaber. | No |
| MEAL2 | Mealan Odhar | “A Sheiling of a very narrow Compass” (p. 1548). | No |
| MENT1 | Menteith | A district in Perthshire. | No |
| MENZ1 | Castle Menzies | The seat of Clan Menzies in Perthshire. Also known as Castle Weem (see Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 38), although Castle Weem was an older structure near to the later site of Castle Menzies; Weem was destroyed in 1502, and materials from it were used to build Menzies. | No |
| MEWB1 | Meoble | | No |
| MIDL1 | Midlothian | The county in which Edinburgh is located. | No |
| MILL1 | Mill of Keith | Now ruined. | No |
| MILT1 | Milton Keynes | | Yes |
| MILT2 | Milton | A tack on South Uist. | No |
| MODE1 | Modena | | No |
| MOFF1 | Moffat | | Yes |
| MOFF2 | Moffat Water | | Yes |
| MOID1 | Moidart | Lochaber | No |
| MONB1 | Monboddo House | | No |
| MONK1 | Monkstadt House | The seat of Sir Alexander MacDonald of Sleat, seventh Baronet on Skye. | Yes |
| MONS1 | Mons | City in Belgium. | No |
| MONT1 | Montrose Harbour | In Montrose at the River Esk. | Yes |
| MONT2 | Montrose | A coastal town in Angus. | No |
| MOOR1 | Moorhouse | A village near Carlisle. | No |
| MORA1 | Morar | A peninsula in Lochaber, north of Loch Morar and Arisaig. | No |
| MORA2 | Moray | Moray, (Scottish Gaelic: Moireibh or Morayshire), called Elginshire until 1919, is a historic county in Scotland. | No |
| MORL1 | Morlaix | A commune in Brittany, France. | No |
| MOSS1 | Mossfennan House | | No |
| MOUL1 | Moultrie's Hill | Also known as Bunker's Hill. The site of a small village just outside (and now part) of Edinburgh, later developed into St James Square (now St James Quarter). | No |
| MOYX1 | Moy | A village near Inverness. | Yes |
| MRNO1 | Boghall | House of George Norvell. | No |
| MUCH1 | Muchrachd | See Blaikie, Itinerary, note 2 on p. 64; also Mackenzie, History of the Chisholms, p. 80.
| No |
| MUIC1 | Wood of Muick | Unidentified, but apparently near Locharkaig (see Journal from the Retreat from Stirling
to the Prince's Embarkation for France, being
particular and exact, by Mr John Cameron, etc.. | No |
| MULB1 | Mulben | A hamlet in Moray. Roy's Military Survey has Millben. | No |
| MULL1 | Isle of Mull | Fourth largest island in Scotland | No |
| MUNS1 | Münster | | No |
| MURL1 | Murlagan | A small hamlet located on the north shore of Loch Arkaig in Inverness-shire. | No |
| MUTH1 | Muthill | | Yes |
| NAIR1 | Nairn House | | No |
| NAIR2 | Nairn | Nairn is a town and royal burgh in the Highland council area of Scotland. | No |
| NANT1 | Nantes | A port-city in France. The metropolitan center of the French slave trade. | No |
| NAPL1 | Naples | | No |
| NAVA1 | Château de Navarre | Seat of Charles Edward Stuart's uncle, the Duke of Bouillon. | No |
| NEID1 | Neidpath Castle | Medieval castle in the Scottish Borders. Seat of the Earl of March. | No |
| NETH1 | The Netherbow Port | Gatehouse in Edinburgh | No |
| NEWC1 | Newcastle upon Tyne | A city in the north of England. | Yes |
| NEWD1 | New Durn | Episcopal chapel just outside Portsoy, burned in 1746. "[S]eems to have stood between the house and mill of Durn" (Ordnance Gazetteer), probably in the vicinity of of the Durn House built later in the century. | No |
| NEWG1 | New Gaol | In Southwark. Formerly the White Lion, rebuilt in the 1720s. | No |
| NEWG2 | Newgate Prison | | No |
| NEWH1 | Newhaven | District in Edinburgh. | Yes |
| NEWR1 | Newry | City in the North of Ireland (bordering Counties Armagh and Down). | No |
| NICH1 | Nicholson's Rock | Near Scorrybreac. Identified by Blaikie as Creag Mhicneucail, "a long scaur running along the north side of Portree harbour" (Itinerary, p. 54). | No |
| NIDD1 | Niddrie | Niddrie or Niddery. Suburb in Edinburgh, Scotland. | No |
| NORE1 | The Nore | A sandbank in the Thames Estuary. | Yes |
| NORT1 | North Uist | | Yes |
| NORT2 | North America | | No |
| NORT3 | North Leith | | No |
| NORT4 | North Berwick | Town in East Lothian, Scotland. | Yes |
| NOTT1 | Nottingham | British ship which captured the Bellone. The Bellone's page on threedecks.org identifies this ship as the Exeter. | No |
| NUNT1 | Baile nan Cailleach | House of Ranald MacDonald, fifteenth of Clanranald onBenbecula. On the name, see Blaikie's note on p. 52 of his Itinerary. | No |
| OBAN1 | Oban | At the head of Loch Morar. | No |
| OCHI1 | Ochil Hills | Range of hills in Scotland. | Yes |
| OLDA1 | Old Aberdeen | A medieval burgh incorporated into Aberdeen in 1891. | No |
| OLDD1 | Old Deer | Village in Aberdeenshire | Yes |
| OLDH1 | Old High Kirk | In Inverness. | No |
| OLDM1 | Oldmeldrum | Oldmeldrum (commonly known as Meldrum) is a village and parish in the Formartine area of Aberdeenshire, not far from Inverurie in North East Scotland. | No |
| OLIV1 | Oliver House | | No |
| ORKN1 | Orkney | referred to as both Orkney and Orkney Islands | Yes |
| ORMS1 | Ormskirk | A town in Lancashire. | No |
| OSTE1 | Ostend | City in Flanders. | No |
| OXFO1 | Oxford | A cathedral city and district. Home to University of Oxford. | Yes |
| OXFO2 | University of Oxford | | No |
| PALM1 | Palazzo Muti | Stuart residence in Rome. | No |
| PAME1 | Pamela | Transport ship. See Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 9-10, 77, 158, 163. | No |
| PARI1 | Paris | | Yes |
| PARL1 | Parliament Close | Edinburgh. Now known as Parliament Square. | No |
| PARL2 | Parliament House | The Edinburgh meeting-place for Scottish parliament until the 1707 Union. | No |
| PAUN1 | Paunch Market | Former market in Queen Street, Edinburgh. | No |
| PEEB1 | Peebles | | Yes |
| PEGG1 | Peggie of Dumfries | Unidentified ship that carried Alexander Stewart back to Scotland in January, 1748. | No |
| PENI1 | Penicuik House | | No |
| PENN1 | Pennsylvania | An English (and later British) colony in North America. | No |
| PENR1 | Penrith | | Yes |
| PENT1 | Pentland Hills | Range of hills in Scotland. | Yes |
| PERT1 | Perth | | Yes |
| PERT2 | Perthshire | | No |
| PETE1 | Peterhead | A coastal town in Aberdeenshire and the easternmost point on mainland Scotland. | No |
| PETT1 | Petty | A parish near Inverness. | No |
| PICC1 | Piccadilly | | Yes |
| PINK1 | Pinkie House | | No |
| PISA1 | Pisa | a city in Tuscany, Italy | Yes |
| PITL1 | Pitlochry | A town in Perthshire. | No |
| PITS1 | Pitsligo | A parish in Aberdeenshire, no longer extant. | No |
| PLAI1 | Plaintruthhall | Also Plaintruth Hall | No |
| POLA1 | Poland | Country in Europe | No |
| POLM1 | Polmood House | In the Scottish Borders (formerly Peebleshire). Rebuilt after 1864. | No |
| POME1 | Pomerania | | No |
| POMO1 | Orkney Mainland | Sometimes called Pomona or (earlier) Hrossey. | No |
| POOL1 | Poolewe | A village in Wester Ross. | Yes |
| PORT1 | Portree | | Yes |
| PORT2 | Port Glasgow | | Yes |
| PORT3 | Port Tobacco | A town on the Port Tobacco River, a tributary of the Potomac River in Maryland. | No |
| POTO1 | Potomac River | | No |
| POTS1 | Potsdam | Residence of the Prussian kings. | Yes |
| POTT1 | Potter's Row | Not located. There is a street in Edinburgh by this name (also called Potterrow, and Potterow), but given the context it should be in London. | No |
| PRES1 | Preshome | A chapel house in Banffshire. | No |
| PRES2 | Prestonpans | | No |
| PRES3 | Preston | City in Lanchanshire, England | No |
| PRIE1 | Priesthill | Priesthill is a neighbourhood in the south of the River Clyde in the Scottish city of Glasgow. | No |
| PRIN1 | Prince Edward Island | The Mi'kmaq name of the island is Epekwitk. Until 1798, it was called St. John's Island. | No |
| PRIN2 | Prince George's County | In Maryland. | No |
| PROV1 | Provost Skene's House | A sixteenth-century mansion house (the oldest in Aberdeen) occupied by Provost George Skene of Rubislaw in the late seventeenth century. Alexander Thomson, advocate, was the occupant when the Duke of Cumberland requisitioned the house in the spring of 1746. | No |
| PRUS1 | Kingdom of Prussia | A Germanic state from 1701 to 1918. | No |
| QUAL1 | Quality Street | The location of Lady Stewart of Burray's residence in Leith. | No |
| QUEB1 | Province of Quebec | 1763-1791. Formerly the French colony of Canada. Also referred to as "Canada" in the manuscript. | No |
| QUEE1 | Queensberry House | A house in The Canongate, formerly belonging to the Dukes of Queensberry. | No |
| RAAS1 | Raasay | The Island of Raasay; Rasay | Yes |
| RAAS2 | Raasay House | The present Raasay House is supposed to have been built on or near the site of the house burned in 1746. | No |
| RANN1 | Rannoch | Area in the Scottish Highlands | No |
| RANN2 | Rannagulzion House | House of James Rattray of Rannagulzion in Perthshire. | No |
| RARI1 | Rarinish | On Benbecula. | No |
| RAYN1 | Rayne | Aberdeenshire, birthplace of Bishop Robert Forbes | Yes |
| RAYN2 | East Raynham | A village in Norfolk. | Yes |
| REDL1 | Red Lion Square | Small square in Holborn, London | No |
| REST1 | Restalrig | In Edinburgh. | No |
| RHUP1 | Rhu Peninsula | A peninsula in Lochaber, on which Arisaig is located. | No |
| RHYN1 | Rhynie | Village in Aberdeenshire | Yes |
| RIVE1 | River Lochy | Inverness-shire | Yes |
| RIVE2 | River Arkaig | A river flowing between Locharkaig and Loch Lochy in Lochaber. | No |
| RIVE3 | River Don | In Aberdeenshire. | No |
| RIVE4 | River Dee | In Aberdeenshire. | No |
| ROBI1 | Robieston | A settlement in Aberdeenshire. | No |
| RODE1 | Rodel | Rodel (Scottish Gaelic: Roghadal) is a village on the south-eastern coast of Harris | No |
| ROGA1 | Rogart | Estate of John Gray, drover, which he acquired through marriage in 1733 and sold out of necessity in 1762 (Beard, "Satire and Social Change," p. 4). | No |
| ROME1 | Rome | | Yes |
| RONA1 | Rona | The Island of Rona | Yes |
| RORA1 | Rora | A hamlet in Aberdeenshire. | Yes |
| ROSA1 | Rosarie | A settlement in Banffshire. | No |
| ROSC1 | Roscoff | A commune in Brittany, France. | No |
| ROSS1 | Ross-shire | A historic county, now part of Ross and Cromarty. | No |
| ROSS2 | Rossinish | Beach in Benbecula | No |
| ROWA1 | Rowanburn | Rowanburn is a hamlet in Eskdale, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland. | No |
| ROYA1 | HMS Royal Sovereign | | No |
| RUMX1 | Isle of Rum | | Yes |
| RUSS1 | Russian Empire | Existed from 1721 to 1917. | No |
| RUTH1 | Ruthven | In Badenoch (there is also a Ruthven in Angus). | Yes |
| RUTH2 | Ruthven Barracks | Near Ruthven in Badenoch. | No |
| SAIN1 | Saint-Germain-en-Laye | Home of the Stuart family and Jacobite court in exile, 1689-1713. | No |
| SALA1 | The Salamander | A Royal Navy fireship. | No |
| SALI1 | Salisbury Crags | Salisbury Crags are a series of 46-metre (151 ft) cliffs at the top of a subsidiary spur of Arthur's Seat which rise on the west of Holyrood Park. | No |
| SALI2 | Salisbury | City in England. | Yes |
| SALT1 | Saltcoats | Town in North Ayrshire. | Yes |
| SAUC1 | Sauchie | A small town one mile northeast of Alloa. | No |
| SCAL1 | Scalpay | Sometimes called "Scalpay in the Harris" to distinguish from the Scalpay off Skye. Also known as Island Glass, perhaps from the Gaelic name Eilean Glas (Grey or Green Island). | Yes |
| SCAL2 | Scalan | A Catholic seminary in Glenlivet. See Roberts, "Scalan Destroyed." | No |
| SCAR1 | The Scarborough | A Royal Navy ship. | No |
| SCHE1 | Scheldt | A river that flows through France, Belgium, and the Netherlands. | No |
| SCON1 | Scone Palace | Perthshire | Yes |
| SCON2 | Sconser | A town on Skye | Yes |
| SCOR1 | Scorrybreac | Also Scorobreak, Scorrybreck. Estate of the Nicolsons of Scorrybreac. | No |
| SCOT1 | Scotland | | Yes |
| SCOT3 | Scots College | A Catholic seminary in Paris. | No |
| SCOT4 | Scots College, Douai | A Catholic seminary in Douai. | No |
| SELK1 | Selkirk | A town in the Scottish Borders. | Yes |
| SEVI1 | Seville | a city in Spain | No |
| SGUR1 | Sgur Mhuide | A hill. | No |
| SGUR2 | Sgurr nan Coireachan | A mountain near Glendessary. | Yes |
| SHAN1 | Shanvell | There were several places with this name (or Shanwall) in Banffshire alone (Roy's Military Survey). The name means "old village or farm" (Gaelic in Moray, p. 70). | No |
| SHAP1 | Shap | Shap is a village and civil parish located among fells and isolated dales in Westmorland and Furness, Cumbria, England. | No |
| SHAP2 | Shapinsay | Island in Orkney. | No |
| SHEE1 | HMS Sheerness | British ship which took the HMS Hazard (which at that time had been renamed the Prince Charles) near Tongue. | No |
| SHEF1 | Sheffield | | No |
| SHER1 | Sheriffmuir | | No |
| SHIR1 | Shirramore | A settlement in the parish of Laggan. | Yes |
| SHRE1 | Shrewsbury | A town in Shropshire. | Yes |
| SIBB1 | Sibbald | Ship on which Duncan Cameron travelled to Holland after the rising. | No |
| SICI1 | Sicily | | No |
| SKIR1 | Skirdustan | Former name of the village of Charlestown of Aberlour, Banffshire. | No |
| SKYE1 | Skye | | Yes |
| SLEA1 | Sleat | A peninsula on Skye. | No |
| SMEA1 | Smeaton House | Known in the eighteenth century as East Park House. | No |
| SMID1 | Smid Hope Burn | A stream that joins the River Tweed. | No |
| SNIZ1 | Snizort | A parish on Skye | No |
| SNIZ2 | River Snizort | On Skye. | Yes |
| SNOD1 | Point of Snod | This seems to be a alternative name for Dunvegan Head ("Unknown Beauties of Skye," p. 8). This would accord with Alasdair Mac Mhaighstir Alasdair's account, in which this place was mistaken for the Point of Waternish. Robert Moray, in 1677/78, also made reference to a Snod on Skye (Desription of the Island Hirta, p. 927). | No |
| SOUT1 | South Uist | | Yes |
| SOUT2 | Southwark | A district in London. | Yes |
| SOUT3 | South Leith | | No |
| SPAI1 | Spain | | No |
| SPEY1 | River Spey | River in Scotland, ninth longest river in the United Kingdom | No |
| SPRI1 | Spring Gardens | A street in London. | No |
| SPRI2 | Springkell | A mansion house in Dumfries and Galloway. Built in 1734 by Sir William Maxwell of Springkell, second Baronet. | No |
| SPRI3 | Spring Grove | In Kent. The residence of Thomas Brett and his son Nicholas Brett. | No |
| STAD1 | Stade | Prince William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland retreated here after the Battle of Hastenbeck. | No |
| STAN1 | University of St Andrews | | No |
| STAN2 | St Andrew's Episcopal Chapel | In Banff. The present church is built on the site of the church burned in 1746. | No |
| STBR1 | St Brigid's House | Glenbucket's house near Achriachan (now Tomintoul) and Camdelmore (see Roberts, "Scalan Destroyed," p. 93). | No |
| STCU1 | St Cuthbert's | A church in Carlisle. The present building dates from 1778. | No |
| STEP1 | Stepney | | Yes |
| STEW1 | Reverend John Stewart's Episcopal meeting house | Unclear where this was, but possibly in Tain. | No |
| STEW2 | Castle Stuart | | No |
| STGE1 | St George's Channel | Channel separating Ireland and Wales. | Yes |
| STIR1 | Stirling Castle | | No |
| STIR2 | Stirling | | Yes |
| STIR3 | Stirlingshire | | No |
| STIR4 | Stirling Old Bridge | A fifteenth-century four-arched bridge. Damaged in the siege at Stirling. | No |
| STIR5 | Stirling Tolbooth | Built in 1705. Designed by Sir William Bruce of Kinross, husband to Lady Bruce. | No |
| STJA1 | St. James's Palace | | No |
| STJA2 | St James's Square | London. | No |
| STKI1 | St Kilda | An archipelago comprising four islands, and the westernmost of The Hebrides. | No |
| STMA1 | St Malo | | No |
| STMA2 | St Martin's Kirk | Medieval and ruined church in Cairnie. | No |
| STMA3 | St Margaret's Hill | Open space in Southwark. | No |
| STMA4 | St Mary's County | In Maryland. | No |
| STNI1 | St Ninian's Church | A church used to store Jacobite munitions during the Siege of Stirling Castle. Whether the consequent destruction was accidental is a subject of interest in the Lyon in Mourning. | No |
| STNI2 | St Ninian's | | Yes |
| STOB1 | Stobo Kirk | Twelfth century church in the Scottish Borders. | No |
| STOC1 | Stockport | Industrial town in Greater Manchester, England. | No |
| STOL1 | Stolberg | Town in North Rhine-Westphalia | No |
| STON1 | Stonyfield | About equidistant from Inverness and Culloden Moor. | No |
| STOR1 | Stornoway | The main town of the Western Isles and the capital of Lewis and Harris in Scotland. | No |
| STPA1 | St Paul's Cathedral | Cathedral in London | No |
| STPE1 | St. Peter's Episcopal Chapel | At Roxburgh Place in Edinburgh from 1791 (Ingram, A Jacobite Stronghold, p. 87). Moved to the newly-built Lutton Place in the mid-nineteenth century. | No |
| STRA1 | Strathmashie | Badenoch | No |
| STRA10 | Strath Cluanie | | Yes |
| STRA11 | Strath diveran | Not identified. | No |
| STRA2 | Strath | A parish on Skye. | No |
| STRA3 | Strathspey | Region near the river Spey | No |
| STRA4 | Strathglass | Strathglass is a strath or wide and shallow valley in the Highlands of Scotland. The River Glass runs through this valley. | Yes |
| STRA5 | Strathbogie | Valley of the River Bogie in Aberdeenshire, Scotland. | No |
| STRA6 | Strathdon | In Strathspey. Now Strathavon or Stratha'an (see Blaikie, Origins of the '45, p. 113). | No |
| STRA7 | Stratton Park | A medieval manor in Bedfordsire. | No |
| STRA8 | Strathyre | A district and village, historically in Perthshire. | No |
| STRA9 | Stratherrick | Valley in the Highlands. | No |
| STRO1 | Struan | | Yes |
| STRO2 | Stromness | A town on Orkney mainland. | No |
| STST1 | St Stephen's Chapel | House of Commons chamber in the old Palace of Westminster (destroyed by fire in 1834). | No |
| SUFF1 | Suffolk | County in England. | No |
| SUTH1 | Sutherlandshire | | No |
| SWED1 | Sweden | Country in Europe | No |
| SWIT1 | Switzerland | | No |
| TAIL1 | Tail Burn | Grey-Mares-Tail. | No |
| TAIN1 | Tain | | Yes |
| TALI1 | Talisker | Settlement in the Isle of Skye | No |
| TART1 | Tartan Hall | | No |
| TAYB1 | Tay-Bridge | The Tay Bridge carries the railway across the Firth of Tay in Scotland between Dundee and Wormit in Fife. | No |
| TAYR1 | River Tay | The River Tay (Scottish Gaelic: Tatha, IPA: [ˈt̪ʰa.ə]; probably from the conjectured Brythonic Tausa, possibly meaning 'silent one' or 'strong one' or, simply, 'flowing') is the longest river in Scotland and the seventh-longest in Great Britain. | No |
| TENN1 | Tinnis Castle | | No |
| TERR1 | HMS Terror | | No |
| THAM1 | River Thames | | Yes |
| THAN1 | Thane of Fife | A transport ship. | No |
| THEO1 | Theobalds Road | Road in London. | No |
| THOM1 | Thomas | Supposedly a ship on which John MacKinnon of Elgol was briefly held, although there is no ship of this name in Prisoners of the '45, nor is there a plausible Thomas on the Three Decks database. | No |
| THUR1 | Thurso | | Yes |
| THUR2 | Thuringia | Region in Germany. | No |
| TILB1 | Tilbury Fort | On the Thames in Essex. | Yes |
| TIRE1 | Tiree | Island in the Inner Hebrides. | Yes |
| TOMB1 | Tombae | In Glenlivet. The chapel stood "further up the Livet than the present neo-Gothic church" (Roberts, "Scalan Destroyed," p. 97. | No |
| TOMD1 | Tomdoun | Settlement in the Highlands. | Yes |
| TORD1 | Tordarroch | | Yes |
| TORM1 | Tarmore | An estate just outside of Keith. | No |
| TORV1 | Torr a' Mhuilt | A wood between Clunes and Locharkaig in Lochaber (see p. 167). | No |
| TORW1 | Torwood | A forested area near Falkirk. | No |
| TOTE1 | Tobhta | A township on Skye. | No |
| TOTT1 | Tottrome | A township on Skye. | No |
| TOUR1 | Tournai | Belgium | No |
| TOWE1 | Tower Hill | London | No |
| TOWE2 | Tower of London | | Yes |
| TRIA1 | The Trial | A Royal Navy sloop. | No |
| TRIT1 | H.M.S. Triton | | No |
| TROD1 | Eilean Trodday | A small island near the Skye peninsula of Trotternish. | No |
| TRON1 | Tron Kirk | Former parish church still standing on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh. | No |
| TROT1 | Trotternish | A peninsula on Skye | No |
| TULL1 | Tullibardine House | | No |
| TULL2 | Tullochgorm | Badenoch | No |
| TULL3 | Tullochs | There are many places called Tulloch in Scotland, but Robert Stewart probably means Tullochs (Upper and Nether) in Aberdeenshire. | No |
| TURK1 | Turkey | In the eighteenth century this name refers not to the modern state, but to the whole of the Ottoman Empire. | No |
| TUSC1 | The Grand Duchy of Tuscany | | No |
| TWEE1 | River Tweed | A river that flows near the Anglo-Scottish border. | Yes |
| TWEE2 | Tweedmuir Kirk | The present building dates to 1874, replacing a church built in 1643. | No |
| TWEE3 | Tweedy Brae | Not located, but supposedly near Tweedsmuir. | No |
| TWEE4 | Tweed's Well | Source of the River Tweed in the Lowther Hills. | No |
| TYBU1 | Tyburn | | No |
| UAIM1 | Uaimh Shomhairle | A cave in Glenevis. | No |
| UISG1 | Uisge Chaoil Reidhe | | No |
| UISG2 | Uisge-nam-Fichead | | No |
| UISH1 | Uishness Point | Either the location of the later Ushenish Lighthouse, or some point of land closer to Bàgh Uisinis (Usinish Bay). | No |
| UNIT1 | America | The Thirteen Colonies. | No |
| UPPE1 | Upper-Downen | Probably Upper Dunans or Downan in Banffshire. | No |
| URIE1 | River Urie | A small river in Aberdeenshire, meeting the River Don at Inverurie. | No |
| URQU1 | Urquhart | | No |
| USAN1 | Usan | Harbour. Located to the south of Montrose in Angus, Scotland. | No |
| VALX1 | Val | In or about Lafelt in modern Belgium. The Battle of Lauffeld (Lafelt) or Val was fought here in 1747. The origin of the name Val is unclear. | No |
| VEER1 | Veere | Town and port in the Dutch Republic. | No |
| VENI1 | Venice | Capital of the Republic of Venice. | Yes |
| VERO1 | Verona | City in Italy. | No |
| VERS1 | Palace of Versailles | | No |
| VIEN1 | Vienna | City in the Holy Roman Empire. | Yes |
| VIRG1 | Colony of Virginia | English and later British colony in North America (1606-1776). | No |
| VIRG2 | Virginia Capes | Cape Charles and Cape Henry. | No |
| VITE1 | Viterbo | | No |
| WALS1 | Walston | Hamlet in the middle of black mount area of South Lanarkshire | Yes |
| WARW1 | Warwick Hall | The present building dates to the twentieth century. | No |
| WARW2 | Warwick Bridge | A village five miles east of Carlisle. | No |
| WATE1 | Water of Leith | | Yes |
| WATE2 | River Nairn | | Yes |
| WATE3 | Water of Esk | River Esk that runs through Midlothian and East Lothian, Scotland. It initially runs as two separate rivers: the North Esk and the South Esk.
| No |
| WATE4 | Point of Waternish | The northernmost point on the peninsula of Waternish or Vaternish (Scottish Gaelic: Bhàtairnis) on the island of Skye. | No |
| WATE5 | Watergate | Gateway in Edinburgh. | No |
| WELL1 | Wellhouse | Alexander Fraser's house in the Parish of Kilmorack | No |
| WEST1 | Westminster | | Yes |
| WEST2 | The Western Isles | Also known as the Outer Hebrides, comprising Lewis and Harris (Leòdhas agus na Hearadh), North Uist (Uibhist a Tuath), South Uist (Uibhist a Deas), Benbecula (Beinn na Faoghla), Barra (Barraigh), and many smaller islands. Also known as The Long Island (An t-Eilean Fada). | No |
| WEST3 | West Port | Gate in Flodden Wall at Edinburgh. | No |
| WEST4 | Wester Ross | The western region of Ross-shire. | No |
| WEST5 | Westminster Abbey | Church in Westminster, and the location of coronations. | No |
| WHIM1 | Whim House | House in the Scottish Borders. Purchased by Sir James Montgomery, first Baronet. | No |
| WHIN1 | Whinmoor | A settled area now part of Leeds. | No |
| WHIT1 | Whitehall | Centre of government in London at the former site of the Palace of Whitehall. | Yes |
| WICO1 | Wicomico River | A tributary of the Potomac River. The port Alexander Stewart refers to is unlocated. | No |
| WIGA1 | Wigan | Town in Greater Manchester, on the River Douglas | No |
| WIMB1 | Wimbledon | Suburb of London | Yes |
| WIND1 | Windsor Park | Royal Park in England | No |
| WIND2 | Windsor | | Yes |
| WIND3 | Windlestraelee | Unidentified. Supposedly an estate near Penicuik House. | No |
| WOOD1 | Woodsheal | Woodsheal, Scotland | No |
| WOOD2 | Woodhouselee | An estate in Midlothian. The house was demolished after 1960. | No |
| WRAE1 | Wrae Castle | A ruined sixteenth century tower house in the Scottish Borders. | No |
| WRAE2 | Wrae Hill | In the Scottish Borders. | No |
| YARR1 | Yarrow | A parish in the Scottish Borders (formerly Selkirkshire). | No |
| YORK1 | York Jail | | No |
| YORK2 | York | | Yes |
| YORK3 | York Castle | York Castle is a fortified complex in the city of York, England. | No |
| YORK4 | Yorkshire | Historic county in England. | No |