Places

IDPlace NameNoteMapped
ABER1AberdeenYes
ABER2AberchalderNo
ABER3AberdeenshireNo
ABER4AberardarA hamlet in Inverness-shire.No
ABER5Abercairny HouseSeat of John Moray, thirteenth of Abercairny. The present house was built in the twentieth century.No
ACAR1Acarsaid FhalaichNo
ACHN1Achnacarry CastleIn Lochaber. Destroyed as retribution for Donald Cameron of Lochiel's participation in the rising.No
ACHN2AchnasaulA village on the shore of Loch Arkaig.No
ACHN3AchnacarryA Hamlet in Lochaber.No
ADVO1Advocates LibraryLibrary located in EdinburghNo
AIRD1The AirdIn the northeast of Skye.No
AIRD2The AirdIn Lovat's territory, Inverness-shire.No
AIRT1AirthA village and trading port near Falkirk.No
AIXE1Aix-en-ProvenceCity in southern France.Yes
AIXL1Aix-la-Chapelle1748 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
ALEX1Alexander and JamesTransport ship. See Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 6, 162.No
ALFO1AlfordA village in Aberdeenshire.Yes
ALIS1AlisaryA 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
ALLA1AllargueAncestral house of John FarquharsonYes
ALLO1AllowayA village in Ayrshire. The birthplace of Robert Burns.No
ALLO2AlloaA town on the River Forth, six miles to the east of Stirling.No
ALTH1Althash BurnIdentified as such by James Frederick Skinner Gordon, The Book of the Chronicles of Keith [...] (Glasgow: Robert Forrester, 1880), p. 44. No
ALVA1AlvaHistorically in Stirlingshire.Yes
ALVE1AlvesVillage in Moray.Yes
AMIE1AmiensFranceNo
ANGU1AngusShire of Angus, council in ScotlandNo
ANNA1AnnanTown in Dumfries and Galloway, south-west Scotland. No
ANNA2River AnnanA river in south-west Scotland.Yes
ANNA3AnnapolisCapital of Maryland.Yes
ANTR1AntrimTown in the North of Ireland (County Antrim).No
ANTW1AntwerpYes
APOS1Apostolic PalaceHost to papal conclaves.No
APPI1AppinA coastal district of the Scottish West HighlandsNo
APPI2Appin HouseNo
APPL1Applecross BayNo
ARBU1ArbuthnottHistorically in Kincardineshire (Mearns).Yes
ARDN1ArdnamurchanPeninsula in Lochaber, ScotlandNo
ARDO1ArdochCommunity in Perth and Kinross, ScotlandNo
ARDO2Ardoch Old BridgeBridge spanning the River Knaik.No
ARGY1ArgyleshireAlso called Argyll, ArgylleshireNo
ARIS1ArisaigLochaberYes
ARMA1ArmadaleOn Skye.Yes
ARMA2Armathwaite HallHome, in 1745, to Benson Highmore.No
ARYN1Arnish PointYes
ASHB1AshbourneAshbourne is a market town in the Derbyshire Dales district in Derbyshire, England.No
ASHL1AshleyNear Bath No
ATHO1AthollWhere the Atholl raids took placeYes
AUCH1Auchendinny HouseNo
AULD1AuldearnVillage outside Nairn House.Yes
AUST1Austrian NetherlandsA significant theatre in the War of Austrian Succession (1740-48).No
AYRS1AyrshireNo
AYRX1AyrYes
BADE1BadenochRegion in the HighlandsYes
BALE1BaleshareNorth UistYes
BALF1BalfinlayAlso Bellfinlay, part of Nunton (outer Hebrides)No
BALO1BalodingaghaborUnidentified. A hill near Monkstadt House.No
BALQ1BalquhidderVillage in PerthshireNo
BALT1HMS BaltimoreShipNo
BALT2Baltic SeaNo
BANF1BanffshireNo
BANF2BanffA town in Aberdeenshire (historically in Banffshire.No
BANN1BannockburnCity in ScotlandNo
BANN2Bannockburn MuirNo
BARB1BarbadosNo
BARN1BernerayNo
BARN2BarnhillA hill near Inverness.No
BARR1BarraYes
BATH1BathSeaside resort town in EnglandYes
BATH2BathgateTown in West Lothian, Scotland.Yes
BATH3Parish of BathgateHistorically in Linlithgowshire.No
BEDF1BedfordshireA county in England.Yes
BEIN1Beinn ArcharainA hill in Chisholm's territory.No
BEIN2Beinn Ruigh ChoinnichHill near Lochboisdale.No
BELF1Belfast LoughInlet in the north of Ireland.Yes
BELL1Belle-ÎleIsland off the coast of Brittany.No
BELL2BelloneFrench privateer ship.No
BELM1Belmont HouseThe present house on this site was built in the nineteenth century.No
BENA1Ben AlderMountain in the Highlands.Yes
BENB1BenbeculaWestern IslesYes
BENC1Ben CorodaleBeinn Choradail. A mountain on South Uist.No
BERG1BerguesNo
BERL1BerlinIn the eighteenth century, the capital city of Prussia.Yes
BERN1Canton de BerneOne of the constituent states of Switzerland.No
BERW1Berwick-upon-TweedA town near the Anglo-Scottish border.Yes
BIEL1Bield InnProperty of Thomas Tweedie of Oliver.No
BLAC1Black BaronyHouse in the Scottish Borders.No
BLAC2Blackwell HallResidence of Sir Richard Musgrave just south of Carlisle (Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 25).No
BLAI1Blair CastlePerthshire seat of the Dukes of Atholl.Yes
BLAI2Blair AthollVillage in Perthshire, ScotlandNo
BLAI3BlairfettieNow deserted village near Blair AthollNo
BLAI4Blair InnInn 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
BONN1BonnyhaughA house attached to the land and mill of Bonnytoun in Edinburgh, where Stewart Carmichael had his linen manufactory.No
BORD1Bord CruinA broad, flat rock to the east of Fladaigh Chùain.No
BORN1BornesketaigA settlement in Trotternish.No
BORR1BorrodaleRefers to Borrodale Bay or Beach in Lochaber, not to Borrodale on Skye.No
BORR2Borrodale HouseAngus MacDonald, fourth of Boradale's house, burned by the time of Charles Edward Stuart's return from the Hebrides.No
BOST1BostonYes
BOTC1BotcherbyBotcherby 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
BOUC1BouchoutCamp of Bouchout in Brussels.No
BOUL1BoulogneFranceNo
BOUR1BourblachFormerly a township near the village of Morar. Might also refer to the nearby hill.No
BOWC1Bowchell HallNot identified. In Glenlivet. Burned in the aftermath of Culloden.No
BOYN1River BoyneRiver in Leinster, IrelandNo
BOYN2BoyndieVillage in AberdeenshireYes
BRAE2BraemarA village in Aberdeenshire.No
BRAI1Braid HillsIn Edinburgh.No
BRAM1BramptonNo
BRAN1BrandenburgA Margraviate in Germany roughly corresponding to the modern Province of Brandenburg.No
BRAS1Brasenose CollegeAn Oxford college.No
BREA1BreagachA settlement in Banffshire, burned in 1746.No
BREA2BreadalbaneRegion in the Southern/Central HighlandsNo
BREC1BrechinTown in Angus, ScotlandNo
BRES1BrestPort city in Brittany, France.Yes
BRIC1BraeAlso known as Brica or BreaYes
BRID1Bridge StreetStreet in Inverness continuous with Inverness Bridge.No
BRID2Bridge of DonFive arch bridge in Aberdeen, Scotland.No
BRID3BridgewaterShip.No
BRID4Inverness BridgeSeven-arched stone bridge spanning the River Ness at Inverness, 1685-1849.No
BRIT1The British Coffee-HouseIn 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
BRIT2BritainA geopolitical entity, distinct from Great Britain, which refers only to the landmass of Great Britain. Excludes Ireland.No
BROA1BroadhaughThe original house, demolished in 1963, stood to the west of the modern Breda House.No
BROA2BroadfordVillage on Skye.Yes
BROU1Broughton HouseThe 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
BROU2Broughton MuirNot located, but presumably near the village of Broughton.No
BROU3BroughtonA village in the Scottish Borders (formerly Peebleshire).No
BRUS1BrusselsIn Belgium.No
BUBU1The Bu of BurrayThe seat of Sir James Stewart of Burray on Burray in Orkney. Now the site of Bow Farmhouse.No
BUCH1BuchanA district in Aberdeenshire, Scotland.Yes
BUCH2Buchan Ness PointIn Aberdeenshire.Yes
BUNC1Bun CraobhA village in Inverness-shire.No
BUNR1BunrannochSite of an abandoned medieval village in Perthshire.No
BURN1BurnhallNo
BURN2Burnet's CloseNo
BURR1BurrayOrkneyYes
BURT1Burton Upon TrentBurton 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
CABR1CabrachA parish in Moray.No
CAGE1Cluny’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
CAIR1CairnieAlso spelled Cairney. Village in Aberdeenshire, Scotland.No
CAIR2Cairnie BurnA stream that rises in the Mounth, or eastern range of the Grampian Mountains, north of Netherley, Aberdeenshire, Scotland.No
CAIT1CaithnessA county in the far northeast of Scotland.No
CALA1CalaisPort city in France.No
CALL1CallanderA town in the historic county of Perthshire.Yes
CALV1Calvay CastleNo
CAMB1CambridgeYes
CAMM1CamastianavaigA township on Skye.Yes
CAMP1CampbeltownTown in Argyll and Bute.No
CAMU1Camusdarach BeachNear Mallaig in Morar.No
CANN1CannaIsland in the Inner Hebrides; Canaigh, Canna, Eilean Chanaigh, Isle of CannaYes
CANN2River CannichRiver which runs through Glen CannichYes
CANO1The CanongateStreet and district in EdinburghNo
CANO2Canongate TolboothNo
CANT1Cantray HouseHouse of the Dallas family of Cantray, just east of Culloden Moor. No longer standing.No
CAPE1Cape CharlesIn Virginia. Cape Charles and Cape Henry are known as the Virginia Capes.No
CAPE2Cape HenryIn Virginia. Cape Henry and Cape Charles are known as the Virginia Capes.No
CAPH1Cap-HaïtienFormerly Cap-Français.No
CAPT1"Captn. Alexr. MacDonalld's house"No
CARL1Carlisle CastleYes
CARL2CarlisleYes
CARL3Carlisle CathedralNo
CARO1CarolinaOne of the early English (and later British) colonies in North America, partitioned in 1712.No
CARR1CarridenNo
CART1CarthageAncient city in northern Africa.No
CAST1CastlehillTo the east of Inverness (now incorporated into Inverness). The house on site was built or rebuilt after the Rising of 1745.No
CAST2Castle SempleLocated in Renfrewshire, ScotlandNo
CAST3Castle LachlanAttacked by the government in 1746 and thereafter abandoned.No
CAST4Doune CastleA medieval castle, historically in Perthshire.No
CAST5Brahan CastleHome of Kenneth Mackenzie, Lord Fortrose, south of Dingwall.No
CATE1CateleyNot firmly identified, but probably Catlodge (Caitleag in Gaelic, with alternative spellings of Cattelleitt, Catleak, Catlaig, and Catalach).No
CAVE1Prince's Cave, Glen CorodaleA cave in Glen Corodale in which Charles Edward Stuart stayed.No
CHAM1ChampagneHistorical province in France.No
CHAR1Charlevillea commune in FranceNo
CHAR2Charing CrossNo
CHEL1ChelseaYes
CIAA1Abhainn Cia-aigA small river in Lochaber.No
CITA1Citadel of LeithNo
CLAD1Claddach CarinishSoutheast of Carinish, North Uist. "Cladach" means "beach" or "shore." Yes
CLAS1ClashnoirA settlement in Glenlivet.No
CLEA1CleanhillA hill and some sort of settlement in Banffshire. In Roy's Military Survey, it appears as Glugyhill.No
CLES1Clestrain's houseThe 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
CLIF1CliftonWhere the battle of Clifton (Clifton Moor Skirmish) took placeYes
CLUN1Cluny's houseThe 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
CLUN2ClunesA hamlet in Lochaber.No
CLUN3ClunyThe estate of Ewen Macpherson, eighteenth of Cluny.No
CLYD1River ClydeA river in Scotland which flows through Glasgow. The eighth longest river in the United Kingdom.Yes
CLYN1Hill of ClyneNo
COAL1CoalhillA short street on the Water of Leith in Leith.No
COCH1CochivileIdentity 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
COIR1Coire MheadhoinA cave.No
COIR2Coire DhóBlaikie 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
COIR3Coire Sgoir adailNear Loch Hourn.No
COIR4Coire nan GallNo
COIR5Coire Beinn nan CabarA hollow in Beinn nan Cabar, a hill in Morar.No
COIR6Coire OdharAlso known as "the dun corry," in Lochaber (see Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 59).No
COIR7Coire an Iubhair MòrAt the foot of Ben Alder.No
COIR8Coire a MhaigheNo
COLC1ColchesterYes
COLL1College of ArmsLondonNo
COLL2CollarigNo
COLT1Colt BridgeIn Edinburgh.No
COMM1The CommodoreShipNo
CORR1Corrieyairack PassThrough Corrieyairack HillYes
CORR2CorrybroughAn estate in Inverness-shire.No
COUP1Coupar AngusIn Perthshire, formerly in Angus.No
COWA1Captain Cowan's shipShip 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
COWG1CowgateA street in Edinburgh.No
COWG2Cowgate PortGateway in Edinburgh.No
CRAI1CrailYes
CRAI2CraigheadA settlement near Mulben in Moray.No
CRAI3Craighall CastleIn Perthshire. No
CRAS1CraskieAn estate in Glenmoriston.No
CRIE1CrieffYes
CRIN1Cringletie HouseHouse near Eddleston Water.No
CROM1Cromwell's FortAlso known as the Old Citadel, Inverness.No
CROO1Crook InnNo
CROO2Crook's MillJust outside of Keith. The mill now standing was built in 1895.No
CROS1Cross HouseSeat of the Laird of Morar in Morar, destroyed in 1746.No
CROS2Cross KirkChurch in Peebles founded by Alexander III in the thirteenth century. It later became a Trinitarian friary.No
CROW1Crown TavernAt the entry to Parliament Close.No
CROY1CroyA village between Inverness and Nairn.No
CUIL1CuillinA mountain range on Skye.No
CULC1Kilravock Castle groundsIdentified as such by Maidment, ed., Spottiswoode Miscellany, vol. 2, p. 496. "Culraick" resembles the Gaelic name: Cill Raithag.Yes
CULL1Culloden MoorDrumossie MoorYes
CULL2Culloden HouseYes
CULL3CullenIn BanffshireYes
CULL4Cullen HouseSeat 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
CULL5Cullen Old Market CrossStood across from the parish church before being moved some time between 1821 and 1830.No
CULQ1CulquoichNo
CUMB1CumbernauldA town in North Lanarkshire, ScotlandYes
CUMB2CumberlandHistorically a county in the northwest of England, incorporated into Cumbria in 1974.No
CUPA1CuparTown in Fife.Yes
CUST1The Custom HouseA building designed by Thomas Ripley, standing on the south side of Lower Thames Street (London) from 1717 to 1814.No
DALC1DalchruinSettlement near Perth, ScotlandNo
DALE1DaleliaNo
DALK1DalkeithDalkeith is a town in Midlothian, Scotland, on the River Esk. No
DALM1Dul mac GerraidhA settlement in Inverness-shire.No
DALN1DalnacardochA public house and later a hunting lodge on Wade's Road. Rebuilt in 1774 (Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 11).No
DALR1DalrachneyThe land on which Inverlaidnan sits.No
DALW1DalwhinnieA small village in the Scottish HighlandsNo
DARI1DarienNo
DARL1DarlingtonA market town in County Durham, England.No
DAWY1Dawyck HouseSeat of Sir James Nasmyth, second Baronet. Also known as New Posso.No
DEER1Deer SoundA bay on Orkney Mainland.No
DERB1DerbyNo
DETT1DettingenSite of a victorious battle for the British and allies against the French in 1743.No
DICK1Messenger William Dick's houseIn London. It was most likely here that Dr John Burton and John Walkinshaw collected the accounts passed on to Forbes.No
DING1DingwallDingwall (Scots: Dingwal,[2] Scottish Gaelic: Inbhir Pheofharain[3] [ˈiɲɪɾʲ ˈfjɔhəɾan]) is a town and a royal burgh in Scotland.No
DONA1Donald Campbell's houseIn 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
DORN1DornochTown in Sutherlandshire.Yes
DOUA1DouaiCity in northern France.No
DOUG1DouglasDouglas (Scottish Gaelic: Dùbhghlas) is a village in South Lanarkshire, Scotland. No
DOUN1DounePerthshireYes
DRUI1Druim ChosaidhYes
DRUM1Drumlanrig CastleDrumlanrig Castle is situated on the Queensberry Estate in Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.No
DRUM2Drumelzier CastleA ruined medieval castle in Drumelzier.No
DRUM3DrumelzierVillage in the Scottish Borders.Yes
DRUM4Pass of DrumochterMountain pass in the Scottish Highlands.No
DRUM5Drummond CastleCastle in Perthshire. It is known for its gardens.No
DRYD1DrydenThe Midlothian residence of the Lockharts of Carnwath.No
DRYN1DrynachanA MacDonald estate near Invergarry Castle.No
DUBL1DublinCo. Leinster, IrelandYes
DUMA1Dumyata hill in Ochill Hills, ScotlandNo
DUMB1Dumbarton CastleCastle overlooking Dumbarton, Scotland.No
DUMF1DumfriesshireNo
DUMF2DumfriesYes
DUNB1DunblanePerthshire (until 1994)Yes
DUNB2DunbennanA settlement in Aberdeenshire.No
DUND1DundeeYes
DUNF1DunfermlineTown in ScotlandYes
DUNK1DunkeldPerthshire cathedral city.Yes
DUNK2DunkirkNo
DUNM1DunmoreA village southeast of Stirling, formerly known as Elphinstone Pans.No
DUNR1Dunrobin CastleSeat of the Chief of Clan Sutherland.Yes
DUNV1Dunvegan CastleSeat of the chief of Clan MacLeod in Skye.No
DUPP1Dupplin CastleA former castle (now a country house) in Perthshire.No
DURH1DurhamYes
DUTC1Dutch RepublicNo
DUTE1La Du TeillayFrench privateer ship owned by Antoine Vincent Walsh.No
EAGL1EagleBritish ship which captured the Bellone.No
EAMO1Eamont BridgeA fifteenth-century bridge spanning the River Eamont to the south of Penrith.No
EARN1River EarnRuns through Perthshire.No
EAST1Easter JaslickNot identified.No
EAVA1EavalNorth Uist.Yes
EDDL1Eddleston WaterSmall river north of Peebles which joins the River Tweed there. Yes
EDIN1Edinburgh CastleYes
EDIN2EdinburghYes
EDIN3Edinburgh TolboothAlso known as Edinburgh Gaol or Edinburgh Prison.No
EDIN4Edinburgh Mercat CrossUntil 1756, Edinburgh's Mercat Cross was located at the north end of Old Fishmarket Close.No
EDIN5EdinburghBritish ship which captured the Bellone. No
EDIN6Edindaich Mortifier's SchoolBuilt near Keith Old Kirk in 1648. No longer standing. See Keith Grammar School prospectus 1915-16, PDF pp. 6 and 29.No
EIGG1EiggIsland in the Inner Hebrides;Yes
EILE1Eilean Loch ArkaigAn island in Locharkaig, also known as Columbkill.No
EILE2Eilean na GlaschoilleA small island in Loch Nevis.No
ELGI1ElginScotland, within MorayYes
ELGO1ElgolOn Skye.Yes
ELIZ1ElizabethFrench ship.No
ELST1ElstreeYes
ELTH1ElthamNo
ELWI1Elwick BayA harbour on Shapinsay.No
EMDE1EmdenNo
ENGL1EnglandEnglandYes
ENZI1EnzieAn area in Banffshire.No
ERIS1EriskayYes
ERRI1Errickstane HillIn Lanarkshire.No
EUIR1Eilean LiubhairdAlso Euirn, Iffurt, Iubhard (Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 49).No
EURO1EuropeContinentNo
EXET1ExeterCity in South West EnglandNo
EXET2Exeter CathedralCathedral in Exeter dedicated to Saint Peter.No
FAIL1FaillieAn estate or township in Inverness-shire.No
FALK1FalkirkYes
FALK2Falkirk Old Parish ChurchA medieval church at the heart of Falkirk, almost entirely rebuilt in the nineteenth century.No
FALK3FalklandVillage in Fife.Yes
FALM1FalmouthTown in England.Yes
FARO1Farraline HouseNo
FASN1FasnakyleA small settlement.Yes
FASS1FassifernThe house of John Cameron of Fassifern in Lochaber.No
FERN1FerntowerOnce 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
FERR1FerrydenFerryden is a village in Angus, Scotland in the community council area of Ferryden and Craig. It is south of Montrose.No
FIFE1FifeCouncil area in ScotlandNo
FIND1FindhornVillage in Moray.Yes
FINS1FinsbayA small township on the southeast coast of South Harris.No
FIRT1Firth of ForthYes
FIRT2Dornoch FirthSee Carlisle, "Tain," Topographical Dictionary of Scotland, vol. 2).No
FISH1FisherrowFisherrow 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
FLAD1Fladaigh ChùainA small island in the Inner Hebrides.No
FLAN1FlandersFlemish region of BelgiumNo
FLOR1FlorenceCapital of the Grand Duchy of TuscanyYes
FOCH1FochabersFochabers, Fachabair or Fothabair is a village in Moray, Scotland. It is close to the River Spey and the city of Elgin. No
FOCH2Fochabers Mercat CrossNo
FONT1FontenoyNo
FORF1Forfara town in ScotlandNo
FORR1ForresTown within MorayYes
FORT1FortroseFortroseYes
FORT2Fort WilliamLochaberYes
FORT3Fort AugustusInverness-shireYes
FORT4River ForthNo
FRAN1FranceNo
FRAO1Fraoch BheinnA mountain near Locharkaig.No
FRAO2Loch FraonUnidentified. Supposedly a harbour on the coast of Ross-shire.No
FURN1HMS FurnaceShip. See Prisoners of the '45, pp. 6, 254.No
GALL1GallowayRegion in Southwestern ScotlandNo
GALT1GaltrigillYes
GARR1River GarryRiver which flows through Glengarry.Yes
GARV1GarvamoreProbably refers to Garvamore barracks.No
GARV2Garvock HouseThe Perthshire seat of the Graemes of Garvick (or Garrick). Rebuilt in the nineteenth century.No
GASK1Old Gask HouseSeat of the Oliphants of Gask.No
GASK2GaskIn Strathnairn, Inverness-shire.No
GEDE1GedernNo
GERM1GermanyYes
GILD1GildartShip belonging to Richard Gildart. The name given by Alexander Stewart is confirmed elsewhere by Gildart (Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, p. 46).No
GIVE1GivetCommune in France.No
GLAD1Gladsmuiraka (Battle of) PrestonpansYes
GLAM1GlameA settlement on Raasay.No
GLAS1GlasgowYes
GLAS2The GlasgowA Royal Navy ship.No
GLEN1GlenaladaleYes
GLEN10GlenelgYes
GLEN11Glen CannichYes
GLEN12Glen Cia-aigNo
GLEN13GlenmazeranNo
GLEN14GlengarryYes
GLEN15Glen BeasdaleA corner of MacDonald of Boradale's estate.No
GLEN16Glen LyonGlen in Perth and KinrossNo
GLEN17Glen KingieA glen or valley in the Northwest Highlands of ScotlandNo
GLEN18Glen CorodaleOn the east coast of South UistNo
GLEN19Gleann CòsaidhYes
GLEN2GlenlivetNo
GLEN20GlendulichanIdentity 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
GLEN21GlensiarichNot 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
GLEN22Glen ShielIn the Highlands of Scotland. The site of a significant Jacobite defeat in 1719.No
GLEN23Glen ConglassNo
GLEN24Glen LoyneNo
GLEN25Glen OrchyIn Argyleshire.No
GLEN26Glen RoyYes
GLEN27Gleann CamgharaidhAt the head of Locharkaig.No
GLEN28GlenrinnesA village in BanffshireNo
GLEN3GlencoeA settlement in Lochaber. Site of the Massacre of Glencoe on February 13, 1692. A common refrain in Jacobite memory.Yes
GLEN4GlenfinnanLochaberYes
GLEN5GlenevisLochaberYes
GLEN6GlenpeanYes
GLEN7GlendessaryYes
GLEN8GlenmoristonYes
GLEN9Glen StrathfarrarYes
GOGA1GogarYes
GORD1Castle GordonSeat of the Dukes of Gordon, just north of Fochabers.No
GORT1Gorthleck HouseThe house of Thomas Fraser of Gorthleck, where Simon Fraser of Lovat was staying at the time of the Battle of Culloden Moor.No
GRAM1GramsdaleOn Benbecula.No
GRAN1Grange HouseResidence of George Durie of Grange, Lord Rutherford.No
GRAV1GravelinesCommune in northern France.No
GRAY1Gray's MillFarmhouse on the Water of Leith in Slateford.No
GREA1Great BritainRefers only to the largest landmass in the British Isles, not to the geopolitical entity of Britain.Yes
GREE1GreenheadBritish ship which was wrecked off the coast of the Dutch Republic in November 1774.No
GRET1Gretna GreenIn Dumfries and Galloway.Yes
GREY1Grey-Mares-TailA waterfall near Moffat.No
GREY2HMS GreyhoundShipNo
GUIS1Guisachan HouseStrathglass residence of William Fraser of Culbokie and eighth of Guisachan and Margaret MacDonell, burned in the aftermath of Culloden.No
HADD1HaddingtonTown in East Lothian, Scotland.No
HAGG1HaggyhallUnidentified. Supposedly in Liddesdale.No
HAGU1HagueAdministrative centre of the Dutch Republic.No
HAIN1HainautProvince in Wallonia, Belgium. Its capital is Mons.No
HALF1Half Moon Battery, Edinburgh CastleNo
HAMI1HamiltonHamilton is a large town in South Lanarkshire, Scotland.No
HAMM1HammersmithYes
HAMP1Hampton RoadsHarbour by Virginia.No
HANO1HanoverYes
HAPP1Happy JennetA Royal Navy ship.No
HARO1HarrogateHarrogate is a spa town in the district and county of North Yorkshire, England.No
HARR1HarrisIsle of Harris, the southern part of the Scottish Hebridean island of Lewis and Harris.No
HARR2HarrabyAn village now incorporated into Carlisle.No
HARW1HarwichA town in Essex, England.No
HASG1Eilean HasgeirA small island to the west of North Uist.No
HAST1HastenbeckSite of a defeat of the British army and allies by the French in 1757.No
HAWI1HawickTown in Scotland, on the borders of ScotlandNo
HAWL1Henry Hawley's houseIn Hedge Lane, St Martin-in-the-Fields, London.No
HAXX1HaNot identified. A phoenetic rendering of a Gaelic place name.No
HAYM1HaymarketArea in Edinburgh, left of the city-centre.No
HAZA1HMS HazardA ship temporarily captured by the Jacobites and renamed Le Prince Charles. See Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 138, 237, 328.No
HEBR1The HebridesAn archipelago off the west coast of Scotland.Yes
HEUR1L'HeureuxA French frigate.No
HIGH1Highlands of ScotlandNot 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
HIGH2High StreetPart of the Royal Mile in Edinburgh.No
HOLB1HolbornA district in central London.No
HOLL1HollandYes
HOLY1Palace of HolyroodhouseEdinburghNo
HOLY2Holyrood AbbeyEdinburghNo
HOMI1HomieNot located. Possibly the Allt Homie (a stream) in Banffshire (Ordnance Survey, 1888-1915).No
HOUN1HMS HoundNo
HOUR1Loch HournYes
HUMB1HumbieA village in East Lothian.Yes
HUNG1HungaryCountry in Central EuropeNo
HUNT1HuntlyA town in Aberdeenshire.Yes
HUNT2Huntly CastleA now-ruined seat of the Gordons in Aberdeenshire.No
INCH1The LeesThe estate house at Inshes.No
INCH2InshesAn estate southeast of Inverness.No
INCH3InchnacapeA settlement in Moray (formerly Banffshire).No
INFI1Royal Infirmary of EdinburghThe Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh is the oldest voluntary hospital in Scotland. It was established in 1729. TNo
INNI1InnishewanAn estate in Glen Dochart, Perthshire.No
INVE1InverlochieInverlochie/InverlochyYes
INVE10Inverness TolboothRebuilt in 1789-91.No
INVE11Inverness RoadsNo
INVE12Inverness CastleIn Inverness. The castle now on the site is of nineteenth-century construction.No
INVE13InverlaidnanThe eighteenth-century house of the Grants of Dalrachney, now ruined.No
INVE2InvernessYes
INVE3InverurieA town in Aberdeenshire.No
INVE4Invergarry CastleBurned shortly after Charles Edward Stuart's stay following Culloden (Blaikie, Itinerary, p. 46 n3). No
INVE5Inverness-shireNo
INVE6InvermoristonThe 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
INVE7InverwickYes
INVE8InveraryTown in Argyll and Bute.No
INVE9Inverness Old CrossAccording 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
IREL1IrelandYes
IRVI1IrvineTown in North Ayrshire.Yes
ISLA1River IslaA river flowing from Moray to Aberdeenshire.Yes
ISLA2IslayYes
ITAL1ItalyNo
IUIA1WiyaAlso Bhuia or Fuidheigh.No
JAMA1JamaicaYes
JAME1James and MaryA 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
JANE1Jane of LeithTransport ship. See Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 6, 162.No
JEDB1JedburghTown in ScotlandNo
JERU1JerusalemNo
JOHN1JohnsonShip belonging to Richard Gildart. The name given by Alexander Stewart is confirmed elsewhere by Gildart (Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, p. 46).No
KEAB1KeabackProbably 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
KEAM1KeamFormerly a village in Moray.No
KEIT1KeithSmall town within Moray, site of the Skirmish at KeithNo
KEIT2Keith Old KirkBuilt in 1569 and demolished and 1819.No
KEIT3Keith Old BridgeSpanning the River Isla. Built in 1609 and still standing.No
KEIT4Keith HallAn estate just outside Inverurie.No
KELS1KelsoTown in ScotlandNo
KEND1KendalMarket town on the river KentYes
KENL1KenlochindaleNo
KENN1Kennington CommonNo
KENN2KennethmontA village near Huntly in AberdeenshireNo
KENS1Kensington PalaceYes
KENT1KentA county in England.No
KEPP1KeppochReferrenced in relation to "Major Donald MacDonell of the Family of Keppoch"No
KERR1County KerryNo
KESS1Kessock FerryThe 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
KILB1KilbrideTown in TrotternishNo
KILB2KilbuchoAn estate in the Scottish Borders (formerly Peebleshire).No
KILD1KildrummyHamlet in Aberdeenshire.Yes
KILL1Pass of KilliecrankieSite of the Jacobite victory and the death of John Graham of Claverhouse, Viscount of Dundee in 1689.No
KILM1KilmarnockYes
KILM2KilmorackA parish in Inverness-shire.Yes
KILM3KilmarieA village on the Isle of Skye.Yes
KILM4KilmoryVillage located on the Isle of Arran, Scotland No
KILS1KilsythKilsyth is a town and civil parish in North Lanarkshire, roughly halfway between Glasgow and Stirling in Scotland.No
KINC1KincardineshireHistoric county in Scotland. Sometimes known as "The Mearns."No
KING1Kingsburgh HouseOn Skye.Yes
KING2KingsburghA township on Skye.No
KING3KingsmillsJust southeast of Inverness.No
KING4Kingsgate StreetA short street in Holborn.No
KING5KinghornTown in Fife.Yes
KINL1KinlochmoidartLochaberYes
KINL2Kinloch na DalSomewhere 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
KINM1KinmundyA hamlet in Aberdeenshire.No
KINT1KintailRegion of mountains in the Northwest Highlands of ScotlandNo
KINT2KintoreA town in Aberdeenshire.Yes
KIRK1KirkcaldyFifeYes
KIRK2KirkgateA street in Leith.No
KIRK3KirkintillochTown in Dunbartonshire, Scotland.Yes
KIRK4Kirkcaldy TolboothBuilt 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
KIRK5Kirk StreetIn Inverness.No
KIRN1KirnagThe 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
KIRT1Kirtle WaterA river in Dumfries and Galloway.No
KITT1KittlehallA ruined medieval tower house in the Scottish Borders.No
KNOY1KnoydartA peninsula in Lochaber.No
KYLE1Kyles StuleyA farmstead or township in South Uist.No
KYLE2Caol ÀcainA 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
KYNA1KynachanA Perthshire estate. The location relative to the nineteenth-century Kynachan Lodge is unclear.No
LADY1Lady Bruce's houseIn 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
LAGG1LagganLaggan (or Lagan) is a village in Badenoch, in the Highland region of Scotland. It is beside the River Spey.No
LANC1LancasterCity in Lancashire No
LANC2Lancaster CastleNo
LANC3LancashireA county in England.No
LAND1Land of ForgetfulnessMentioned 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
LANG1LangholmLangholm,also known colloquially as the "Muckle Toon", is a burgh in Dumfries and Galloway, southern Scotland.No
LAUD1LauderTown in ScotlandNo
LAUR1LaurencekirkTown in Kincardineshire. Known locally as "Lournie" or "The Kirk."Yes
LECK1Leckie HouseStirlingshireNo
LEED1LeedsA city in Yorkshire.No
LEEK1LeekA market town in Staffordshire.No
LEEK2LeekThe 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
LEHA1Le Hardi MendiantA French ship.No
LEID1LeidenNo
LEIT1LeithYes
LEIT2Leith RoadsWaterwayNo
LEIT3Leith LinksNo
LEIT4Leith TolboothStood from 1565 to 1823. Now the site of modern houses.No
LEIT5Leith WyndIn Edinburgh.No
LEIT6Leith WalkStreet in Edinburgh which connects the city centre to Leith.No
LENY1LenyFrancis Buchanan's estate (through his wife, Elizabeth Buchanan) near Callander.No
LEPR1Le Prince de ContiA French privateer.No
LESM1LesmahagowA town in the historic county of Lanarkshire, Scotland.No
LETT1LetterfinlayYes
LEUC1Leuchatan estate in FifeNo
LEVE1LevenFifeYes
LEWI1LewisAlso known as the Isle of LewisNo
LEWI2Lewis and HarrisThe island comprising Lewis and Harris.No
LIBE1Liberty and PropertyTransport ship. See Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 9, 10, 164.No
LIDD1LiddesdaleValley of the Liddel Water, and historical town in Scotland. No
LIDD2Liddel WaterA river bordering Scotland and England.No
LIND1LindisfarneAlso known as the Holy Island. Off the coast of north-east England.No
LINL1LinlithgowTown in West Lothian, ScotlandNo
LINT1LintonVillage in the Scottish Borders.Yes
LION1HMS LionBritish Royal Navy shipNo
LISB1LisbonCapital of Portugal.Yes
LITI1Litir-na-lic“A very rough, high, rockie Mountain” (p. 1551).No
LIVE1LiverpoolPort city in England.Yes
LIVE2Liverpool BayYes
LIVI1LivingstonVillage in West Lothian.No
LIZA1Lizard PointCornwall. The southernmost point on Great Britain, and historically an important navigational reference point. No
LOCH1LochmaddyNorth UistYes
LOCH11Loch ShielA Loch 20 kilometres from Fort-WilliamNo
LOCH12Loch LevenLake in Perth and KinrossNo
LOCH13Loch BroomLoch 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
LOCH14Loch NevisSea Loch in Lochaber, ScotlandNo
LOCH15Loch StornowayYes
LOCH16Loch nan UabhA lake in Lochaber.No
LOCH17Loch ArnishYes
LOCH18Loch FinsbayYes
LOCH19Loch UskavaghYes
LOCH2Loch EilLochaberYes
LOCH20Loch BracadaleNo
LOCH21Loch SkeenLoch which feeds into Grey-Mares-Tail.Yes
LOCH22Loch ThoirbheartanNo
LOCH23Loch MorarFreshwater loch in Lochaber.Yes
LOCH24Loch QuoichLoch in Lochaber.Yes
LOCH25Loch MoyIn Inverness-shire.No
LOCH26Loch ErichtA lake stretching from Inverness-shire to Perthshire.No
LOCH27Loch ShellAn inlet on Lewis, at the mouth of which is Eilean Liubhaird.No
LOCH28Loch na DalSea loch on Sleat.Yes
LOCH3Loch LochyLochaberYes
LOCH4LochaberA region in the Highlands.Yes
LOCH5LocharkaigLocharkaig, also known as Loch Arkaig (or Gaelic: Loch Airceig), a body of freshwater in Lochaber, Scotland. No
LOCH6Loch LagganYes
LOCH7Loch SeaforthSea loch in the Outer Hebrides of Scotland.No
LOCH8LochboisdaleVillage and port on the island of South Uist, Outer Hebrides No
LOCH9Loch CarnonNo
LOCK1LockerbieTown in Dumfries and Galloway.Yes
LOGI1Logie HouseAt Logie-Almond, a Perthshire estate.No
LOIR1LoireLongest river in France.No
LOND1LondonCapital of EnglandYes
LONG1LongsideVillage in AberdeenshireYes
LONG2The Long DykesOutside of Edinburgh No
LONG3LongtownLongtown is a market town in Cumbria, England, just south of the Scottish Border.No
LONG4Longside Old Parish ChurchIn Longside.No
LORE1LoretoCity in the Marche region of Italy, then part of the Papal States.No
LOWL1LowlandsThe Lowlands of Scotland.No
LUDE1LudeEstate 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
MACC1MacclesfeildMacclesfield is a market town and civil parish in the unitary authority of Cheshire East in Cheshire, England.No
MACD1House of James MacDonaldThe house of James MacDonald in Leith.No
MACE1MacerataCity in the Marche region of Italy, then part of the Papal States.No
MACH1Machany HouseThe Perthshire seat of the Viscounts of Strathallan.No
MACI1Moy HallLady Anne Mackintosh's house.Yes
MACL1MacLaren's LeapA 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
MACN1MacNab's InnNow the site of the Royal Hotel in Portree.No
MADG1MadgeburgAn archbishopric in Germany.No
MAIN1MainA tributary of the Rhine.No
MALL1MallaigA port and village in Morar.No
MAMN1Màm nan CalumA small hill between Glenpean and Glendessary.No
MANC1ManchesterYes
MANN1Isle of ManNo
MARI1Marischal College and University of AberdeenThe present building is modern, but on the site of the old College founded in 1593.No
MARS1Marshalsea PrisonNo
MART1MartiniqueNo
MARY1Province of MarylandEnglish and later British colony in North America (1634-1776).No
MATT1Mattox CreekA tributuary of the Potomac River in Virginia.No
MEAL1Meall an TaigraidhA hill in Lochaber.No
MEAL2Mealan Odhar“A Sheiling of a very narrow Compass” (p. 1548).No
MENT1MenteithA district in Perthshire.No
MENZ1Castle MenziesThe 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
MEWB1MeobleNo
MIDL1MidlothianThe county in which Edinburgh is located.No
MILL1Mill of KeithNow ruined.No
MILT1Milton KeynesYes
MILT2MiltonA tack on South Uist.No
MODE1ModenaNo
MOFF1MoffatYes
MOFF2Moffat WaterYes
MOID1MoidartLochaberNo
MONB1Monboddo HouseNo
MONK1Monkstadt HouseThe seat of Sir Alexander MacDonald of Sleat, seventh Baronet on Skye.Yes
MONS1MonsCity in Belgium.No
MONT1Montrose HarbourIn Montrose at the River Esk.Yes
MONT2MontroseA coastal town in Angus.No
MOOR1MoorhouseA village near Carlisle.No
MORA1MorarA peninsula in Lochaber, north of Loch Morar and Arisaig.No
MORA2MorayMoray, (Scottish Gaelic: Moireibh or Morayshire), called Elginshire until 1919, is a historic county in Scotland.No
MORL1MorlaixA commune in Brittany, France.No
MOSS1Mossfennan HouseNo
MOUL1Moultrie's HillAlso 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
MOYX1MoyA village near Inverness.Yes
MRNO1BoghallHouse of George Norvell.No
MUCH1MuchrachdSee Blaikie, Itinerary, note 2 on p. 64; also Mackenzie, History of the Chisholms, p. 80. No
MUIC1Wood of MuickUnidentified, 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
MULB1MulbenA hamlet in Moray. Roy's Military Survey has Millben.No
MULL1Isle of MullFourth largest island in ScotlandNo
MUNS1MünsterNo
MURL1MurlaganA small hamlet located on the north shore of Loch Arkaig in Inverness-shire.No
MUTH1MuthillYes
NAIR1Nairn HouseNo
NAIR2NairnNairn is a town and royal burgh in the Highland council area of Scotland. No
NANT1NantesA port-city in France. The metropolitan center of the French slave trade.No
NAPL1NaplesNo
NEID1Neidpath CastleMedieval castle in the Scottish Borders. Seat of the Earl of March.No
NETH1The Netherbow PortGatehouse in EdinburghNo
NEWC1Newcastle upon TyneA city in the north of England.Yes
NEWD1New DurnEpiscopal 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
NEWG1New GaolIn Southwark. Formerly the White Lion, rebuilt in the 1720s.No
NEWG2Newgate PrisonNo
NEWH1NewhavenDistrict in Edinburgh.Yes
NEWR1NewryCity in the North of Ireland (bordering Counties Armagh and Down).No
NICH1Nicholson's RockNear Scorrybreac. Identified by Blaikie as Creag Mhicneucail, "a long scaur running along the north side of Portree harbour" (Itinerary, p. 54).No
NIDD1NiddrieNiddrie or Niddery. Suburb in Edinburgh, Scotland.No
NORE1The NoreA sandbank in the Thames Estuary.Yes
NORT1North UistYes
NORT2North AmericaNo
NORT3North LeithNo
NORT4North BerwickTown in East Lothian, Scotland.Yes
NOTT1NottinghamBritish ship which captured the Bellone. The Bellone's page on threedecks.org identifies this ship as the Exeter.No
NUNT1Baile nan CailleachHouse of Ranald MacDonald, fifteenth of Clanranald onBenbecula. On the name, see Blaikie's note on p. 52 of his Itinerary.No
OBAN1ObanAt the head of Loch Morar.No
OCHI1Ochil HillsRange of hills in Scotland.Yes
OLDA1Old AberdeenA medieval burgh incorporated into Aberdeen in 1891.No
OLDD1Old DeerVillage in AberdeenshireYes
OLDH1Old High KirkIn Inverness.No
OLDM1OldmeldrumOldmeldrum (commonly known as Meldrum) is a village and parish in the Formartine area of Aberdeenshire, not far from Inverurie in North East Scotland.No
OLIV1Oliver HouseNo
ORKN1Orkneyreferred to as both Orkney and Orkney IslandsYes
ORMS1OrmskirkA town in Lancashire.No
OSTE1OstendCity in Flanders.No
OXFO1OxfordA cathedral city and district. Home to University of Oxford. Yes
OXFO2University of OxfordNo
PALM1Palazzo MutiStuart residence in Rome.No
PAME1PamelaTransport ship. See Prisoners of the '45, vol. 1, pp. 9-10, 77, 158, 163.No
PARI1ParisYes
PARL1Parliament CloseEdinburgh. Now known as Parliament Square.No
PARL2Parliament HouseThe Edinburgh meeting-place for Scottish parliament until the 1707 Union.No
PAUN1Paunch MarketFormer market in Queen Street, Edinburgh.No
PEEB1PeeblesYes
PEGG1Peggie of DumfriesUnidentified ship that carried Alexander Stewart back to Scotland in January, 1748.No
PENI1Penicuik HouseNo
PENN1PennsylvaniaAn English (and later British) colony in North America.No
PENR1PenrithYes
PENT1Pentland HillsRange of hills in Scotland.Yes
PERT1PerthYes
PERT2PerthshireNo
PETE1PeterheadA coastal town in Aberdeenshire and the easternmost point on mainland Scotland.No
PETT1PettyA parish near Inverness.No
PICC1PiccadillyYes
PINK1Pinkie HouseNo
PISA1Pisaa city in Tuscany, ItalyYes
PITL1PitlochryA town in Perthshire.No
PITS1PitsligoA parish in Aberdeenshire, no longer extant.No
PLAI1PlaintruthhallAlso Plaintruth HallNo
POLA1PolandCountry in EuropeNo
POLM1Polmood HouseIn the Scottish Borders (formerly Peebleshire). Rebuilt after 1864.No
POME1PomeraniaNo
POMO1Orkney MainlandSometimes called Pomona or (earlier) Hrossey.No
POOL1PooleweA village in Wester Ross.Yes
PORT1PortreeYes
PORT2Port GlasgowYes
PORT3Port TobaccoA town on the Port Tobacco River, a tributary of the Potomac River in Maryland.No
POTO1Potomac RiverNo
POTS1PotsdamResidence of the Prussian kings.Yes
POTT1Potter's RowNot 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
PRES1PreshomeA chapel house in Banffshire.No
PRES2PrestonpansNo
PRES3PrestonCity in Lanchanshire, EnglandNo
PRIE1PriesthillPriesthill is a neighbourhood in the south of the River Clyde in the Scottish city of Glasgow. No
PRIN1Prince Edward IslandThe Mi'kmaq name of the island is Epekwitk. Until 1798, it was called St. John's Island.No
PRIN2Prince George's CountyIn Maryland.No
PROV1Provost Skene's HouseA 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
PRUS1Kingdom of PrussiaA Germanic state from 1701 to 1918.No
QUAL1Quality StreetThe location of Lady Stewart of Burray's residence in Leith.No
QUEB1Province of Quebec1763-1791. Formerly the French colony of Canada. Also referred to as "Canada" in the manuscript.No
QUEE1Queensberry HouseA house in The Canongate, formerly belonging to the Dukes of Queensberry.No
RAAS1RaasayThe Island of Raasay; RasayYes
RAAS2Raasay HouseThe present Raasay House is supposed to have been built on or near the site of the house burned in 1746.No
RANN1RannochArea in the Scottish HighlandsNo
RANN2Rannagulzion HouseHouse of James Rattray of Rannagulzion in Perthshire.No
RARI1RarinishOn Benbecula.No
RAYN1RayneAberdeenshire, birthplace of Bishop Robert ForbesYes
RAYN2East RaynhamA village in Norfolk.Yes
REDL1Red Lion SquareSmall square in Holborn, LondonNo
REST1RestalrigIn Edinburgh.No
RHUP1Rhu PeninsulaA peninsula in Lochaber, on which Arisaig is located.No
RHYN1RhynieVillage in AberdeenshireYes
RIVE1River LochyInverness-shireYes
RIVE2River ArkaigA river flowing between Locharkaig and Loch Lochy in Lochaber.No
RIVE3River DonIn Aberdeenshire.No
RIVE4River DeeIn Aberdeenshire.No
ROBI1RobiestonA settlement in Aberdeenshire.No
RODE1RodelRodel (Scottish Gaelic: Roghadal) is a village on the south-eastern coast of HarrisNo
ROGA1RogartEstate 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
ROME1RomeYes
RONA1RonaThe Island of RonaYes
RORA1RoraA hamlet in Aberdeenshire.Yes
ROSA1RosarieA settlement in Banffshire.No
ROSC1RoscoffA commune in Brittany, France.No
ROSS1Ross-shireA historic county, now part of Ross and Cromarty.No
ROSS2RossinishBeach in BenbeculaNo
ROWA1RowanburnRowanburn is a hamlet in Eskdale, Dumfries and Galloway, Scotland.No
ROYA1HMS Royal SovereignNo
RUMX1Isle of RumYes
RUSS1Russian EmpireExisted from 1721 to 1917.No
RUTH1RuthvenIn Badenoch (there is also a Ruthven in Angus).Yes
RUTH2Ruthven BarracksNear Ruthven in Badenoch. No
SAIN1Saint-Germain-en-LayeHome of the Stuart family and Jacobite court in exile, 1689-1713.No
SALA1The SalamanderA Royal Navy fireship.No
SALI1Salisbury CragsSalisbury 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
SALI2SalisburyCity in England.Yes
SALT1SaltcoatsTown in North Ayrshire.Yes
SAUC1SauchieA small town one mile northeast of Alloa.No
SCAL1ScalpaySometimes 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
SCAL2ScalanA Catholic seminary in Glenlivet. See Roberts, "Scalan Destroyed."No
SCAR1The ScarboroughA Royal Navy ship.No
SCHE1ScheldtA river that flows through France, Belgium, and the Netherlands.No
SCON1Scone PalacePerthshireYes
SCON2SconserA town on SkyeYes
SCOR1ScorrybreacAlso Scorobreak, Scorrybreck. Estate of the Nicolsons of Scorrybreac.No
SCOT1ScotlandYes
SCOT3Scots CollegeA Catholic seminary in Paris.No
SCOT4Scots College, DouaiA Catholic seminary in Douai.No
SELK1SelkirkA town in the Scottish Borders.Yes
SEVI1Sevillea city in SpainNo
SGUR1Sgur MhuideA hill.No
SGUR2Sgurr nan CoireachanA mountain near Glendessary.Yes
SHAN1ShanvellThere 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
SHAP1ShapShap is a village and civil parish located among fells and isolated dales in Westmorland and Furness, Cumbria, England. No
SHAP2ShapinsayIsland in Orkney.No
SHEE1HMS SheernessBritish ship which took the HMS Hazard (which at that time had been renamed the Prince Charles) near Tongue.No
SHEF1SheffieldNo
SHER1SheriffmuirNo
SHIR1ShirramoreA settlement in the parish of Laggan.Yes
SHRE1ShrewsburyA town in Shropshire.Yes
SIBB1SibbaldShip on which Duncan Cameron travelled to Holland after the rising.No
SICI1SicilyNo
SKIR1SkirdustanFormer name of the village of Charlestown of Aberlour, Banffshire.No
SKYE1SkyeYes
SLEA1SleatA peninsula on Skye.No
SMEA1Smeaton HouseKnown in the eighteenth century as East Park House.No
SMID1Smid Hope BurnA stream that joins the River Tweed.No
SNIZ1SnizortA parish on SkyeNo
SNIZ2River SnizortOn Skye.Yes
SNOD1Point of SnodThis 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
SOUT1South UistYes
SOUT2SouthwarkA district in London.Yes
SOUT3South LeithNo
SPAI1SpainNo
SPEY1River SpeyRiver in Scotland, ninth longest river in the United KingdomNo
SPRI1Spring GardensA street in London.No
SPRI2SpringkellA mansion house in Dumfries and Galloway. Built in 1734 by Sir William Maxwell of Springkell, second Baronet.No
SPRI3Spring GroveIn Kent. The residence of Thomas Brett and his son Nicholas Brett.No
STAD1StadePrince William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland retreated here after the Battle of Hastenbeck.No
STAN1University of St AndrewsNo
STAN2St Andrew's Episcopal ChapelIn Banff. The present church is built on the site of the church burned in 1746.No
STBR1St Brigid's HouseGlenbucket's house near Achriachan (now Tomintoul) and Camdelmore (see Roberts, "Scalan Destroyed," p. 93).No
STCU1St Cuthbert'sA church in Carlisle. The present building dates from 1778.No
STEP1StepneyYes
STEW1Reverend John Stewart's Episcopal meeting houseUnclear where this was, but possibly in Tain.No
STEW2Castle StuartNo
STGE1St George's ChannelChannel separating Ireland and Wales.Yes
STIR1Stirling CastleNo
STIR2StirlingYes
STIR3StirlingshireNo
STIR4Stirling Old BridgeA fifteenth-century four-arched bridge. Damaged in the siege at Stirling.No
STIR5Stirling TolboothBuilt in 1705. Designed by Sir William Bruce of Kinross, husband to Lady Bruce.No
STJA1St. James's PalaceNo
STJA2St James's SquareLondon.No
STKI1St KildaAn archipelago comprising four islands, and the westernmost of The Hebrides.No
STMA1St MaloNo
STMA2St Martin's KirkMedieval and ruined church in Cairnie.No
STMA3St Margaret's HillOpen space in Southwark.No
STMA4St Mary's CountyIn Maryland.No
STNI1St Ninian's ChurchA 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
STNI2St Ninian'sYes
STOB1Stobo KirkTwelfth century church in the Scottish Borders.No
STOC1StockportIndustrial town in Greater Manchester, England.No
STOL1StolbergTown in North Rhine-WestphaliaNo
STON1StonyfieldAbout equidistant from Inverness and Culloden Moor.No
STOR1StornowayThe main town of the Western Isles and the capital of Lewis and Harris in Scotland.No
STPA1St Paul's CathedralCathedral in LondonNo
STPE1St. Peter's Episcopal ChapelAt 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
STRA1StrathmashieBadenochNo
STRA10Strath CluanieYes
STRA11Strath diveranNot identified.No
STRA2StrathA parish on Skye.No
STRA3StrathspeyRegion near the river SpeyNo
STRA4StrathglassStrathglass is a strath or wide and shallow valley in the Highlands of Scotland. The River Glass runs through this valley.Yes
STRA5StrathbogieValley of the River Bogie in Aberdeenshire, Scotland.No
STRA6StrathdonIn Strathspey. Now Strathavon or Stratha'an (see Blaikie, Origins of the '45, p. 113). No
STRA7Stratton ParkA medieval manor in Bedfordsire.No
STRA8StrathyreA district and village, historically in Perthshire.No
STRA9StratherrickValley in the Highlands.No
STRO1StruanYes
STRO2StromnessA town on Orkney mainland.No
STST1St Stephen's ChapelHouse of Commons chamber in the old Palace of Westminster (destroyed by fire in 1834).No
SUFF1SuffolkCounty in England.No
SUTH1SutherlandshireNo
SWED1SwedenCountry in EuropeNo
SWIT1SwitzerlandNo
TAIL1Tail BurnGrey-Mares-Tail.No
TAIN1TainYes
TALI1TaliskerSettlement in the Isle of SkyeNo
TART1Tartan HallNo
TAYB1Tay-BridgeThe Tay Bridge carries the railway across the Firth of Tay in Scotland between Dundee and Wormit in Fife. No
TAYR1River TayThe 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
TENN1Tinnis CastleNo
TERR1HMS TerrorNo
THAM1River ThamesYes
THAN1Thane of FifeA transport ship.No
THEO1Theobalds RoadRoad in London.No
THOM1ThomasSupposedly 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
THUR1ThursoYes
THUR2ThuringiaRegion in Germany.No
TILB1Tilbury FortOn the Thames in Essex.Yes
TIRE1TireeIsland in the Inner Hebrides.Yes
TOMB1TombaeIn Glenlivet. The chapel stood "further up the Livet than the present neo-Gothic church" (Roberts, "Scalan Destroyed," p. 97.No
TOMD1TomdounSettlement in the Highlands.Yes
TORD1TordarrochYes
TORM1TarmoreAn estate just outside of Keith.No
TORV1Torr a' MhuiltA wood between Clunes and Locharkaig in Lochaber (see p. 167).No
TORW1TorwoodA forested area near Falkirk.No
TOTE1TobhtaA township on Skye.No
TOTT1TottromeA township on Skye.No
TOUR1TournaiBelgiumNo
TOWE1Tower HillLondonNo
TOWE2Tower of LondonYes
TRIA1The TrialA Royal Navy sloop.No
TRIT1H.M.S. TritonNo
TROD1Eilean TroddayA small island near the Skye peninsula of Trotternish.No
TRON1Tron KirkFormer parish church still standing on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh.No
TROT1TrotternishA peninsula on SkyeNo
TULL1Tullibardine HouseNo
TULL2TullochgormBadenochNo
TULL3TullochsThere are many places called Tulloch in Scotland, but Robert Stewart probably means Tullochs (Upper and Nether) in Aberdeenshire.No
TURK1TurkeyIn the eighteenth century this name refers not to the modern state, but to the whole of the Ottoman Empire.No
TUSC1The Grand Duchy of TuscanyNo
TWEE1River TweedA river that flows near the Anglo-Scottish border.Yes
TWEE2Tweedmuir KirkThe present building dates to 1874, replacing a church built in 1643.No
TWEE3Tweedy BraeNot located, but supposedly near Tweedsmuir.No
TWEE4Tweed's WellSource of the River Tweed in the Lowther Hills.No
TYBU1TyburnNo
UAIM1Uaimh ShomhairleA cave in Glenevis.No
UISG1Uisge Chaoil ReidheNo
UISG2Uisge-nam-FicheadNo
UISH1Uishness PointEither the location of the later Ushenish Lighthouse, or some point of land closer to Bàgh Uisinis (Usinish Bay).No
UNIT1AmericaThe Thirteen Colonies.No
UPPE1Upper-DownenProbably Upper Dunans or Downan in Banffshire.No
URIE1River UrieA small river in Aberdeenshire, meeting the River Don at Inverurie.No
URQU1UrquhartNo
USAN1UsanHarbour. Located to the south of Montrose in Angus, Scotland. No
VALX1ValIn 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
VEER1VeereTown and port in the Dutch Republic.No
VENI1VeniceCapital of the Republic of Venice.Yes
VERO1VeronaCity in Italy.No
VERS1Palace of VersaillesNo
VIEN1ViennaCity in the Holy Roman Empire.Yes
VIRG1Colony of VirginiaEnglish and later British colony in North America (1606-1776).No
VIRG2Virginia CapesCape Charles and Cape Henry.No
VITE1ViterboNo
WALS1WalstonHamlet in the middle of black mount area of South LanarkshireYes
WARW1Warwick HallThe present building dates to the twentieth century.No
WARW2Warwick BridgeA village five miles east of Carlisle.No
WATE1Water of LeithYes
WATE2River NairnYes
WATE3Water of EskRiver Esk that runs through Midlothian and East Lothian, Scotland. It initially runs as two separate rivers: the North Esk and the South Esk. No
WATE4Point of WaternishThe northernmost point on the peninsula of Waternish or Vaternish (Scottish Gaelic: Bhàtairnis) on the island of Skye.No
WATE5WatergateGateway in Edinburgh.No
WELL1WellhouseAlexander Fraser's house in the Parish of KilmorackNo
WEST1WestminsterYes
WEST2The Western IslesAlso 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
WEST3West PortGate in Flodden Wall at Edinburgh.No
WEST4Wester RossThe western region of Ross-shire.No
WEST5Westminster AbbeyChurch in Westminster, and the location of coronations.No
WHIM1Whim HouseHouse in the Scottish Borders. Purchased by Sir James Montgomery, first Baronet.No
WHIN1WhinmoorA settled area now part of Leeds.No
WHIT1WhitehallCentre of government in London at the former site of the Palace of Whitehall.Yes
WICO1Wicomico RiverA tributary of the Potomac River. The port Alexander Stewart refers to is unlocated.No
WIGA1Wigan Town in Greater Manchester, on the River Douglas No
WIMB1WimbledonSuburb of LondonYes
WIND1Windsor ParkRoyal Park in EnglandNo
WIND2WindsorYes
WIND3WindlestraeleeUnidentified. Supposedly an estate near Penicuik House.No
WOOD1WoodshealWoodsheal, ScotlandNo
WOOD2WoodhouseleeAn estate in Midlothian. The house was demolished after 1960.No
WRAE1Wrae CastleA ruined sixteenth century tower house in the Scottish Borders.No
WRAE2Wrae HillIn the Scottish Borders.No
YARR1YarrowA parish in the Scottish Borders (formerly Selkirkshire).No
YORK1York JailNo
YORK2YorkYes
YORK3York CastleYork Castle is a fortified complex in the city of York, England. No
YORK4YorkshireHistoric county in England.No