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The Clan
attended a memorial service at St. Magnus Cathedral, Kirkwall
for the victims of the 9-11 terrorist attack on the World
Trade Center in New York City, the Pentagon in Washington,
DC and the hijacked plane that crashed near Shanksville, PA.
Clan members Chairman Guy Irvin and Lillian Brown along with
James Irvine participated in the service with Rev. Ronald
Ferguson officiating. At 11 a.m. along with the rest of the
world the Clan observed three minutes of silence at the Ring
of Brodgar.
The Clan
had a short tour of the Stones of Stenness that date from
3000 BC. We had a guided tour of Maes Howe considered the
finest chambered tomb in Western Europe and dating from
about 2700 BC. It is constructed from single stone slabs more
than eighteen feet long and some four feet wide.
The tomb
was broken into by Viking crusaders returning from Jerusalem
in the 12th Century who left a large collection of Viking
runes carved on the walls. These runes and drawings such as
the Maes Howe dragon (or lion) continue to serve as inspirations
for the lovely jewellery and crafts produced today in Orkney.
Maes Howe
is considered the most spectacular of Orkney's Neolithic chambered
cairns. The interior of the tomb is illuminated at the time
of the Winter Solstice when the setting sun shines through
the entry passsage. Maes Howe along with the nearby Stones
of Stenness, the Ring of Brodgar and Skara Brae form part
of The Heart of Neolithic Orkney World Heritage Site and demonstrate
domestic, ritual and burial practices of a 5000-year
old culture.
We drove
to Stromness, took the 2-hour P&O Ferry trip to Scrabster
and drove to Thurso where we spent the night at the St. Clair
Hotel.
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