Why Does Inverness shire Feel So Haunted?
Inverness-shire is one of the richest haunted-history landscapes in Scotland, but its stories are not evenly spread. The strongest traditions cluster around Inverness, Culloden, Loch Ness, Tomnahurich, Boleskine, and the old island districts of the historic county, especially Skye.
Page outline Jump by section
Introduction
Inverness-shire is one of the richest haunted-history landscapes in Scotland, but its stories are not evenly spread. The strongest traditions cluster around Inverness, Culloden, Loch Ness, Tomnahurich, Boleskine, and the old island districts of the historic county, especially Skye. These are not “proof” of ghosts; they are inherited stories, visitor reports, tourism traditions, folklore motifs, and memories attached to places where death, battle, burial, power, and landscape have become unusually vivid.

The county’s haunted character is also a boundary puzzle. Historic Inverness-shire is not the same thing as the modern Highland Council area. It once included a large mainland county around Inverness, Badenoch, Lochaber and Loch Ness, plus island areas including Skye and parts of the Outer Hebrides; Scotland’s counties were abolished as local government areas in 1975, but they remain useful for historic mapping and local-history work.[Wikishire]wikishire.co.ukInverness shireInverness shire That matters because many modern “Inverness” ghost lists include nearby places such as Cawdor Castle, which is in Nairnshire rather than Inverness-shire, so this page keeps the centre of gravity on the historic county itself.[Cawdor Castle]cawdorcastle.comCawdor Castle Find UsCawdor Castle Find Us
Why Inverness-shire feels so haunted
Inverness-shire’s ghost stories are tied less to one famous spectre than to a chain of charged places: a battlefield where a political world ended, churchyards associated with executions, a loch with older water-spirit traditions beneath the modern monster story, ancient burial cairns, a hill long treated as a fairy place, and remote houses whose later reputations have been shaped by occultism and popular culture.
The atmosphere comes partly from geography. Inverness stands at the mouth of the River Ness and the north-eastern end of the Great Glen, a natural routeway where sea, river, road and mountain traffic meet.[Wikishire]wikishire.co.ukOpen source on wikishire.co.uk. In haunted-history terms, that makes it a gathering place: soldiers and prisoners after Culloden, travellers on old roads, tourists heading for Loch Ness, and storytellers carrying tales from the mainland Highlands and the islands.
The county’s folklore also mixes several kinds of “haunting”. Some stories are classic apparitions, such as battlefield figures or a restless presence in a graveyard. Others belong to older supernatural folklore: fairy hills, water horses, prophetic sight and enchanted clan relics. A visitor looking only for white-sheet ghosts would miss much of Inverness-shire’s eerie tradition; the local material is often about thresholds, warnings and social memory rather than a single named ghost.
Culloden: why the battlefield dominates the county’s ghost map
Culloden is the most important haunted place in Inverness-shire because the historical event behind the stories is so clear. On 16 April 1746, the Jacobite army made its final stand near Inverness against government troops led by the Duke of Cumberland; the National Trust for Scotland describes the battle as the last pitched battle on British soil, with around 1,600 men killed in less than an hour, most of them Jacobites.[National Trust for Scotland]nts.org.ukOpen source on nts.org.uk.
That scale of loss explains why ghost stories cling to the moor. Modern haunted-site accounts commonly describe heard rather than seen phenomena: cries, weapons, gunfire, unease, and the idea of “anniversary” impressions around 16 April.[Kingsmills Hotel]kingsmillshotel.comKingsmills Hotel Haunted Inverness | Places to visit this HalloweenKingsmills Hotel Haunted Inverness | Places to visit this Halloween These should be read as folklore and commemorative imagination, not as neutral battlefield evidence. Their power lies in how they translate historical trauma into sensory form: the moor is remembered as a place where sound, absence and landscape still seem to carry the battle.
Culloden also has an unusually strong material record, which helps keep the ghost stories from floating free of history. The National Trust for Scotland manages the key battlefield area, including interpreted trails, grave markers and the memorial cairn.[Jacobite Scotland]jacobitescotland.orgJacobite Scotland Culloden Battlefield and Visitor CentreJacobite Scotland Culloden Battlefield and Visitor Centre Archaeological work continues to recover battle evidence: recent reports describe finds such as musket balls, grapeshot, a possible broken shoe buckle linked to Donald Cameron of Lochiel, and a complete government mortar shell discovered during excavation and later made safe.[The Times]thetimes.co.ukThe Times Buckle 'shot off Cameron Clan chief at Culloden' uncoveredThe Times Buckle 'shot off Cameron Clan chief at Culloden' uncovered
For a sceptical reader, the most plausible explanation is not that Culloden is “proved haunted”, but that it is intensely mnemonic: the place has a known date, known casualties, visible memorials, continuing archaeological discoveries and a national story of defeat. Those conditions are exactly the kind that produce recurring ghost traditions. The haunting is credible as folklore because the memory is real, even when individual apparitions remain unverified.
Inverness after Culloden: churches, prisons and uneasy civic memory
The haunted reputation of Inverness itself often turns on what happened after Culloden. Local visitor accounts and dark-history guides frequently point to the Old High Church and its kirkyard as places associated with Jacobite prisoners, executions and musket-ball marks in the stonework.[Ness Walk]nesswalk.comNess Walk Haunted Places in Inverness to VisitNess Walk Haunted Places in Inverness to Visit These stories are less famous than the battlefield, but they matter because they shift the reader’s attention from battle to aftermath: captivity, punishment and public authority inside the county town.
The Old High Church tradition is usually told in a physical way. The churchyard is not simply “spooky”; it is presented as a site where prisoners were held, condemned men were shot, and scars in the masonry are interpreted as traces of execution fire.[Atlas Obscura]atlasobscura.comold high church kirkyardold high church kirkyard Some details vary between retellings, so the safest wording is that the place is locally associated with post-Culloden imprisonment and executions rather than treating every dramatic detail as settled fact.
The Inverness Tolbooth also appears in local haunted-place writing as a place of confinement. Ness Walk’s 2024 guide links the Tolbooth area to prisoners from the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, including the period of the Highland Clearances.[Ness Walk]nesswalk.comNess Walk Haunted Places in Inverness to VisitNess Walk Haunted Places in Inverness to Visit Here the haunting theme broadens beyond Culloden: Inverness-shire’s ghost map is shaped not only by one battle, but by imprisonment, displacement and the hard edge of law in the Highland capital.
Loch Ness: monsters, water horses and Boleskine’s darker fame
Loch Ness is not usually described as a ghost story in the narrow sense, yet it is central to Inverness-shire’s supernatural identity. The modern monster legend sits on top of older water-spirit traditions in which dangerous horses or shape-shifting beings haunt lochs and rivers. Scotland’s national folklore guidance describes kelpies as supernatural water horses said to haunt lonely rivers and lochs, and Visit Inverness Loch Ness preserves a local Loch Ness tale of a kelpie encountered by James MacGrigor in the early nineteenth century.[Scotland]scotland.orgscottish myths folklore and legendsscottish myths folklore and legends
That older water-horse background changes how the Loch Ness Monster should be understood on a haunted-history page. It is not just a twentieth-century tourist mystery about a large creature in the water; it also belongs to a much deeper Highland habit of treating dark water as dangerous, animate and morally charged. For folklore readers, the kelpie tradition gives Loch Ness an eerie prehistory before cameras, newspapers and monster-hunting expeditions.
Boleskine House, on the south side of Loch Ness near Foyers, adds a different kind of haunting. The house is famous because the occultist Aleister Crowley bought it in 1899, and because Led Zeppelin guitarist Jimmy Page later owned it. The Boleskine House Foundation describes the property as an eighteenth-century manor house on the banks of Loch Ness, nearly lost after two major fires and now owned and safeguarded by a Scottish charity.[Boleskine House]boleskinehouse.orgOpen source on boleskinehouse.org. The foundation’s history page confirms Crowley’s purchase in 1899 and his view of the secluded house as suitable for spiritual retreat.[Boleskine House]boleskinehouse.orgOpen source on boleskinehouse.org.
Boleskine’s reputation is therefore unusually modern and media-shaped. Its “haunting” is less a single stable apparition than a cloud of occult association, fire damage, rock-music fame, rumours and restoration debate. Recent coverage has also shown that the house’s public future is contested: the foundation presents its work as heritage, education, conservation and community use, while press reports have raised questions about how far Crowley’s occult legacy still shapes the project.[Boleskine House]boleskinehouse.orgabout usabout us For readers, the useful distinction is this: Boleskine is historically important as a site of occult reputation, but many of its darker claims are better treated as legend, branding and controversy rather than confirmed paranormal evidence.
Tomnahurich and Clava: where burial places become otherworldly
Tomnahurich Hill, overlooking Inverness, is one of the county’s most important fairy-haunted places. It is widely known as the Fairy Hill, and modern storytelling sources preserve the tale of two fiddlers who are drawn into a fairy celebration inside the hill, only to find that time outside has moved differently.[Discover Highlands and Islands]discoverhighlandsandislands.scotOpen source on discoverhighlandsandislands.scot. The story belongs to a wider British and Irish folklore pattern: music, hospitality, hidden people and dangerous time-slippage.
What makes Tomnahurich especially compelling is the layering of folklore and civic use. The hill is now a cemetery, and local accounts often stress the contrast between ordinary graves and the older sense of an otherworldly mound.[Kingsmills Hotel]kingsmillshotel.commonster myths legends invernessmonster myths legends inverness A careful reader should note that even the name is contested in popular understanding: some modern summaries call it the Fairy Hill, while place-name discussion points to a meaning connected with yew trees rather than a literal “fairy” etymology.[Wikipedia]WikipediaTomnahurich CemeteryTomnahurich Cemetery The folklore remains real as tradition, even if the name’s origin is more complicated than tourist shorthand suggests.
Clava Cairns, near Culloden, supplies a different kind of eeriness. Historic Environment Scotland describes the cairns as about 4,000 years old, built to house the dead, and part of a cemetery landscape that remained sacred for millennia.[Historic Environment Scotland]historicenvironment.scotOpen source on historicenvironment.scot. That is enough to explain why the site attracts ghostly and uncanny readings, even without strong evidence for a long-established apparition story. It is a burial landscape, open to the sky, close to Culloden, and visually powerful.
Modern haunted-place guides sometimes include Clava because ancient tombs invite “thin place” interpretations, but the strongest source-based claim is archaeological rather than paranormal: it is a Bronze Age cemetery whose design and survival give rare insight into prehistoric belief.[Historic Environment Scotland]historicenvironment.scotOpen source on historicenvironment.scot. For this page, Clava matters because it shows how Inverness-shire’s haunted imagination often begins with the dead being visibly present in the landscape, not with a named ghost walking a corridor.
Skye and the island edge of Inverness-shire
Historic Inverness-shire included Skye, so the county’s haunted and supernatural map extends beyond Inverness and Loch Ness into island folklore. Skye’s best-known example is not a ghost in the conventional sense but the Fairy Flag of Dunvegan Castle, one of Clan MacLeod’s treasured possessions. Dunvegan Castle’s own account describes the flag as a silk relic, probably from Syria or Rhodes and woven in late antiquity, with a legend that it has miraculous powers when unfurled in battle.[Dunvegan Castle]dunvegancastle.comOpen source on dunvegancastle.com.
The Fairy Flag is a useful reminder that Highland supernatural tradition often attaches to objects as well as places. In later accounts, the flag’s powers include protection, victory and aid in crisis; the castle’s official framing keeps the balance between material object and legend by presenting both the relic’s likely foreign silk origin and the clan tradition surrounding it.[Dunvegan Castle]dunvegancastle.comOpen source on dunvegancastle.com.
Skye also has broader fairy and apparition traditions: modern folklore round-ups mention haunted passes, fairy places and shape-shifting beings, including the Beast of Odal Pass in the island’s south-east.[Spooky Scotland]spookyscotland.netSpooky Scotland The Top 6 Spooky Hotspots in Haunted SkyeSpooky Scotland The Top 6 Spooky Hotspots in Haunted Skye These island stories should not be flattened into Inverness city ghost tourism. They belong to the older Gaelic and Hebridean side of Inverness-shire’s historic county identity, where fairies, warnings and landscape beings can matter as much as castle apparitions.
What to make of the evidence
The best-supported Inverness-shire haunted traditions are those with a strong historical or folkloric anchor. Culloden has the clearest historical base: a precisely dated battle, large casualties, preserved memorial landscape and continuing archaeology. The Old High Church and Tolbooth traditions draw strength from documented civic punishment and post-Culloden memory, though individual ghost claims are harder to verify.[nts.org.uk]nts.org.ukOpen source on nts.org.uk.
Tomnahurich, Loch Ness and Dunvegan are strongest as folklore rather than as witness-led hauntings. Their value lies in the survival of story patterns: fairy music, dangerous water, enchanted objects, prophetic or protective powers, and the sense that certain hills, lochs and heirlooms are not ordinary.[mapofstories.scot]mapofstories.scotthe story of the fiddlers of tomnahurich englishthe story of the fiddlers of tomnahurich english Boleskine is different again: its reputation is historically modern, shaped by Crowley, Jimmy Page, fire, restoration and media fascination.[Boleskine House]boleskinehouse.orgOpen source on boleskinehouse.org.
A fair reading is that Inverness-shire is not “haunted” in one simple way. It is a county where ghost stories, battle memory, burial landscapes, fairy lore and occult reputation overlap. Some claims are tourist retellings; some preserve older oral tradition; some are attached to verifiable historical trauma; and some are modern myth-making around famous names. The most trustworthy approach is to enjoy the stories while keeping their categories clear: history where the evidence is historical, folklore where the evidence is tradition, and haunting claims where the evidence is personal report or later retelling.
Places readers usually start
For a first exploration of Inverness-shire’s haunted history, the most rewarding route begins with Culloden Battlefield, then moves into Inverness for the Old High Church and Tomnahurich, before following Loch Ness southwards towards Boleskine and the older water-horse traditions of the loch. This route works because it moves from documented history into folklore without pretending they are the same kind of evidence.
A second route follows historic county geography rather than modern tourist habit: Inverness and Loch Ness on the mainland, then Skye for Dunvegan and the island fairy traditions. That broader route better reflects old Inverness-shire, whose historic identity stretched from the Highland capital into island districts now often discussed separately.[Wikishire]wikishire.co.ukInverness shireInverness shire
The main boundary trap is Cawdor Castle. It is often sold to visitors from Inverness and has its own ghost and Macbeth traditions, but the castle itself is in the parish of Cawdor in Nairnshire.[Cawdor Castle]cawdorcastle.comCawdor Castle Find UsCawdor Castle Find Us It belongs naturally in a neighbouring-county or Macbeth-haunting discussion, while Inverness-shire’s own core stories are already strong enough: Culloden’s dead, Inverness’s post-battle shadows, Tomnahurich’s fairy hill, Loch Ness’s water spirits, Boleskine’s occult reputation and Skye’s enchanted clan relics.
Amazon book picks
Further Reading
Books and field guides related to Why Does Inverness shire Feel So Haunted?. Use these as the next step if you want deeper reading beyond the article.
Scottish Myths and Legends
First published 2009. Subjects: Tales, Legends, Folklore, Legends, scotland.
The Highland Clans
First published 2010. Subjects: Clans, History, Social life and customs, Histoire, Mœurs et coutumes.
Ghosts
First published 2015. Subjects: Ghosts, History, BODY, MIND & SPIRIT, Parapsychology, General.
Endnotes
1.
Source: scotland.org
Title: scottish myths folklore and legends
Link:https://www.scotland.org/inspiration/scottish-myths-folklore-and-legends
2.
Source: mapofstories.scot
Title: the story of the fiddlers of tomnahurich english
Link:https://mapofstories.scot/the-story-of-the-fiddlers-of-tomnahurich-english/
3.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Tomnahurich Cemetery
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tomnahurich_Cemetery
4.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Battle of Culloden
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Battle_of_Culloden
5.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Boleskine House
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boleskine_House
6.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Boleskine House Foundation
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Boleskine_House_Foundation
7.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Inverness shire
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverness-shire
8.
Source: Wikipedia
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kelpie
9.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Brahan Seer
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brahan_Seer
10.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Fairy Flag
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairy_Flag
11.
Source: Wikipedia
Title: Cawdor Castle
Link:https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cawdor_Castle
12.
Source: clan.com
Title: Folklore Thursday: The Brahan Seer
Link:https://clan.com/blog/folklore-thursday-the-brahan-seer?srsltid=AfmBOoomHcMmkvv1Wyo2NHFtBmpLIAsENnXckFh8x7e7U03XlSJGT_ba
13.
Source: cawdor.com
Link:https://www.cawdor.com/history
14.
Source: youtube.com
Title: Haunted Boleskine House, home of Aleister Crowley and Jimmy Page
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AHX9g1lTOdg
Source snippet
Wikipedia...
15.
Source: wikishire.co.uk
Title: Inverness shire
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Inverness-shire
16.
Source: scotlandspeople.gov.uk
Link:https://www.scotlandspeople.gov.uk/content/inverness-county
17.
Source: cawdorcastle.com
Title: Cawdor Castle Find Us
Link:https://www.cawdorcastle.com/find-us/
18.
Source: wikishire.co.uk
Link:https://wikishire.co.uk/wiki/Inverness
19.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/culloden/the-battle-of-culloden
20.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/visit/places/culloden
21.
Source: kingsmillshotel.com
Title: Kingsmills Hotel Haunted Inverness | Places to visit this Halloween
Link:https://www.kingsmillshotel.com/hotel/blog/haunted-inverness/
22.
Source: kingsmillshotel.com
Title: monster myths legends inverness
Link:https://www.kingsmillshotel.com/hotel/blog/monster-myths-legends-inverness/
23.
Source: jacobitescotland.org
Title: Jacobite Scotland Culloden Battlefield and Visitor Centre
Link:https://jacobitescotland.org/explore/culloden-battlefield-and-visitor-centre/
24.
Source: thetimes.co.uk
Title: The Times Buckle ‘shot off Cameron Clan chief at Culloden’ uncovered
Link:https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/buckle-shot-off-cameron-clan-chief-at-culloden-uncovered-j3gvh6scz
25.
Source: nesswalk.com
Title: Ness Walk Haunted Places in Inverness to Visit
Link:https://www.nesswalk.com/blog/haunted-places-in-inverness/
26.
Source: atlasobscura.com
Title: old high church kirkyard
Link:https://www.atlasobscura.com/places/old-high-church-kirkyard
27.
Source: visitinvernesslochness.com
Title: the lochness monster
Link:https://www.visitinvernesslochness.com/the-lochness-monster
28.
Source: boleskinehouse.org
Link:https://boleskinehouse.org/
29.
Source: boleskinehouse.org
Title: about us
Link:https://boleskinehouse.org/about-us
30.
Source: boleskinehouse.org
Link:https://boleskinehouse.org/history
31.
Source: thetimes.co.uk
Link:https://www.thetimes.co.uk/article/charity-founders-hid-links-to-aleister-crowley-occult-sects-wcs73ch6m
32.
Source: discoverhighlandsandislands.scot
Link:https://discoverhighlandsandislands.scot/en/story/the-tomnahurich-tale
33.
Source: historicenvironment.scot
Link:https://www.historicenvironment.scot/visit/all/clava-cairns/
34.
Source: dunvegancastle.com
Link:https://www.dunvegancastle.com/castle/fairy-flag/
35.
Source: spookyscotland.net
Title: Spooky Scotland The Top 6 Spooky Hotspots in Haunted Skye
Link:https://spookyscotland.net/haunted-skye/
36.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/RealCounties/photos/the-county-of-inverness-is-a-shire-in-the-heart-of-the-highlandsit-stretches-fro/882193130730922/
37.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/Rabbies/videos/scotlands-ghost-stories-arent-just-folklore-theyre-woven-into-our-most-beloved-c/812786721610721/
38.
Source: facebook.com
Title: Dunvegan castle’s fairy flag history
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/mcleodclan/posts/10162383921068170/
39.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/kastelykedvelo/posts/6636204203095391/
40.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/cawdorcastle/
41.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/cawdorcastle/?locale=en_GB
42.
Source: cawdorcastle.com
Title: Cawdor Castle
Link:https://www.cawdorcastle.com/
43.
Source: cawdorcastle.com
Title: Cawdor Castle
Link:https://www.cawdorcastle.com/cawdor-castle/
44.
Source: scotlands-stories.com
Title: incredible stories of cawdor castle
Link:https://scotlands-stories.com/incredible-stories-of-cawdor-castle/
45.
Source: scotlands-stories.com
Title: The Fiddlers of Tomnahurich
Link:https://scotlands-stories.com/the-fiddlers-of-tomnahurich-storytelling/
46.
Source: historichouses.org
Link:https://www.historichouses.org/house/cawdor-castle/
47.
Source: tripadvisor.com
Title: Cawdor Castle
Link:https://www.tripadvisor.com/Attraction_Review-g186549-d1754686-Reviews-Cawdor_Castle-Nairn_Scottish_Highlands_Scotland.html
48.
Source: worldhistory.org
Title: Clava Cairns
Link:https://www.worldhistory.org/Clava_Cairns/
49.
Source: spookyscotland.net
Title: haunted cawdor castle
Link:https://spookyscotland.net/haunted-cawdor-castle/
50.
Source: tripadvisor.co.uk
Title: BOLESKIN E HOUSE
Link:https://www.tripadvisor.co.uk/Attraction_Review-g186543-d17420829-Reviews-Boleskine_House-Inverness_Scottish_Highlands_Scotland.html
51.
Source: visitinvernesslochness.com
Link:https://www.visitinvernesslochness.com/listings/boleskine-house
52.
Source: blog.historicenvironment.scot
Title: battle of culloden
Link:https://blog.historicenvironment.scot/2025/04/battle-of-culloden/
53.
Source: portal.historicenvironment.scot
Link:https://portal.historicenvironment.scot/apex/f?p=1505%3A300%3A%3A%3A%3A%3AVIEWTYPE%2CVIEWREF%3Adesignation%2CGDL00099
54.
Source: instagram.com
Link:https://www.instagram.com/boleskine.house/?hl=en
55.
Source: thecastlesofscotland.co.uk
Link:https://www.thecastlesofscotland.co.uk/the-best-castles/grand-castles/cawdor-castle/
56.
Source: scotlandfarandnear.co.uk
Link:https://scotlandfarandnear.co.uk/en/CawdorCastle
57.
Source: boleskinehouse.org
Link:https://boleskinehouse.org/event/the-centre-of-a-thousand-legends-a-brief-history-of-boleskine-house-and-aleister-crowley
58.
Source: kingsmillshotel.com
Title: Cawdor Castle near Nairn, Scotland
Link:https://www.kingsmillshotel.com/hotel/things-to-do-in-inverness/scottish-castles/cawdor-castle/
59.
Source: discoverhighlandsandislands.scot
Link:https://discoverhighlandsandislands.scot/en/story/cawdor-castle-macbeth-and-a-ghost
60.
Source: genuki.org.uk
Link:https://www.genuki.org.uk/big/sct/ShennanBoundaries/Inverness
61.
Source: mapeffects.co
Link:https://www.mapeffects.co/tutorials/kelpie
62.
Source: cullodenbattlefield.wordpress.com
Link:https://cullodenbattlefield.wordpress.com/page/9/
63.
Source: scotlandhighlandtrip.com
Title: haunted places in highlands
Link:https://scotlandhighlandtrip.com/travel-guide/haunted-places-in-highlands/
64.
Source: lovebritishhistory.co.uk
Link:https://www.lovebritishhistory.co.uk/2024/10/cawdor-castle-and-kidnapping-of.html
65.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/scottish-ghost-stories-witches-murder-and-folklore-part-2
66.
Source: nts.org.uk
Link:https://www.nts.org.uk/stories/scottish-ghost-stories-witches-murder-and-folklore
67.
Source: peachandthistle.com
Title: cawdor castle over 600 years of mystery
Link:https://www.peachandthistle.com/2012/11/cawdor-castle-over-600-years-of-mystery.html
68.
Source: britainexpress.com
Link:https://www.britainexpress.com/scotland/Highlands/castles/cawdor-castle.htm
Additional References
69.
Source: youtube.com
Title: The Ghosts of Culloden Moor: Lost Soldiers on the Battlefield
Link:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xSV4FGIIEzM
Source snippet
Haunted Boleskine House, home of Aleister Crowley and Jimmy Page...
70.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/NationalTrustforScotland/posts/280-years-ago-today-was-the-battle-of-culloden-one-of-the-most-harrowing-events-/1387392266749852/
71.
Source: visitscotland.com
Link:https://www.visitscotland.com/fr-fr/things-to-do/attractions/haunted-sites
72.
Source: visitscotland.com
Link:https://www.visitscotland.com/things-to-do/attractions/haunted-sites
73.
Source: scotsmagazine.com
Link:https://www.scotsmagazine.com/articles/secret-inverness-g/
74.
Source: instagram.com
Link:https://www.instagram.com/p/DTWVVL6iYxf/
75.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/friendsofscotland/posts/6925601817478721/
76.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/groups/48433854513/posts/10159054929729514/
77.
Source: secret-scotland.com
Link:https://www.secret-scotland.com/place/clava-cairns
78.
Source: facebook.com
Link:https://www.facebook.com/100088539433942/videos/clava-cairns-really-stuck-with-mebuilt-more-than-4000-years-ago-this-bronze-age-/2479445252457705/
Topic Tree
Follow this branch
Related pages 91
- Haunted Clackmannanshire
- Haunted Antrim
- Haunted Armagh
- Haunted Durham
- Haunted Londonderry
- +86 more in sidebar



