1. Home
  2. Travel
  3. United Kingdom Travel

The Orkney Islands - Scotland's Remote and Remarkable Island Group

From Ferne Arfin, About.com

The North Atlantic Drift warms Orkney, making it a temperate, year round destination with a fascinating history, colorful wildlife and great seafood.

Closer to Norway than to England, Orkney was the last holdout of the Vikings in the United Kingdom. They stayed until 1468. Before them, and reaching back to a mysterious past of at least 5,000 years, Stone Age communities lived, farmed and built houses on Orkney. You can still see the monuments they left behind. There are so many, in fact, that large tracts of the main island are included in a UNESCO World Heritage Site.

Orkney is also a sophisticated island, popular with artists and artisans inspired by the islands' subtle colors, their dramatic and changing light and their melancholy beauty.

Images 13-17 of 17
Skara Brae, Orkney's 5000-year-old Stone Age residenceThe Neolithic Settlement of Skara BraeThe Broch of Gurness, Orkney Island, ScotlandThe Broch of GurnessThe Ring of BrodgarThe Ring of BrodgarKirkwall at Dusk on Orkney, ScotlandKirkwall at Dusk
Birsay Village on North OrkneyBirsay Village on North Orkney at Day's End
  1. Home
  2. Travel
  3. United Kingdom Travel
  4. Picture Galleries
  5. Pictures of Orkney - Scotland's Islands on The Edge of the World>

©2009 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company.

All rights reserved.