Bazsites.com Caithness
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On the Web
- Caithness Stud - Stands the Thoroughbreds Caithness Ascot and Dorchester, the Trakehner cross Caithness Rainchaser, and the Swedish Warmblood Maestro. Offers stallion and mare details, a sales list, and show results.
- Climbing in Caithness - General description of the cliffs suitable for climbing. (Scotland)
- Caithness Stud - Stands the Thoroughbreds Caithness Ascot and Dorchester, the Trakehner cross Caithness Rainchaser, and the Swedish Warmblood Maestro. Offers stallion and mare details, a sales list, and show results. Located in Ashburton.
- Caithness Sports Council Website - The Caithness Sports Council exists to promote sport, publicise and promote events, encourage cooperation between sporting clubs and maximise the use of sports facilities in Caithness.
- Caithness Glass Paperweights Information - World Collectors Net - Caithness Glass Paperweights Collectors Society.
- Caithness Glass Paperweights Information - World Collectors Net - Information on Caithness Glass Paperweights, Collectors Society, latest news, new additions, and retirements. Also a message board for collectors.
- Caithness Area - Information on both past and upcoming events. Includes contact information.
- Caithness Community Web Site - News, business, community, and entertainment.
- Caithness FM - Local radio station. Listing presenters, programme schedule and company history.
- Caithness Business Pages - Directory of local businesses with job listings and property section.
Wikipedia Articles
- Caithness - Caithness (Gallaibh in Gaelic)The Cait element of Caithness is Pictish or Goidelic in origin but the origin of Caithness is Norse or Norn, and may be read as meaning Horn (or Nose) of Cait. The Gaelic name, Gallaibh, means land of the Norse (or of the foreigner).
- Bishop of Caithness - The Bishop of Caithness was the ecclesiastical head of the Diocese of Caithness, one of Scotland's 13 medieval bishoprics. The first referenced bishop of Caithness was Aindréas, a Gael who appears in sources between 1146 and 1151 as bishop.
- The Standing Stones of Caithness - The Standing Stones of Caithness by Leslie J Myatt, 2003, is the first complete description of megalithic standing stone sites in Caithness, in the Highland area of Scotland, since 1911, when the Royal Commission on Ancient and Historical Monuments produced its Caithness Inventory.
- Archdeacon of Caithness - The Archdeacon of Caithness was the only archdeacon in the Diocese of Caithness, acting as a deputy of the Bishop of Caithness. The following is a list of known historical archdeacons:
- Diocese of Moray, Ross and Caithness - The Diocese of Moray, Ross and Caithness is one of the seven dioceses of the Scottish Episcopal Church. It covers Caithness and Sutherland (the old Diocese of Caithness), mainland Ross and Cromarty (the old Diocese of Ross), and mainland Inverness-shire, Nairnshire, Moray and Banffshire (the old Diocese of Moray).