- TITLE
- Loch Duich and Five Sisters of Kintail
- EXTERNAL ID
- GB1796_859_20_0757
- PLACENAME
- Loch Duich; Five Sisters
- DISTRICT
- South West Ross
- OLD COUNTY/PARISH
- ROSS: Lochalsh
- PERIOD
- 20c
- CREATOR
- M E M Donaldson
- SOURCE
- Highland Photographic Archive (IMAG)
- ASSET ID
- 10659
- KEYWORDS
- legends
magicians
folklore
lochs
hills
place names

This view of the head of Loch Duich, with the Five Sisters of Kintail in the background, was photographed by M.E.M. Donaldson in the first half of the 20th century. The Five Sisters are Sgurr na Mòraich (876m), Sgurr nan Saighead (929m), Sgurr Fhuaran (1068m), Sgurr na Carnach (1002m) and Sgurr na Ciste Duibhe (1027m).
Legend relates that two Irish Princes, washed ashore during a storm, fell in love with two of the seven daughters of the King of Kintail. Having promised to send their five brothers for the remaining sisters, the Princes married the two youngest Princesses and returned to Ireland. The five sisters waited in vain, and eventually asked the Grey Magician of Coire Dhunnaid to extend their vigil beyond life itself, whereupon he turned them into mountains.
Mary Ethel Muir Donaldson was born in 1876 and came to the Highlands around 1908. She travelled extensively around the North and West Highlands, writing and taking photographs. One of her favourite locations was the Ardnamurchan Peninsula and it was there she settled, at Sanna, in 1927.
Between 1912 and 1949 Miss Donaldson produced many books on the social history and customs of the North and West Highlands. 'Wanderings in the Western Highlands and Islands' and 'Further Wanderings - Mainly in Argyll' are two of her best known works and both are illustrated with her own photographs. She died in a nursing home in Edinburgh in 1958, and was buried in Oban.
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Highland Photographic Archive quoting the External ID.