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Your first view of Oban
is one you are unlikely to forget. From the north, you glimpse this bustling
port from the top of the 'Bealach-an-Righ'. As you sweep down the hill towards
the expanse of the bay, the view opens up before you and one begins to appreciate
why Oban has developed into Scotland's most popular west-coast holiday town.
Beyond Oban ("little bay" in Gaelic - Scotland's ancient Celtic
language) lie the islands of the Inner Hebrides: Kerrera, which protects
the town from
Atlantic storms, the low, green island of Lismore, majestic Mull and the granite
mountains of the Morvern peninsula. Beyond them, the sacred island of Iona,
Coll, Colonsay and Tiree.
Oban today has a resident population of 8,500 and is the unofficial capital
of the West Highlands - the "Gateway to the Isles". The panoramic
views of the mountains, lochs and islands which have captivated artists, authors,
composers, and poets for centuries are as striking now as they were when Dunollie
Castle, a ruined keep which has stood sentinel over the narrow entrance to
the sheltered bay for around six hundred years, was the northern outpost of
the Dalriadic Scots.
Loch Etive
It is no surprise to find Oban in the 21st Century remains a magnet for travellers
from all over the world. The town's present day popularity owes much to the
Victorians, and as early as 1812, when the Comet steamship linked Oban with
Glasgow, the town played host to intrepid travellers touring Staffa - the inspiration
for Mendelssohn's Hebridean Overture - and Iona - home of Scottish Christianity
since St Columba stepped ashore in AD563.
Indeed once Oban had the royal seal of approval from Queen Victoria, who called it "one of the finest spots we have seen", the town's destiny as an endearingly enchanting holiday destination was as firmly set as the lava columns of Fingal's Cave in Staffa.