Talk:Rhins of Galloway

Latest comment: 15 years ago by Alistairliv in topic What is (are) Rhins?

What is (are) Rhins? edit

What does Rhins mean? Are there more than one? Are there other places called The Rhins of... ? --AW 21:38, 25 June 2007 (UTC)Reply

Anyone? --AW (talk) 20:13, 28 May 2008 (UTC)Reply

Herbert Maxwell in The Places Names of Galloway (Glasgow, 1930) p.234 gives 'Rhinns' as rionn, rinn, a point or promontory and quotes O'Brien's (?) Dictionary "It would take more than a whole sheet to mention all the neck-lands of Ireland whose name begins with this word rinn".

In Galloway (Stewartry of Kirkcubdright) there is a range of hills up to 2500 feet high called the Rhinns of Kells which run from Clatteringshaws Loch to Loch Doon, highest peak being Corserine (= cross-rhinn) 814 metres.

On Islay, which is also mentioned by Maxwell, there is (are?) the Rhinns of Islay, a penninsula on the north -west side of Loch Indaal. Alistairliv (talk) 17:32, 23 August 2008 (UTC)Reply

One n edit

This seems to have found its way back to two n's - despite the fact that that is not what it is called. The usage of two n's is historical, not contemporary - and all respectable geographical current sources use one n - including the OS, who are pretty much the authority on place names. Google searches with quotes yields ~7000 hits for one n and ~3000 for two - without quotes the ratio is even higher in favour of one n.