We could not match "STRATHERRICK" in our simplified list of the main towns and villages, or as a postcode. There are several other ways of finding places within Vision of Britain, so read on for detailed advice and 9 possible matches we have found for you:
- If you meant to type something else:
- If you typed a postcode, it needs to be a full
postcode: some letters, then some numbers, then more letters.
Old-style postal districts like "SE3" are not precise enough
(if you know the location but do not have a precise postcode or placename,
see below):
- If you are looking for a place-name, it needs to be
the name of a town or village, or possibly a district within a town.
We do not know about individual streets or buildings, unless they
give their names to a larger area (though you might try our
collections of Historical Gazetteers and
British travel writing).
Do not include the name of a county, region or
nation with the place-name: if we know of more than one place
in Britain with the same name, you get to choose the right one
from a list or map:
-
You have just searched a list of the main towns, villages
and localities of Britain which we have kept as simple as possible.
It is based on a much more detailed list of
legally defined administrative units: counties, districts, parishes,
wapentakes and so on.
This is the real heart of our system, and you may be better off
directly searching it.
There are no units called "STRATHERRICK"
(excluding any that have already been grouped into the places you
have already searched), but administrative unit searches can be
narrowed by area and type, and broadened using wild cards and
"sound-alike" matching:
-
If you are looking for hills, rivers, castles ...
or pretty much anything other than the "places" where people live and lived, you need
to look in our collection of Historical Gazetteers.
This contains the complete text of three gazetteers published in the
late 19th century over 90,000 entries.
Although there are no descriptive gazetteer entries for
placenames exactly matching your search term (other than those
already linked to "places"), the following
entries mention "STRATHERRICK":
Place name County Entry Source Badenoch Aberdeenshire
Inverness Shire
Moray
PerthshireStratherrick and Strathdearn; NE by Elginshire, and partly there by a line drawn across the Braes of Abernethy; SE by the watershed Groome Boleskine and Abertarff Inverness Shire Stratherrick to the NE, which are comparatively low and level, the surface everywhere is grandly mountainous. In the western division Groome Dores Inverness Shire Stratherrick, the surface everywhere is hilly or mountainous, elevations from NNE to SSW being Drumashie Moor (776 feet), Creag a' Chlachain Groome Foyers or Fechlin Inverness Shire Stratherrick, a space of three or four miles, the river Foyers flows through a series of low rocky hills clothed Groome Gortlech or Gorthlick Inverness Shire shire, in Stratherrick, 3¾ miles SE of Inverfarigaig, and 20 SSW of Inverness, under which it has a post office. Groome Inverness Inverness Shire Kirkhill, Moy, Petty, and Stratherrick, and a mission station in Strathglass, which 13 together had 5994 members and adherents in 1883. Groome Inverness-shire Inverness Shire Stratherrick, Loch Duntelchak (702), Loch Ruthven (700), Loch Farraline (650), Loch Garth (618), Loch Killin (1057), Loch Kemp (545), Loch Groome Mealfourvounie Inverness Shire Stratherrick and the country watered by the head-streams of the Spey. Right below is Loch Ness, like a narrow Groome Stratherrick Inverness Shire Stratherrick , school, Dores par., Inverness-shire. Bartholomew
- Place-names also appear in our collection of British travel writing. If the place-name you are interested in appears in our simplified list of "places", the search you have just done should lead you to mentions by travellers. However, many other places are mentioned, including places outside Britain and weird mis-spellings. You can search for them in the Travel Writing section of this site.
- If you know where you are interested in, but don't know the place-name, go to our historical mapping, and zoom in on the area you are interested in. Click on the "Information" icon, and your mouse pointer should change into a question mark: click again on the location you are interested in. This will take you to a page for that location, with links to both administrative units, modern and historical, which cover it, and to places which were nearby. For example, if you know where an ancestor lived, Vision of Britain can tell you the parish and Registration District it was in, helping you locate your ancestor's birth, marriage or death.