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Free Derry - Pride
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Grianan - Exterior
Grianan - interior
Grianan Dawn
Grianan Walls
Guildhall Riverside
Halloween 08
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Magazine Gate Market
Millennium Forum
Ness: Bluebells
Ness: Glen
Newmarket Street
Raytheon 9
Shadowmen 1
Shadowmen 2
Shipquay Gate Upper
Shipquay Street
St Columbs Cathedral
St Columbs from Walls
The Undertones
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Umoja Dance
Waterloo Place
Waterside Roundabout

Grianan of Aileach, Burt, Co Donegal     2007-12-22

This picture is interactive - to make it pan - click and drag it: left or right, up or down.
Use the [-] or [+] buttons at the bottom left of the picture to zoom out or in.
Use the link at the bottom of the page to launch the, larger full-screen version.

This panorama was taken at around dawn on the day of the Winter Solstice 2007. It was taken as part of the Wrinkle in Time event organised by the World Wide Panorama project.

Grianan of Aileach is an ancient stone fort. It stands a top a hill - a site on which a fort has stood for three millennia.

This view from the Walls of Grianan of Aileach opens looking towards Inch Island, in Lough Swilly. As we start to rotate to the left we pass along Lough Swilly taking in the lights of Letterkenny and then the small ribbon of the river Foyle under the sunrise near the town of Strabane.

As we continue to rotate we pass the hill-tops of Hollywell Hill - with the RTE (Irish TV) transmission mast and Sheriff's Mountain with the BBC (British TV) transmission mast. The border, partitioning Ireland into Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland, runs between the two transmitters.

Next we glimpse the River Foyle again and some of the lights of the City of Derry - most of the city is obscured by the hills. Then Lough Foyle gives way to Scalp Mountain, and beyond it we return to our starting point at Lough Swilly.

The view from the fort encompasses three counties: Donegal, Derry and Tyrone.

Inside the fort you can see the three tiers of terracing within the walls.

What is perhaps more remarkable is that forts of near identical design stand in West Donegal and on the Aran Islands. This suggestis that the original fort was not just the result of the efforts of an early group of skilled dry-stone-wallers, but the product of a sophisticated culture with architects, communication and planning.

There are three other panoramas of Grianan:

Full-Screen version of this panorama (about 1.5mb)






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© Copyright 2010 George Row
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