The
Ochil Hills (G.M. Miller,
BBC Pronouncing Dictionary of British Names (Oxford UP, 1971), p. 110.) (from a Celtic word root, compare
Old Welsh uchel meaning 'high') is a range of hills in
Scotland north of the
Forth valley bordered by the towns of
Stirling,
Alloa,
Kinross and
Perth. The only major roads crossing the hills pass through Glen Devon/
Glen Eagles and
Glenfarg, the latter now largely replaced except for local traffic by the
M90 Edinburgh-Perth motorway cutting through the eastern foothills. The hills are part of a
Devonian lava extrusion whose appearance today is largely due to the
Ochil Fault which results in the southern face of the hills forming an
escarpment. The plateau is undulating with no prominent peak, the highest point being
Ben Cleuch at 721m The south-flowing burns have cut deep
ravines including
Dollar Glen,
Silver Glen and
Alva Glen, often only passable with the aid of wooden walkways.
Historically, the hills, combined with the town being built at the lowest bridge-point on the river Forth, led to
Stirling's importance as a main gateway to the
Highlands. They also acted as a boundary to the Kingdom of
Fife.
Castle Campbell was built at the head of
Dollar Glen in the late 15th century (an earlier castle on the site being called "Castle Gloom") mainly as a very visible symbol of the
Campbell domination of the area.
Sheriffmuir, the site of the 1715 battle of the
Jacobite rising is on the northern slopes of the...
Read More