Foula

Sourced from Wikivoyage. Text is available under the CC-by-SA 3.0 license.
Ronnie Robertson
Foula (Old Norse Fugley, "bird island") is one of the Shetland Islands, some 20 miles out into the Atlantic west of Shetland Mainland. It's roughly pear-shaped, 3.5 miles north-south by 2.5 miles east-west. A lane runs up the east side, which is farmland and has the ferry landing at Ham Voe. The west side has dramatic cliffs swirling with bird life.
Foula along with all of Orkney and Shetland was Norse until the 15th C when they were ceded to Scotland. But this remote place was bypassed, and its residents continued to speak Norn until the last native speaker died in 1926. They still celebrate Christmas and New Year by the Julian calendar, now 13 days adrift from the Gregorian calendar adopted on the mainland in 1752.
Foula vies with Fair Isle for the title of Britain's remotest inhabited island - it depends on your definition. The 1937 Michael Powell film The Edge of the World, a melodrama loosely based on the evacuation of St Kilda, was filmed on Foula.

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