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Portknockie is a cliff-top village
overlooking the Moray Firth in NE Scotland, midway between
Aberdeen and Inverness. Early settlement at this location is
suggested by the remains of Iron Age and Pictish fortifications
that have been found on a promontory that shelters the harbour
known as the Green Castle.
The village was founded in 1677 and it became a significant
herring fishing port during the nineteenth century. At the
height of the herring fishing boom about 100 sailing boats
crowded its harbour, many of them being of the famous Zulu
design. Between 1883 and 1905 some of these boats were being
built in the village.
The present harbour features date from 1890 and, as late as
1929, it was still being used by up to 58 steam drifters. Today,
Portknockie’s fishing fleet comprises ten modern boats, which
land their fish at Scotland’s east and west coast ports with
just five smaller boats locally landing creels and mackerel.
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