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  1. This was soon followed by the first performance of the Scottish highland dance known as "Flora MacDonald's Fancy", while a bronze statue was erected at Inverness Castle in 1896, with her dog Flossie by her side.

  2. 28 de fev. de 2018 · Flora Macdonald was the young woman who helped Bonnie Prince Charlie escape from Scotland after the Jacobites were routed at the Battle of Culloden in 1746. According to the "Inverness City Trail," the statue of the Jacobite heroine was paid for” by the generosity of "Captain J. Henderson MacDonald of Caskieben, and of the 78th ...

  3. The Scottish heroine who helped Prince Charles Edward escape is depicted with a Scottish hound at her feet, looking out over the valley and shielding her eyes. The statue was designed by Andrew Davidson, a sculptor from Inverness and installed on the terrace in front of Inverness Castle in 1899.

  4. Flora MacDonald, the Scottish heroin who helped in the escape of Bonnie Prince Charlie from Scotland after his defeat at Culloden, is buried in the Kilmuir cemetery. A high Celtic Cross marks her grave.

  5. One of the most romantic characters in Scottish history, Flora MacDonald is famous for helping Bonnie Prince Charlie escape from Scotland after the defeat of the Jacobites at the Battle of Culloden in 1746.

  6. 22 de dez. de 2022 · This portrait of the Jacobite heroine Flora Macdonald (1722–1790) relates to a famous episode that continues to capture the modern imagination: the flight of Prince Charles Edward after his defeat at Culloden in 1746.

  7. On 28th June 1746, Flora MacDonald and her Isish maid ‘Betty Burke’ sailed from Benbecula over the sea to Skye. The maid was the thinly disguised ‘Bony Prince Charlie’ and the event is commemorated in the famous Skye Boat Song.