Scotland's National Booktown
The mediaeval town of Wigtown sits on top of a hill at the head of Wigtown Bay, the UK's largest nature reserve and home to a variety of wildlife, including a pair of nesting ospreys.
Once the seat of power for the west of Galloway, Wigtown has a rich history, and architecture going back to the 13th Century. The town's place in one of the darker episodes in Scottish history is marked by the execution of two women, the Wigtown Martyrs, who were drowned at the stake during the Covenanting times. But not all of Wigtown's history is so grim, and it was once home to actor James Robertson Justice, who famously kept his house warm by feeding enormous logs into a mobile brazier, which he moved from room to room.
Nearby is the pretty riverside village of Bladnoch, home to Scotland's most southerly whisky distillery (http://www.qype.com/place/2169622-Bladnoch-Distillery-Newton-Stewart) .
In 1998 Wigtown re-invented itself as Scotland's National Book Town, and is home to over a dozen thriving bookshops and a successful literary festival every Autumn. If books aren't your thing there's plenty more around Wigtown to keep you entertained, from stone circles to the stunning views from the County Buildings, beautiful walks, cafes and parks, and much more. read more