CORHABBIE, hiU in Mortlach parish, Banlfshire.
CORICHBAD, deer preserve of the Earl of Breadalbane, in upper part of Glenorchy, Argyleshire.
CORINAHENCHAR, bay in Torosay parish, Mull Island, Argyleshire.
CORINESSIE, vale in Durness parish, Sutherland.
CORKINDALE LAW, hill, with magnificent panoramic view, in Neilston parish, Renfrewshire.
CORKRIE, bay in Kirkmaiden parish, Wigtonshire.
CORLIE, loftiest hill-summit in Greenock parish, Renfrewshire. It commands a rich, diversified, extensive view.
CORMIE, eminence crowned with Raith Tower in Abbotshall parish, Fife.
CORMILLIGAN, lofty hill in Tynron parish, Dumfriesshire.
CORMORANTS' CAVE, basaltic cavern, 224 feet long and 50 feet high, in Staffa Island, Argyleshire.
CORNACHANTIAN, mountain in Luss parish, Dumbartonshire.
CORNAIG, place, with public school, in Coll Island, Argyleshire.
CORNAL, ruined baronial fortalice on Moffat river, in Moffat parish, Dumfriesshire.
CORNAMAUGH, lake in Kildonan parish, Sutherland.
CORNCAIRN, village, 8 miles south-west of Banff.
CORNCOCKLE, moor, 2 miles north of Lochmaben, Dumfriesshire. A building-stone is quarried on it notable for peculiar fossil footprints.
CORNHILL, place, 12 miles north-east of Keith, Banffshire. It has a post office under Banff, and a railway station.
CORNHILL, seat in Culter parish, Lanarkshire.
CORNHILL, seat in Old Machar parish, Aberdeenshire.
CORNIE, burn in Abercorn parish, Lin-litligowshire.
CORNISH, Like, 7 miles south of Straiton, Ayrshire.
CORNTOWN, battle-field near Stirling. It was the scene of the battle in 1297 commonly called the Battle of Stirling.
CORODALE, cave on east side of South Uist Island, Outer Hebrides. It was, for some days in 1746, the abode of Prince Charles Edward.
CORPACH, village at south-west end of Caledonian Canal, 2| miles north of Fort-William, Inverness-shire. It is the landing-place for steamboat passengers, and it has a pier, an Established church, and an obeliskal monument to Colonel Cameron.
CORR, islet off mouth of Loch Swin, Argyleshire.
CORR, lake, 5 miles long, adjacent, to south-east side of Benclybric, in centre of Sutherland.
CORRACHREE, seat in Logie-Coldstone parish, Aberdeenshire.
CORRA-DHUN, vestige of ancient castle in Canna Island, Inner Hebrides.
CORRAL, burn in Auchtergaven parish, Perthshire.
CORRA LINN, second fall of Clyde, in vicinity of Lanark. It occurs within a picturesque amphitheatre, with maxim nm height of 120 feet ; it includes first a fall of a few feet, next a fall of about 30 feet, next a cataract of about 90 feet, next a grand final leap ; and it makes, in these, a total descent of 84 feet.
CORRAN, rivulet, running to the sea, in Jura Island, Argyleshire.
CORRAN, ferry across lower part of West Loch Tarbert, Argyleshire.
CORRAN, ferry across foot of Loch Eil, between Ardgour district, Argyleshire, and Lochaber district, Inverness-shire.
CORRENNIE, hill-range, 1578 feet high, in Cluny and Tough parishes, Aberdeenshire.
CORRICHIE, vale on mutual border of Aberdeenshire and Kincardineshire, 14 miles west-by-south of Aberdeen. It was the scene of the battle in 1562 between the forces of Queen Mary and those of her antagonists.
CORRIE, coast village, 4^ miles north of Brodick, Arran Island, Buteshire. It has a post office under Brodick, and a small harbour with a quay.
CORRIE, ancient parish, now united to Button, Dumfriesshire. Corrie Burn in it is an affluent of the Milk ; Corrie Law is a beautiful hill, with fine view ; and Corrie public school has about 63 scholars.
CORRIE, hill in Kilsyth parish, Stirlingshire.
CORRIE, place, with remains of ancient Caledonian stone circle, in Rogart parish, Sutherlandshire.
CORRIEDOW, glen in Kiltarlity parish, Inverness-shire. A cave in it is said to have been inhabited for some days by Prince Charles Edward.
CORRIEDOWN, heights, with notable cairn, in Rathven parish, Banffshire.
CORRIEMONY, plain, seat, and public school in Urquhart parish, Inverness-shire.
CORRIEMUCKLOCK, place, with inn, about a mile south of Amulree, Perthshire.
CORRIEMULZIE, burn, entering the Dee 3 miles above Castleton-Braemar, Aberdeenshire. It makes a beautiful snow-white cascade within a wooded precipitous ravine.
CORRIEVRECKAN, tortured tidal cur-rent, popularly regarded as a dreadful whirlpool, in strait between Jura and Scarba Islands, Argyleshire.
CORRISEL, seat in Penningham parish, Wigtonshire.
CORRISKIN, lake, about 3 miles in circuit, among Cuchullin Mountains, Isle of Skye. Its scenery is dis-dark, and stern, and is graphically described by Sir Walter Scott in his Lord of the Isles