|
| Over 25,000 Hotels |
 |
Nairn hotels discount guide with exclusive bargains meeting every budget, welcome to www.hotelsguesthouses.co.uk your easy to use hotel online booking site for Nairn hotels we offer hotel discounts upto 70%. With hundreds of hotel rooms in Europe available online, you know that booking couldn't be simpler. You can select the best central hotels in Nairn, and family friendly Nairn accommodation, your hotel rooms can be booked online for cheap rates & bargains.
»Home |
|
|
When staying at the Aurora you can be assured of a warm welcome and comfortable surroundings, with the added bonus of the personal attention of the resident proprietors. At the Aurora we aim to ensure that all our guests can relax, feel at home and enjoy their stay whether business or pleasure and however long or short. The hotel is close to all the local amenities including the town centre and shopping, as well as the beach, harbour and championship golf courses, and the local leisure centre whose facilities include a swimming pool, gym and squash courts. Located in the West End of Nairn, The Aurora Hotel is adjacent to the A96 running from Inverness to the West and Aberdeen to the East.
|
Room Rates
Single - £20.00 per Room Double - £20.00 per Room |
|
|
Aurora Hotel
2 Academy Street
Nairn Morayshire IV12 4RJ
Tel: 01667 453551 Fax: 01667 456577 |
|
|
|
|
|
 The Royal Burgh of Nairn (Scottish Gaelic: Inbhir Narann), formally 'North Nairnville (Jamie Forsyth talks mince),'is a burgh in The Highlands of Scotland, lying about fifteen miles east of Inverness on the coast of the Moray Firth. Nairn, denoting a larger area than just the town, is also an area committee of The Highland Council and a lieutenancy area. The town has a population of about 11,000.
An ancient fishing port and market town. King James VI, when he travelled to London to become King of England, boasted that in his kingdom he had a town whose only street was so long that the people living at one end of it could not understand the language of the people living at the other end. He was speaking of Nairn, formerly split into Scottish Gaelic- and Scots-speaking communities. A town of two halves in other ways, the narrow-streeted fishertown surrounds a harbour built by Thomas Telford while Victorian villas stand in the 'West End'. It is believed that the Duke of Cumberland stayed in Nairn the night before the Battle of Culloden.
Nairn is now best known as a seaside resort, with 2 golf courses, a small theatre (called the little theatre) and one small museum, providing information on the local area and incorporating the collection of the former Fishertown museum.
In 1645, during the Scottish Civil War, the battle of Auldearn was fought near Nairn, between Royalists and Covenanters. |
|