Dictionary Definition
fife n : a small high-pitched flute similar to a
piccolo; has a shrill tone and is used chiefly to accompany drums
in a marching band
User Contributed Dictionary
see Fife
English
Pronunciation
-
- Rhymes: -aɪf
Noun
- A small shrill pipe, resembling the piccolo flute, used chiefly to accompany the drum in military music
Italian
Noun
fife- Plural of fifa
Extensive Definition
about the
area in Scotland Fife (Gaelic:
Fìobh) is a council area
of Scotland, situated
between the Firth of
Tay and the Firth of
Forth, with inland boundaries to Perth and
Kinross and Clackmannanshire.
It was originally one of the Pictish kingdoms, known as Fib, and is
still commonly known as the Kingdom of Fife within Scotland.
It is a
lieutenancy area, and was a county
of Scotland until 1975. It was very occasionally known by the
anglification
Fifeshire in old documents and maps compiled by English
cartographers and authors. A person from Fife is known as a
Fifer.
From 1975 to 1996 Fife was a
local government region
divided into three districts
— Dunfermline,
Kirkcaldy
and North-East
Fife. Since 1996 the functions of the district councils have
been exercised by the unitary
Fife Council.
Fife is Scotland's third largest local authority
area by
population. It has a resident population of just under 360,000,
almost a third of whom live in the three principal towns of
Dunfermline,
Kirkcaldy
and Glenrothes.
The historical town of St Andrews is
located on the east coast of Fife. It is well known for one of the
most ancient
universities in Europe, and as the home of golf.
History
Popularly known as 'The Kingdom of Fife', Fife probably takes its name from Fibh, a 7th century Pictish king. Fibh was one of the seven sons of Cruithne, a warrior king who ruled over a wide area of ancient Scotland.Legend has it that upon the death of Cruithne,
the Pictish realm - known collectively as 'Pictavia' - was
divided into seven sub-kingdoms or provinces, one of which became
Fife. The name is recorded as Fib in 1150 and Fif in 1165. It was
often associated with Fothriff.
Fife, bounded to the north by the Firth of
Tay and to the south by the Firth of
Forth, is a natural peninsula whose political boundaries have
changed little over the ages.
King James
VI of Scotland described Fife as a 'beggar's mantle fringed
with gold' - the golden fringe being the coast and its chain of
little ports with their thriving fishing fleets and rich trading
links with the Low
Countries, ironic given the much later development of farming
on some of Scotland's richest soil and the minerals, notably coal,
underneath. Wool,linen, coal and salt were all traded. Salt pans
heated by local coal were a feature of the Fife coast in the
past.The distinctive red clay "pan tiles" seen on many old
buildings in Fife arrived as ballast on trading boats and replaced
the previously thatched roofs. In 1598 King James VI
employed a group of 12 men from fife, who became known as the
Fife
adventurers to colonise the Isle of
Lewis in an attempt to begin the "civilisation" and anglicisation of the
region. This endeavour lasted until 1609 when the
colonists, having been opposed by the native population, were
bought out by Coinneach, the clan chief of the MacKenzies.
Historically, there was much heavy industry in the century or so
following the Victorian engineering triumphs of the Forth and Tay
rail bridges, The Fife coalfields were developed around Kirkcaldy and the
west of Fife reaching far out under the Firth of Forth.
Shipbuilding was famous at Methil and Rosyth. The world
centre for linoleum production was in Kirkcaldy (where it is still
produced), and flax grown in Fife was transformed into linen
locally too. Post-war Fife saw
the development of Scotland's second new
town, Glenrothes.
Originally to be based around a coal mine the town eventually
attracted a high number of modern Silicon Glen
companies to the region. Fife Council also centered their
operations in Glenrothes.
There are many notable historical buildings to be
seen in Fife, some of which are managed by the National Trust for
Scotland or Heritage Scotland. They include Dunfermline abbey (last
resting place of Scottish Royalty), the Palace in Culross,
Ravenscraig Castle in Kirkcaldy, Dysart Harbour area, Balgonie
Castle near Coaltown of Balgonie, Falkland Palace (hunting palace
of the Scottish Kings), Kellie Castle near Pittenweem, Hill of
Tarvit (a historical house), St Andrews Castle (with a gruesome
bottle dungeon), St Andrews Cathedral and St Rules' Tower.
Geography
Fife is a peninsula in eastern Scotland bordered on the north by the Firth of Tay, on the east by the North Sea and the Firth of Forth to the south. The route to the west is partially blocked by the mass of the Ochil Hills. Almost all traffic into and out of Fife has to pass over one of three bridges, south on The Forth Road Bridge, west on the Kincardine Bridge or north east via The Tay Road Bridge, the exception being traffic headed north on the M90. Tolls were abolished on the Tay Road Bridge and Forth Road Bridge on 11 February 2008There are a number of extinct volcanic features, such as the
Lomond
Hills which rise above rolling farmland, and Largo Law, a
volcanic
plug in the east. At 522 m (or 1713 feet),
the West
Lomond is the highest point in Fife. The coast has many fine
but small harbours, from the industrial docks in Burntisland and
Rosyth to
the fishing villages of the East Neuk such
as Anstruther and
Pittenweem. The
large area of flat land to the north of the Lomond Hills, through
which the River
Eden flows, is known as the Howe of
Fife. North of the Lomond Hills can be found many villages and
small towns in a primarily agricultural landscape. The areas in the
south and west of Fife, including the towns of Dunfermline,
Glenrothes,
Kirkcaldy
and the Levenmouth
region are much more lightly industrial and densely populated. The
only area which could claim to be heavy industry is that of
Rosyth,
around the naval dockyard.
The east corner of Fife, generally that east of a
line between Leven and
St
Andrews is recognised throughout Scotland as the "East Neuk"
(or corner) of Fife, small settlements around sheltered harbours,
with distinctive vernacular "Dutch" or craw(crow)stepped gabled and
stone-built architecture - an area much sought after as second
homes of the Edinburgh
professional classes in the 30 years since the Forth Road Bridge
was built. The
fishing industry on which the East Neuk settlements were built
has declined in recent years with the main fishing fleet now
operating from Pittenweem and the harbour in Anstruther being used
as a marina for pleasure craft.
Towns and villages
- Abercrombie, Aberdour, Anstruther, Arncroach, Auchterderran, Auchtermuchty, Auchtertool
- Balfarg, Ballingry, Balmalcolm, Balmerino, Balmullo, Benarty, Blairhall, Blebo Craigs, Buckhaven, Burntisland
- Cairneyhill, Cardenden, Carnbee, Carnock, Cellardyke, Ceres, Chance Inn, Charlestown, Cluny,Coaltown of Balognie, Collessie, Comrie, Cowdenbeath, Craigrothie, Crail, Crombie, Crossford,Crossgates, Crosshill, Culross, Cupar, Cupar Muir
- Dairsie, Dalgety Bay, Donibristle, Dunfermline, Dysart
- Earlsferry, East Wemyss, Elie
- Falkland, Freuchie, Forgan
- Gateside, Glenrothes, Grange of Lindores, Guardbridge
- Hillend
- Inverkeithing
- Jamestown
- Kelty, Kemback, Kennoway, Kettlebridge, Kilconquhar, Kilmany, Kilrenny, Kincardine, Kinghorn, Kinglassie, Kingsbarns, Kingseat, Kingskettle, Kirkcaldy
- Ladybank, Largoward, Leslie, Leuchars, Leven, Letham, Limekilns, Lindores, Lochgelly, Lower Largo, Lumphinnans, Lundin Links, Luthrie
- Markinch, Methil, Methilhill, Mountfleurie
- Newburgh, Newton of Falkland, Newport-on-Tay, North Queensferry, Newburn
- Oakley
- Peat Inn, Philadelphia Pickletillum, Pitlessie, Pitscottie, Pittencrief, Pittenweem,
- Rosyth, Rockwood
- Saline, Springfield, St Andrews, St Monans, Stratheden, Strathkinness, Strathmiglo, Star
- Tayport, Thornton, Torryburn, Teasses
- Upper Largo
- Wellwood, West Wemyss, Windygates, Woodhaven, Wormit
- High and Low Valleyfield
Places of interest
- Balmerino Abbey
- Cupar Garden Centre
- Dogton Stone
- Dunfermline Abbey
- Falkland Palace
- Fife Coastal Path
- Fife Folk Museum
- Forth Bridge
- Kellie Castle
- Kirkcaldy Museum and Art Gallery
- Lomond Hills
- RAF Leuchars
- Scotstarvit Tower
- Scottish Fisheries Museum
- St. Andrews Botanic Gardens
- Tay Rail Bridge
- Tay Road Bridge
- Tentsmuir Forest
Notable Fifers
- Robert Adam, architect
- Stuart Adamson, Musician (Big Country)
- Ian Anderson, musician, frontman of Jethro Tull
- Iain Banks, writer
- Jim Baxter, footballer
- Edith Bowman, Radio 1 DJ
- Andrew Carnegie, industrialist and philanthropist
- Kenneth Cranham, actor
- Jim Clark, driver
- Barbara Dickson, singer and actress
- Philip Charles Durham, sailor and captain of HMS Defiance at Trafalgar
- John Forbes, general
- Shirley Henderson, actress
- Deborah Knox, Olympic Gold medallist
- Ian Rankin, writer
- Craig and Charlie Reid, better known as The Proclaimers
- Craig Russell (British author), writer
- Dougray Scott, actor
- Alexander Selkirk, seafarer and inspiration for Robinson Crusoe
- Sir Jimmy Shand, accordion player
- Adam Smith, economist
- Michaela Tabb, first female snooker referee to appear on the Crucible
- KT Tunstall, musician
- Jack Vettriano, artist
- James Wilson, Signer of U.S. Declaration of Independence, appointed by Geo. Washington to first Supreme Court
Sports
- Cowdenbeath F.C., Senior football club based in Cowdenbeath
- Dunfermline Athletic F.C., Senior football club based in Dunfermline
- East Fife F.C., Senior football club based in Methil
- Raith Rovers F.C., Senior football club based in Kirkcaldy
- Fife Flyers, the UK's oldest ice hockey club
- Fife Lions, Rugby League club
- Aberdour Shinty Club, the only senior shinty club in Fife.
Council political composition
Fife Council has a joint SNP/Liberal Democrat
local government administration following the recent elections.
Labour and the other parties form the opposition. http://www.fifeonline.co.uk/news?articleid=2884083
- Labour - 24
- Scottish National Party - 23
- Liberal Democrat - 21
- Conservative - 5
- Independent - 3
- Left Alliance - 2
External links
See also
fife in Breton: Fìobh
fife in Czech: Fife
fife in German: Fife (Schottland)
fife in Spanish: Fife
fife in Esperanto: Fife (Skotlando)
fife in French: Fife (Écosse)
fife in Scottish Gaelic: Fìobha
fife in Italian: Fife
fife in Lithuanian: Faifas
fife in Dutch: Fife
fife in Japanese: ファイフ
fife in Norwegian: Fife
fife in Polish: Fife (Szkocja)
fife in Romanian: Fife
fife in Russian: Файф (область)
fife in Scots: Fife
fife in Simple English: Fife
fife in Finnish: Fife
fife in Swedish: Fife
fife in Chinese: 法夫
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
English horn, Pandean pipe, aulos, bagpipe, basset horn, basset
oboe, bassoon, blow, blow a horn, bombard, bugle, carillon, clarinet, clarion, contrabassoon, contrafagotto, cromorne, doodle, double bassoon, double
reed, double-tongue, fipple flute, flageolet, flute, hautboy, heckelphone, hornpipe, licorice stick,
lip, musette, oaten reed, oboe, oboe da caccia, ocarina, panpipe, penny-whistle, piccolo, pipe, pommer, recorder, reed, reed instrument, sax, saxophone, shawm, single reed, single-reed
instrument, sonorophone, sound, sweet potato, syrinx, tabor pipe, tenoroon, tin-whistle, tongue, toot, tootle, triple-tongue, trumpet, tweedle, whistle, wind, wind the horn, woods, woodwind, woodwind choir,
woodwind instrument