Domain and Website Information:
egilsay.uk
Domain name - egilsay.uk
Site title - Site title unavailable
Go to website - link blocked
Site Logo
Domain name:
egilsay.uk
Data validation:
Nominet was able to match the registrant's name and address against a 3rd party data source on 13-Sep-2022
Registrar:
ANY-Web Limited [Tag = ANY-DOMAINS]
URL: http://www.any-domains.com
Relevant dates:
Registered on: 21-Mar-2019
Expiry date: 21-Mar-2024
Last updated: 22-Oct-2023
Registration status:
Renewal required.
*** This registration has been SUSPENDED. ***
Name servers:
ns1.dan.com
ns2.dan.com
WHOIS lookup made at 18:07:05 02-Jun-2024
--
This WHOIS information is provided for free by Nominet UK the central registry
for .uk domain names. This information and the .uk WHOIS are:
Copyright Nominet UK 1996 - 2024.
You may not access the .uk WHOIS or use any data from it except as permitted
by the terms of use available in full at https://www.nominet.uk/whoisterms,
which includes restrictions on: (A) use of the data for advertising, or its
repackaging, recompilation, redistribution or reuse (B) obscuring, removing
or hiding any or all of this notice and (C) exceeding query rate or volume
limits. The data is provided on an 'as-is' basis and may lag behind the
register. Access may be withdrawn or restricted at any time.
Brief facts about egilsay:
Egilsay is one of the Orkney Islands in Scotland, lying east of Rousay. The anglicized name of Eagleshay was used in past centuries. The island is largely farmland and is known for its corncrakes and St Magnus Church, dedicated or re-dedicated to Saint Magnus, who was killed on the island in 1117 by an axe blow to the head. For hundreds of years the story of St. Magnus, part of the Orkneyinga saga, was considered just a legend until a skull with a large crack in it, such as it had been stricken by an axe, was found in the walls of St. Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall.
Sir Alexander Douglas of Eagleshay - Sir Alexander Douglas of Eagleshay, Lord of Egilshay, was a Scottish politician who sat in the Parliament of Scotland from 1702 to 1707 and in the British House of Commons from 1707 to 1713.
© DMS 2011-