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Quiz about Four British Islands
Quiz about Four British Islands

Four British Islands Trivia Quiz


There are over 6000 islands making up the British Isles. I have picked four (Anglesey, the Isle of Man, Skye and the Isle of Wight) and the answer to each of these questions is one of those.

A multiple-choice quiz by davejacobs. Estimated time: 4 mins.
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Author
davejacobs
Time
4 mins
Type
Multiple Choice
Quiz #
398,398
Updated
Dec 03 21
# Qns
15
Difficulty
Average
Avg Score
11 / 15
Plays
424
Awards
Top 20% Quiz
Last 3 plays: pehinhota (14/15), wycat (11/15), Guest 81 (10/15).
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Question 1 of 15
1. This island is the location of the village with the longest name in Britain - allegedly! Hint


Question 2 of 15
2. This island is where the famous Talisker Whisky is made. Hint


Question 3 of 15
3. This is the largest island by area in the Irish Sea. Hint


Question 4 of 15
4. Oddly this island is not the location of Cowes, but it does have a Calf. Hint


Question 5 of 15
5. This island was the winter home of the renowned poet Alfred Lord Tennyson, and there is a tall memorial to him on a high chalk down where he often walked. Hint


Question 6 of 15
6. Popular with serious fell-walkers and climbers, the black Cuillin Hills are on which island? Hint


Question 7 of 15
7. Two of these islands are only connected to the nearest British mainland by ferry; two have road bridges, but only this one has a bridge that carries rail traffic. Hint


Question 8 of 15
8. Motor cycle enthusiasts flock to this island in June to watch the "Tourist Trophy" races. Hint


Question 9 of 15
9. Parts of this island are subject to serious landslips, due to the notorious "blue slipper" clay. Hint


Question 10 of 15
10. This island is not technically part of the United Kingdom, but is a Crown Dependency. Hint


Question 11 of 15
11. This is one of a named group of islands, and is in fact the largest and most northerly both of this group, and of our four chosen ones. Hint


Question 12 of 15
12. The main town on this island has a boy's name. Hint


Question 13 of 15
13. An invasion of this island by the French was repulsed in 1545. Hint


Question 14 of 15
14. This island is the original home of a breed of cat with an unusual mutation. Hint


Question 15 of 15
15. Queen Victoria had her summer residence on this island, and indeed it was there that she died in 1901. Hint



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Most Recent Scores
Apr 02 2024 : pehinhota: 14/15
Mar 20 2024 : wycat: 11/15
Mar 14 2024 : Guest 81: 10/15

Quiz Answer Key and Fun Facts
1. This island is the location of the village with the longest name in Britain - allegedly!

Answer: Anglesey

Being able to remember and pronounce the name of this village is somewhat of a party trick.
Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch is the full but seldom used name, and is shown on the long board at the railway station for tourists to photograph.
It lies close to the Menai Strait and is practically the first place you come to when you cross over the bridge into Anglesey. On maps the name is usually shortened to Llanfair Pwllgwyngyll, or Llanfair PG, to distinguish it from several other Llanfairs in Wales.
2. This island is where the famous Talisker Whisky is made.

Answer: Skye

It has to be the Scottish one, obviously. Talisker is a single malt Scotch whisky distilled in Carbost, on the Isle of Skye. Cheers!
3. This is the largest island by area in the Irish Sea.

Answer: Anglesey

There are two major islands in the Irish Sea, of which the largest by area is Anglesey at 276 square miles. The other, the Isle of Man, has an area of 221 square miles. By population though, the Isle of Man has about 80,000 inhabitants (in 2006) compared with Anglesey's 69,000 (in 2001). These figures do not include seasonal increases due to tourism.
4. Oddly this island is not the location of Cowes, but it does have a Calf.

Answer: Man

There is a small island off the south west end of the Isle of Man, across Calf Sound, and it is called the Calf of Man (Manx: Yn Cholloo). Just under a square mile in area, it is run as a wildlife sanctuary by Manx National Heritage. On the island and surrounding rocks are four lighthouses, none currently manned.
Cowes of course is a town on the Isle of Wight.
5. This island was the winter home of the renowned poet Alfred Lord Tennyson, and there is a tall memorial to him on a high chalk down where he often walked.

Answer: Wight

Tennyson Down is a hill at the western end of the Isle of Wight. To walk on this wide grass-covered ridge is sheer delight - in the right weather, obviously, and provided you don't go too near the sheer cliffs on the northern side.
Tennyson himself had a house nearby for nearly 40 years, and frequently walked on the down. He is reputed to have said that the air here was 'worth sixpence a pint', a quotation probably not up to his usual standard!
6. Popular with serious fell-walkers and climbers, the black Cuillin Hills are on which island?

Answer: Skye

The jagged mass of the Cuillin hills dominate the view of Skye from either land or sea, and they are a favourite with serious fell walkers, and also mountaineers. The Black Cuillins are composed of a mixture of gabbro (a rough igneous rock) and basalt which can be very slippery when wet. The high point is Sguirr Alisdair at
3309 ft.
7. Two of these islands are only connected to the nearest British mainland by ferry; two have road bridges, but only this one has a bridge that carries rail traffic.

Answer: Anglesey

The Isle of Wight and the Isle of Man are both only reachable by ferry, and until a few years ago this was also true of Skye, which now has a road bridge. Anglesey however was always a main route to Ireland, but was separated from Wales by the Menai Strait with its treacherous currents. To improve this journey a road bridge was built by the famous engineer Thomas Telford, whose Menai Bridge was the world's first iron suspension bridge, and was the world's biggest suspension bridge when it was opened in 1826.
The railway engineer Robert Stephenson, faced with Parliament's requirement that a fully rigged man-o-war should be able to pass below a new rail bridge, came up with a wrought iron tubular design. Known as the Britannia Bridge, it was completed in 1850. Trains could now run from London to Holyhead on Anglesey, which connected to Dublin by ferry. A fire pretty much destroyed the Brtannia Bridge in 1970, and it has since been redesigned as a more conventional two level bridge.
More recently a new road suspension bridge has further improved access to Anglesey.
8. Motor cycle enthusiasts flock to this island in June to watch the "Tourist Trophy" races.

Answer: Man

The Isle of Man TT races take place in June each year, and are some of the last classic road racing events. The races, in a number of different classes of motorcycle, are run over public roads (closed temporarily) in a time-trial format. The speeds reached seem incredible considering this is not a race track; the record lap speed for the 37 mile course is over 135 mph, achieved by Peter Hickman on a BMW machine in 2018.
9. Parts of this island are subject to serious landslips, due to the notorious "blue slipper" clay.

Answer: Wight

The clay locally known as 'blue slipper' sometimes occurs between layers of rock, and when there is sufficient rainfall with drainage into certain areas the land above the blue slipper will fall and slip away toward the sea. An area in the north of the island subject to this problem is known as the "Undercliff", and roads in the area have frequently been cut by landslips.
10. This island is not technically part of the United Kingdom, but is a Crown Dependency.

Answer: Man

The Isle of Man, together with the Channel islands, are Crown Colonies rather than part of the United Kingdom. Residents however are eligible to hold British passports. These islands have independent parliaments, although with limited powers. The UK for instance is responsible for their defence.
11. This is one of a named group of islands, and is in fact the largest and most northerly both of this group, and of our four chosen ones.

Answer: Skye

Skye is the largest of the Inner Hebrides, off the west coast of Scotland.
The next biggest is Mull. Others nearby include the intriguingly named islands of Rum, Eigg and Muck.
12. The main town on this island has a boy's name.

Answer: Man

Douglas, on the Isle of Man, is its biggest town. I was at school there in 1940 when the waterfront hotels were occupied by "enemy aliens", who were either people of German and Italian extraction who had lived in Britain for years, or recent Jewish refugees from Germany, but they were nevertheless feared to be a danger to the war effort and interned on the Isle of Man. Douglas is now a popular tourist town.
The main towns of Anglesey, the Isle of Wight and Skye are Llangefni, Newport, and Portree respectively.
13. An invasion of this island by the French was repulsed in 1545.

Answer: Wight

The position of the Isle of Wight in the English Channel made it vulnerable to attacks by the French during the Hundred Years War and after.
In July 1545, a French fleet of over 200 ships arrived off the east corner of the island and landed troops who caused much devastation. They were fought by Henry VIII's ships and eventually retreated, although the English navy suffered many losses including the famous "Mary Rose" which capsized and sank in the Solent.
The remarkable exhibition of this ship in Portsmouth Dockyard is well worth visiting by the way.
14. This island is the original home of a breed of cat with an unusual mutation.

Answer: Man

The Manx cat is famous for being tailless, although many have short stubs of tails. They also have long back legs and rounded heads, which define them as one of the 42 cat varieties recognised by the American Cat Fanciers Association and the British equivalent. Manx cats are fierce predators and are popular as farm cats and ship's cats.
15. Queen Victoria had her summer residence on this island, and indeed it was there that she died in 1901.

Answer: Wight

The place is called Osborne House, near East Cowes on the Isle of Wight. An earlier house on the site was rented in the early 1840s by the newly married Queen and consort, but in 1845 they decided to buy the site and build a new house, advised by the master architect and builder Thomas Cubitt.
Osborn House was very much appreciated by Queen Victoria who spent much time there. The Italianate style of the house was the preference of Prince Albert: apparently the view from the gardens across the Solent reminded Prince Albert of the Bay of Naples.
Source: Author davejacobs

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