Fife milestone (B940) near Lathones.JPG
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

Fife (, ; gd, Fìobha, ; sco, Fife) is a
council area {{Unreferenced, date=May 2019, bot=noref (GreenC bot) A council area is one of the areas defined in Schedule 1 of the Local Government etc. (Scotland) Act 1994 and is under the control of one of the local authorities in Scotland created by that Act. ...
, historic county,
registration county A registration county was, in Great Britain and Ireland, a statistical unit used for the registration of births, deaths and marriages and for the output of census information. In Scotland registration counties are used for land registration purpose ...
and lieutenancy areas of Scotland, lieutenancy area of Scotland. It is situated between the Firth of Tay and the Firth of Forth, with inland boundaries with Perth and Kinross (i.e. the historic counties of Perthshire and Kinross-shire) and Clackmannanshire. By custom it is widely held to have been one of the major Picts, Pictish monarchy, kingdoms, known as ''Fib'', and is still commonly known as the Kingdom of Fife within Scotland. A person from Fife is known as a ''Fifer''. In older documents the county was very occasionally known by the anglicisation Fifeshire. Fife is Scotland's third largest local authority area demographics of Scotland, by population. It has a resident population of just under 367,000, over a third of whom live in the three principal towns, Dunfermline, Kirkcaldy and Glenrothes. The historic town of St Andrews is located on the northeast coast of Fife. It is well known for the University of St Andrews, the most Ancient universities of Scotland, ancient university of Scotland and one of the List of oldest universities in continuous operation, oldest universities in the world. From the 15th century it was the metropolis of the former Archdiocese of St Andrews, St Andrews Cathedral having been the seat of the most senior bishop of Scotland since the 10th century. St Andrews is also renowned as the home of golf.


History

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. The List of kings of the Picts, Pictish king list and De Situ Albanie documents of the Poppleton manuscript mention the division of the Picts, Pictish realm or Alba, Albany into seven sub-kingdoms, one being Fife. The earliest known reference to the common epithet ''The Kingdom of Fife'' dates from only 1678, in a proposition that the term derives from the quasi-regal privileges of the Earl of Fife. The notion of a kingdom may derive from a misinterpretation of an extract from Andrew of Wyntoun, Wyntoun. The name is recorded as ''Fib'' in A.D. 1150 and ''Fif'' in 1165. It was often associated with Fothriff. The hill-fort of Clatchard Craig, near Newburgh, Fife, Newburgh, was occupied as an important Picts, Pictish stronghold between the sixth and eighth centuries AD. Fife was an important royal and political centre from the reign of King Malcolm III onwards, as the leaders of Scotland gradually moved southwards away from their ancient strongholds around Scone. Malcolm had his principal home in Dunfermline and his wife Saint Margaret of Scotland, Margaret was the main benefactor of Dunfermline Abbey. The Abbey replaced Iona as the final resting place of Scotland's royal elite, with Robert the Bruce, Robert I amongst those to be buried there. The Earl of Fife was until the 15th century considered the principal peer of the Scottish realm, and reserved the right of crowning the nation's monarchs, reflecting the prestige of the area. A new royal palace was gradually constructed at Falkland, Fife, Falkland, formerly the stronghold of Clan MacDuff, and was used by successive monarchs of the House of Stuart, who favoured Fife for its rich hunting grounds. King James VI of Scotland described Fife, in 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. Wool, linen, coal and salt were all traded. Open-pan salt making, Salt pans heated by local coal were historically a feature of the Fife coast. 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 11 men from Fife, who became known as the Fife adventurers, to colonise the Isle of Lewis in an attempt to begin the "civilisation" and de-gaelicisation of the region. This endeavour lasted until 1609 when the colonists, having been opposed by the native population, were bought out by Kenneth Mackenzie, 1st Lord Mackenzie of Kintail, Kenneth Mackenzie, the Scottish clan chief, clan chief of the Clan Mackenzie, Mackenzies. Fife became a centre of heavy industry in the 19th century. Coal had been mined in the area since at least the 12th century, but the number of pits increased ten-fold as demand for coal grew in the Victorian period. Previously rural villages such as Cowdenbeath rapidly swelled into towns as thousands moved to Fife to find work in its mines. The opening of the Forth Bridge, Forth and Tay Rail Bridge, Tay rail bridges linked Fife with Dundee and Edinburgh and allowed the rapid transport of goods. Modern ports were constructed at Methil, Fife, Methil, Burntisland and Rosyth. Kirkcaldy became the world centre for the production of linoleum. Postwar Fife saw the development of Scotland's second New town#United Kingdom, new town, Glenrothes. Originally to provide housing for miners at a new coal mine, the town eventually attracted a high number of modern Silicon Glen companies to the region. Fife Council and Fife Constabulary also centre their operations in Glenrothes. The Local Government (Scotland) Act 1889 established a uniform system of county councils in Scotland and realigned the boundaries of many of Scotland's counties. Subsequently, Fife County Council was created in 1890. Fife County Council was based at County Buildings, Cupar, County Buildings in Catherine Street in Cupar. From 1975 to 1996 Fife was a local government (Scotland), local government Regions and districts of Scotland, region, divided into three Regions and districts of Scotland, districts: Dunfermline (district), Dunfermline, Kirkcaldy (district), Kirkcaldy and North-East Fife (district), North-East Fife. In 1996 the district councils were abolished and Fife Regional Council became a unitary authority known as Fife Council. Fife is one of the six local authorities in the city region of Edinburgh and southeast Scotland. There was a parliamentary constituency of Fife (UK Parliament constituency), Fife in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom until 1885 and the Fife (Parliament of Scotland constituency), Fife constituency in the Parliament of Scotland until the Acts of Union 1707. There are numerous notable historical buildings in Fife, some of which are managed by the National Trust for Scotland or Historic Scotland. They include Dunfermline Abbey (the 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, St Andrews Cathedral, St. Andrews Cathedral and St Andrews Cathedral#St Rule's tower, St. Rule's Tower.


Governance

Fife is represented by five constituency members of the Scottish Parliament (MSPs) and four members of the United Kingdom parliament (MPs) who are sent to Scottish Parliament, Holyrood and the British Parliament respectively. Following the 2015 United Kingdom general election, 2015 general election, all four of the MPs constituencies were held by the Scottish National Party. In the 2017 United Kingdom general election, 2017 general election, Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath was regained by Labour Party (UK), Labour. At the same election, the seat of North East Fife (UK Parliament constituency), North East Fife became the closest seat in the country with the SNP holding a majority of 2 over the Scottish Liberal Democrats, Liberal Democrats. Three of the Scottish Parliament constituencies are held by the Scottish National Party: Cowdenbeath (Scottish Parliament constituency), Cowdenbeath, Dunfermline (Scottish Parliament constituency), Dunfermline and Mid Fife and Glenrothes (Scottish Parliament constituency), Mid Fife and Glenrothes. One is held by the Scottish Liberal Democrats: North East Fife (Scottish Parliament constituency), North East Fife. Fife Council's administrative headquarters and Police Scotland's P Division (formerly Fife Constabulary) are based in Glenrothes. The Council meetings take place in Fife House (formerly known as Glenrothes House) in the town centre. The west wing of the building was built by the Glenrothes Development Corporation (GDC) as their offices in 1969, which was later used as the headquarters of Fife Regional Council.Ferguson ''A History of Glenrothes'' p.91. The former administrative seat was Cupar. Since the last Scottish election in 2012, Fife Council has been run as a minority by the Labour party, with a total of 35 seats, with support of Tory and independent councillors. Alex Rowley was elected leader of Fife Council but demitted office following his election as an MSP. David Ross succeeded as leader in February 2014. The SNP and the other parties form the opposition.


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 by the Firth of Forth to the south. The route to the west is partially blocked by the mass of the Ochil Hills. Almost all road traffic into and out of Fife has to pass over one of four bridges, south on the Forth Road Bridge (public transport and cyclists only) and Queensferry Crossing, west on the Kincardine Bridge or north-east via the Tay Road Bridge, the exception being traffic headed north on the M90 motorway, M90. Tolls were abolished on the Tay Road Bridge and Forth Road Bridge on 11 February 2008. There are extinct volcanic features, such as the Lomond Hills which rise above rolling farmland, and Largo Law, a volcanic plug in the east. At , the West Lomond is the highest point in Fife. The coast has 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, Fife, River Eden flows, is known as the Howe of Fife. North of the Lomond Hills can be found 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 lightly industrial and more densely populated. The only areas which could claim to be heavily industrial are Rosyth, around the naval dockyard and perhaps the Mossmorran Natural Gas Liquids fractionation plant on the outskirts of Cowdenbeath. The east corner of Fife, along the string of villages between Earlsferry and Kingsbarns, and along with their hinterland, is known as the East Neuk (corner, or projecting point of land) of Fife; small settlements around sheltered harbours, with distinctive vernacular "Dutch" or crow-stepped gable, corbie (crow) stepped gabled and stone-built architecture. The area has amongst the highest concentration of second homes and holiday lets in Scotland. The Fishing industry in Scotland, fishing industry, on which the coastal 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. There are several islands located off the coast of Fife, such as the Isle of May, Inchkeith and Inchcolm. The former Preston Island south of Valleyfield, Fife, Valleyfield is no longer an island following land reclamation work.


Settlements

Cupar took over as county town from Crail in the early 13th century. Glenrothes is now the administrative centre, after the decision to locate the headquarters of the newly established Fife Regional Council there in 1975. Fife's three major towns are Kirkcaldy, Dunfermline (awarded City status in the United Kingdom, city status in 2022) and Glenrothes. According to the 2012 estimate, Dunfermline is the largest settlement by population, followed by Kirkcaldy then Glenrothes. The next most sizeable towns by population are St Andrews, Cowdenbeath, Rosyth, Methil and Dalgety Bay. The rest of Fife includes smaller towns such as Inverkeithing, Kincardine, Anstruther, Lochgelly, Burntisland, Leven, Newburgh, Tayport and Cupar, and villages such as Springfield, Kinglassie, Kinghorn, Elie, Auchtertool, Crossgates, Ballingry and Auchtermuchty. The county was formerly divided into parishes, often but not always based on a town or village: * Abbotshall * Abdie * Aberdour * Anstruther Easter * Anstruther Wester * Arngask (to Perthshire in 1891) * Auchterderran * Auchtermuchty * Auchtertool * Ballingry * Balmerino * Beath * Buckhaven * Burntisland * Cameron, Fife, Cameron * Carnbee, Scotland, Carnbee * Carnock * Cellardyke * Ceres, Fife, Ceres * Collessie * Cowdenbeath * Crail * Creich, Fife, Creich * Crossgates, Fife, Crossgates * Culross (to Fife from Perthshire, 1891) * Cults, Fife, Cults * Cupar * Dairsie * Dalgety Bay, Dalgety * Dunbog * Dunfermline * Dunino * Dysart, Fife, Dysart * Elie * Falkland, Fife, Falkland * Tayport, Ferry Port on Craig * Flisk * Forgan (Fife), Forgan * Freuchie * Glenrothes * Inverkeithing * Kelty * Kemback * Kennoway * Kilconquhar * Kilmany * Kilrenny * Kinghorn * Kinglassie * Kingsbarns * Kingskettle * Kirkcaldy * Ladybank * Largo, Fife, Largo * Leslie, Fife, Leslie * Leuchars * Leven, Fife, Leven * Lochgelly * Logie, Fife, Logie * Lumphinnans * Markinch * Methil * Monimail * Moonzie * Newburgh, Fife, Newburgh * Newburn, Fife, Newburn * Pitlessie * Pittenweem * Rosyth * Saline, Fife, Saline * Scoonie * St Andrews, St Andrews & St Leonards * St Monance (and Abercrombie) * Strathmiglo * Thornton, Fife, Thornton * Torryburn * Wellwood, Fife, Wellwood * Wemyss, Fife, Wemyss * Wormit


Culture

Fife contains 4,961 listed buildings and 48 conservation areas. Domestic sites of importance include Falkland Palace, Kellie Castle, Dunfermline Palace, St Andrews Castle, Culross Palace and Kirkcaldy's Ravenscraig Castle. Fife also has a number of church (building), ecclesiastical sites of historical interest. St Andrew's Cathedral, St Andrews, St Andrews Cathedral was home to the powerful Archbishop of St Andrews, Archbishopric of St Andrews, and later became a centre of the Scottish Reformation, while Dunfermline Abbey was the last resting place of a number of Scottish kings. Balmerino Abbey, Balmerino and Culross Abbey, Culross abbeys were both founded in the 13th century by the Cistercians, while a century before Lindores Abbey was founded by the Tironensians outside Newburgh, Fife, Newburgh; all were highly important sites. The Stanza Poetry Festival, East Neuk Festival, and Pittenweem Arts Festival are events of national cultural importance. Smaller festivals like the Cupar Arts Festival also take place. The Byre Theatre in St Andrews and Adam Smith Theatre in Kirkcaldy are both highly regarded as touring venues, the latter also being the base of the grand opera opera company, company Fife Opera. The Byre has re-opened in Autumn, 2014 following its going into Administration (law), administration in 2012.


Notable Fifers

* Robert Adam, architect * Stuart Adamson, musician (Big Country, The Skids) * Robert Hope Moncrieff Aitken, Lieutenant in the 13th, Bengal Native Infantry, awarded the Victoria Cross *William Allan (classicist), William Allan, classicist at the University of Oxford * Ian Anderson (musician), Ian Anderson, musician, frontman of Jethro Tull (band), Jethro Tull * Iain Banks, writer * Lady Anne Barnard, travel writer, artist and socialite of the period * Andrew Whyte Barclay, physician, Lumleian Lecturer, Lumleian lecturer, and Harveian Orator, Harveian orator * Jim Baxter, footballer * David Beaton, David Bethune, Archbishop of St Andrews * George Bethune (politician), George Bethune, MSP for Kilrenny * James Beaton, James Bethune, Archbishop of St Andrews * James Beaton (archbishop of Glasgow), James Bethune, Archbishop of Glasgow * Janet Beaton, Janet Bethune, noblewoman * Mary Beaton, Mary Bethune, attendant of Mary, Queen of Scots * Elizabeth Bethune, mistress of King James V of Scotland * Guy Berryman, bassist from the band Coldplay * James Black (pharmacologist), Sir James Black, pharmacologist and nobel prize winner * Sir Ernley Blackwell, lawyer and civil servant * Edith Bowman, BBC Radio 1/6 DJ * Caroline Brazier (librarian), Caroline Brazier, librarian * Gordon Brown, former British Prime Minister and Chancellor of the Exchequer and former MP for Kirkcaldy and Cowdenbeath * Scott Brown (footballer, born June 1985), Scott Brown, Scotland and Celtic F.C. footballer * Gregory Burke, playwright * Kenn Burke, ballet dancer * Andrew Carnegie, industrialist and philanthropist * Henry Chisholm, steel industry executive * Jim Clark, two-times Formula One World Drivers' Champion * James Clephan, Lieutenant on board HMS Spartiate (1798), HMS ''Spartiate'' during the Battle of Trafalgar * Archibald Constable, publisher, bookseller and stationer * Kenneth Cranham, actor * King Creosote, musician * Lawrence Daly, General Secretary of the NUM * David Danskin, principal founding member of Arsenal F.C., Arsenal FC * James Dewar (judge), James Dewar, judge * Barbara Dickson, singer and actress * Thomas Millie Dow, artist, a member of the Glasgow School * Peter Dumbreck, racing driver and 1998 Macau Grand Prix winner * Philip Charles Durham, sailor and captain of HMS Defiance (1783), HMS ''Defiance'' at Battle of Trafalgar, Trafalgar * Marjorie Fleming, child writer and poet * Sandford Fleming, Sir Sandford Fleming, engineer, who proposed worldwide standard time zones, engineered on the Intercolonial Railway and the Canadian Pacific Railway * Valentine Fleming, member of parliament and father of the author Ian Fleming * John Forbes (British Army officer), John Forbes, named the city of Pittsburgh * Chris Fusaro, rugby player * Thomas Lomar Gray, engineer noted for his pioneering work in seismology * Martin Grehan, footballer * Samuel Greig, Russian admiral and "Father of the Russian Navy" * Thomas Hardy (minister), Thomas Hardy, minister of religion, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland and Professor of Ecclesiastical History at Edinburgh University * Alexander Henderson (theologian), Alexander Henderson, theologian, and an important ecclesiastical statesman * Shirley Henderson, actress * Peter Horne, rugby player * Bob Howie and Dave Howie, rugby players * Ninian Imrie, army officer and geologist * Danny Inglis, darts player * Richard Jobson (television presenter), Richard Jobson, filmmaker, television presenter, musician, The Skids * Peter Johnstone (footballer), Peter Johnstone, Celtic FC footballer * Henrietta Keddie, novelist who wrote under the pseudonym Sarah Tytler * Deborah Knox, Olympic gold medallist in curling * Craig Levein, Scottish former professional footballer and manager * Jackie Leven, singer-songwriter * Wallace Lindsay, classical scholar, palaeographer, Professor of Humanity at St Andrews University * Robert Lindsay of Pitscottie, 16th-century writer * Anne Macaulay musicologist, archaeologist, author and lecturer * Douglas Mackinnon, director * Val McDermid, writer * Ken McNaught, footballer, Aston Villa F.C. centre back, 1982 European Cup Winner * Willie McNaught, footballer, Raith Rovers F.C. defender * Old Tom Morris, greenskeeper St Andrews Links and 4 times champion of The Open Championship * Tom Nairn, political theorist of nationalism * Rab Noakes, singer, songwriter, record producer * Aileen Paterson, author/illustrator * John Philip (missionary), John Philip, missionary in South Africa * David Pitcairn, physician * John Pitcairn, British Royal marines, Marine officer killed at the Battle of Bunker Hill * William Pitcairn, physician * Ian Rankin, writer * The Proclaimers, Craig and Charlie Reid, singer-songwriters of ''The Proclaimers'' * David Rollo (rugby union), David Rollo, rugby player * Craig Russell (British author), writer * Dougray Scott, actor * John Scrimgeour of Myres, Master of Work to the Crown of Scotland, Master of Work for royal buildings for James V and Mary, Queen of Scots * Alexander Selkirk, seafarer and inspiration for ''Robinson Crusoe'' * Jimmy Shand, accordion player * Daniel Sloss, comedian * Adam Smith, philosopher and economist * Jordan Smith (actor), Jordan Smith, actor * Mary Fairfax Somerville, science writer and polymath * Catherine Steele, plant biochemist * David Steel, former Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament, Presiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament and leader of the Liberal Party (UK), Liberal party and Member of the Scottish Parliament, MSP for Lothians (Scottish Parliament electoral region), Lothian and Member of Parliament (United Kingdom), MP for Tweeddale, Ettrick and Lauderdale (UK Parliament constituency), Tweeddale, Ettrick and Lauderdale * Ian Stewart (musician), Ian Stewart, co-founder of the ''Rolling Stones'' * Lawrence Storione, miner and anarchist organiser * John Struthers (anatomist), Sir John Struthers, first Regius Professor of Anatomy at the University of Aberdeen * John McDouall Stuart, explorer of Australia's interior * Michaela Tabb, first female snooker referee to appear at the Crucible * William Tennant (poet), William Tennant, scholar and poet * John Thomson (footballer, born 1909), John Thomson, Celtic F.C. and Scotland national football team, Scotland goalkeeper * KT Tunstall, musician * Jack Vettriano, artist * William Montgomery Watt, historian, Emeritus Professor in Arabic and Islamic Studies at the University of Edinburgh * David Wilkie (artist), Sir David Wilkie, painter * Alexander Wilson (astronomer), Alexander Wilson, surgeon, type-founder, astronomer, mathematician and meteorologist * James Wilson (Founding Father), James Wilson, signer of US Declaration of Independence, appointed by George Washington to first Supreme Court of the United States, Supreme Court * Jocky Wilson, darts player * James Yorkston, musician * Douglas Young (classicist), Douglas Young, poet, scholar, translator, and leader of the Scottish National Party


Sports

St Andrews in Fife is the home of golf, and the headquarters of The R&A, the governing body of the sport throughout the world, aside from the United States and Mexico. The Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St Andrews, from which it was devolved in 2004, is the world's oldest golf club. Fife has four association football, football clubs that play in the Scottish Professional Football League: Dunfermline Athletic F.C., Dunfermline Athletic, East Fife F.C., East Fife (based in Methil), Kelty Hearts F.C., Kelty Hearts, and Raith Rovers F.C., Raith Rovers (based in Kirkcaldy); Cowdenbeath F.C., Cowdenbeath played at this level between 1905 and 2022 but are now members of the Lowland Football League. Fifteen clubs compete in the East of Scotland Football League, East of Scotland League while one plays in the Scottish Junior Football Association, East Region, SJFA East Region. Fife Flyers (based in Kirkcaldy) are the UK's oldest ice hockey club and play in Britain's top flight, the Elite Ice Hockey League. Fife is also home to eight rugby union clubs. Howe of Fife RFC, Howe of Fife (based in Cupar), and Kirkcaldy RFC, Kirkcaldy play in Scottish Rugby's national leagues while Dunfermline RFC, Dunfermline, Rosyth Sharks, Glenrothes RFC, Glenrothes, Madras College FP RFC, Madras, Waid Academy (based in Anstruther) compete in the Caledonia Regional League, Caledonia regional leagues. University of St Andrews RFC, University of St Andrews – the oldest rugby club in Fife – play in the British Universities & Colleges Sport (BUCS) system. Kingdom Kangaroos are Fife's only Australian Rules Football team, with training held in Rosyth and Kirkcaldy. Aberdour Shinty Club have two men's teams, two women's teams and multiple youth squads. Fife also has two competitive basketball teams; Dunfermline Reign B.C., Dunfermline Reign, who play out of St Columba's Roman Catholic High School, Dunfermline, St Columba's High School in Dunfermline and compete across a number of national Scottish Basketball Championship Men, SBC competitions, an
Fife Steel
a Kirkcaldy-based team, operating a number of age groups, with a Senior men's and an under 19's team currently playing in Division 3 of th

Fife is the location of several of the nation's motorsport venues: Knockhill Racing Circuit, Scotland's national motorsport venue and the only Fédération Internationale de l'Automobile, FIA-graded venue in the country; Cowdenbeath Racewall, a stock car oval racing venue; Lochgelly Raceway, a venue containing the Driftland drifting course and a 1/4 mile oval; and Crail Raceway, a venue located on a former military aerodrome containing a 1/4 mile drag strip and a karting circuit, operated by the East of Scotland Kart Club.


Media

Locally published newspapers include the ''Fife Free Press'' in Kirkcaldy; the ''Dunfermline Press'' in Dunfermline; the ''Glenrothes Gazette'' in Glenrothes, the ''East Fife Mail'' in Leven, Fife, Leven, the ''Fife Herald'' in Cupar / Howe of Fife and the ''St Andrews Citizen'' in St Andrews. D. C. Thomson & Co., DC Thomson publishes Fife and West Fife editions of the ''The Courier (Dundee), Dundee Courier & Advertiser'', and the Counties Edition of the ''Evening Telegraph (Dundee), Evening Telegraph'' is sold in Fife. The only Fife-based radio station is Kingdom FM. There is also a community radio station that broadcasts each evening and is run solely by youths, called Fife Youth Radio. Other local radio stations, Radio Tay and Edinburgh's 97.3 Forth One, broadcast to the northern and southern parts of the region respectively.


See also

* Abbeys and priories in Scotland * Castles in Scotland * Duke of Fife * Earl of Fife * Fire and Rescue Authority (Scotland) * Historic houses in Scotland * Kingdom Housing Association * List of places in Fife * Museums in Scotland


References


External links

*
Knowfife Dataset

Fife Council
{{Authority control Fife, Council areas of Scotland Counties of Scotland Pictish territories Counties of the United Kingdom (1801–1922) Lieutenancy areas of Scotland Peninsulas of Scotland Regions of Scotland