Glenlivet - meaning and definition. What is Glenlivet
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What (who) is Glenlivet - definition

VALLEY AND SETTLEMENT IN MORAY, SCOTLAND, UK
Glenlivat
  • Remains of a late 18th-century bridge over the River Livet

Glenlivet         
·noun A kind of Scotch whisky, named from the district in which it was first made.
Glenlivet         
Glenlivet (Scottish Gaelic: Gleann Lìobhait) is the glen in the Scottish Highlands through which the River Livet flows.
Glenlivat         
·noun ·Alt. of Glenlivet.

Wikipedia

Glenlivet

Glenlivet (Scottish Gaelic: Gleann Lìobhait) is the glen in the Scottish Highlands through which the River Livet flows.

The river rises high in the Ladder Hills, flows through the village of Tomnavoulin and onto the Bridgend of Glenlivet, passing under the remains of a late 18th-century bridge before joining the River Avon, one of the main tributaries of the River Spey.

Glenlivet is known for the Glenlivet Estate and the whisky The Glenlivet. The Battle of Glenlivet was fought on 3 October 1594.

Examples of use of Glenlivet
1. John Gordon Smith was the son of George Smith, founder of the nearby Glenlivet Distillery, and he joined his father in the business in 1846, helping him establish a small distillery at Delnabo in 184'. Charles MacLean, Bonhams‘ consultant and word authority on whisky, has been researching the origins of the elderly bottle.
2. The Glenlivet, sponsor of the winning team of James Cracknell and Ben Fogle, has announced they will congratulate them by donating 15,000 for BBC Children in Need, doubling the amount the pair raised for the charity. | View all Reader comments (') ' people have commented on this story so far.
3. "The best spring waters may be just as good, but at the other end of the scale they can be no better than treated rainwater." Britain still has some true natural mineral waters, such as Abbey Well, Brecon Carreg, Ty Nant and Speyside Glenlivet.
4. What is certain is that the Smiths closed Delnabo in 1858 and in the following year they consolidated all their distilleries – including Glenavon/Delnabo – at Minmore, the site of the present Glenlivet Distillery." Mr MacLean added: "Since the label reads ‘Glenavon‘ and ‘Bottled by the Distillers‘ it implies that it was bottled before the move to Minmore." Northern Ireland boasts the oldest licensed distillery in the world – Bushmills Irish Whiskey has been produced in the Co Antrim village since the licence was granted in 1608.