Iona cruise port guide
If tiny islands that resonate with peace and tranquillity are your idea of travel heaven, then welcome to Iona. Almost 200 miles east of Edinburgh, set in Scotland’s Inner Hebrides, this magical island has a spiritual reputation that precedes it. And luckily, more than lives up to. The island is miniscule. Just three miles long and only one and a half miles wide, this is not a place that hums with urban attractions. View less 120 people call Iona home (this number rises significantly if the gull, tern and Kittiwake population is added), although residential numbers do go up (to a whopping 175) in summer. The beautiful coastline is lapped by the gulf stream and gives the island a warm climate with sandy beaches that look more Mediterranean than Scottish! Add to that a green field landscape that is just beautiful, and you’ll find that Iona is a place that stays with you long after you leave. Iona’s main attraction is of course its abbey. Built in 563 by Saint Columbia and his monks, the abbey is the reason why Iona is called the cradle of Christianity. Not only is the abbey (today an ecumenical church) one of the best – if not the best – example of ecclesiastical architecture dating from the Middle Ages, but it also serves as an important site of spiritual pilgrimage. St. Martin’s Cross, a 9th century Celtic cross that stands outside the abbey, is considered as the finest example of Celtic crosses in the British Isles. Rèilig Odhrain, or the cemetery, allegedly contains the remains of many Scottish kings.
About Iona
Iona is a small island in the Scottish Inner Hebrides, measuring approximately 2 km wide by 6 km long and lying roughly 2 km off the Ross of Mull. It is celebrated worldwide as the birthplace of Celtic Christianity in Scotland, where St. Columba founded his abbey in 563 AD. Today the island draws visitors for its remarkable spiritual heritage, relative tranquility, and dramatic natural environment.
The centerpiece of any visit is Iona Abbey, a functioning historic monument that stood at the heart of Gaelic monasticism for three centuries and still stands today. The ruins of the Nunnery in the main village of Baile Mòr provide further medieval atmosphere, alongside the MacLeod Centre a short walk north. Natural highlights include Dùn Ì, the island's 101-metre high point, the sweeping Bay at the Back of the Ocean on the western coast, and Càrn Cùl ri Éirinn — the hill where St. Columba is said to have first landed. Port Bàn, the White Port beach on the west shore, hosts the Iona Beach Party.
Quick facts
Cruises visiting Iona
Prices per person · incl. taxes & fees.
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Dalmatia's charm and the magic of the Greek islands - Dubrovnik to Piraeus (Athens)
MS EUROPA 2 · Mediterranean · 12 nights
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Dublin to Leith
Silver Wind · United Kingdom · 11 nights
from $12,400
$1,127 / night
Leith to Dublin
Silver Wind · United Kingdom · 11 nights
from $15,700
$1,427 / night
Scottish Isles: Historic Trails & Wilderness
Scenic Eclipse · United Kingdom · 9 nights
from $13,075
$1,452 / night
Dublin to Leith
Silver Wind · United Kingdom · 11 nights
from $12,400
$1,127 / night
Expedition circumnavigation of Great Britain: British contrasts with a touch of sophistication - Hamburg to Hamburg
HANSEATIC Nature · Europe · 16 nights
from $12,199
$762 / night
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