The
History of Scotland
The
recorded history of Scotland begins in the 1st
century AD, when the Romans invaded Britain.
The Romans added southern Britain to their empire
as the province Britannia. They were unable,
however, to subdue the fierce tribes in the
north. To keep these tribes from invading Britannia,
Emperor Hadrian had a massive wall built across
the island from sea to sea. The Romans called
the land north of the wall Caledonia, and they
called the people Picts--from the Latin piclus,
meaning "painted"--because they painted
their bodies. Parts of Hadrian's Wall still
stand on the Scottish border.
In the 5th century Celtic immigrants from Ireland,
called Scots, settled north of the Clyde. The
Scots were already Christians when they left
Ireland. In the next century St. Columba converted
the king of the Picts to Christianity. In the
9th century Kenneth MacAlpine, king of the Scots,
added the Pictish kingdom to his own. In about
the 10th century the land came to be known as
Scotland.
After the Normans conquered England in 1066,
many Anglo-Saxons from England settled in the
Lowlands of Scotland. Here the Scots gradually
adopted English ways. Feudalism was established,
and the chiefs of the clans became nobles. Towns
grew, trade increased, and Scotland prospered.
In 1290 Margaret, heiress to the throne, died.
Thirteen claimants contested the Crown. Edward
I of England claimed the right to bestow it
and made John de Baliol king. When Edward asked
John for help against the French, however, John
entered into an alliance with France. For 260
years Scotland held to this so-called "auld
alliance" with England's enemy.
Edward crossed the border in 1296, took John
de Baliol prisoner, and proclaimed himself king
of Scotland. To symbolize the union he carried
off the ancient Stone of Scone, on which Scottish
kings had long been crowned, and placed it in
Westminster Abbey where it lay beneath the coronation
chair.
The Scots rose again. Led by William Wallace,
they routed the English at Stirling Bridge in
1297 and pursued them across the border. The
next year Edward returned and inflicted a disastrous
defeat on the Scots at Falkirk. Wallace was
later captured and executed, and the English
hung his head from London Bridge. This part
of the history of Scotland was the foundation
for the film "Braveheart".
The Scots' spirit was still unbroken, and they
soon found another great champion in Robert
the Bruce. The last great battle in the war
for independence was fought in 1314 at Bannockburn
near Stirling Castle. There Bruce inflicted
a disastrous defeat on superior English forces
led by Edward II. In 1328 Edward III formally
recognized Scotland's independence.
In the later Middle Ages, Scotland suffered
from weak kings and powerful nobles. For two
centuries there was a constant struggle between
the Crown and the barons. Border clashes with
England also continued. James IV of Scotland
married Margaret, daughter of Henry VII of England,
in 1503. When Henry VIII went to war with France
in 1512, however, James IV invaded England.
He fell, "riddled with arrows," at
Flodden Field in the last great border battle
(1513).
James V died brokenhearted after his army had
been slaughtered at Solway Moss (1542). The
throne went to his infant daughter, Mary Stuart.
Meanwhile the Protestant Reformation had swept
across Europe and into England. Scotland was
still a Roman Catholic country. Its young queen,
Mary Stuart, was in France when John Knox returned
home to Scotland from Geneva, Switzerland. Knox
was a follower of John Calvin, one of the leaders
of the Reformation. With fiery eloquence he
spread Calvin's Protestant doctrine. Knox and
others drove Mary out. In 1560 Scotland's parliament
adopted a confession of faith drawn up by Knox
and established the Church of Scotland on a
Presbyterian basis.
When Mary returned to Scotland in 1561, she
was imprisoned and forced to abdicate her throne.
She escaped, however, and fled to England. Queen
Elizabeth I made her a prisoner and finally
had her executed.
Mary Stuart's son, James VI, was brought up
as a Presbyterian. When Queen Elizabeth of England
died in 1603, James inherited the throne of
England. This is an important point missed by
many historians - it was the Scottish king who
took over the English throne, not the reverse.
In England he was called James I. The two nations
were thus united under a single king, but Scotland
remained a separate state with its own parliament
and government.
England tried repeatedly to impose the Anglicans'
episcopal form of worship and church government
on the Scottish kirk. The Scots took up arms
against Charles I. When civil war broke out
in England, they aided the Puritans against
the king. After Oliver Cromwell executed Charles
I without consulting the Scots, however, the
Scots welcomed Charles's son as Charles II.
Cromwell then marched into Scotland and imposed
his rule. When Charles II was restored to the
throne, persecution of Presbyterians continued.
Finally, after James II had been driven from
the throne, Presbyterianism was firmly established
as Scotland's national church. The Highlanders
long remained loyal to the exiled Stuarts. In
1715 they attempted to restore the house of
Stuart to the throne; James Stuart, known as
the Old Pretender, was proclaimed James III.
In 1745 they supported his son, Charles Edward,
known as the Young Pretender and Bonnie Prince
Charlie. The Young Pretender's quest for the
throne ended in 1746 at the battle Culloden
when the Highland forces were defeated by the
English.
The age-old rivalry between Scotland and England
ended formally in 1707 when the parliaments
of both nations agreed to the Act of Union.
This act merged the parliaments of the two nations
and established the Kingdom of Great Britain.
Scotland now had free trade with England and
the colonies. As Britain's empire expanded the
Scots played a great part in its development.
They also shared in the inventions that brought
about the Industrial Revolution and in the wealth
that flowed into Britain from it.
The end of the 18th century has been called
Scotland's most creative period. David Hume
won world fame in philosophy and history, Adam
Smith in political economy, and Robert Burns
in poetry. In the next generation Sir Walter
Scott made the land and history of Scotland
known throughout the world. During this period
the Scots were also pre-eminent in establishing
the fledgling colonies in America, Canada and
Australia.
From that time on, the history of Scotland merges
with that of the rest of the United Kingdom
but Scots continued to play a part in world
affairs far greater than their numbers might
suggest. Legal and education systems did remain
separate (and superior) and in the second half
of the 20th century many Scots began to demand
a greater say in other areas of government.
Eventually a new Scottish parliament was established
in Edinburgh and it is currently making its
mark.
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