Bygone Scotland: Historical and Social. David Maxwell

Bygone Scotland: Historical and Social - David  Maxwell


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       David Maxwell

      Bygone Scotland: Historical and Social

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066232474

       Preface.

       The Roman Conquest of Britain.

       Britain as a Roman Province.

       The Anglo-Saxons in Britain.

       The Rise of the Scottish Nation.

       The Danish Invasions of Britain.

       The Last Two Saxon Kings of England.

       How Scotland became a Free Nation.

       Scotland in the Two Hundred Years following Bannockburn.

       The Older Scottish Literature.

       The Reformation in England and in Scotland.

       The Rival Queens—Mary and Elizabeth.

       Old Edinburgh.

       Offences and their Punishment in the Sixteenth Century.

       Penalties for Immorality.

       Administration of the Effects of Persons Dying. Dress Regulations.

       Old Aberdeen.

       Witchcraft in Scotland.

       Holy Wells in Scotland.

       Scottish Marriage Customs.

       Scotland under Charles the First.

       The Civil War.

       Scotland under Cromwell.

       Scotland under Charles the Second.

       Scotland under James the Second.

       The Revolution of 1688.

       Battle of Killiecrankie.

       The Massacre of Glencoe.

       The Union of Scotland and England.

       The Jacobite Risings of 1715.

       The Rebellion of 1745.

       Index.

      Preface.

       Table of Contents

      For a country of comparatively small extent, and with a large proportion of its soil in moor and mountain, histories of Scotland have been numerous and well-nigh exhaustive. The present work is not a chronicle of events in order and detail, but a series of pictures from the earlier history, expanding into fuller narratives of the more striking events in later times. And it includes portions of contemporaneous English history; for the history of Scotland can only be fully understood through that of its larger and more powerful neighbour.

      The growth of a people out of semi-barbarism and tribal diversity, to civilization and national autonomy, is ever an interesting study. This growth in Scotland included many elements. The Roman occupation of Southern Britain banded together for defence and aggression the northern tribes. For centuries after the Roman evacuation the old British race held the south-western shires, up to the Clyde; the Anglo-Saxon kingdom of Northumbria extended to the Frith of Forth; there were Norse settlements on the eastern coast, in Orkney, and the Hebrides. Of the various races out of which the Scottish nation was formed, the Picts were the most numerous; but the Scots—a kindred race, wanderers from Ireland—were the more active and aggressive—came to assume the general government, and gave their name to the whole country north of the Solway and the Tweed.

      It is interesting to trace how, in unsettled times, the burghs developed into little, distinct communities, largely self-governed. And the religious element in Scotland has been a powerful factor in shaping the character of the people and of the national institutions; the conflict of the Covenant was the epic in Scottish history. The rebellion of 1745, as the last specially Scottish incident in British history, is properly the closing chapter in Bygone Scotland.

      D. M.

      Hull Literary Club,

      St. Andrew’s Day, 1893.

      BYGONE SCOTLAND.

       Table of Contents

      We cannot tell—it is highly improbable that we ever shall know—from whence came the original inhabitants of the islands of Great Britain and Ireland. Men living on the sea-coasts of the great quadrant of continental land which fronts these islands, would, when the art of navigation got beyond the raft and canoe, venture


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