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The History of Scotland. Ancient Scotland Birth of a Nation Stewart Scotland North Britain Modern Scotland. Ancient Scotland. Around 10 000 BC the ice that had covered Scotland for a long time began to melt.
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The History of Scotland • Ancient Scotland • Birth of a Nation • Stewart Scotland • North Britain • Modern Scotland
Ancient Scotland • Around 10 000 BC the ice that had covered Scotland for a long time began to melt. • Trees and bushes began to grow, and animals such as bears wolves and wild pigs came searching for food.
Ancient Scotland • The first settlers were hunters and gatherers from Ireland, Germany and the rest of Europé. • They decided to stay and lived as nomads in Britain. • Nomads are people who live in and move to different places, in search of food and shelter. • Around 7000BC they had spread to most parts of the country.
Ancient Scotland • Around 4000BC hunter and gatherers stopped living as nomads and settled down and became farmers. • They grew crops like oats and barley, which they later stored to survive the harsh winters. • They also learned how to tame animals and thereby didn’t need to hunt as much.
Ancient Scotland • Between 1200BC to AD200 Scotland got closer and merged with a civilization that flourished throughout Europé, called Celtic. • The name Celtic was given by the Greeks and Romans who fought against these people. • Celtic culture first developed in central Europé, and later spread to the British Isles.
Ancient Scotland • Around AD80 the Romans invaded and conquered Scotland. • The Romans realized it would be impossible to control all the land, so they withdrew. • The Romans built Hadrian’s Wall to protect themselves from the Scottish Celts.
Ancient Scotland • Before the Romans came, the people of Scotland worshipped many different gods and goddesses. • With the Romans this new religion called Christianity came along, and things like bishops monks and saints became part of everyday life in Scotland.
Ancient Scotland • Vikings from Scandinavia came to the northern part of Scotland, around AD800. • First just to plunder and and steal treasures and jewelry. • But around AD1000, they had settled down and ruled much of northern part of Scotland.
Birth of a Nation • For thousands of years, Scotland was not a united nation. • But between AD800 and 1300 warriors and kings created the first Scottish nation. • The new threat came not from Vikings or Romans now, but from the English…
Birth of a Nation • The last of the Viking kings to have any real power in Scotland was Norway’s Magnus the Lawgiver, who returned the power to the Scottish people in 1266.
Birth of a Nation • The first real towns in Scotland were built around 1150. • Towns like Edinburgh, Glasgow, Aberdeen and Inverness were founded by kings, great nobles or monasteries as trading centres.
Birth of a Nation • The way people lived was much determined by the environment. • In the Lowlands people mostly worked on great estates owned by kings lords or monks. • In the Highlands people were more independent, but instead they belonged to different clans and its clanchiefs. For example McDougals, McSorley and others.
Birth of a Nation • In 1296, the English king Edward I invaded and defeated Scotland. • Scotland now belonged to England and had no king.
Birth of a Nation • One of the most famous and important Scots to resist the English was William Wallace. • William Wallace and his army beat the English at Stirling Bridge, which was a great upset for Edward I. • Later, William Wallace and his army got defeated at Falkirk 1298 • William Wallace was later executed, but to this day he is considered to be a great hero.
Birth of a Nation • Inspired by William Wallace, Robert Bruce I fought against the English and won an amazing and surprising victory at Bannockburn in 1314. • This ensured the freedom and independence of the Scottish people for another 400 years.
Stewart Scotland 1300-1600 • Between 1300 to 1600 Scotland was transformed. • It turned from a weak country troubled with fights between warlords into a confident nation ruled by intelligent kings and queens. • Named ”Stewart Scotland” because of the dynasty (ruling family) that reigned during this era and started with Robert the Steward, who became king in 1371.
Stewart Scotland 1300-1600 • The Black Death (the plague) was a deadly disease, carried by rats, which killed many Scots during the 14th century.
Stewart Scotland 1300-1600 • Many sea-based indistries developed during this era, much due to the fact that Scotland is surrounded by sea. • Such industries were fishing, salt-making and carrying goods by cargo ship.
Stewart Scotland 1300-1600 • Until around 1600 most Scottish people could not read and write. • Before 1600 most schools were run by churches, but after the Reformation schools were taken over by and run by town councils. • By time, education got more available for the Scots and more and more people learned how to read and write.
Stewart Scotland 1300-1600 • Scottish people had followed the Catholic Church led by the Pope in Rome until the Reformation. • You could pay the Church to forgive your sins and guarantee that you would go to heaven. • A lot of people protested against this, these people were called Protestants, and suddenly a new branch of Christianity was created.
Stewart Scotland 1300-1600 • Mary Queen of Scots refused to be part of this new Protestantism. • She wanted to be a Catholic so she abdicated as queen, and she is now the most famous queen in Scottish history.
North Britain • In 1603 King James VI of Scotland inherited the English crown, which made Scotland and England much closer to each other. • In 1707 Scotland and England were united and Scotland became more a part on Britain. • Since Scotland is in the northern part of Britain, you could say that it was North Britain.
North Britain • In the 16th century witches were seen as a threat to society, and beacause of that, witchcraft became a crime. • Innocent women were accused of being witches, and some were killed. • Witch-hunting became less common after around 1650.
North Britain • The massacre at Glencoe in 1692 was a horrible thing, but Scottish society was about to change. • People looked to England and France for a more polite and civil society. • People wanted to leave Scotland’s history of bloody clan battles and ”primitive” life behind.
North Britain • Around 1750, new people from all over Scotland moved to Edinburgh. • People as different as artists, architects, designers, boooksellers, scientists, publishers, teachers and students. • They gathered in coffee houses and salons. • This meant that the Enlightenment had started in Edinburgh and Scotland.
North Britain • Scottish engineers and inventors changed the world by helping to create the Industrial Revolution. • From around 1750-1850, millions of ordinary men and women stopped working at home and on farms, instead they began to work in huge factories.
Modern Scotland • Between 1750-1850, Scotland was transformed from a poor rebellious region to the workshop of the world. • In 1999, the Scottish parliament met again for the first time in almost 300 years.
Modern Scotland • In 1851 only one out of five Scots lived in big cities like Glasgow, Edinburgh, Dundee and Aberdeen. • People lived very differently, there was a great gap between Scotland’s rich and poor.
Modern Scotland • The majority of Scottish people lived hard an unpleasent lives, but others had a much more comfortable existence. They were the middle-class. • Only 3 in 1000 belonged to the upper-class during the 19th century.
Modern Scotland • During the 19th century, ordinary men and women did not have the right to vote. • They could not choose their political leaders or make their views known.
Modern Scotland • Many Scots fought in the First World War in 1914-18. • In many towns and villages all the young men of fighting age (between 16 and 40) went to war together – and died together.
Modern Scotland • In 1939, Britian and its allies went to war with Germany. • Fighting in the Second World War until 1945, young Scottish menwere conscripted (forced by law) to join the army, navy and the new air force.
Modern Scotland • In 1999 Scotland got their own parliament and a bit more independence from Great Britain. • The Scottish Parliament now has the power to raise or lower taxes and manage Scotland’s health care, education, transport, farming and the environment.