Active Users:150 Time:02/06/2024 12:31:12 AM
And over here. - Edit 1

Before modification by Stephen at 29/11/2012 01:36:13 AM

is that Scotland always was independent until the Union in the early 18th century, albeit at times under the same crown as England in a personal union (although I'm not sure about how much real independence it had under Cromwell, possibly that was a temporary exception). It fought several wars against England to *remain* independent, but with your references to the American Revolution you're making it sound as if they were an English possession that fought to liberate itself. Only the wars of the Pretenders that you note, the "1715" and the "1745", could actually be considered revolutions like the American one (and even then it'd be an odd comparison).

I mean, the aim was the whole of GB, not just to detach Scotland, and involved uprisings in places like Cornwall, the North West of England and high tories across England - religious and political, rather than geographic. It just happened that one of the power bases was in Scotland and it was furthest from the centre of the country.


Part of the secondary school curriculum for Irish included the study of poetry lamenting the Stuarts.

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