The Scots and the UnionEdinburgh University Press, 2006 - 424 páginas An updated edition on the 1707 Union between Scotland and England in a modern context The Scots and the Union: Then and Now is a refreshed, revised and extended edition of The Scots and the Union, which appeared in 2006. It was acclaimed then as a path-breaking, game-changing account of the making of the United Kingdom, and the Scots' part in this. Winner of the Saltire Society's prestigious Scottish History Book of the Year prize, it successfully challenged accounts of the process that alleged that the union was brought about by English bullying and the venality of Scottish politicians 'bought and sold for English gold'. This new edition not only provides readers with an essential explanation of why and how Scotland became part of the United Kingdom, but brings the historical debate into a vigorous present with an additional section. An explanation is provided as to why the union is less strong in 2014 than it was in the 1950s and also why, in comparison with citizens in some other smaller European nations which have become independent states in recent times, large numbers of Scots seem reluctant to see the end of Britain. This new edition is the key background text for anyone wishing to explore how we got to the position where we are once again debating union issues and opinions, lending historical weight and context to the arguments for and against union. Key Features:
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... reasons they believed had caused its collapse , drove them irrevocably into the opposition camp ; more than anything else , it was Darien that brought Scots out onto the streets and into the politics of the crowd in the years that ...
... reasons why it wasn't were traced in chapter 2. And as we have just seen , even among those who disliked intensely ... reason - the country was ' drained of money ' - that many tenants sought permission to pay their rents in kind ...
... reasons given by individuals who had reached this conclusion were not always identical . Cromartie , as we pointed out in chapter 2 , regarded himself as a Briton , and hoped that incorporation would eliminate national differences ...
Conteúdo
Issues debates and aims | 23 |
ambition and achievement and the aftermath of | 104 |
a nation in crisis | 139 |
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