Book description
Did the Scots really cower in the shadow of their powerful,
aggressive English neighbour? This book reveals a very different
picture. Scottish armies repeatedly invaded English-held territory,
defying generations of Anglo-Norman kings, and it took many centuries
to finally decide the fluid Border frontier. Sent homeward to think
again ... ? The author spells out the financial and military factors
that helped to ensure Scotland's independence from the time of the
Romans in Britain through Saxon, Norse and Norman invasions, the
ravages of Edward Longshanks and the savagery of Henry VIII's  rough
wooing'. How did the English people react to the Union of Crowns? Were
the Scots incorporated against their will? This book explodes the myth
that the crowns of England and Scotland were united in some sort of
constitutional coincidence. It uncovers associations between many
Scots and the English court and its secret service Â- lifting the lid
on a murky underworld of collaborators, spies and assassins. Did the
French love the Scots as much as they hated the English? The author
reveals the implications of the Auld Alliance between Scotland and
France, and the legacy of England's foreign wars. The mutually
sacrificial and loveless marriage of England and Scotland, arranged by
Protestant pragmatists, secured independence for both countries which
might otherwise have become Catholic dominions of France or Spain. Who
gained most from Britain's independence? Britain was just a small
corner in a huge power struggle raging throughout Europe. The author
reveals the ruthless, secular and political nature of religions that
tortured and massacred men, women and children in their hundreds of
thousands. Divided they might have fallen or been pushed into
obscurity, but united the two countries stood as Europe's foremost
independent Protestant state, the seat of democratic government and
the foundation stone of much social and legal reform. Today, when many
are asking if it's time to end the 305-year-old union and look
increasingly to a united Europe, this book prompts a greater
understanding of the warts-and-all origins of our ancestors' legacy.