American Reacts to 101 Facts About Scotland

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  • čas přidán 31. 10. 2022
  • In this video I react to 101 facts about Scotland. There are so many interesting things about Scotland that I never knew. From incredible inventions that were created by Scottish people to over 790 beautiful islands and literally everything in between. I already knew Scotland was an amazing country, but this list has given me so many more things I'd like to explore when I finally get to visit.
    Thanks for watching. If you enjoyed this reaction please give this video a thumbs up, share your thoughts in the comments and click the subscribe button to follow my journey to learn about my British and Irish ancestry.
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    • 101 Facts About Scotland
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Komentáře • 1,1K

  • @lorrainehamilton5051
    @lorrainehamilton5051 Před 3 měsíci +15

    The glib way that the Highland Clearances were described is unbelieveable.

  • @daftgowk1
    @daftgowk1 Před rokem +213

    Additional Scottish inventions... The contact lense, the ATM, fingerprinting, the tyre, wave turbines, tarmac, the bicycle, the steam hammer, steel casting, modern economics, sociology, logarithms, the decimal point, the oil refinery, anesthesia, insulin, the bank of England, the bank of France, the banknote, Grand Theft Auto, chicken tikka masala, the tractor beam, the steamboat, Sherlock Holmes, Peter Pan, cordite, the electric clock, universal standard time, the seismometer, the raincoat...

  • @Sophie.S..
    @Sophie.S.. Před rokem +140

    You had no idea whisky was so big in Scotland 🤣😂🤣

    • @marconatrix
      @marconatrix Před rokem +19

      From the Gaelic _Uisge Beatha_ literally "The Water of Life" 🙂

    • @dib000
      @dib000 Před rokem +4

      🤣

    • @1951woodygeo
      @1951woodygeo Před rokem +15

      They only teach American History in the States they are so inward looking it’s so unbelievable .

    • @stevie1234
      @stevie1234 Před rokem +1

      @@digidol52 😂😂😂

    • @Dippa666
      @Dippa666 Před rokem +25

      wait youre telling me the scots are known for scotch? 😅

  • @puressenceuk35
    @puressenceuk35 Před rokem +29

    Think I've just stopped laughing after a long time at the "no idea whisky was so big in Scotland" line.

  • @Retrospective.
    @Retrospective. Před rokem +47

    As a Scotsman, we refer to the Irish as our Celtic kin and cousins, they are the only other culture that has certain things that are shared with ours, i would imagine they would feel the same, Scots Gaelic is remarkably similar to the Irish spoken language also.

    • @Retrospective.
      @Retrospective. Před 11 měsíci +9

      @@Hummus-fl9vr "adopted", is a word i would use loosely, more "enforced". We didn't really have a say in it, did we? thankfully only the good half is still Celtic.

    • @normanchristie4524
      @normanchristie4524 Před 10 měsíci +4

      @@Hummus-fl9vrScots is also recognised as a unique language.

    • @brianandjillianadamson5479
      @brianandjillianadamson5479 Před 8 měsíci +1

      ​@@Hummus-fl9vrwhat you're thinking of is Scots, which stems from the same source as middle English - Northumbric. Obviously, differences then developed, with other influences such as Frisian etc. I suspect that the great vowel shift played a part too. I very much doubt this lad would find Doric Scots or Shetlandic particularly intelligible, and yet we've all been speaking English all these centuries? Aye, right.

    • @paul3640
      @paul3640 Před 7 měsíci +4

      ​@Hummus-fl9vr The Education (Scotland) Act 1872.
      The act mandated the exclusive use of English-medium education in Scotland, in effect banning Scottish Gaelic medium education. For this reason it is credited with causing substantial harm to the Scottish Gaelic language and contributing to its overall decline.
      The Education (Scotland) Act 1872 effectively put an end to non-English medium education and repressed Gaelic with pupils being punished for speaking the language. Pupils were belted if caught speaking in Gaelic and beaten again if they did not reveal the names of other students speaking Gaelic.The effect of the education act upon the Gaelic language has been described as "disastrous"and by denying the value of Gaelic culture and language, contributed to destroying the self-respect of Gaelic communities. It was a continuation of a general policy by British governments after 1707 which aimed at Anglicisation.
      As a result of facing punishment and humiliation for speaking Gaelic, many parents decided not to pass on the language to their children, resulting in language shift.

    • @thepickledpixie9052
      @thepickledpixie9052 Před 4 měsíci +2

      With only 13 miles of water between us it's not surprising there are a lot of links.

  • @vicky1147
    @vicky1147 Před 4 měsíci +12

    Fun fact Scotland is the only place in the world that contains the entire geological history of the earth. The north Highlands used to be part of the North American plate (we used to be part of Canada) until the European plate crash into it and Scotland hitched a ride across the ocean. 😁

  • @73whitezz
    @73whitezz Před 5 měsíci +8

    I live in the Outer Hebrides & it's an absolutely stunning place. White sandy beaches, clear green sea & not many people! Love it!

  • @scottishsteph3841
    @scottishsteph3841 Před rokem +43

    As a glaswegian, thank you pronouncing Glasgow properly and taking an interest in our wee country. I know other people have mentioned it but you should definitely have a look at all the invention that scotland introduced to the world. Apologies of you have already done this. Only just seen one of your videos

  • @revelation3679
    @revelation3679 Před rokem +51

    Regarding the Irish and Scottish thing you were asking about, we are the exact same ethnic group. Celtic. There are 6 Celtic 'nations' - Scotland, Ireland, Wales, Man, Cornwall and Brittany (in France). Brittany, Cornwall and Wales are Celts of the Brythonic variety whilst the Scottish, Irish and Manx Celts are of the Goidelic, or Gaelic, variety. So yes, Irish and Scottish are essentially the same people when you get right down to it.

    • @waldorfmcvitty4854
      @waldorfmcvitty4854 Před rokem +11

      This is not entirely accurate, although Scotland is seen a a Celtic nation the Romans did go out of their way to distinguish the area they called Caledonia, modern Scotland, as different peoples from those they had already encountered in the Celtic World. They called them Picts. These were the predominant people in the country and are not seen as being Celtic, at least not by the Romans. The Scots are Pict/Celt not just Celt. So not the exact same people, but similar i guess. Am i being pedantic, yes, yes i am. Also i do know the argument as to the Picts being Celts, specifically Welsh, my own name meaning Welsh speaking in Gaelic. But i'll go with the Romans on this, us Scots are Pict/Ce;lt the same way the English are Anglo/Saxon.

    • @phdotsco
      @phdotsco Před rokem +2

      @@waldorfmcvitty4854 i wouldn't call it pedantic as much as i would call it picking one side of a largely undocumented debate and simply running with it. I could argue the Celtic Britons involvement before the Romans and them settling in mainland Europe, Cornwall and Wales is a plausible link across the Irish Sea for both sets of settlers. There is no doubt the people that occupied both Ireland and Scotland diverged over the centuries but they would appear to have shared bloodlines long before the picts.

    • @Tangerine10.
      @Tangerine10. Před rokem +1

      @@phdotsco it's always been interesting to me where the Picts came from before Scotland or were they indigenous people like the Welsh 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @OneTrueScotsman
      @OneTrueScotsman Před rokem +2

      @Purple Burglaralarm Same here. Pictish here too.

    • @josephmorrison7064
      @josephmorrison7064 Před rokem +1

      no we are not the same,I am Scottish and proud British and proud,nothing to do with ireland.

  • @Scottishmamabear
    @Scottishmamabear Před rokem +38

    I'm from Aberdeen Scotland and its known as the oil capital if Europe, we have a huge oil industry here, there's oil rigs off in the North Sea

    • @zainulabdin1720
      @zainulabdin1720 Před rokem +5

      Also stavanger Norway is famous for oil industry is in Europe 🌍

    • @WilliamWallace42
      @WilliamWallace42 Před 8 měsíci

      Shame Scotland doesn't own any of it's oil anymore, that industry has been ruined by the UK government

    • @thepickledpixie9052
      @thepickledpixie9052 Před 4 měsíci

      Aye, the North sea oil field. It must've been a massive undertaking to get those first rigs set up.

    • @fishingstevie8830
      @fishingstevie8830 Před 4 měsíci +3

      Im a Scot also but we dont have much in Oil today via being ravaged up all Oil by Westminster in London .

    • @janice506
      @janice506 Před měsícem

      British government issued 100 new oil permits or licenses so they’re definitely still extracting oil & gas yet we were told Scotland would run dry during the independence referendum more Tory lies.

  • @lilyliz3071
    @lilyliz3071 Před rokem +27

    The American constitution is based on the declaration of Arbroath so that would be worth a look for you

    • @digidol52
      @digidol52 Před rokem

      And a surprising number of the signatories were Welsh emigrants to the colonies.

  • @ianmacpherson7620
    @ianmacpherson7620 Před rokem +53

    There's a book called How The Scots Invented The Modern World. I bought a copy from Barnes & Noble when I was in San Diego. You should get a copy. It's unbelievable how much we've contributed to the world for such a small country.

    • @Dunsapie
      @Dunsapie Před rokem +17

      “Of all the small nations of this earth, perhaps only the ancient Greeks surpass the Scots in their contribution to mankind.” Winston Churchill.

    • @TheWebcrafter
      @TheWebcrafter Před rokem +2

      @@Dunsapie ... and the word 'Dorian' connects both nations.

    • @1951woodygeo
      @1951woodygeo Před rokem +1

      I have it myself great book hundreds of
      inventions .

    • @zainulabdin1720
      @zainulabdin1720 Před rokem +3

      Yes Scotland contribute alot in the modren world development ❤

  • @lustyzombie691
    @lustyzombie691 Před 11 měsíci +13

    Coming from England, I was so surprised at how much I liked haggis when I first tried it. It is definitely worth trying!

    • @user-us3sw6iz3k
      @user-us3sw6iz3k Před 19 dny

      I tried it last year and was surprised I liked it. 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🇺🇸❤

  • @Peterraymond67
    @Peterraymond67 Před 8 měsíci +4

    As there are so many inhabited islands in Scotland there are ferries everywhere. Skye is so close to the mainland that a bridge now connects the two. The first time I went to Skye was a train ride from Inverness to the Kyle of Lochalsh. The train ride is one of the most beautiful trips in the world. At the Kyle of Lochalsh the train stops at what was the ferry pier. It was a short 15-minute ride to the Isle of Skye. The longest ferry ride in Scotland is the trip from Aberdeen to The Shetlands, it took me 12 hours, it stops in the Orkneys on the way. This crossing can be very rough, the tables and chairs are fixed to the floor. You can also fly between the two. The Scottish Government subsidises the ferries so a ferry trip can be reasonably cheap, and they can be frequent. The ferry to Shetland is Northern Ferries, the other Islands are usually run by Caledonian MacBrayne.

  • @lth1072
    @lth1072 Před rokem +20

    Alexander Fleming was born in Darvel , Ayrshire.
    My dog once had a long pee on the sign post showing where he was born.
    I tried to explain the significance of Fleming's achievement. My dog couldn't care less. He was a proud dog and had no time for human history.
    As much as I thank Fleming for his contribution to human history. I've got to support my dog and have his back .

  • @shelleyphilcox4743
    @shelleyphilcox4743 Před rokem +32

    Haggis is delicious. You dont eat the stomach or other casing, it's just for keeping the filling together so it's easy to cook. When its cooked you open it up and then only serve the 'stuffing' inside. I recommend having it traditionally with mashed potatoes and turnip/Swede and a whisky cream sauce. Haggis, neeps and tatties!

  • @tracytabb2882
    @tracytabb2882 Před rokem +36

    Wow this made me even more proud to be Scottish 🥰🥰🥰

    • @ianmclaughlin4043
      @ianmclaughlin4043 Před rokem +2

      Every day's a school day ĺove being scottish 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿💙🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

    • @zainulabdin1720
      @zainulabdin1720 Před rokem +1

      I love Scotland ❤

  • @couller755
    @couller755 Před rokem +16

    The oil industry in Scotland is mainly based out of Aberdeen. Lots of oil platforms in the North Sea. There is a road trip you can do, called The North Coast 500.

  • @miatamags
    @miatamags Před 7 měsíci +5

    If you want to see beautiful beaches in Scotland look up Luskentyre, Harris and Reef, Lewis. Also most of the West coast of the Uists and don't forget Barra which also has the only scheduled air service in the world to land on a beach. The schedule depends on the tides!

  • @jockwood2398
    @jockwood2398 Před rokem +49

    You should definitely search for "what did Scotland invent"

  • @gabbymcclymont3563
    @gabbymcclymont3563 Před rokem +8

    I love the story about the Queen at Balmoral, she was out and about a couple of American tourists walked up to her. They thought she was a local, they asked her if she had ever seen the Queen? She replied no but he has pointing to her security bloke. She was game.

  • @fenellainnis7216
    @fenellainnis7216 Před rokem +56

    You should hear the accents of some of those Scottish island folk , it’s so beautiful and totally different from mainland accents , very unique , especially the older generations accents

    • @TheHoff1902
      @TheHoff1902 Před rokem +6

      As a Shetlander, I agree. Shetland has its own dialect and is very difficult for anyone to understand who isn’t from here

    • @fenellainnis7216
      @fenellainnis7216 Před rokem +5

      @@TheHoff1902 I could listen to you guys talk all day , when you compare my dour Glaswegian accent to your beautiful accents there is no comparison , you guys win hands down , even in your way of life.

    • @jennigee51
      @jennigee51 Před rokem +2

      I wonder if that lovely soft accent, and language, derive from the Gaelic.

    • @scottishwoodart
      @scottishwoodart Před rokem

      @@fenellainnis7216 What? One was English, the other a yank!!!

    • @fenellainnis7216
      @fenellainnis7216 Před rokem +6

      @@scottishwoodart I mean the islanders accents in general, because a lot of creators that show British accents never show any any Scots accents except Glasgow and Edinburgh, would be nice to showcase some of the islands and highlands beautiful accents too.

  • @penname5766
    @penname5766 Před rokem +11

    Yep, you can see Scotland if you’re standing on the cliffs of Northern Ireland. I’ve seen it myself!

    • @MrCakerape
      @MrCakerape Před rokem +2

      Went camping on the tip of the Kintyre peninsula and could see NI from there. Also got sun stroke, good times

  • @andrewmorton9327
    @andrewmorton9327 Před rokem +4

    The tobacco was grown in Virgina and imported into Scotland via Glasgow.

  • @davidtempleton2793
    @davidtempleton2793 Před rokem +10

    Scotsman also created the US Navy and Buick. There is also an Island of South west Scotland called Ailsa Craig where the granite is used for every single olympic curling stone.

    • @gabbymcclymont3563
      @gabbymcclymont3563 Před 11 měsíci

      I have a realy old stone and someone put a shoe scraper in it, so probably victorian, i love it.

    • @angussoutter7824
      @angussoutter7824 Před 11 měsíci

      And the Russian navy 😂😂 crating a world stalemate

  • @lindarolph9069
    @lindarolph9069 Před rokem +8

    Balmoral Castle is where Queen Elizabeth 11 died in September. It was her favourite place.

  • @MillsyLM
    @MillsyLM Před rokem +7

    My maternal grandmother was Scottish and I lived just outside Stirling for 4 years in the early to mid 70's. Have visited several times since and the scenery never fails to be stunning.

  • @pauldryburgh6346
    @pauldryburgh6346 Před rokem +18

    Tunnock's Tea Cakes. Can't believe they weren't on the list.
    As for your comments on haggis and black pudding, God starts his day with a roll of sliced sausage, bacon, haggis, black pudding, tattie scone and HP sauce.
    Be well laddie, cheers from Scotland 🍻❤

  • @revenant_scot
    @revenant_scot Před rokem +6

    I’m with those that can’t believe you didn’t know about whisky! There are over 140 distilleries here, with 8 on the Isle of Islay (pronounced like eye-la) alone. It’s called Scotch for a reason. Always go with a single malt.
    Haggis is absolutely delicious!
    Not all Angus beef comes from Scotland, however the breed of cow, Aberdeen Angus, does.

    • @rancidbhoy
      @rancidbhoy Před rokem

      The Whisky thing "Scotch"
      Scottish Whisky when drank outside of Scotland

  • @enemde3025
    @enemde3025 Před rokem +25

    Well done on saying GLASGOW correctly 👏👏
    Scotland and Ireland are Celtic brothers.
    Don't, Don't, ever use Braveheart as a historical reference !!!! It's PISH !!
    SCOTTISH OIL !
    Scots today are more and more looking for independence.
    Whisky is called SCOTCH for a reason !
    I wouldn't say the word PERIOD too often, as it means something very different in the UK !!
    I love haggis. With NEEPS and TATTIES. You don't eat the casing/ bag .
    Other countries have Aberdeen Angus cows.
    Old fridges used large blocks of ice.
    Surprised he never mentioned ROBBIE BURNS or Burns Night celebrations !!

    • @andrewwells3367
      @andrewwells3367 Před rokem +2

      Everyone around where I live (Manchester) says Glazgoh rather than Glasgoh.

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Před rokem +1

      @@andrewwells3367 That is the right way to say it in Scots.

    • @Kstaann
      @Kstaann Před rokem

      Rabbie*

    • @enemde3025
      @enemde3025 Před rokem

      @@Kstaann my mistake.Blame my sausage fingers !!

    • @Kstaann
      @Kstaann Před rokem

      @@enemde3025 nae worries auld yin

  • @patriciameany1238
    @patriciameany1238 Před 11 měsíci +2

    We also invited the ultrasound

  • @Mamawaffa
    @Mamawaffa Před rokem +3

    A big hiya fae Edinburgh🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿Loved this reaction, and love that University of Edinburgh is included. Currently studying there for my nursing degree. Born and bred in Edinburgh and proud to be Scottish🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿❤Scotland is an amazing country, that’s why people fall in love when they visit!♥️

  • @williamduncan5679
    @williamduncan5679 Před rokem +3

    Iam a red head and was born in South west Scotland across from Ireland, what a fantastic country 😍😍

  • @margaretreynolds4394
    @margaretreynolds4394 Před rokem +5

    The gateway to the Highlands Stirling where William Wallace fought the English at the battle of Stirling bridge in 1297 ,I think. You will find the Wallace monument there as well as the castle which dates from late 1500s but there has been defences there from well before.
    The Orkney islands has archaeology dating back to 4000BC. There is now some belief that the oldest standing stones in Britain are there and not Stonehenge

  • @CharlygalSW
    @CharlygalSW Před rokem +4

    Yes Ireland and Scotland are one of the same ppl really - our Clans and blood are intertwined we are so so similar, many Irish have Scottish heritage

  • @1951woodygeo
    @1951woodygeo Před rokem +6

    Yep it’s the Unicorn 🦄 and Flower is the Thistle . And the wild haggis so yummy

  • @Shoomer1988
    @Shoomer1988 Před rokem +6

    The number of islands thing reminded me of a collection of mountains in Scotland known as the "Munro's". There are 282 of them (others exist not part of the Munro's). If you manage to climb them all, which as you imagine is quite a challenge, you become known as a "Munroists" and are eligible to join the Munro Society.
    The first people to achieve this was A. E. Robertson, a Scottish minister in 1901. To date only around 6,000 people have completed the challenge.

  • @aimeedean1
    @aimeedean1 Před 7 měsíci +2

    The Celts/Scandis used to trade with each other so Ireland, Scotland, Iceland, Sweden, Norway and Denmark have very close ancient ties.

  • @davidlloyd3243
    @davidlloyd3243 Před rokem +2

    The Youngs (AC/DC) were from Glasgow. What Tom missed was Bon Scott, the original singer, was from Kirriemuir in Angus, where there is a statue of him.

  • @paulharvey9149
    @paulharvey9149 Před rokem +10

    The narrowest part of the Irish Sea (between the islands of Great Britain and Ireland) is between what is now Northern Ireland and Scotland, at just 17 miles. There has therefore always a good deal of toing and froing between the two, mainly for the purposes of seasonal agricultural employment (in the past), and of course there are many close family relationships in both of these nations as a consequence. Until the Union of the Crowns in 1603, Scotland was a Catholic nation and therefore had that in common with much of Ireland and, even to the present day, there are strong cultural similarities between the two and in particular, the so-called Ulster Scots, of the Ulster Province of Ireland (which includes the whole of the political state of Northern Ireland) and the industrialised parts of Glasgow, the Clyde Valley and Western Scotland. Sectarianism in fact, is stronger in some Scottish communities than it is in Ireland - to the extent that the Scottish Government has even made it illegal to express in public, such as at football matches. This is the main basis for the infamous rivalry between the Glasgow Celtic (Catholic) and Glasgow Rangers (Protestant, and loyalist to Britain) teams. The Gaelic languages, although similar, aren't quite the same, with Scots Gaelic being particularly confined to just a few areas of the westernmost islands and northwest highlands, whereas Irish Gaelic is widely recognised and used across the whole island.
    Glaz-GO is indeed the correct pronunciation of Glasgow, while that of Edinburgh is Edin-BRUH. The word 'burgh' (pronounced like BURRAH), incidentally, is the Scottish version of the English 'borough', denoting that the so-named place has been deliberately established as such and within given boundaries at some point; and is controlled by a democratically elected Council. Scotland did have large numbers of 'Royal Burghs' which in some respects were the equivalent of English cities that were so-named and privileged by a king's charter at some point - mostly in the 13th and 14th Centuries. While Dunfermline was certainly a Royal Residence in the distant past, the claim that it is a past capital city of Scotland is rather dubious incidentally, as there is no evidence that Government ever met there. The claims of Stirling and (especially) Perth, are known to be much more genuine. Edinburgh was a large city long before Glasgow by the way, whose population reached a peak of over a million during the 1930s; and has been in gradual decline ever since. By the4 same argument, you might ask why Washington DC is the American capital when New York or Los Angeles might seem like more obvious choices!
    When the independence referendum failed to win a majority in 2014, almost everyone on every side of the argument agreed that it is probably inevitable that Scotland will become independent from the UK in the future. This is largely due to the fact that in recent decades, the majority of Scottish voters haven't got what they voted for in the UK government - because it has always been dominated by just two Unionist political parties, neither of which is willing to accede any of their nominal power through the introduction of any form of Proportional Representation in the UK Government - despite it being very common elsewhere in Europe and even the Scottish Government being elected on the STV+1 system! Worse still, it is really only the Conservative Party that has sufficient support within England and only minority support in Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland; as the Labour Party usually needs their votes to win a majority on the existing, first-past-the-post, electoral system! While older people in Scotland are still sceptical about the advantages of independence (with the usual regional variations), it is clear that younger generations are increasingly supportive of it.
    What would I add? Well, there are quite a few more inventions by Scottish people - raincoats and rubber wellington boots (Mackintosh hence, "mac"), tarmac road surfaces (McAdam), bicycles, breech-loading rifles; while the founder of the Bank of England was a Scot - as was the first Governor of the US Navy; and even the man who authorised the translation of the Bible into English - King James VI and I. The sister of the late Queen, Elizabeth II, was born in Scotland - and their mother, also Queen Eliabeth - Consort of King George VI, was a member of the Scottish nobility. King Charles III is therefore the most Scottish monarch for centuries - and may well turn out to exceed even his mother, in terms of the percentage of his time that he spends here! Places - forget Stonehenge in England, for the stone circles (yes there are several) at Callanish on the Isle of Lewis are around two Millennia earlier, dating from around 4500 BC as opposed to Stonehenge's 2000 BC - and the many neolithic stones in Orkney are believed to be even older - the stone age settlement of Skara Brae being around 6000 years old and believed to be one of many in the area that have either been buried by shifting sand or drowned in the sea. Indeed, there is growing evidence that the Orkney Islands may have been a major centre of World Civilisation during the Stone Age.
    By all means go to Loch Ness and Skye as most of the other tourists do - passing through Glencoe if you do so by road and across Glenfinnan (i.e. "Harry Potter") viaduct as most of the other tourists go. But do it under your own steam so you can stop a while, take in a few hikes and discover for yourself just how wonderful our little nation really is. And when you're coming, call me - I live here, in Edinburgh; and I'll show you even more mind-blowing places, and maybe even buy you a drink!

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Před rokem +4

      Good post. Just one wee quibble. Scotland's Reformation started in the 1530s and the country was mainly Protestant by 1603. The largest group was Presbyterian.

    • @reactingtomyroots
      @reactingtomyroots  Před rokem +2

      Paul, that was a very insightful post. Thank you. You've clarified some facts and gave me some ideas of some other things about Scotland to check out. I'll definitely keep you mind for when I come for a visit in your area.

    • @paulharvey9149
      @paulharvey9149 Před rokem

      @@alicemilne1444 You are quite right, of course. It was the Royal House of Stuart that was Catholic, rather than the whole country by that stage; and the Regents of James VI sensibly raised him as a protestant.

  • @geoffpoole483
    @geoffpoole483 Před rokem +15

    Dunlop, of pneumatic tyre fame was Scottish. The best whisky to try is a single malt; there are hundreds to choose from. An island with a fascinating history is St Kilda, which is now uninhabited. I'm not surprised the video did not mention the poet William McGonagall, whose works should be categorised as "so bad it's good". The town of Corby in Northamptonshire has a large Scottish population and Irn Bru outsells Pepsi and Coca Cola there too.

    • @HootMaRoot
      @HootMaRoot Před rokem +1

      St kilda isn't uninhabited it has researchers living on it all year round

    • @bouleyloon
      @bouleyloon Před rokem

      John Dunlop was the re-inventor of the pneumatic tyre. the pneumatic tyre was in fact patented by one of Scotland’s most prolific inventors, Robert William Thomson on 10 December 1845, some 43 years before John Dunlop’s re-invention. He also invented the fountain pen.
      Thomson was also the originator of:
      -The washing mangle with reversible mangles
      -The ribbon saw
      -Elliptical rotary engine
      -Use of electricity to detonate explosive charges
      -Machinery for sugar manufacturing
      -The portable steam crane
      -Hydraulic dry dock

  • @GamerSpartanFire
    @GamerSpartanFire Před rokem +5

    I would add that the US Navy was Founded by a Scotsman: John Paul Jones and an Irishman: John Barry

  • @alzyerpal-TV
    @alzyerpal-TV Před 10 měsíci +1

    You've never lived until you've experienced a sunset across a Hebridean beach, or driven through rugged Argyll, stopped of at Oban, or Glencoe, rural Perthshire, Fife and its historic fishing villages, or the beautiful rolling countryside of Ayrshire and Dumfries & Galloway or up north the Cairngorm mountain region or Sutherland. The cities are much like many cities, there's a Starbucks on every corner. Glasgow and Edinburgh are very different from each other and unique. You'll figure out what you like best by experience. The people are what make Scotland, ultimately. Good luck and may your memories be long.

  • @orwellboy1958
    @orwellboy1958 Před rokem +6

    Oil is not just drilled for in the north sea, we have a small oil field in Poole harbour.

  • @paul3640
    @paul3640 Před 7 měsíci +3

    The act of union was hugely unpopular in Scotland, riots broke out in towns and cities, copies of the treaty were burned in Dumfries

  • @Ken_Dodds_Tickling_Stick

    Marholm and Angus Young were born in Skerryvore Street, Cranhill, Glasgow. The building are no longer there.

  • @feefee-77
    @feefee-77 Před rokem +2

    Tobacco wasn't grown in uk but the Glasgow merchants traded in many products from USA. As in cotton, tobacco etc

  • @normanwallace7658
    @normanwallace7658 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Tobacco was never grown as a commercial crop in the UK But Glasgow was a center for the Importation & marketing of the commodity.

  • @lornagrewar7952
    @lornagrewar7952 Před rokem +8

    The relationship is like cousin between scotland and Ireland

    • @footballx2325
      @footballx2325 Před rokem

      Catholic Scottish like Ireland and hate the British and Protestant prefer the British and don’t like Irish it’s like Celtic v rangers

  • @bernadettesingleton1798
    @bernadettesingleton1798 Před rokem +5

    In 2011 I enrolled at The City of Glasgow College to do an HND Travel & Tourism course. One of my classes was in Scottish Tourism. I learned so many fascinating facts about my country. For instance, there is an actual Malt Whisky Trail where you can go visit all the famous distilleries such as The Glenlivet and Glen Moray distilleries. Only Scottish Whisky can be written as 'whisky'. All others are written as 'whiskey' and the largest customers for buying Scottish Whisky are the Chinese and Japanese markets.
    There are also Scottish Tourist Routes clearly signposted that you can drive, the most famous being The North Coast 500.
    Please come to Scotland to see the beauty of our small but perfectly formed country. Visit the Highlands for the scenery but also visit places like Glasgow, where you will meet some of the friendliest people on the planet and I guarantee you will keep returning.

    • @Notherenotever
      @Notherenotever Před 6 měsíci

      Scottish whisky legally has to be spelled whisky and other countries do use that spelling including England, Wales, Canada, Australia and Japan. The Japanese love whisky and produce lots of their own. Whisky was brought to Japan by a Japanese man about 100 years ago who learned about distilling whisky while living in Scotland. It's said to be most like Scotch compared to other whiskies.

  • @veronicaballantyne4153
    @veronicaballantyne4153 Před 2 měsíci

    Did you know it was a Scotsman who gave you the American navy. Enjoy watching you, and love that you correct yourself on Britain and England. Well done, we will keep watching 😊

  • @1979tizzy
    @1979tizzy Před rokem +2

    he never mentioned that the song auld lang syne that is sung worldwide for new year is actually a scottish song written by rabbie burns

  • @themoderntemplar1567
    @themoderntemplar1567 Před rokem +3

    Scotch whisky is the only brand allowed to spell whisky as such, foreign whiskies are spelled Whiskey. Also tobacco was traded from the southern U.S states to Glasgow, which was the leading shipbuilders in the world at one point. The river Clyde runs through the centre of Glasgow and Clydebuilt was a byword for shipbuilding excellence. Sadly a long gone industry.
    As you picked up on Scotland & Ireland have a special connection going back millennia. Loved ur content mate.👍

  • @Twiska
    @Twiska Před rokem +9

    Another famous Scottish author is R.L Stevenson. Author of Treasure Island and Doctor Jekyll and Mister Hyde. And Robert "Rabbie" Burns. Author of Tam O'Shanter, which some argue was ripped off and rebranded as the Legend of Sleepy Hollow. And Scotland was the birthplace and home of the famous cannibal Sawneys Bean and his family. The basis of the Hills Have Eyes.

    • @stewedfishproductions7959
      @stewedfishproductions7959 Před rokem

      Three other great RLS writings: Kidnapped, The Master of Ballantrae and (a short story, but one of my favourites) The Bottle Imp. Also, don't forget J.M. Barrie (Peter Pan, the Boy Who Wouldn't Grow Up!) and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle (Sherlock Holmes).

    • @Twiska
      @Twiska Před rokem +1

      @@stewedfishproductions7959 , I didn't forget them. They were in the video. I was mentioning people the video left out.

    • @stewedfishproductions7959
      @stewedfishproductions7959 Před rokem +1

      @@Twiska - My apologies, I had only been through half the vid, got called to the door to take a package in and still haven't watched the rest... Duh! LOL 😀

    • @wboyle9721
      @wboyle9721 Před rokem

      One o my great randmother from 1700s is a Stevenson her nephews are the Stevenson's that built the lighthouses and george Stevenson who worked on the steamengine Robert loie Stevenson is related to me to

  • @james-wx2mh
    @james-wx2mh Před rokem

    thank you for this video its made my day

  • @jamesstead2256
    @jamesstead2256 Před rokem +2

    i enjoyed your reactions

  • @claregale9011
    @claregale9011 Před rokem +4

    I've been to Edinburgh and Isle of skye, my nan was Scottish she died when I was very young but I do remember her being quite a stern lady and not to be messed with . 🙂 Beautiful scotland I love it .

  • @1951woodygeo
    @1951woodygeo Před rokem +5

    It’s Aberdeen Angus and it comes from Scotland 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿 fed on special grass only available in Scotland unique taste .

  • @lyndseythomson6262
    @lyndseythomson6262 Před 8 hodinami

    My mum comes from a small island on the west of Scotland, in the area called the inner Hebrides called the island of Coll. Just about 200 people stay there

  • @annewilliamson8482
    @annewilliamson8482 Před 4 měsíci +1

    The Irish and Scottish love each other and the Welsh as they are all cells.

  • @lewisbigham7476
    @lewisbigham7476 Před rokem +27

    As a Scottish ladie I feel that most people here would want independence including me

    • @ando19bs
      @ando19bs Před 9 měsíci +7

      Naw we don't we've had our vote!

    • @tartansnow81
      @tartansnow81 Před 9 měsíci +8

      You were lied to last time ang EU membership will be fast tracked, England and it's Tories do not give a flying eff about you.

    • @MrDunkycraig
      @MrDunkycraig Před 8 měsíci

      @@tartansnow81it seems youve drunk the snp coolaide. Independence would bankrupt Scotland on day 1. Plus getting indy then cowtowing to the EU seems dafter than anything ive ever heard. My family that still lives say that theres very few snutters outside a few hotspots these days given how corrupt the snp are. Perhaps those of us that would qualify for a Scottish passport should get a vote to you may win then

    • @ruthguthrie1099
      @ruthguthrie1099 Před 8 měsíci

      ​@@ando19bs
      Get off your knees man.

    • @martindornan1667
      @martindornan1667 Před 25 dny

      @@ando19bs
      Red and blue Tories.

  • @danpictish5457
    @danpictish5457 Před rokem +5

    Aye, our National Animal is indeed the Unicorn and we have the oldest official flags in the world too.

  • @martinmillar7137
    @martinmillar7137 Před 4 měsíci

    The guy who made this video was gucci... Kept it tight and nailed key points.. liked it.. not all english are biased 😂❤ would like to see more in depth stuff cause i would watch it lol

  • @juliarabbitts1595
    @juliarabbitts1595 Před rokem +5

    Haggis is delicious, especially with neeps and tatties (mashed swede and mashed potatoes)

  • @brianbell4937
    @brianbell4937 Před rokem +3

    Papa Westrey was mentioned in the video. But not mentioned was that the flight from there to Westray is not only the shortest commercial flight anywhere (takes 2 minutes), but also the most expensive mile for mile.

    • @bouleyloon
      @bouleyloon Před rokem

      I did the flight in 83 seconds, the flight to Papa Westray (locals call it Papay) the next day to pick me up did it in 65 seconds. Also in the Orkney Islands is the second shortest commercial flight in the world between Sanday and Stronsay (4 mins). There are many more islands to fly to from Kirkwall on the main island, and all affordable. Fantastic scenery and a flying enthusiasts dream.

  • @assi2424
    @assi2424 Před rokem +3

    Steve as a Glaswegian I'd like to thank you for covering my stunning homeland there's so much more to discover the list is endless the city's are amazing and there's no words to describe our Highlands you should view the Edinburgh Military Tattoo it's an amazing show especially if you like the bagpipes and Glasgow also hosts the world bagpipes championship and our people are amazing too 😄♥️🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @justice.wilson686
    @justice.wilson686 Před rokem +2

    Was a scotsman that invented the usa navy.

  • @danpictish5457
    @danpictish5457 Před rokem +2

    Tobaco crops were grown in the States and owned by Scotts.

  • @19McCloy91
    @19McCloy91 Před rokem +4

    There is book called how scotland invented the modern world. For such a small country we've left a big footprint.
    Also Scotland is the oil capital of europe

  • @alicemilne1444
    @alicemilne1444 Před rokem +28

    Pronunciation: Glaz-go, Edin-buh-ruh. The Gaelic name for Scotland is written Alba but pronounced Al-a-pah. All three names have the stress on the first syllable. The Declaration of Arbroath - this time the stress is on the last syllable.
    Lochaber is pronounced Loch-ah-ber, stress on the "ah" and the "ch" is not pronounced like "ck", but a guttural "h". Royal House of Atholl, stress on the first syllable of Atholl. Clan MacDonald of Clanranald, the stress is on the "ran" part of Ranald. Lochshiel is pronounced Loch-sheel, stress on the second syllable.
    Braveheart is a horrible Hollywood distortion of history.
    Oil: Scotland had a booming shale oil industry in the 19th century. In the 20th century oil was discovered in the North Sea. Most of British oil&gas reserves are in Scottish waters and Aberdeen and the Shetland Islands became large oil centres. Drilling still goes on today, but Scotland produces all its electricity needs through renewables like wind, hydro, tidal and hydrogen energy.
    The Aberdeen Angus breed originated in Scoltand. Angus is a historical county in the East of Scotland. Scotland exports a lot of meat, but not to the whole world. The Highland cow, the hairy orange one is also a Scottish breed.
    Scotch Whisky is a legally protected designation.
    Yes, Scotland are Ireland are closely linked through language (Gaelic), music styles (fiddle, harp, bagpipes), the game of shinty (Scotland) and hurling (Ireland), migration back and forth for nearly 2000 years.
    Scottish sports that made it to the Olympics: the hammer, the shot putt, the pole vault, the triple jump, curling.
    The first electric car was made in Aberdeen in the 1840s.
    Biggest literary fraud in Europe: James Macpherson published a series of epic poems in the 1760s that he claimed to have translated from collecting oral recitations of works by a famous ancient bard called Ossian. The book was translated into scores of different languages and sold all over Europe until the fraud was discovered years later.
    Walter Scott was a real literary great, though, writing Ivanhoe and Rob Roy for example.

    • @seanj10
      @seanj10 Před rokem +2

      Edin-bru ( 'u' sounding like the 'u' in up )

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Před rokem

      @@neuralwarp International maritime law doesn't work that way. Orkney and Shetland would be considered enclaves within Scottish waters and would only have a 12-mile limit around them. You just have to look at the situation with the Channel Islands.

    • @matthewjamison
      @matthewjamison Před rokem

      Golf is now in the Olympics too

    • @MrBulky992
      @MrBulky992 Před rokem +1

      Also, William the Lion was defeated at the Battle of Alnwick which is pronounced "Annick" (not "All-n-wick"!).

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Před rokem

      @@MrBulky992 Yep. I noted that and forgot to include it.

  • @evanchalmers6172
    @evanchalmers6172 Před 7 měsíci +2

    The Big Yin himself said it best, the Scottish people come from Irish stock that had the urge to move somewhere colder and wetter👍

  • @davidmacgregor5193
    @davidmacgregor5193 Před rokem +1

    Angus and Malcolm Young of AC/DC were born in Glasgow, the bands first vocalist, Bon Scott was born in Forfar.

  • @DraconimLt
    @DraconimLt Před rokem +13

    You seemed surprised at Scotland having 790 Islands m8, so I should tell you that in the British Isles as a whole, there are over 6,000 of them, from tiny little rocks to Great Britain itself.

  • @howellevans8679
    @howellevans8679 Před rokem +5

    british isles 189 inhabited islands 7700 islands in total around about that number

  • @Ayeskint
    @Ayeskint Před rokem +1

    #79: Got an ice cold Irn Bru beside me right now (but being from Glasgow I call it Ginger. As in; "Gie's a boattla Ginger, mate.") Love the stuff.

  • @princessliz6201
    @princessliz6201 Před rokem +1

    It's worth checking out the Highlands, there is a railway that you can catch a train, and just take in the beautiful scenery, from Fort William to Mallaig which is a coastal place, where you can get a boat to the Isle of skye. It's a holiday I hope to go on sometime in my life.

  • @marycarver1542
    @marycarver1542 Před rokem +19

    Wales, Ireland and of course England are all equally beautiful. We are very fortunate
    !

    • @janice506
      @janice506 Před měsícem +1

      Nah Scotland wins hands down on scenery whether it’s the highlands or the isles or the nc500 we win .

  • @lauralott5242
    @lauralott5242 Před rokem +4

    The Irish, Scots, Welsh, etc are all Celts. Plus a part of Northern Ireland extending into the West coast of Scotland was known as Dalriada. These were the Scoti tribe. Scotland back then was really Pictland, and was inhabited by the picts. You should look further back to see all the different areas and tribes

  • @Stewart682
    @Stewart682 Před rokem +2

    About "Braveheart". It's the least historically accurate movie of all time. Not only did they not have either kilts, tartan or bagpipes in Scotland at that time but the blue face paint was a reference to the Picts who were a different people of a completely different era. Oh, and the battle of Stirling was actually the battle of Stirling BRIDGE which was fought on a bridge in Stirling!!

  • @no-oneinparticular7264
    @no-oneinparticular7264 Před rokem +2

    I am an honorary juroch, and this entitles me to visit the Isle of Jura distillery anytime I want. Any other Jurochs on stream?? I love Haggis, with a thick gravy. .yum!!. Yes, Aberdeen Angus beef is from Scotland...absolutely delicious.

  • @boxtradums0073
    @boxtradums0073 Před rokem +3

    What’s now west Scotland and Ireland had cultural ties thousands of years before Anglo-Saxons even came to the British isles.

  • @penname5766
    @penname5766 Před rokem +3

    Outlander is one of the best TV shows of all time. “Time” being the operative word, as it’s about time travel and takes place in both the present and the 18th century, hopping back and forth. The premise is fantastic. It’s bloody awesome 😎 And it’s still in production.

    • @vinnyganzano1930
      @vinnyganzano1930 Před rokem

      Sorry but Outlander is absolutely shite.

    • @penname5766
      @penname5766 Před rokem

      @@vinnyganzano1930 You don’t need to apologise as if you’re informing me of some objective truth. Outlander is amazing. Enough people agree with me that it’s been going for eight years.

  • @CouncilOfWolves
    @CouncilOfWolves Před rokem +2

    The BBC produced an excellent series called "Coast" which explored the coastlines of Great Britain and Ireland and provides a clear insight to the history of the British Isles. Hosted by historian Neil Oliver and other heavyweights such as Nicholas Crane and his trademark umbrella, who in one episode tackled the Hardknott Pass in the Lake District on a 1930s bicycle, which is a challenge to many motorists and bikers. In the series Crane conquered the beautiful rock in Scotland on which Connor McCloud stood with his sword in the 1986 film Highlander. I cannot recall it's name but Christopher Lambert had to be skylifted by helicopter due to it's inaccessible location. Brilliant series and highly recommended as a valuable insight to the British Isles.

  • @patriciakeogh5008
    @patriciakeogh5008 Před rokem +7

    I’m shocked you didn’t know about Scottish Whiskey 😲

    • @samuelmartin8052
      @samuelmartin8052 Před rokem +12

      Whisky is the way it's spelt in Scotland

    • @vinnyganzano1930
      @vinnyganzano1930 Před rokem +1

      Whisky, no added "e" add a drop of water or ice cube if you must. Single malt whisky is the finest alcohol known to man.

  • @garymacdonald7165
    @garymacdonald7165 Před rokem +3

    Scotland held the first ever soccer international match(Scotland v England 1872) in Glasgow! Also invented the sports of Golf and Curling!

    • @andrewnairn6288
      @andrewnairn6288 Před rokem +1

      And ice hockey

    • @angussoutter7824
      @angussoutter7824 Před rokem

      Cough we also won the first world championship in football 🙄 with Renton beating West Bromwich 🙄😂😂

  • @TheSpacecraftX
    @TheSpacecraftX Před rokem +1

    We still have domestic oil production. Basically everyone with a stem degree in Aberdeen gets headhunted by north sea oil and gas companies.

  • @lynnemcsheffrey3426
    @lynnemcsheffrey3426 Před 2 měsíci

    The line about scotkand not being a theme park is from tourism. I actually had an American tourist ask why edininburgh castle was built so far from the sirport, and a Japanese tourist stop traffic in princes (not princess) street to take a picture of a mannequin waring a cheap kilt

  • @katydaniels508
    @katydaniels508 Před rokem +18

    The UK is reasonably independent for energy, I think we only get 4% from other countries. Scotland however, are completely self sufficient and make enough to sell to other countries. 😁

    • @daftgowk1
      @daftgowk1 Před rokem +18

      Not strictly true, we produce 2.5 times the energy we need in Scotland, but are paying the highest prices as it's sold abroad then sold back to us to support profiteering, or sold cheaply to subsidise England, depending on the source of energy.
      My family have been in oil since the 70s, and its produced only 70 miles from where i live, but i am paying the highest price in the world currently, thieving rats!

    • @johncroyfindlay
      @johncroyfindlay Před rokem

      @@neuralwarp What absolute BritNat propagandist rubbish. If that were the case the U.K. government would be thrilled to be rid of us rather than desperate to keep us as an essential part of the U.K. In fact, we pay more than our share, as you well know.

    • @daftgowk1
      @daftgowk1 Před rokem +13

      @@neuralwarp we import gas, yes we do, does that make me wrong? Please do more reading before doubting others dude. "In 2020 56% of the electricity consumed in Scotland came from renewable sources, 30% from nuclear and 13% from fossil fuels"... The Scottish govt and Full Fact agree on this. We export a lot of our resources, the Tories allowed companies to get rid of gas storage to profiteer before the energy crisis, and still are, while paying them £100bn of our taxes for the pleasure of the highest prices in the world and lying by blaming it on Russia, again to support profiteering. We get c50% back from what we contribute to the exchequer, this includes only c8% of revenue from oil and gas. The Union of inequity has robbed us blind and lied about it for decades. Uppity Scots is the usual refrain in response to the alarms we have been raising. We have not voted Tory since the 1950s, there is a reason for that

    • @claregallagher8550
      @claregallagher8550 Před rokem +9

      @@neuralwarp I think you need to do more research. We have wind, solar, wave and hydropower, all of which generate energy. We also have 90% of the UKs fresh water, which will be a needed commodity in the near future. You quote a fact of only working 30% of the time, without looking at the bigger picture of all renewable energy and other wealth, including a thriving tourism, food and drink export etc. With regard to electricity prices we are paying in Scotland, the UK government sold the national grid and so Scotland has to send the electricity it generates to the national grid and then buy it back. When we buy it back, it is more expensive than it is for the south of England, because they charge us higher standing charges!! Work that out!!
      Some facts you may have missed. Scotland has 8.4% of the UKs population with 32% of the UKs landmass and 62% of its offshore maritime area, but also possesses:
      34% of UKs natural wealth; 90% of UKs fresh water; 26% of renewable energy; 90% of the hydropower; 96% of the UKs crude oil and 63% natural gas; 60% of timber production; 70% of fish landings; 25% of EUROPE's offshore wind and 25% of EUROPE's tidal energy resources; finally 10% of EUROPE's wave power potential.

    • @danielmacpherson8487
      @danielmacpherson8487 Před rokem +3

      @@claregallagher8550 I've never heard anything about that energy situation and those stats are staggering, can I ask where you got this information? I'm not saying you're wrong but being able to prove it may just get my vote in the next refurendum, the big reason I've been unsure about Independence is I thought we'd be spending more than we'd be making but with those statistics, we could be one of europes most prosperous countries and maintain our socialist programs like free nursery through college without having to abuse taxes.

  • @isla1687
    @isla1687 Před rokem +9

    lol my last name is Macdonald (mentioned in the video) my ancestors were actually part of the jacobite rebellion, and also about Gaelic it’s actually my first language, i was brought up speaking gaelic first and then started getting taught english at about 5yrs old ahah

    • @marconatrix
      @marconatrix Před rokem +1

      Glé mhath, ghille! :-)

    • @lobo3678
      @lobo3678 Před rokem +1

      Same as myself, Cò às a tha thu? 'S e leòdhasach a th' annam

  • @stuartmalloch4326
    @stuartmalloch4326 Před 7 měsíci

    Steve, you should check out videos by Ruth Aisling who travels around Orkney, Shetland & other islands by campervan. She also takes the world's shortest scheduied flight from Westray to Papa Westray...less than a minute!

  • @skywatergarage
    @skywatergarage Před 9 měsíci

    Scotland. The best country and people in the world.

  • @moiradevlin2564
    @moiradevlin2564 Před rokem +3

    The Glasgow coma scale.

  • @andy70d35
    @andy70d35 Před rokem +4

    You have to come to Scotland, you would love the history and beautiful highlands and islands.
    Haggis is really amazing with neeps and tatties (turnips and mashed potatoes) and there are some truly amazing whisky to try, a nice matured single malt of 15 years or older are something to savour, a few of my favourites are Glenmorangie, Glenfiddich, Glenlivit.

  • @riz8437
    @riz8437 Před 5 měsíci

    There was also a thriving shale oil industry in West Lothian for many years.

  • @cathiecraig5730
    @cathiecraig5730 Před rokem

    Great video

  • @EwenMorrisonewenart
    @EwenMorrisonewenart Před rokem +3

    P.S. When you try Haggis and/or Black Pudding, I strongly recommend Stornoway Blackpudding!

    • @vinnyganzano1930
      @vinnyganzano1930 Před rokem +1

      Stornoway black pudding served with fresh scallops👍

    • @jmiswan1
      @jmiswan1 Před rokem

      Shame I can only upvote this comment one time.

  • @AidanThomson-yp1oi
    @AidanThomson-yp1oi Před rokem +3

    Haggis is a monthly meal for me. Amazing and tasty. Recommend it to all.

    • @vinnyganzano1930
      @vinnyganzano1930 Před rokem

      I hate haggis, give me a curry anyday, failing that a fish supper.

  • @rosaliegolding5549
    @rosaliegolding5549 Před rokem +1

    Add about the Caledonian Canal when this was built seafarers did not have to go around the coast of Scotland they could bypass it go by land and Beale to go East to west 👌🤷‍♀️

  • @user-km6jk6xh3v
    @user-km6jk6xh3v Před 7 měsíci

    My Scotland is beautiful 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿🏴󠁧󠁢󠁳󠁣󠁴󠁿

  • @johnbruce2868
    @johnbruce2868 Před rokem +4

    The Irish and Scottish "blood-line" is their shared ancient Goidelic Celtic heritage. Their languages are distinguished as Goidelic through the replacement of the consonant P (Brittonic languages - Welsh, Cornish, Breton) with Q. Thus pen in Welsh is kin in Irish and Gaelic. There is a theory, based upon an entry in the Annals of Tigernach, that the Scots were actually Irish immigrants who occupied Argyll in the late 6th. and early 7th. centuries A.D. The conversation of the Picts to Christianity from the 5th.- 6th. centuries A.D. was significantly influenced by Irish saints. My own research demonstrates that the Pictish language was a creole (advanced pidgin) which used Old Irish (the precursor of both modern Irish and Gaelic) for the lexicon, with an independent orthography (akin, in using doubled consonants, to Welsh) and grammar. Moreover, the Picts are often considered to be culturally similar to the Irish Cruthin. You're corret, there are a lot of old historical like between these peoples.

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Před rokem +1

      I'd be interested to know what research you have done into Pictish. As far as I know there are insufficient records (only a few Ogham insciptions on stone carvings) to reconstruct the language. And according to all the Celtic language scholars whose works I have read, Brittonnic and Goidelic were closely enough related 2000 years ago for there to have been a certain level of intelligibility. Pidgins only occur when peoples with completely unintelligible languages from completely different language families meet.

    • @vaudevillian7
      @vaudevillian7 Před rokem

      I thought the theory was now that the Picts were Brythonic, or a least spoke a P Celtic language

    • @alicemilne1444
      @alicemilne1444 Před rokem +1

      @@vaudevillian7 Yes, there is sufficient place name evidence to support the Brythonic theory for Pictish. Prefixes like Aber-, Pit- and Car- are found all over the mainland of Scotland east of the Grampians and north of the Forth.