www.newsnetscotland.com

 www.firmmagazine.com  www.scottishindependenceconvention.com

www.alba.co.uk

 www.alastairmcintosh.com  www.andywightman.com

We welcome new readers to this web site which has been established to provide relevant information on Scotland in the 21st Century, and to offer a forum for ideas on the country’s future and the well-being of its people. Comments are welcome and will be added to the feedback page provided they have useful information or ideas that would add positively to the debate. The web site will be developed over coming months as suggestions are received and improvements or corrections are appled. We welcome contributions to the different sections, particularly papers of value that may merit a wider audience. Material on each or any of the subjects on the left of the web site screen will be considered. Additional web subject buttons will be added if there is a clear need to expand the topics. On sectoral issues, we would appreciate copies of documents whether published previously or not, that are considered to be informative and seriously helpful to the debate on Scotland's future. Author's must grant their permission for the material to be displayed. Articles or extracts that come under other copyright protection can obviously not be considered.

In recent months the Realm of Scotland has been referred to in many newspaper blogs and discussion forums. Web site hits have gone up from the hundreds to over 10,000 some months. We thank all readers for their interest, and also for criticisms where these have been valid and helpful. We wish to make clear that Realm of Scotland has no political party allegiance, but seeks to encourage all who work for Scotland's political and economic betterment. We intend to broaden the the range of contributors and would mention that we are not responsible for external statements by any of the persons quoted or referred to in the web site. In view of the current strong unionist bias of the two main national newspapers in Scotland, and their apparent censorship of certain news items, we endeavour to give a more positive and truthful view of Scotland's potential and the aspirations of its people. 

 Demographic Information


Scotland is the northernmost and second largest of the 4 nations currently forming the United Kingdom.  It extends from 54 to 61 degrees north, and around 2 to 7.5 degrees west, on a similar latitude to Labrador, Estonia and Latvia.  Its location between the North Sea and the NE Atlantic gives it a relatively mild but damp and windy climate.  The land area measures 31,510 sq. miles and extends 274 miles north to south, and up to 154 miles east to west (mainland Scotland). The Hebrides to the west and the Orkney and Shetland Isles to the north, add to the country’s dimensions and the area of its major share of the UK’s 200 mile marine exclusive economic zone, currently surrendered to the EU by the Westminster government.

Much of Scotland is rugged, mountainous, and covered in heather, gorse, bracken with some plantations of pine, fir and birch trees.  The main mountain range, the Grampians, is divided by the fault, of Glen More or the Great Glen, at the foot of which lies Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in Scotland, and in the British Isles.  The eastern and southern coastal areas and the central lowlands have excellent soils for agriculture, mainly grain and livestock farming. Scotland has deposits of coal and zinc, but they are not mined at present.  Although it is praised for its rugged beauty, much of Scotland is a despoiled landscape, as a result of the destruction of the ancient forest of Caledon, and the introduction of sheep in large numbers. Wisely managed the land could more resemble Norway, but subject to the current neglect, it could deteriorate to be more like Iceland.

The population numbers 5.1 million, mostly located in the central belt and divided fairly evenly between the cities and the smaller towns and rural villages.  The main industries of the early 20th century, shipbuilding, engineering, weaving, steel and coal production, have largely gone and have been replaced by North Sea oil production, electronics, and service industries.  But whisky and foodstuffs remain major export items, and tourism continues to be important. 

Although currently part of the United Kingdom, Scotland retains its own legal and banking systems.  Scottish banks produce their own notes which also represent pounds sterling.  There is a vibrant financial industry, Edinburgh is the second financial centre in the UK, and is recognised globally.  Scots Universities have as old a pedigree as those in England, and have recognised excellence in medicine, science, engineering, law, and the humanities.   The (Presbyterian) Church of Scotland which has declined over the last century, has been the main religious body since the Reformation, though in Scotland, unlike England, church and state are separate.  Catholic, Anglican, Baptist and Pentecostal churches are also present.  Scotland has a devolved parliament (Holyrood) with limited powers.  It was established in 1999 following sustained pressure from the people for both devolution and independence.

 The Road to the Treaty of Union and Subsequent Developments


Scotland had shared a common monarch with England since 1603, when James VI, King of Scots, became James I, King of England, after the death of England's Queen Elizabeth, who had no children to succeed her. There was no union of the crowns of Scotland and England, which continued as otherwise independent states for the next century. The Stuarts reigned from 1603 until 1707 in a dual Scottish-English monarchy.  There was, however, an interval from 1649 till 1662, when the English monarchy was abolished and replaced by a Commonwealth, whereas the Scottish monarchy continued uninterrupted. Charles II, King of Scots, was crowned at Scone on 1 January 1651. After the Restoration in England he was also crowned King of England on 23 April 1662.



His brother succeeded him as James VII, King of Scots, and James II, King of England, but his Catholic policies created a reaction in both countries, and he was eventually forced to flee to France in 1688/89. The English declared James to have abdicated, whereas the Scottish Parliament, meeting as a Convention of Estates, roundly deposed him as King of Scots. His daughter Mary (a Protestant and the legitimate heir), was invited to succeed him, jointly with her husband, Prince William of Orange, Statthalter of The Netherlands. He reigned as William II, King of Scots, and William III, King of England, while Mary II retained the same designation in both countries. Both nations continued to pursue independent foreign policies, and each had its own currency, church, and legal structures. The Scottish flag was then (and remains now) the Saltire, which has a white diagonal cross on a blue background.

In 1698 the Scots sought to establish their own global trading base abroad, to rival English and Dutch trading companies based in India, S.E. Asia and Africa, and to compete with Spanish colonies in South and Central America.  The Darien scheme, located on the isthmus near the present Panama Canal, was planned by the man who later founded the Bank of England, William Paterson, and a number of Scots merchants.  The scheme immediately attracted the hostile interest of English and Spanish merchants, who prevailed on their governments to prevent supplies from reaching the Darien outpost and to sabotage further development of the Darien venture, which they did.  A brief trade war followed between England and Scotland.

Barely 8 years after Darien, in 1706, in a move calculated among other things to prevent any future challenge to English economic dominance, the Treaty of Union was signed under Queen Anne, the last of the joint Stuart monarchs. Article 1 of the Treaty united the crowns of Scotland and England into a new United Kingdom of Great Britain, and Article 3 set up a completely new parliament to administer the affairs of the Union. Two almost but not quite identical Acts of Union, by the Scottish and English parliaments respectively, ratified and implemented the terms of the Treaty, and the new United Kingdom was created on 1 May 1707. The flag of the United Kingdom combines the flags of Scotland, England and Ireland.

Scotland’s Parliament, which had functioned till then, ceased to meet, although it was never actually disbanded or formally abolished. Its last action was to fix a date and time for its next meeting, but that adjourned session was never held until, 292 years later, a devolved parliament with limited powers was established in Scotland following the positive results of a referendum on the issue.

 The Highland Clearances and Their Impact


Following the Jacobite rebellion of 1745 and the battle of Culloden the following year, there followed a period of upheaval in the north and west of Scotland known as the Highland Clearances.  Huge tracts of land were taken from clan chiefs that supported the uprising and given to those loyal to the ‘hanovarian’ king George II.   The owners of the highland estates evicted and drove out most of the existing tenant farmers to make room for sheep which were considered much more profitable.  From the mid-18th to the mid-19th century, the Clearances were implemented in determined if spasmodic fashion until the whole region was depopulated of most of its indigenous inhabitants.

The situation Scotland has inherited as a result is one of gross inequality in access to and ownership of land.  A mere 66 landlords claim title to a quarter of the land.  Half of Scotland (19.5 million acres) is owned by 343 landlords.  Most of these estates cater to a hunting elite and rely on exclusivity to attract their clients.  So the land has not been available for indigenous crofter purchase until recently, or for industrial use or housing development.  Meantime real estate values escalate all over the country.

The Clearances also had a marked effect on Gaelic culture which suffered from repression and was eventually largely replaced by a caricature of its original form now evident in the modern tartans and romanticised clan histories.  The Celts revered the land to which they had a strong attachment.  It was traditionally regarded as clan property (not private property), and the modern idea of buying and selling the soil would have been totally alien to them.  But the changes that followed the Clearances made it possible for absentee landlords to evict their tenants with the full backing of the law, though the tenants’ families had toiled there for centuries before the landowner’s family had appeared on the scene.

For any sovereign country to prosper and to provide opportunity for all its peoples, land ownership and taxation should reflect its democratic ideals and ensure the most beneficial utilisation of its resources.  Most of the contributors to this web site are convinced that we stand in need of much more radical steps to address the structural injustice and economic constraints inherent in our current treatment of the land resource.  Robin Harper, MSP has said, “What we need in Scotland is a combination of land value taxation and a thorough review of the planning system … to achieve environmentally sustainable land reform that upholds principles of justice, equity and ecology”.

 Present Condition and Future Prospects


Under Construction


 
"Scottish response to insulting Spectator letter"
"The Global Background to Scotland's Economic Situation"
"Read Review of Tartan Pimps book by Prof Owen Dudley Edwards"
"The Global financial situation and prospects for 2011 - a Scottish view"
"The robbery of Scotland's oil, - read the details and amounts, with the geographical details. In the section on Scotland's resources."
"See Harry Reid's expose of government attempts to control the Scottish press. (Courtesy of the SIC) Click on Sectoral issues"
"Read Canon Kenyon Wright's paper on expressing and exercising Scottish Sovereignty. Click on the Constitutional papers button."
"Read the new paper on Scotland's Borders and maritime waters. Click on the Scotland's Resources button"
"News : the Scottish Government calls for the EU CFP to be scrapped. Click on Sectoral Issues, then click on Fisheries."
"Read the remarkable correspondence between Robbie the Pict and UK authorities that led to the return of the Stone of Destiny to Scotland. Click on Historical Notes."
"Read the views of Sir Sean Connery on Scotland and its independence. Click on Comments button."
"Megrahi release and the Lockerbie trial. Read informed views of key observers. Click on 'New Items' - "Megrahi and Lockerbie trial"
"The Attempted Murder of Scotland. Read this striking analysis of the Treaty of Union. Click on New Items, Treaty of Union"
"Read the startling and detailed new evidence of the Pan Am 103 crash and the Lockerbie trial from an independent legal journal."
"Scotland is losing billions of revenue from tax on oil production from the North Sea off Aberdeen.  Read the First inister's call for this income to come to Scotland."
"Read the truth behind the Mackerel Conflict between the EU and the small island states of Faroe and Iceland, and the lies and misinformation being propagated."