fbpx
Wikipedia

Anti-Scottish sentiment

Anti-Scottish sentiment is disdain, discrimination, or hatred for Scotland, the Scots or Scottish culture. It may also include the persecution or oppression of the Scottish people as an ethnic group, or nation. It can also be referred to as Scotophobia or Albaphobia.[1][2]

Middle Ages

Much of the negative literature of the Middle Ages drew heavily on the writings from Greek and Roman antiquity. The writings of Ptolemy in particular dominated concepts of Scotland till the Late Middle Ages and drew on stereotypes perpetuating fictitious, as well as satirical accounts of the Kingdom of the Scots. The English Church and the propaganda of royal writs from 1337 to 1453 encouraged a barbarous image of the kingdom as it allied with England's enemy, the Kingdom of France, during the Hundred Years' War.[3] Medieval authors seldom visited Scotland but called on such accounts as "common knowledge", influencing the works of Boece's "Scotorum Historiae" (Paris 1527) and Camden's "Brittania" (London 1586) plagiarising and perpetuating negative attitudes. In the 16th century Scotland and particularly the Gaelic speaking Highlands were characterised as lawless, savage and filled with wild Scots. As seen in Camden's account to promote an image of the nation as a wild and barbarous people:

They drank the bloud [blood] out of wounds of the slain: they establish themselves, by drinking one anothers bloud [blood] and suppose the great number of slaughters they commit, the more honour they winne [win] and so did the Scythians in old time. To this we adde [add] that these wild Scots, like as the Scythians, had for their principall weapons, bowes and arrows. Camden (1586)[4]

Camden's accounts were modified to compare the Highland Scots to the inhabitants of Ireland.[5] Negative stereotypes flourished and by 1634, Austrian Martin Zeiller linked the origins of the Scots to the Scythians and in particular the Highlander to the Goths based on their wild and Gothic-like appearance.[6] Quoting the 4th-century Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus,[7] he describes the Scots as descendants of the tribes of the British Isles who were unruly trouble makers. With a limited amount of information, the Medieval geographer embellished such tales, including, less favourable assertions that the ancestors of Scottish people were cannibals.[5] A spurious accusation proposed by Saint Jerome's tales of Scythian atrocities was adapted to lay claims as evidence of cannibalism in Scotland. Despite the fact that there is no evidence of the ancestors of the Scots in ancient Gaul,[8] moreover St. Jerome's text was a mistranslation of Attacotti,[9] another tribe in Roman Britain, the myth of cannibalism was attributed to the people of Scotland:

What shall I [St. Jerome] say of other nations – how when I was in Gaul as a youth I saw the Scots, a British race, eating human flesh, and how, when these men came upon the forests upon herds of swine and sheep, and cattle, they would cut off the buttocks of the shepherds and paps of the woman and hold these for their greatest delicasy.

 
A part of the spurious De Situ Britanniae.

Accepted as fact with no evidence, such ideas were encouraged and printed as seen in De Situ Britanniae a fictitious account of the peoples and places of Roman Britain. It was published in 1757, after having been made available in London in 1749. Accepted as genuine for more than one hundred years, it was virtually the only source of information for northern Britain (i.e., modern Scotland) for the time period, and historians eagerly incorporated its spurious information into their own accounts of history. The Attacotti's homeland was specified as just north of the Firth of Clyde, near southern Loch Lomond, in the region of Dunbartonshire.[10][11] This information was combined with legitimate historical mentions of the Attacotti to produce inaccurate histories and to make baseless conjectures. For example, Edward Gibbon combined De Situ Britanniae with St. Jerome's description of the Attacotti by musing on the possibility that a 'race of cannibals' had once dwelt in the neighbourhood of Glasgow.

These views were echoed in the works of Dutch, French and German authors. Nicolaus Hieronymus Gundling proposed that the exotic appearance and cannibalism of the Scottish people made them akin to the savages of Madagascar. Even as late as the mid-18th century, German authors likened Scotland and its ancient population to the exotic tribes of the South Seas.[12] With the close political ties of the Franco-Scottish alliance in the late Medieval period, before William Shakespeare's Macbeth, English Elizabethan theatre dramatised the Scots and Scottish culture as comical, alien, dangerous and uncivilised. In comparison to the manner of Frenchmen who spoke a form of English,[13] Scots were used in material for comedies; including Robert Greene's James IV in a fictitious English invasion of Scotland satirising the long Medieval wars with Scotland. English fears and hatred were deeply rooted in the contemporary fabric of society, drawing upon stereotypes as seen in Raphael Holinshed's Chronicles" and politically edged material such as George Chapman's Eastward Hoe in 1605, offended King James with its anti-Scottish satire, resulting in the imprisonment of the playwright.[14] Despite this, the play was never banned or suppressed. Authors such as Claude Jordan de Colombier in 1697 plagiarised earlier works,[15] Counter-Reformation propaganda associated the Scots and particularly Highland Gaelic-speakers as barbarians from the north[16] who wore nothing but animal skins. Confirming old stereotypes relating back to Roman and Greek philosophers in the idea that "dark forces" from northern Europe (soldiers from Denmark, Sweden, Netherlands, France and Scotland) acquired a reputation as fierce warriors.[17][18][19] With Lowland soldiers along the North Sea and Baltic Sea, as well as Highland mercenaries wearing the distinctive Scottish kilt, became synonymous with that of wild, rough and fierce fighting men.[20]

However, the fact that Scots had married into every royal house in Europe who had also married into the Scottish royal house indicates that the supposed anti-Scottish sentiment there has been exaggerated as opposed to in England where the wars and raids in Northern England increased anti-Scottish sentiment. An increase in the English anti-Scottish sentiments after the Jacobite uprisings and the anti-Scottish bills of parliament are clearly shown in comments by leaders in English such as Samuel Johnson, whose anti-Scottish remarks such as that "in those times nothing had been written in the Earse [i.e. Scots Gaelic] language" is well known.[21]

Anti-Highlander and anti-Jacobite sentiment

 
Sawney Beane at the Entrance of His Cave. published in the 1720s The Newgate Calendar caption: The woman in the background carries a severed leg.

Stereotypes of Highland cannibalism lasted till the mid-18th century and were embraced by Lowland Scots Presbyterian and English political and anti-Jacobite propaganda, in reaction to a series of Jacobite uprisings, rebellions, in the British Isles between 1688 and 1746. The Jacobite uprisings themselves in reaction to the Glorious Revolution of 1688, were aimed at returning James VII of Scotland and II of England, and later his descendants of the House of Stuart. Anti-Jacobite predominantly anti-Highland propaganda of the 1720s includes publications such as the London Newgate Calendar a popular monthly bulletin of executions, produced by the keeper of Newgate Prison in London. One Newgate publication created the legend of Sawney Bean, the head of a forty-eight strong clan of incestual, lawless and cannibalistic family in Galloway. Although based on fiction, the family were reported by the Calendar to have murdered and cannibalised over one thousand victims. Along with the Bible and John Bunyan's The Pilgrim's Progress, the Calendar was famously in the top three works most likely to be found in the average home and the Calendar's title was appropriated by other publications, who put out biographical chapbooks. With the intent to create a work of fiction to demonstrate the superiority of the Protestant mercantile establishment in contrast to the 'savage pro-Jacobite uncivilised Highland Gaels'.[22][23]

From 1701 to 1720 a sustained Whig campaign of anti-Jacobite pamphleteering across Britain and Ireland sought to halt Jacobitism as a political force and undermine the claim of James II and VII to the British throne. In 1705 Lowland Scots Protestant Whig politicians in the Scottish parliament voted to sustain a status quo and to award financial incentives of £4,800 to each writer having served the interests of the nation.[24][25] Such measures had the opposite effect and furthered the Scots towards the cause, enabling Jacobitism to flourish as a sustaining political presence in Scotland.[24] Pro-Jacobite writings and pamphleteers e.g. Walter Harries and William Sexton were liable to imprisonment of for producing in the eyes of the government seditious or scurrilous tracts and all copies or works were seized or destroyed.[26] Anti-Jacobite Pamphleteering, as an example An Address to All True Englishmen[27] routed a sustained propaganda war with Scotland's pro-Stuart supporters ensued and British Whig campaigners pushed a pro-Saxon and the anti-Highlander nature of Williamite satire[28] resulting in a backlash by pro-Jacobite pamphleteers.

From 1720 Lowland Scots Presbyterian Whiggish literature sought to remove the Highland Jacobite, being beyond the pale, or an enemy of John Bull or a unified Britain and Ireland as seen in Thomas Page's The Use of the Highland Broadsword published in 1746.[29] Propaganda of the time included the minting of anti-Jacobite or anti-Highlander medals,[30] and political cartoons to promote the Highland Scots as a barbaric and backward people,[31] similar in style to the 19th-century depiction of the Irish as being backward or barbaric, in Lowland Scottish publications such as The Economist.[31] Plays like William Shakespeare's Scottish play Macbeth, was popularised and considered a pro-British, pro-Hanoverian and anti-Jacobite play.[13] Prints such as Sawney in The Boghouse, itself a reference to the tale of Sawney Bean, depicted the Highland Scots as too stupid to use a lavatory and gave a particularly 18th-century edge to traditional depictions of cannibalism.[32] The Highland Scots people were promoted as brutish thugs, figures of ridicule and no match for the "civilised" Lowland Scots supporters of the Protestant Hanovarians. They were feminised as a parody of the female disguise used by Bonny Prince Charlie in his escape,[32] and as savage warriors that needed the guiding hand of the industrious Lowland Scots Protestants to render them civilised.[29]

 
William Hogarth's francophobic painting The Gate of Calais or O! The Roast Beef of Old England, in which in the foreground, a Highlander, an exile from the Jacobite rising of 1745,[33] sits slumped against the wall, his strength sapped by the poor French fare – a raw onion and a crust of bread.

Depictions included the Highland Scots Jacobites as ill-dressed and ill-fed, loutish and verminous usually in league with the French[34] as can be seen in William Hogarth's 1748 painting The Gate of Calais with a Highlander exile sits slumped against the wall, his strength sapped by the poor French fare – a raw onion and a crust of bread. Political cartoons in 1762 depict the Prime Minister, Lord Bute (accused of being a Jacobite sympathiser), as a poor John Bull depicted with a bulls head with crooked horns ridden by Jacobite Scots taking bribes from a French monkey[34] Anti-Jacobite sentiment was captured in a verse appended to various songs, including in its original form as an anti-Jacobite song Ye Jacobites By Name, God save the King with a prayer for the success of Field Marshal George Wade's army which attained some short-term use debatably in the late 18th century. This song was widely adopted and was to become the national anthem of Britain now known as "God Save the Queen" (but never since sung with that verse).

Lord, grant that Marshal Wade,
May by thy mighty aid,
Victory bring.
May he sedition hush,
And like a torrent rush,
Rebellious Scots to crush,
God save the King.

The 1837 article and other sources make it clear that this verse was not used soon after 1745, and certainly before the song became accepted as the British national anthem in the 1780s and 1790s.[35] On the opposing side, Jacobite beliefs were demonstrated in an alternative verse used during the same period, attacking Lowland Scots Presbyterianism:[36]

God bless the prince, I pray,
God bless the prince, I pray,
Charlie I mean;
That Scotland we may see
Freed from vile Presbyt'ry,
Both George and his Feckie,
Ever so, Amen.

Modern day

In 2007 a number of Scottish MPs warned of increasing anti-Scottish sentiment in England, citing the increased tension over Devolution, the West Lothian question and the Barnett formula as causes.[37]

There have been a number of attacks on Scots in England in recent years. In 2004 a Scottish former soldier was attacked by a gang of children and teenagers with bricks and bats, allegedly for having a Scottish accent.[38] In Aspatria, Cumbria, a group of Scottish schoolgirls say they received anti-Scottish taunts and foul language from a group of teenage girls during a carnival parade.[39] An English football supporter was banned for life for shouting "Kill all the Jocks" before attacking Scottish football fans.[40] One Scottish woman says she was forced to move from her home in England because of anti-Scottish feeling,[41] while another had a haggis thrown through her front window.[42] In 2008 a student nurse from London was fined for assault and hurling anti-Scottish abuse at police while drunk during the T in the Park festival in Kinross.[43]

In the media

In June 2019, an anti-Scottish poem titled "Friendly Fire" was recirculated on the internet, leading to criticism of Boris Johnson. The poem was written by James Michie and published in The Spectator magazine in 2004 by Johnson, who was editor of the magazine at the time.[44] The poem reads:

The Scotch – what a verminous race!

Canny, pushy, chippy, they're all over the place,

Battening off us with false bonhomie,

Polluting our stock, undermining our economy.

Down with sandy hair and knobbly knees!

Suppress the tartan dwarves and the Wee Frees!

Ban the kilt, the skean-dhu and the sporran

As provocatively, offensively foreign!

It's time Hadrian’s Wall was refortified

To pen them in a ghetto on the other side.

I would go further. The nation

Deserves not merely isolation

But comprehensive extermination.

We must not flinch from a solution.

(I await legal prosecution.)

In a 2007 obituary titled James Michie, gentle genius, Boris Johnson dubbed Michie "one of the most distinguished poets and translators of the 20th century" and referred to "Friendly Fire" as an example of how he wrote "whimsically, sometimes with bite."[45]

The term Scottish mafia is a pejorative term used to refer to a group of Scottish Labour Party politicians and broadcasters who are believed to have had undue influence over the governance of England, such as the constitutional arrangement allowing Scottish MPs to vote on English matters, but not the other way around. The termed had found usage in the UK press[46][47] and in parliamentary debates.[48][49] Members of this group include Tony Blair, Gordon Brown, Alistair Darling, Charles Falconer, Derry Irvine, Michael Martin and John Reid.

An edition of the BBC satirical show Have I Got News for You aired on 26 April 2013 prompted over 100 complaints to the BBC and Ofcom for its perceived anti-Scottish stance during a section discussing Scottish independence. Panelist Paul Merton had suggested Mars bars would become the currency of a post-independence Scotland, while guest host Ray Winstone added, "To be fair the Scottish economy has its strengths – its chief exports being oil, whisky, tartan and tramps."[50]

In July 2006, former editor of The Sun Kelvin MacKenzie ,who is of Scottish descent himself; his grandfather hailed from Stirling,[51] wrote a column referring to Scots as 'Tartan Tosspots' and mocking the fact that Scotland has a lower life expectancy than the rest of the U.K. MacKenzie's column provoked a storm of Scottish protest and was heavily condemned by numerous commentators including Scottish MPs and MSPs.[52] In October 2007, MacKenzie appeared on the BBC's Question Time TV programme and launched another attack on Scotland, claiming that:

Scotland believes not in entrepreneurialism like London and the south east… Scots enjoy spending [money] but they don't enjoy creating it, which is the opposite to down south.[53]

Quotations

  • "The noblest prospect which a Scotchman ever sees, is the high road that leads to England." – Samuel Johnson[54]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Scotophobia". Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press. 2008. Scotophobia, a morbid dread or dislike of the Scots or things Scottish (tartan, bagpipes, ginger hair, accents, flag)
  2. ^ Neal Ascherson (28 June 2006). . OpenDemocracy. Archived from the original on 9 January 2008. Retrieved 2 January 2008.
  3. ^ The Hundred Years' War. W. R. Jones (1979). Journal of British Studies
  4. ^ W. Camden, Britannia, or, A Chorographical description of the most flourishing kingdoms of England, Scotland and Ireland. (London 1610), p114-127
  5. ^ a b Travels to Terra Incognita: The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers' Accounts c. 1600 to 1800. Martin Rackwitz. Waxmann Verlag 2007. p33, p94
  6. ^ Zeiller, Martin, Itinerarium Magnae Britanniae, 2nd ed. (1674) Zeiller's account is based on the travels of an anonymous Count of the Holy Roman Empire in 1609, p. 232.
  7. ^ Travels to Terra Incognita: The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers' Accounts c. 1600 to 1800. Martin Rackwitz. Waxmann Verlag 2007. p34 Ibid.p123
  8. ^ Travels to Terra Incognita: The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers' Accounts c. 1600 to 1800. Martin Rackwitz. Waxmann Verlag 2007. p38, p39
  9. ^ Camden Britain part i, p. 127
  10. ^ Bertram & 1757E:59–60 (English)
  11. ^ Bertram & 1757L:44 (Latin)
  12. ^ Travels to Terra Incognita: The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers' Accounts c. 1600 to 1800. Martin Rackwitz. Waxmann Verlag 2007. p40
  13. ^ a b Macbeth by William Shakespeare. A. R. Braunmuller p9 Cambridge University Press, 1997
  14. ^ Eastward Ho! by Ben Jonson, George Chapman, John Marston, Royal Shakespeare Company
  15. ^ C. Jordan de Colombier, Voyages Historique de l'Europe, 8 vols, (Paris, 1693–1697)
  16. ^ Williamson Scots, indians and Empire, pp 50–55
  17. ^ The Volois Tapestries a barbaric northerner is depicted ibid., p. 55
  18. ^ Jean Bodin's Les Six Livres de la Républic (Paris 1576)
  19. ^ "Early Modern Representations of the far North. The 1670 Voyage of la Martinére", AVR Nordic Yearbook of Folklore, vol lviii(Stockholm 2002), pp. 19–42.
  20. ^ Travels to Terra Incognita: The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers' Accounts c. 1600 to 1800. Martin Rackwitz. Waxmann Verlag 2007.
  21. ^ Johnson, Samuel. Johnson's Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland and Boswell's Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 104–105.
  22. ^ Travels to Terra Incognita: The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers' Accounts c. 1600 to 1800. Martin Rackwitz. Waxmann Verlag 2007.p39
  23. ^ "A Taste of Scotlands Historical Fictions of sawney bean and his Family", in E. Cowan and D. Gilford (eds), The Polar Twins. 200 Edinburgh
  24. ^ a b Steele. M. (1981) Anti-Jacobite Pamphleteering, 1701 – 1720
  25. ^ Acts of the Parliament of Scotland, xi, 221, 224 cited in Steele. M. (1981) Anti-Jacobite Pamphleteering, 1701 – 1720
  26. ^ Steele. M. (1981)
  27. ^ http://www.nls.uk/collections/rare-books/acquisitions/popup/jacobite1701[permanent dead link] – 1720
  28. ^ Poetry and Jacobite politics in eighteenth-century Britain and Ireland by Murray Pittock p33
  29. ^ a b "Contextualising Western Martial Arts The case of Thomas Page's The Use of the Highland Broadsword". 2007 By Bethan Jenkins cited in http://www.sirwilliamhope.org/Library/Articles/Jenkins/Contextualising.php
  30. ^ Jacobite and Anti-Jacobite Medals by Michael Sharp. The Royal Stuart Society Paper LXXIV
  31. ^ a b The myth of the Jacobite clans by Murray Pittock p9
  32. ^ a b The myth of the Jacobite clans by Murray Pittock p10
  33. ^ J. B. Nichols, 1833 p.63-p.64 "I meant to display to my own countryman the striking difference of food, priests, soldiers, &c. of two nations" ... "The melancholy and miserable Highlander, browzing on his scanty fare, consisting of a bit of bread and an onion, is intended for one of the many that fled this country after the rebellion in 1745."
  34. ^ a b The myth of the Jacobite clans by Murray Pittock
  35. ^ Richards, Jeffrey (2002). Imperialism and Music: Britain 1876 to 1953. Manchester University Press. p. 90. ISBN 978-0-7190-4506-6.
  36. ^ Groom, Nick (2006). The Union Jack: the Story of the British Flag. Atlantic Books. Appendix. ISBN 978-1-84354-336-7.
  37. ^ Walker, Helen (3 December 2007). . The Journal. Archived from the original on 15 April 2011. Retrieved 16 April 2011.
  38. ^ . Archived from the original on 17 June 2015. Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  39. ^ "Police probe pipe band race abuse". BBC News. 15 June 2007. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  40. ^ "'Kill the Jocks' Thug is Caged; Curse of the Casuals Day 4 – Girlfriend Assaulted". Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  41. ^ "Mum Run out of England for Being Scottish; Racist Hell: Victim Tells How Cats Were Killed and Home Burned". Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  42. ^ "Police probe haggis 'hate crime'". BBC News. 23 May 2001. Retrieved 25 April 2010.
  43. ^ "Student nurse fined hundreds for assault and anti-Scottish abuse". STV News. Retrieved 17 June 2015.
  44. ^ "Fact-check: Did Boris Johnson call Scottish people a 'verminous race'?". The National. Retrieved 24 November 2021.
  45. ^ Johnson, Boris. "James Michie, gentle genius | The Spectator". www.spectator.co.uk. Retrieved 24 November 2021.
  46. ^ Jack, Ian (15 July 2006). "Border disputes". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 2 October 2006.
  47. ^ Johnson, Boris (31 August 2006). . The Daily Telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 9 March 2007. Retrieved 2 October 2006.
  48. ^ "Daily Hansard". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Lords. 12 February 2004. col. GC571.
  49. ^ "Daily Hansard". Parliamentary Debates (Hansard). House of Lords. 7 July 1997. col. 523.
  50. ^ "Ray Winstone calls Scots 'tramps' on TV quiz show". The Scotsman. 1 May 2013. Retrieved 1 January 2014.
  51. ^ "The strange case of the ex-editor with Scottish blood who just can't resist attacking Scotland". The Scotsman. 13 October 2007. Retrieved 14 September 2021.)
  52. ^ . Press Gazette. 10 July 2006. Archived from the original on 22 March 2008. Retrieved 12 September 2007.
  53. ^ "MacKenzie attack draws Scots fire". BBC News. 12 October 2007. Retrieved 17 December 2007.
  54. ^ T. Christopher Smout (2005). Anglo-Scottish Relations, from 1603 to 1900. Oxford University Press. p. 25. ISBN 978-0-19-726330-3.

Sources

  • Bertram, Charles; Cirencester, Richard of; Leman, Thomas (1809). The Description of Britain (English translation ed.). J. White.
  • Bertram, Charles; Cirencester, Richard of; Leman, Thomas (1809). The Description of Britain (Latin ed.). J. White.

anti, scottish, sentiment, this, article, lead, section, short, adequately, summarize, points, please, consider, expanding, lead, provide, accessible, overview, important, aspects, article, march, 2022, disdain, discrimination, hatred, scotland, scots, scottis. This article s lead section may be too short to adequately summarize the key points Please consider expanding the lead to provide an accessible overview of all important aspects of the article March 2022 Anti Scottish sentiment is disdain discrimination or hatred for Scotland the Scots or Scottish culture It may also include the persecution or oppression of the Scottish people as an ethnic group or nation It can also be referred to as Scotophobia or Albaphobia 1 2 Contents 1 Middle Ages 2 Anti Highlander and anti Jacobite sentiment 3 Modern day 4 In the media 5 Quotations 6 See also 7 References 7 1 SourcesMiddle Ages EditMuch of the negative literature of the Middle Ages drew heavily on the writings from Greek and Roman antiquity The writings of Ptolemy in particular dominated concepts of Scotland till the Late Middle Ages and drew on stereotypes perpetuating fictitious as well as satirical accounts of the Kingdom of the Scots The English Church and the propaganda of royal writs from 1337 to 1453 encouraged a barbarous image of the kingdom as it allied with England s enemy the Kingdom of France during the Hundred Years War 3 Medieval authors seldom visited Scotland but called on such accounts as common knowledge influencing the works of Boece s Scotorum Historiae Paris 1527 and Camden s Brittania London 1586 plagiarising and perpetuating negative attitudes In the 16th century Scotland and particularly the Gaelic speaking Highlands were characterised as lawless savage and filled with wild Scots As seen in Camden s account to promote an image of the nation as a wild and barbarous people They drank the bloud blood out of wounds of the slain they establish themselves by drinking one anothers bloud blood and suppose the great number of slaughters they commit the more honour they winne win and so did the Scythians in old time To this we adde add that these wild Scots like as the Scythians had for their principall weapons bowes and arrows Camden 1586 4 Camden s accounts were modified to compare the Highland Scots to the inhabitants of Ireland 5 Negative stereotypes flourished and by 1634 Austrian Martin Zeiller linked the origins of the Scots to the Scythians and in particular the Highlander to the Goths based on their wild and Gothic like appearance 6 Quoting the 4th century Roman historian Ammianus Marcellinus 7 he describes the Scots as descendants of the tribes of the British Isles who were unruly trouble makers With a limited amount of information the Medieval geographer embellished such tales including less favourable assertions that the ancestors of Scottish people were cannibals 5 A spurious accusation proposed by Saint Jerome s tales of Scythian atrocities was adapted to lay claims as evidence of cannibalism in Scotland Despite the fact that there is no evidence of the ancestors of the Scots in ancient Gaul 8 moreover St Jerome s text was a mistranslation of Attacotti 9 another tribe in Roman Britain the myth of cannibalism was attributed to the people of Scotland What shall I St Jerome say of other nations how when I was in Gaul as a youth I saw the Scots a British race eating human flesh and how when these men came upon the forests upon herds of swine and sheep and cattle they would cut off the buttocks of the shepherds and paps of the woman and hold these for their greatest delicasy A part of the spurious De Situ Britanniae Accepted as fact with no evidence such ideas were encouraged and printed as seen in De Situ Britanniae a fictitious account of the peoples and places of Roman Britain It was published in 1757 after having been made available in London in 1749 Accepted as genuine for more than one hundred years it was virtually the only source of information for northern Britain i e modern Scotland for the time period and historians eagerly incorporated its spurious information into their own accounts of history The Attacotti s homeland was specified as just north of the Firth of Clyde near southern Loch Lomond in the region of Dunbartonshire 10 11 This information was combined with legitimate historical mentions of the Attacotti to produce inaccurate histories and to make baseless conjectures For example Edward Gibbon combined De Situ Britanniae with St Jerome s description of the Attacotti by musing on the possibility that a race of cannibals had once dwelt in the neighbourhood of Glasgow These views were echoed in the works of Dutch French and German authors Nicolaus Hieronymus Gundling proposed that the exotic appearance and cannibalism of the Scottish people made them akin to the savages of Madagascar Even as late as the mid 18th century German authors likened Scotland and its ancient population to the exotic tribes of the South Seas 12 With the close political ties of the Franco Scottish alliance in the late Medieval period before William Shakespeare s Macbeth English Elizabethan theatre dramatised the Scots and Scottish culture as comical alien dangerous and uncivilised In comparison to the manner of Frenchmen who spoke a form of English 13 Scots were used in material for comedies including Robert Greene s James IV in a fictitious English invasion of Scotland satirising the long Medieval wars with Scotland English fears and hatred were deeply rooted in the contemporary fabric of society drawing upon stereotypes as seen in Raphael Holinshed s Chronicles and politically edged material such as George Chapman s Eastward Hoe in 1605 offended King James with its anti Scottish satire resulting in the imprisonment of the playwright 14 Despite this the play was never banned or suppressed Authors such as Claude Jordan de Colombier in 1697 plagiarised earlier works 15 Counter Reformation propaganda associated the Scots and particularly Highland Gaelic speakers as barbarians from the north 16 who wore nothing but animal skins Confirming old stereotypes relating back to Roman and Greek philosophers in the idea that dark forces from northern Europe soldiers from Denmark Sweden Netherlands France and Scotland acquired a reputation as fierce warriors 17 18 19 With Lowland soldiers along the North Sea and Baltic Sea as well as Highland mercenaries wearing the distinctive Scottish kilt became synonymous with that of wild rough and fierce fighting men 20 However the fact that Scots had married into every royal house in Europe who had also married into the Scottish royal house indicates that the supposed anti Scottish sentiment there has been exaggerated as opposed to in England where the wars and raids in Northern England increased anti Scottish sentiment An increase in the English anti Scottish sentiments after the Jacobite uprisings and the anti Scottish bills of parliament are clearly shown in comments by leaders in English such as Samuel Johnson whose anti Scottish remarks such as that in those times nothing had been written in the Earse i e Scots Gaelic language is well known 21 Anti Highlander and anti Jacobite sentiment Edit Sawney Beane at the Entrance of His Cave published in the 1720s The Newgate Calendar caption The woman in the background carries a severed leg Stereotypes of Highland cannibalism lasted till the mid 18th century and were embraced by Lowland Scots Presbyterian and English political and anti Jacobite propaganda in reaction to a series of Jacobite uprisings rebellions in the British Isles between 1688 and 1746 The Jacobite uprisings themselves in reaction to the Glorious Revolution of 1688 were aimed at returning James VII of Scotland and II of England and later his descendants of the House of Stuart Anti Jacobite predominantly anti Highland propaganda of the 1720s includes publications such as the London Newgate Calendar a popular monthly bulletin of executions produced by the keeper of Newgate Prison in London One Newgate publication created the legend of Sawney Bean the head of a forty eight strong clan of incestual lawless and cannibalistic family in Galloway Although based on fiction the family were reported by the Calendar to have murdered and cannibalised over one thousand victims Along with the Bible and John Bunyan s The Pilgrim s Progress the Calendar was famously in the top three works most likely to be found in the average home and the Calendar s title was appropriated by other publications who put out biographical chapbooks With the intent to create a work of fiction to demonstrate the superiority of the Protestant mercantile establishment in contrast to the savage pro Jacobite uncivilised Highland Gaels 22 23 From 1701 to 1720 a sustained Whig campaign of anti Jacobite pamphleteering across Britain and Ireland sought to halt Jacobitism as a political force and undermine the claim of James II and VII to the British throne In 1705 Lowland Scots Protestant Whig politicians in the Scottish parliament voted to sustain a status quo and to award financial incentives of 4 800 to each writer having served the interests of the nation 24 25 Such measures had the opposite effect and furthered the Scots towards the cause enabling Jacobitism to flourish as a sustaining political presence in Scotland 24 Pro Jacobite writings and pamphleteers e g Walter Harries and William Sexton were liable to imprisonment of for producing in the eyes of the government seditious or scurrilous tracts and all copies or works were seized or destroyed 26 Anti Jacobite Pamphleteering as an example An Address to All True Englishmen 27 routed a sustained propaganda war with Scotland s pro Stuart supporters ensued and British Whig campaigners pushed a pro Saxon and the anti Highlander nature of Williamite satire 28 resulting in a backlash by pro Jacobite pamphleteers From 1720 Lowland Scots Presbyterian Whiggish literature sought to remove the Highland Jacobite being beyond the pale or an enemy of John Bull or a unified Britain and Ireland as seen in Thomas Page s The Use of the Highland Broadsword published in 1746 29 Propaganda of the time included the minting of anti Jacobite or anti Highlander medals 30 and political cartoons to promote the Highland Scots as a barbaric and backward people 31 similar in style to the 19th century depiction of the Irish as being backward or barbaric in Lowland Scottish publications such as The Economist 31 Plays like William Shakespeare s Scottish play Macbeth was popularised and considered a pro British pro Hanoverian and anti Jacobite play 13 Prints such as Sawney in The Boghouse itself a reference to the tale of Sawney Bean depicted the Highland Scots as too stupid to use a lavatory and gave a particularly 18th century edge to traditional depictions of cannibalism 32 The Highland Scots people were promoted as brutish thugs figures of ridicule and no match for the civilised Lowland Scots supporters of the Protestant Hanovarians They were feminised as a parody of the female disguise used by Bonny Prince Charlie in his escape 32 and as savage warriors that needed the guiding hand of the industrious Lowland Scots Protestants to render them civilised 29 William Hogarth s francophobic painting The Gate of Calais or O The Roast Beef of Old England in which in the foreground a Highlander an exile from the Jacobite rising of 1745 33 sits slumped against the wall his strength sapped by the poor French fare a raw onion and a crust of bread Depictions included the Highland Scots Jacobites as ill dressed and ill fed loutish and verminous usually in league with the French 34 as can be seen in William Hogarth s 1748 painting The Gate of Calais with a Highlander exile sits slumped against the wall his strength sapped by the poor French fare a raw onion and a crust of bread Political cartoons in 1762 depict the Prime Minister Lord Bute accused of being a Jacobite sympathiser as a poor John Bull depicted with a bulls head with crooked horns ridden by Jacobite Scots taking bribes from a French monkey 34 Anti Jacobite sentiment was captured in a verse appended to various songs including in its original form as an anti Jacobite song Ye Jacobites By Name God save the King with a prayer for the success of Field Marshal George Wade s army which attained some short term use debatably in the late 18th century This song was widely adopted and was to become the national anthem of Britain now known as God Save the Queen but never since sung with that verse Lord grant that Marshal Wade May by thy mighty aid Victory bring May he sedition hush And like a torrent rush Rebellious Scots to crush God save the King The 1837 article and other sources make it clear that this verse was not used soon after 1745 and certainly before the song became accepted as the British national anthem in the 1780s and 1790s 35 On the opposing side Jacobite beliefs were demonstrated in an alternative verse used during the same period attacking Lowland Scots Presbyterianism 36 God bless the prince I pray God bless the prince I pray Charlie I mean That Scotland we may see Freed from vile Presbyt ry Both George and his Feckie Ever so Amen Modern day EditIn 2007 a number of Scottish MPs warned of increasing anti Scottish sentiment in England citing the increased tension over Devolution the West Lothian question and the Barnett formula as causes 37 There have been a number of attacks on Scots in England in recent years In 2004 a Scottish former soldier was attacked by a gang of children and teenagers with bricks and bats allegedly for having a Scottish accent 38 In Aspatria Cumbria a group of Scottish schoolgirls say they received anti Scottish taunts and foul language from a group of teenage girls during a carnival parade 39 An English football supporter was banned for life for shouting Kill all the Jocks before attacking Scottish football fans 40 One Scottish woman says she was forced to move from her home in England because of anti Scottish feeling 41 while another had a haggis thrown through her front window 42 In 2008 a student nurse from London was fined for assault and hurling anti Scottish abuse at police while drunk during the T in the Park festival in Kinross 43 In the media EditIn June 2019 an anti Scottish poem titled Friendly Fire was recirculated on the internet leading to criticism of Boris Johnson The poem was written by James Michie and published in The Spectator magazine in 2004 by Johnson who was editor of the magazine at the time 44 The poem reads The Scotch what a verminous race Canny pushy chippy they re all over the place Battening off us with false bonhomie Polluting our stock undermining our economy Down with sandy hair and knobbly knees Suppress the tartan dwarves and the Wee Frees Ban the kilt the skean dhu and the sporranAs provocatively offensively foreign It s time Hadrian s Wall was refortifiedTo pen them in a ghetto on the other side I would go further The nationDeserves not merely isolationBut comprehensive extermination We must not flinch from a solution I await legal prosecution In a 2007 obituary titled James Michie gentle genius Boris Johnson dubbed Michie one of the most distinguished poets and translators of the 20th century and referred to Friendly Fire as an example of how he wrote whimsically sometimes with bite 45 The term Scottish mafia is a pejorative term used to refer to a group of Scottish Labour Party politicians and broadcasters who are believed to have had undue influence over the governance of England such as the constitutional arrangement allowing Scottish MPs to vote on English matters but not the other way around The termed had found usage in the UK press 46 47 and in parliamentary debates 48 49 Members of this group include Tony Blair Gordon Brown Alistair Darling Charles Falconer Derry Irvine Michael Martin and John Reid An edition of the BBC satirical show Have I Got News for You aired on 26 April 2013 prompted over 100 complaints to the BBC and Ofcom for its perceived anti Scottish stance during a section discussing Scottish independence Panelist Paul Merton had suggested Mars bars would become the currency of a post independence Scotland while guest host Ray Winstone added To be fair the Scottish economy has its strengths its chief exports being oil whisky tartan and tramps 50 In July 2006 former editor of The Sun Kelvin MacKenzie who is of Scottish descent himself his grandfather hailed from Stirling 51 wrote a column referring to Scots as Tartan Tosspots and mocking the fact that Scotland has a lower life expectancy than the rest of the U K MacKenzie s column provoked a storm of Scottish protest and was heavily condemned by numerous commentators including Scottish MPs and MSPs 52 In October 2007 MacKenzie appeared on the BBC s Question Time TV programme and launched another attack on Scotland claiming that Scotland believes not in entrepreneurialism like London and the south east Scots enjoy spending money but they don t enjoy creating it which is the opposite to down south 53 Quotations Edit The noblest prospect which a Scotchman ever sees is the high road that leads to England Samuel Johnson 54 See also EditScottish cringe Scottish national identityReferences Edit Scotophobia Oxford English Dictionary Oxford University Press 2008 Scotophobia a morbid dread or dislike of the Scots or things Scottish tartan bagpipes ginger hair accents flag Neal Ascherson 28 June 2006 Scotophobia OpenDemocracy Archived from the original on 9 January 2008 Retrieved 2 January 2008 The Hundred Years War W R Jones 1979 Journal of British Studies W Camden Britannia or A Chorographical description of the most flourishing kingdoms of England Scotland and Ireland London 1610 p114 127 a b Travels to Terra Incognita The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers Accounts c 1600 to 1800 Martin Rackwitz Waxmann Verlag 2007 p33 p94 Zeiller Martin Itinerarium Magnae Britanniae 2nd ed 1674 Zeiller s account is based on the travels of an anonymous Count of the Holy Roman Empire in 1609 p 232 Travels to Terra Incognita The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers Accounts c 1600 to 1800 Martin Rackwitz Waxmann Verlag 2007 p34 Ibid p123 Travels to Terra Incognita The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers Accounts c 1600 to 1800 Martin Rackwitz Waxmann Verlag 2007 p38 p39 Camden Britain part i p 127 Bertram amp 1757E 59 60 English Bertram amp 1757L 44 Latin Travels to Terra Incognita The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers Accounts c 1600 to 1800 Martin Rackwitz Waxmann Verlag 2007 p40 a b Macbeth by William Shakespeare A R Braunmuller p9 Cambridge University Press 1997 Eastward Ho by Ben Jonson George Chapman John Marston Royal Shakespeare Company C Jordan de Colombier Voyages Historique de l Europe 8 vols Paris 1693 1697 Williamson Scots indians and Empire pp 50 55 The Volois Tapestries a barbaric northerner is depicted ibid p 55 Jean Bodin s Les Six Livres de la Republic Paris 1576 Early Modern Representations of the far North The 1670 Voyage of la Martinere AVR Nordic Yearbook of Folklore vol lviii Stockholm 2002 pp 19 42 Travels to Terra Incognita The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers Accounts c 1600 to 1800 Martin Rackwitz Waxmann Verlag 2007 Johnson Samuel Johnson s Journey to the Western Islands of Scotland and Boswell s Journal of a Tour to the Hebrides Oxford Oxford University Press pp 104 105 Travels to Terra Incognita The Scottish Highlands and Hebrides in Early Modern Travellers Accounts c 1600 to 1800 Martin Rackwitz Waxmann Verlag 2007 p39 A Taste of Scotlands Historical Fictions of sawney bean and his Family in E Cowan and D Gilford eds The Polar Twins 200 Edinburgh a b Steele M 1981 Anti Jacobite Pamphleteering 1701 1720 Acts of the Parliament of Scotland xi 221 224 cited in Steele M 1981 Anti Jacobite Pamphleteering 1701 1720 Steele M 1981 http www nls uk collections rare books acquisitions popup jacobite1701 permanent dead link 1720 Poetry and Jacobite politics in eighteenth century Britain and Ireland by Murray Pittock p33 a b Contextualising Western Martial Arts The case of Thomas Page s The Use of the Highland Broadsword 2007 By Bethan Jenkins cited in http www sirwilliamhope org Library Articles Jenkins Contextualising php Jacobite and Anti Jacobite Medals by Michael Sharp The Royal Stuart Society Paper LXXIV a b The myth of the Jacobite clans by Murray Pittock p9 a b The myth of the Jacobite clans by Murray Pittock p10 J B Nichols 1833 p 63 p 64 I meant to display to my own countryman the striking difference of food priests soldiers amp c of two nations The melancholy and miserable Highlander browzing on his scanty fare consisting of a bit of bread and an onion is intended for one of the many that fled this country after the rebellion in 1745 a b The myth of the Jacobite clans by Murray Pittock Richards Jeffrey 2002 Imperialism and Music Britain 1876 to 1953 Manchester University Press p 90 ISBN 978 0 7190 4506 6 Groom Nick 2006 The Union Jack the Story of the British Flag Atlantic Books Appendix ISBN 978 1 84354 336 7 Walker Helen 3 December 2007 Scottish MPs voice concern over increase in anti Scottish sentiment The Journal Archived from the original on 15 April 2011 Retrieved 16 April 2011 News amp Star News Beaten Up By 20 Kids for Being Scottish Archived from the original on 17 June 2015 Retrieved 17 June 2015 Police probe pipe band race abuse BBC News 15 June 2007 Retrieved 25 April 2010 Kill the Jocks Thug is Caged Curse of the Casuals Day 4 Girlfriend Assaulted Retrieved 17 June 2015 Mum Run out of England for Being Scottish Racist Hell Victim Tells How Cats Were Killed and Home Burned Retrieved 17 June 2015 Police probe haggis hate crime BBC News 23 May 2001 Retrieved 25 April 2010 Student nurse fined hundreds for assault and anti Scottish abuse STV News Retrieved 17 June 2015 Fact check Did Boris Johnson call Scottish people a verminous race The National Retrieved 24 November 2021 Johnson Boris James Michie gentle genius The Spectator www spectator co uk Retrieved 24 November 2021 Jack Ian 15 July 2006 Border disputes The Guardian London Retrieved 2 October 2006 Johnson Boris 31 August 2006 There s nothing national about the National Health The Daily Telegraph London Archived from the original on 9 March 2007 Retrieved 2 October 2006 Daily Hansard Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Lords 12 February 2004 col GC571 Daily Hansard Parliamentary Debates Hansard House of Lords 7 July 1997 col 523 Ray Winstone calls Scots tramps on TV quiz show The Scotsman 1 May 2013 Retrieved 1 January 2014 The strange case of the ex editor with Scottish blood who just can t resist attacking Scotland The Scotsman 13 October 2007 Retrieved 14 September 2021 Sun ed and MacKenzie clash in tartan tosspots Press Gazette 10 July 2006 Archived from the original on 22 March 2008 Retrieved 12 September 2007 MacKenzie attack draws Scots fire BBC News 12 October 2007 Retrieved 17 December 2007 T Christopher Smout 2005 Anglo Scottish Relations from 1603 to 1900 Oxford University Press p 25 ISBN 978 0 19 726330 3 Sources Edit Bertram Charles Cirencester Richard of Leman Thomas 1809 The Description of Britain English translation ed J White Bertram Charles Cirencester Richard of Leman Thomas 1809 The Description of Britain Latin ed J White Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Anti Scottish sentiment amp oldid 1134779904, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.