Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations and conventions
- Family tree
- Prologue
- Introduction
- 1 A Frontier Society?
- 2 The Socio-Political Structure of the Middle March
- 3 The Administrative Structure of the Middle March
- 4 Middle March Men in Central Government
- 5 Crime, Feud and Violence
- 6 The Road to Pacification, 1573–1597
- 7 Pacification, 1597–1625
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
1 - A Frontier Society?
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 March 2023
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of maps
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations and conventions
- Family tree
- Prologue
- Introduction
- 1 A Frontier Society?
- 2 The Socio-Political Structure of the Middle March
- 3 The Administrative Structure of the Middle March
- 4 Middle March Men in Central Government
- 5 Crime, Feud and Violence
- 6 The Road to Pacification, 1573–1597
- 7 Pacification, 1597–1625
- Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
‘It is impossible that scottis men and inglis men can remane in concord undir ane monarche or ane prince because there naturis and conditions ar as indefferent as is the nature of scheip and wolvis … [though] within ane ile and nythtbours, and of ane langage
for inglis men ar subtil and scottis men ar facile, inglis men ar ambitious in prosperite, and scottis men ar humane in prosperite, scottis men ar furious quhen thai ar violently subieckit, inglis men ar cruel quhen thai get victorie and scottis men ar merciful
[Yet] the familiarity that is betwix inglis men and scottis men in ane peace[ful] world at mercattis and conventions on the tua bordours is the cause of the treason that the scottis men committis contrar their natyfe country’
It is a truism that the Middle March's geographical location on the frontier between two periodically hostile kingdoms affected its political, administrative, social, economical and cultural circumstances. The presence of that borderline inevitably meant that the Middle March developed borderspecific characteristics that differentiated the region from Lowland Scotland. Additionally, the topographical nature of the land, moors, hills and ‘wastelands’, separated from the Lothians by the buttresses of the Moorfoot Hills and the Lammermuirs, contributes to an impression of an area ‘apart’ from its lowland neighbours: an ‘out-countrey’ divided from the ‘incuntry’; the barbarian dales from the ‘lawlands’; a region on the periphery of the kingdom, separated physically from its ‘centre’ in Edinburgh. Most recent work on frontier societies highlights these differences, pointing instead to the similarities, on some international borders, between the regions on either side: cross-border acculturation and/or assimilation, fraternisation and intermarriage, cultural and social similarities and militarisation which blurred the day-to-day significance of a political demarcation. The result has been the identification of a frontier zone, stretching for some miles back either side of the borderline. Thus for many historians, such as Patricia Bradley, the Anglo-Scottish border was not ‘a line drawn on a map’, but a ‘distinct area’ in which ‘No distinction must or, indeed, can be made between the men who claimed allegiance to England and those who were Scottish subjects … [T]hese men had far more in common with each other than with anyone else … [sharing] a similar economy, a similar dialect, and similar dislike of outside authority.’
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- Information
- The Scottish Middle March, 1573-1625Power, Kinship, Allegiance, pp. 23 - 46Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2010