BC (Before Chisto)

Scota with Goídel Glas, voyaging from Egypt, as depicted in a 15th-century manuscript of the Scotichronicon of Walter Bower.

AD - Romans

Scotland’s recorded history began with the arrival of the Roman Empire. AD = Anno Domini, Medieval Latin for "in the year of the Lord"

AD500 to 1000

The emergence of a Nation…

 
 
 

1000 to 1200

Becoming a feudal society

In the 12th century the Kingdom of Alba continued to grow and became a feudal society

1200’s

The peace of the Alexanders

A period of relative peace in Scotland. During the reigns of Alexander II and then Alexander III, more land was turned over to agriculture, trade with the continent bolstered the economy and monasteries and abbeys grew and flourished around the country.

1300’s

Fighting for Independence

Edward I king of England, believed he should be recognised as overlord of Scotland – he marches his troops north in a series of bloody sieges.

Division

the Stewart dynasty

1450

The Union of the Crowns; a Renaissance in Scotland

The cultural, intellectual and artistic movement that took hold around Europe brought significant changes to Scotland; education, intellectual life, literature, art, architecture, music and politics all advanced in the late 15th century.

1542

Mary Queen of Scots

Her reign was marked by Catholic-Protestant conflict and civil unrest in a period known as the ‘rough wooing’.

Elizabeth I of England imprisoned Mary (worried about the possibility of a Catholic plot against her, and her plausible claim to the crown of England) and later, after almost 19 years of captivity, had her executed at Fotheringhay Castle in Northamptonshire in 1567 at the age of 44.

1600

The Union of the Crowns

James VI succeeded the throne at just 13 months old after Mary was forced to abdicate. When Elizabeth I died with no children, James VI succeeded to the English throne and became James VI & I – a historic move that’s now known as the Union of the Crowns.

1690

Jacobite rising

1707

The Act of Union

In 1707 The Act of Union brought Scotland even closer to Britain by creating a single Parliament of the United Kingdom of Great Britain at the Palace of Westminster.

1744

The Jacobite rebellion

1746

Battle of Culloden & Highland Clearances

1750 +

The Age of Enlightenment

The ideas from philosophers living in Scotland during The Age of Enlightenment shaped the modern world. The intellectual movement sought to understand the natural world and the human mind and ranged across philosophy, chemistry, geology, engineering, technology, poetry, medicine, economics and history.

1800

Urban and Industrial Scotland

Industrial advances and wealth accumulated from the trade of tobacco, sugar and cotton bring about the dawn of urban Scotland at the turn of the 19th century. The country shifted from rural to urban, and huge towns, massive factories and heavy industry took hold. Mining, shipbuilding and textiles were very important to Scotland’s development during this time.

1914

Wars

Scottish soldiers played a significant role in the First World War and Glasgow’s Clyde side was an important centre during the war as well – products from the shipyards, steel works and iron foundaries were vital to the war effort.

1990s

Scottish culture worldwide

Films like Braveheart and Trainspotting helped to establish Scotland as a cultural powerhouse; authors, artists and musicians from Scotland were enjoying renewed success. J.K. Rowling wrote the global phenomenon Harry Potter in Edinburgh, and in 1997 scientists from the Roslin Institute successfully cloned the first mammal from an adult cell, Dolly the Sheep.

Source: a combination of Scotland.org , undiscovered Scotland and BritRoyals