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Title: ... bodies, such as the Scottish Football League and th


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SCOTLAND
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GEOGRAPHY
  • Scotland is a nation in northwest Europe and
    a constituent country of the United Kingdom. The
    country occupies the northern third of the island
    of Great Britain, shares a land border to the
    south with England, and is bounded by the North
    Sea to the east, the Atlantic Ocean to the north
    and west, and the North Channel and Irish Sea to
    the south-west. Apart from the mainland, Scotland
    consists of over 790 islands.

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EDINBURGH
  • Gaelic, is the second-largest city in
    Scotland and its capital city.
  • It is Edinburgh pronounced in Scottish
    situated on the east coast of Scotland's central
    lowlands on the south shore of the Firth of Forth
    and in the unitary local authority of City of
    Edinburgh. It has been the capital of Scotland
    since 1437 and is the seat of the country's
    devolved government. The Old Town and New Town
    districts of Edinburgh were listed as a UNESCO
    World Heritage Site in 1995. In the census of
    2001, Edinburgh had a total resident population
    of 448,624.

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HISTORY
  • PREHISTORY

The history of Scotland begins around 10,000
years before the present day, when modern humans
first began to inhabit Scotland after the end of
the Devonian glaciations, the last ice age. Of
the Stone Age, Bronze Age, and Iron Age
civilizations that existed in the country, many
artifacts remain but few are of writing.
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Middle Ages
  • In the tenth and eleventh centuries,
    northern Great Britain was increasingly dominated
    by Gaelic culture. From a base in eastern
    Scotland north of the River Forth, the kingdom
    acquired control of the lands lying to the south.
    It had a flourishing culture, comprising part of
    the larger Gaelic-speaking world.
  • After the twelfth-century reign of King
    David I, the Scottish monarchs are better
    described as Scoto-Norman than Gaelic, preferring
    French culture to native Scottish culture.

Dunnottar Castle
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Union with England
  • In 1603, the Scottish King James VI of
    Scotland inherited the throne of the Kingdom of
    England, and became also "James I" of England.
    With the exception of a short period under The
    Protectorate, Scotland remained a separate state,
    but there was considerable conflict between the
    crown and the Covenanters over the form of church
    government.

Battle of Culloden
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Modern period
  • Following the Scottish Enlightenment and the
    Industrial Revolution, Scotland became one of the
    commercial, intellectual and industrial
    powerhouses of Europe. Its industrial decline
    following World War II was particularly acute,
    but in recent decades the country has enjoyed
    something of a cultural and economic renaissance,
    fuelled in part by a resurgent financial services
    and electronics sector, the proceeds of North Sea
    oil and gas, and latterly the devolved Scottish
    Parliament, established by the UK government
    under the Scotland Act 1998.

Scottish Cottage
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THE FLAG, THE COAT OF ARMS


The Flag of Scotland representing the cross of
the Christian martyr Saint Andrew, the patron
saint of Scotland, on a blue field. It is often
known as The Saltier or the Saint Andrew's Cross.
The Royal Coat of Arms of Scotland was the
official coat of arms of the monarchs of
Scotland, and were used as the official coat of
arms of the Kingdom of Scotland until the Union
of the Crowns in 1603.
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ECONOMY
  • The Scottish economy is closely linked with
    that of the rest of Europe and the wider Western
    world, with a heavy emphasis on exporting. It is
    essentially a market economy with some government
    intervention. After the Industrial Revolution,
    the Scottish economy concentrated on heavy
    industry, dominated by the shipbuilding, coal
    mining and steel industries. Scottish
    participation in the British Empire also allowed
    the Scottish economy to export its output
    throughout the world. However heavy industry
    declined in the latter part of the 20th century
    leading to a remarkable shift in the economy of
    Scotland towards a technology and service
    sector-based economy.


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SCOTTISH INVENTIONS
  • Since before the Industrial Revolution, Scots
    have been at the forefront of innovation and
    discovery across a wide range of spheres the
    steam engine, the pedal bicycle, macadam roads,
    the telephone, television, the transistor, the
    motion picture, penicillin, electromagnetics,
    radar, insulin, calculus and animal cloning are
    only a few of the most significant products of
    Scottish ingenuity.

Radar
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RELIGION
  • The Church of Scotland, also referred to as
    The Kirk, is the national church. It is a
    Presbyterian Church. It is not subject to state
    control nor is it "established" as is the Church
    of England within England. It was formally
    recognised as independent of the UK Parliament by
    the Church of Scotland Act 1921, settling
    centuries of dispute between church and state
    over jurisdiction in spiritual matters.

St Andrews Cathedral Ruins Front
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EDUCATION
  • Education in Scotland has a long history of
    universal provision of public education, and is a
    distinctly different system to elsewhere in the
    United Kingdom. Traditionally, the Scottish
    system has emphasised breadth across a range of
    subjects, while the English, Welsh and Northern
    Irish system has emphasised greater depth of
    education over a smaller range of subjects at
    secondary school level.

University of Glasgow at night
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SCHOOL YEARS
  • Nursery School
  • Age 3 - 5.
  • Primary School
  • Primary 1, age range 4 - 6.
  • Primary 2, age range 5 - 7.
  • Primary 3, age range 6 - 8.
  • Primary 4, age range 7 - 9.
  • Primary 5, age range 8 - 10.
  • Primary 6, age range 9 - 11.
  • Primary 7, age range 10 - 12.
  • Secondary School
  • Secondary 1 (First Year), age range 11 - 13.
  • Secondary 2 (Second Year), age range 12 - 14.
  • Secondary 3 (Third Year), age range 13 - 15.
  • Secondary 4 (Fourth Year), age range 14 - 16.
  • Secondary 5 (Fifth Year), age range 15 - 17.
  • Secondary 6 (Sixth Year), age range 16 - 18.

University of St Andrews
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LITERATURE
  • Scottish literature has had a long and
    successful history. In Scotland, the most famous
    works are perhaps those of Robert Burns, widely
    regarded as the national poet of Scotland. The
    works of Burns, mostly written in the Scots
    language, is celebrated annually on Burns' Night
    (January 25). Other famous Scottish writers
    include Walter Scott, James Hogg, JM Barrie,
    Arthur Conan Doyle, Robert Louis Stevenson and
    more recently, Alexander McCall Smith, Ian
    Rankin, Iain Banks and Irvine Welsh. J.K. Rowling
    wrote the first Harry Potter book, The
    Philosopher's Stone, in a coffee shop in
    Edinburgh.

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SPORT
  • Scotland has its own sporting competitions
    and governing bodies, such as the Scottish
    Football League and the Scottish Rugby Union.
    This gives the country independent representation
    at many international sporting events, for
    example the football World Cup and the
    Commonwealth Games although notably not the
    Olympic Games.

Association Football is the most popular sport
in the country, both played and watched. The
Scottish Football Association is the second
oldest national football association in the
world.
Scottish professional rugby union clubs compete
in the Celtic League.
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  • Scotland is the "Home of Golf", and is
    well-known for its many links courses, including
    the Old Course at St Andrews.
  • Scotland is the home of curling (2002 Olympic
    champions, women) which, although not as popular
    today as in Canada, remains more popular in
    Scotland than anywhere else in Europe.
  • The Highland Games are another distinctive
    feature of the national sporting culture.

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Tee for the first hole at The Links at Spanish
Bay
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Bunkers at Filton Golf Club
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TournamentPlayersClub Sawgrass17thHole
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TRANSPORT
  • Railways

Scotland has an extensive railway network
utilizing cross country links across the country,
and connections to England local commuter links
to the major cities and freight. The railway
network is owned by Network Rail, the non-profit
organization responsible for all of the UK's
railway infrastructure. Rail services are
provided under franchises awarded by the
government. The current holder of the Scottish
franchise is First Scot Rail, a division of First
Group plc. Intercity services are also operated
by Virgin Trains and GNER.
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A First ScotRail train at Edinburgh's Waverley
station.
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Road

Scotland has an extensive road network throughout
the country. The motorway network is concentrated
in the Central belt, with dual-carriageways (A
roads) connecting the rest of the country.
Within the large cities, roads become congested
in peak hours. The M8 motorway becomes heavily
congested in peak hours, especially around
Glasgow where it travels through the heart of the
city. The main congestion hotpots are in Glasgow
City Centre around the Kingston Bridge where a
large amount of traffic leaves and enter the
road.
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The M8 at Charing Cross (Junction 18) in Glasgow.
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Buses
  • Scotland is covered by a large bus network
    based at the two large terminals at Glasgow and
    Edinburgh.
  • Scottish Citylink and Megabus are the two
    principal long distance coach operators within
    Scotland. National Express provide coach links
    with cities in England and local buses in Dundee
    under the Travel Dundee name.

A Neoplan Skyliner coach in Manchester on a
journey from London to Aberdeen
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Water
  • As Scotland is made up of several islands,
    water has always been an important transport
    route for passengers and freight, particuarly in
    the remote communities of the Hebrides.

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A Caledonian MacBrayne ferry at Scrabster
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NATIONAL SYMBOLS
  • 1. Thistle is the common name of a
    polyphyletic group of flowering plants
    characterised by leaves with sharp spines on the
    margins, mostly in the plant family Asteraceae.
  • The thistle, in particular Onopordum acanthium
    (the cotton thistle or Scotch thistle), is the
    national flower of Scotland, and is featured in
    many Scottish symbols and logos. Legend has it
    that a Viking attacker stepped on one at night
    and cried out, so alerting the defenders of a
    Scottish castle.

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  • 2. A tartan is a specific woven pattern that
    often signifies a particular Scottish clan in the
    modern era. The pattern is made with alternating
    bands of coloured (pre-dyed) threads woven as
    both warp and weft at right angles to each other.
    The weft is woven two over - two under the warp,
    advancing one thread each pass, forming diagonal
    lines. The resulting blocks of colour repeat
    vertically and horizontally in a distinctive
    pattern of squares and lines known as a sett.

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