Scotland during
the Medieval and Renaissance periods was divided, both physically and culturally, into two sections: the Highlands and the
Lowlands. The people of the mountainous Highlands to the northwest remained primitive and uninfluenced by the cultural and
scientific advances which made up the "Renaissance". The Highlanders descended almost exclusively from the Celtic
tribe known as the Picts, and fiercely retained their Celtic ancestral traditions. One of the things which distinguished the
Highlanders from the Lowlanders was that the Highlanders tended to adhere to the clan system of self-rule. The Highlands of
Scotland through the latter half of the 18th Century has been likened to the American "Wild West" due to the fact
that each of the family clans made and lived by their own laws. The mountainous terrain of the Highlands, offering natural
isolation, would have contributed somewhat to the Highlander's separatist temperament.
The people of the
Lowlands, on the other hand, descended from an intermingling of at least nine different races: the aboriginal natives, the Gaels,
the Britons, the Romans, the Teutonic Angles, the Saxons, the Normans, the Flemish, and the Scots. The last named group, the
Scots, were a Celtic tribe which originated in Ireland and had, during the Third and Fourth Centuries AD, invaded and established
colonies in Alba, as Scotland was then known.
The Lowlanders, being descended from so many different races, could not help but
influence, and be influenced by, each other. That intermingling contributed to the process of civilizing the people as a whole.
And as the people of the Scottish Lowlands became more civilized, the concept of the clan as a political and social structure gave
way, around the Twelfth Century, to the concept of feudalism. That meant that the people pledged their loyalty to the feudal
lord rather than to a particular family or clan.
The Lowlanders were a hardened people. The Lowlands acted as a buffer zone
between England and the Scottish Highlands. The English and the Highlanders had been enemies for many centuries. The few
instances of congeniality they showed to each other were largely the result of a few politically motivated royal marriages. The
Highlanders had resisted the Romans and all the succeeding invaders who had attempted to subjugate them, and they
occasionally launched raids against the English. In the process, the Lowlands region, lying between the two opponents, was
invariably overrun by them. Life in the Lowlands was therefore neither easy nor particularly stable. The continual struggle to
exist, which was the daily life of the Scottish Lowlanders, molded and toughened them, and despite the devastation that the
Highlanders and English wreaked on their homes and farmlands, they survived.
Two things led up
to the migration of large numbers of Scottish Lowlanders across the water that separated Scotland from Ireland. The one was
starvation; the other was King James I of England's scheme of colonization.
Scotland, at the
start of the 1700s, was a very poor country. The best farmlands were in the Lowlands, but those farmlands were overrun by the
Highlanders and the English so often, that the Lowlanders were not motivated to work very hard to make their farms profitable.
They simply did as best as they could to keep alive. In addition to that, the Scots were overall ignorant of "modern"
farming methods. They knew little about the value of crop rotation. They tended to plant the same crop year after year
until the ground was practically depleted of any nutrients. An English traveler who visited the Lowlands of Scotland in the
early 1700s noted that, for the most part, the countryside was so barren that grass did not even grow there.
When Queen
Elizabeth I died in 1603 the throne of England went to her
nephew, James Stuart, who was crowned King James I. James had
previously become King James VI of Scotland in 1567 upon the
abdication of his mother, Mary, Queen of Scots. The kingdoms of
England and Scotland were not formally united until the Treaty of
Union was signed in 1707 under Queen Anne. Nevertheless, King
James, by virtue of sitting on the thrones of both kingdoms,
carried out a number of projects which affected both. James was
particularly interested in establishing colonies, or as he called
them "plantations", in foreign lands. He is most noted
for the Jamestown Plantation established in 1607.
In 1610 King
James put into operation his scheme for the plantation of the
Irish province of Ulster. Like those he established in North
America, the Ulster Plantation would prove to be a success.
The colony that
was established in Ulster in 1610 was not the first attempt by
the English to colonize and subdue Ireland. In fact, the English
were not even the first foreign nation to attempt to conquer the
island. The earliest noted instance of invasion against the
natives of the island was made around the Fourth Century by
Christian missionaries from Gaul. They established monasteries
throughout Ireland and eventually converted the Celtic natives to
Christianity. From the beginning of the Ninth Century through the
year 950 AD, the Vikings made a number of invasions into the
island and exerted their power over it. Then, in 1166, as a
result of an Internal struggle for lordship over the province of
Leinster, the Cambro-Norman barons under King Henry II were
invited by the claimant, King Dermot to intervene in the civil
strife. This was just the opportunity that the English monarchy
had been waiting for. The Cambro-Normans invaded the island,
conquered Leinster for Dermot and then proceeded to attack the
surrounding provinces. They established a number of English
strongholds, the most notable of which was in and around Dublin.
From that point through the Sixteenth Century the English
government treated Ireland the same as it treated the North
American Continent - as if it had some inherent right to colonize
it. The English court granted tracts of land throughout Ireland
to the barons and knights who had assisted in the invasion. They,
in turn, established feudal estates and brought peasants from
England and Wales as colonists. The Irish natives resisted
subjection and at times re-conquered the lands taken from them.
This process of English invasion and Irish revolt against the
English continued sporadically for the next few centuries. Queen
Elizabeth I made four attempts: one each in the provinces of
Leinster and Munster in the 1560s and twice in Ulster in the
1570s. But each of those attempts ultimately failed because the
English settlers either became disillusioned and returned home to
England or intermarried with the Irish and adopted their customs
and their hatred of the English colonization schemes. Although a
small number of attempts at colonization experienced limited
success, the English could not claim any clear victory until the
Ulster Plantation scheme was undertaken.
Hugh O'Neill, the
Earl of Tyrone, a large portion of the province of Ulster,
attempted to gain control of the entire province in the
early-1590s. He raised an army with the help of some English
adventurers and set about subduing the lesser officials in
Ulster. The English settlers in Ulster began to fear that
O'Neill's aims might be to likewise expel them from the province,
and prepared to confront him. In order to bolster his own army of
Irishmen, O'Neill elicited the aid of Spanish soldiers. King
Philip III of Spain sent O'Neill a force of 4,000 men. Queen
Elizabeth responded by sending an army of nearly 20,000
Englishmen against O'Neill's army. In 1601 the two armies
collided at Kinsale in Munster. The Irish suffered a great defeat
and the English army that had been sent to quell the rebellion
did not stop at just that. The English destroyed all of the
homes, food and livestock they came across in the province. The
utter destruction of the native Irish farmsteads paved the way
for a colonization scheme by Queen Elizabeth's successor, King
James I.
With the defeat
of the Irish under O'Neill, their lands in Ulster, which amounted
to roughly six of the nine counties in that province, were
declared to be forfeited to the English court. After he had
divided up those lands, and designated portions which were to be
granted to lords and gentry of England, members of the army that
had participated in the Irish campaign, and the church, there was
almost one half million acres for a settlement of the common
people. It was originally King James' intention to settle
Londoners and Scots in the Ulster Plantation. London was overly
crowded with nearly 250,000 residents and the Lowlands of
Scotland, as noted previously, had been struggling to survive for
many years. By sending a large number of these two groups to
Ireland, the king hoped to benefit all around.
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