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In
Scotland, it seems to me, myth has played a far more important part in
history than it has in England. Indeed, I believe that the whole
history of Scotland has been coloured by myth; and that myth, in
Scotland, is never driven out by reality, or by reason, but lingers on
until another myth has been discovered, or elaborated, to replace it.
I believe that three consecutive myths have successively filled the 400
years of Scottish history from the 16th century to the 20th. The
political myth, the literary myth and the sartorial myth, which is with
us still.
These
myths, though they may explode on contact with the evidence, are
nevertheless historically important. It became a part of the national
honour to maintain them - at least until a new myth should be imported
to drive them out.
The
early history of all countries is obscure; but the mist which envelops
the early history of Scotland is unique, both in density and duration.
It was thickened and prolonged by national pride and deliberate
myth-making. As late as the end of the 18th century, the racial origins
of the Scots and their relationship with the Irish was a matter of
learned dispute; and the ablest scholars were led, by blind or
interested guides, and by deliberate forgeries, into the grossest
errors.
In 1729, the
first and greatest of Scottish antiquaries, Father Thomas Innes - an
exiled Catholic priest and Jacobite who stood outside the interested
intellectual establishment of Scotland - had destroyed the basis of the
Scottish myths. But his work was barely noticed; and in 1776 even
Edward Gibbon, misled by “two learned and ingenious Highlanders”, would
be totally wrong about the origin of the Scots. A few years later
Gibbon would discover another and better guide. John Pinkerton, whom he
would patronise and encourage, would prove to be the ablest Scottish
antiquary after Innes. But he too would fall into error when he came to
the origin of the Picts. It was not until the late 19th century that
the mists of myth would be scientifically cleared away and at least the
outline of early Scottish history become visible.
Until the late 11th
century, at least, Scottish history was preserved, with reasonable
accuracy, in record or memory, and commemorated by the bards who
recited royal succession lists on ceremonial occasions. But from that
time the mists began to gather and that outline was gradually obscured
and distorted by an ever-thickening cloud of mythology: a cloud that
would not be effectively dispersed till another seven centuries had
passed.
The process began
spontaneously among the Scots as a bid to capture history, like
everything else, from the Picts. It was quickened by an external force:
the national struggle with England for independence. It was
consecrated, in the 16th century, by the most advanced thinkers of the
time: the cultivated, cosmopolitan Scottish humanists of the
Renaissance.
For the 200 years between
Kenneth MacAlpin in the mid-9th century and Malcolm III in the later
11th century we have, essentially, two kinds of sources that tell us
something of how the Scots recorded and interpreted their history.
Lists of kings in the royal succession were preserved: these would be
recited publicly at enthronements and no doubt on other important
occasions. The length and continuity of the royal succession, thus
proclaimed, would emphasise the crucial role played by the monarchy in
the fortunes of its people. There were also folk memories, stories
about the origin and character of the people, which crystallised
occasionally as fragments embedded in the chronicles kept by monks, but
which might also appear in connection with the king-lists.
The information in the
king-lists is narrow; that in the folk stories wider, but also
woollier. These two kinds of sources, exiguous as they are, reveal,
separately or in conjunction, at least an outline of the Scottish
self-image as it developed.
Of the king-lists there are
several versions, reflecting the periodic need to revise and update
them, and also their copying and deposit in different parts of the
country - not to mention their diffusion outside Scotland itself - and,
of course, the hazards of their survival or destruction.
The process of copying and
revision always entailed a risk of scribal error: through misreading,
misspelling, or accidental omission or intrusion of names. Another
technical problem was just how to display, for the unified monarchy of
later times, its inheritance from the earlier dual monarchies: from the
parallel monarchies of the Picts and the Scots, which had coexisted for
some 300 years.
The problem could be dealt
with in different ways: there were separate lists of Pictish kings and
of Dalriadan kings, and lists which attempted a combination. It is by
tracing the changes made to these king-lists over time that we can
observe the gradually developing current that was, in the end, to sweep
the Picts out of the historical record, and produce, instead, an
ever-longer and more glorious past for the Scots.
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