The Scotsman

Crucial history

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IT SURPRISED me not that 40 per cent of young Britons do not know of the Battle of Britain, as stated in the opinion poll commission­ed by the RAF BF ahead of the anniversar­y (your report, 10 July).

History should be commemorat­ed to raise awareness of the importance of past events, such as the recent commemorat­ions of D-day and the Battle of Waterloo.

However, how many Scots, young or old, know of the importance of the Battle of Carham (1018), and will Scotland commemorat­e this pivotal event in our history?

The victorious Scottish forces were led by Malcolm II, and Owen the Bald, King of Strathclyd­e.

It was the decisive factor in settling the easterly part of the Scottish border and for the inclusion of Strathclyd­e into Scotland and subsequent­ly for the annexing of Lothian and establishi­ng the Scottish Border at the River Tweed.

Without Carham there would be no Scotland. Neither Edinburgh nor Glasgow would have been included in a Scotland whose southern border was north of the Forth and Clyde divide.

Thus by the sword and astute politics, Malcom became, as described in his obituary, the King of Scotia, the first time that this term had been applied to Scotland rather than that portion of Ireland from whence came the Dalriadic Scots.

Scotland gave up its independen­ce voluntaril­y in 1707.

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