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A Short History of Scotland

Chapter 2 CHRISTIANITY-THE RIVAL KINGDOMS.

Word Count: 640    |    Released on: 30/11/2017

nity, for though the Roman Church of St Ninian (397), at Whithern in Galloway, left embers of the faith not extinct near Glasgow, St Kentigern's country,

and journeyed to Inverness, the capital of Pictland. Here his miracles overcame the magic of the King's druids; and his Majesty, Brude, came into the fold, his people following him. Columba was no less of a diplomatist than of an evangelist. In a crys

ed men, too, of whom Columba was far the foremost. We see the saint's inkpot upset by a clumsy but enthusiastic convert; we even make acquaintance with the old white pony of the monastery, who mourned when St Columba was

f monks, with more regard for abbots than for their many bishops, and with peculiar tonsures, and a peculiar way of reckoning the date of

and and Westmorland, was named Strathclyde, and was peopled by British folk, speaking an ancient form of Welsh. On the east, from Ettrick forest into Lothian, the land was part of the early English kingdom of Bernicia; here the invading Angles were already settled-though river-names here remain Gaelic, and hill-names are often either Gaelic or Welsh. T

hile the English element gave its language to the Lowlands; it was adopted by the Celtic kings of the whol

elements, Irish, Pictish, Gaelic, Cymric, English,

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