Page 88 - (DK Eyewitness) Travel Guide - Scotland
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SC O TLAND  REGION  B Y  REGION      87

                                                                              SOUTHERN

                                                                              SCOTLAND


                                                                              Southern Scotland is a blend of attractive landscapes and historic
                                                                              houses, castles and abbeys. Sadly, many of these ancient buildings
                                                                              exist only in fortified or ruined form due to the fron tier wars that
                                                                              dated from the late 13th century. The rounded hills of the Scottish
                                                                              Borders and the more rugged peaks of Dumfries & Galloway bore
                                                                              the brunt of this fierce conflict between Scotland and England.

                                                                              In 1296 Scotland committed itself to    the great dramas of Scottish history have
                                                                              the Wars of Independence against the   been played out in the South. Robert the
                                                                              English, and it was Southern Scotland that  Bruce’s guerrilla army defeated an English
                                                                              suffered the most. The strife caused by the  force at Glen Trool in 1307, but Flodden,
                                                                              many bat tles lasted for three centuries, as   near Coldstream, was the scene of the
                                                                              first Scottish self-deter mination, and then   country’s worst military reverse in 1513,
                                                                              alliances with France, led to strained   when King James IV of Scotland and
                                                                              relations between Scotland and its   thou sands of his men fell in battle. Today,
                                                                              southern neighbour, England. Dryburgh,   the quiet countryside around the Borders
                                                                              one of the area’s magnificent 12th-century  market towns, and the beautiful
                                                                              abbeys, was burned twice by the English,   mountain scenery in Dum fries & Galloway,
                                                                              first in 1322 and then again in 1544.  seem to belie such violent history. The
                                                                                The virtual independence of the Borders  area is now known for its manufacturing
                                                                              district brought further conflict. Powerful   of textiles and for promoting its literary
                                                                              families had operated under local laws set  associations, as Sir Walter Scott lived at
                                                                              in place since the mid-12th century, and   Abbotsford, near St Boswells. But it is
                                                                              when Scottish kings were not fighting the  the ruins of the great Border abbeys,
                                                                              English, they led raids into the Border   castles and battlegrounds that serve as
                                                                              country to try and bring it back under   a reminder of Southern Scotland’s
                                                                              central control. Over the years, some of   turbulent past.























                                                                              Fishing in the tranquil waters of the River Tweed, which weaves its way through the Border country
                                                                               Ruins of 12th-century Jedburgh Abbey, one of many abbeys destroyed during conflicts with England



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