How to use Timeline

You can move up and down the timeline using the date bands: the bottom band moves you along centuries quickly and the middle bank moves along decades. Click on individual events to see more details and description.

Timeline of Scottish History

A timeline of events in Scottish History!. Scroll through a growing chronology of events and click on them for more details and links

History of Scotland

Our ongoing history of Scotland that chronicles the events in Scotland over the past million years with a special focus on the last thousand as you might expect. We have also digitised a copy of Patrick Tytler's  History of Scotland which is an eccentric but wonderfully written history of the the mediaeval years in Scotland. The project of chronicling Scotland's history is ongoing, as is the process of organising and structuring and linking the pages together.

Scotland Before Romans

The Beginning of Scotland before 500 BC

Dates: 3,000,000,000 BC — 500 BC

3,000,000,000 BC Lewisian gneiss rocks, thought to be some of the oldest in existence, first formed.

400,000,000 BC Scotland is first formed when fragments of another continent meld together.

300,000,000 BC Scotland lies on the equator covered by rainforests, and with coral reefs offshore.

200,000,000 BC Dinosaurs roam the lands.

9,500 BC Last ice age.

8,000 BC First humans believed to have arrived in Scotland.

6,000 BC Land link between Britain and Europe finally broken.

3,000 BC Skara Brae on Orkney populated; Callanish erected.

500 BC Age of crannogs and brochs.

Scotland's history stretches back to the beginning of the Earth itself. It contains some of the oldest, most varied and most interesting rocks on the planet, and its astonishing geological history can still be seen all around us today. Man came late, but when he arrived, he quickly captured the land for himself, learning to grow crops and building sophisticated settlements for security and defence

EVER since the dawn of time, Scotland has been separate from the rest of the UK. It has drifted around the planet since the world was formed - but only relatively recently has it become physically linked to England.

For billions of years, the two countries have been separated from each other by thousands of miles. It is only in the last 400 million years or so that Scotland and England have become a single geographical unit.

In the early days of the planet, what is now Scotland was joined with present-day North America in a huge prehistoric landmass called Laurentia.

Parts of the Western Isles, the Highlands, Iona, Coll and Tiree are made up of a rock called Lewisian gneiss, which is one of the oldest forms of rock in the world.

As the world gradually formed over hundreds of millions of years, Scotland roamed around the planet, finally joining up with what would become England some 410 million years ago.

Over the course of its long history, Scotland has found itself exposed to a massive variety of different climates. It has been a tropical swamp, a barren desert, and a hot, equatorial land surrounded by beautiful coral seas.

Unfortunately for us, it eventually moved northwards, settling at the north west fringe of what would eventually become Europe on the edge of what we would come to call the Atlantic Ocean. It is this position which gives us the cool and wet climate we have today.

There is plenty of evidence that Scotland was home to a rich variety of prehistoric creatures - including, of course, dinosaurs.

The Isle of Skye in particular has proved to be a rich hunting ground for fossilised remains of creatures from this era. No less than five sets of dinosaur remains have been found, all of them hugely important to geologists.

The famous Bearsden Shark (link to pdf) - discovered by the fossil hunter Stan Wood near Glasgow in 1982 - is the world's most perfectly preserved shark of its kind and dates back 330 million years, providing us with a valuable insight into life on Earth at that time.

During these periods, Scotland was a warm place - certainly much warmer than it is today. But during its history, it has also been through periods of intense cold. In the last million years or so, for instance, it has been through an ice age about six times.

Each time, the landscape would have been covered in ice hundreds of feet thick - so thick, in fact, that only the highest mountains would have stuck through the top of it.

This process, which lasted until about 10,000 years ago, helped to shape the Scotland we see around us today. The freezing and melting of the ice cut channels in the rock and deposited silt and rock, forming areas such as the terraces around Inverness, the low-lying land around Glasgow, and the bleak expanse of present-day Rannoch Moor.

Yet as all this happened, the shape of the land itself was continuing to change. By now Scotland was firmly joined to England, but the whole was still attached to the Continent. As the land masses continued to shift, Britain only became an island around 6000BC.

Perhaps 2000 years before then, however, another remarkable event had occurred - people had arrived for the first time. We obviously know very little about these first Scots, though they would have been primitive hunter-gatherers, probably originating from the Mediterranean.

There would have been plenty of food to eat - meat and fish as well as fruits, vegetables and nuts - but life would have been extremely harsh and tough. For a start, they would have had to compete for food and existence with creatures which do not exist here today, such as the bear and the wolf.

We have firm evidence of human settlement as far back as 8000BC from an ancient refuse pit discovered near Biggar in Lanarkshire (archeology group website). It's thought that these first Scots would have lived together in tiny colonies of perhaps just a few people to start with, although we believe that the population of the nation as a whole grew after 5000BC.

Around 1000 years after that, there is evidence that cereal started to be grown here. By then, a primitive system of barter had also probably been established.

Most of the land was very different to the way we see it today. With the exception of the highest mountains, it would have been covered with forest - not the best sort of landscape for crop cultivation.

For the first time, man started to manage his environment, clearing the woodland by burning it down and then planting crops. He also continued to hunt and fish, of course, but this new type of cultivation proved to be highly successful, helping the population to grow further.

As the years passed, so societies became more sophisticated and complex. Settlements such as Skara Brae on Orkney - the best preserved Neolithic village in northern Europe - were populated for hundreds of years up until about 2500BC.

They consisted of small, squat but solid houses made of stone. Inside was a constantly burning fire, box beds and a dresser containing ornaments which indicated a family's importance. |t certainly appears that people lived in family groups rather than communally.

The residents would probably have eaten well - beef, venison, lamb and perhaps pork or boar as well as cereals such as barley and a variety of fish. They may have used oil from stranded whales for fuel as well as driftwood.

As Scotland's people evolved, so they started to ascribe to a new set of beliefs, erecting mysterious stone circles, earthworks and burial mounds. They also started to carve strange cup and ring symbols on rocks which we can still see today.

We don't understand the meaning of these symbols, though the sites chosen appear to be sacred and may well have strong links with some form of pre-Christian religion.

Scotland's stone circles in particular are some of Britain's most impressive ancient structures, with Callanish on Lewis in particular rivalling Stonehenge in terms of size and impact.

As circles such as Callanish are precisely aligned to the sun, moon and stars, we can speculate that they were used for some form of exact astronomical calculation - though what, of course, remains a baffling mystery.

However, these early Scots didn't just make their mark on land - they did so on the water, too, building lake dwelling settlements known as crannogs on lochs in places such as Perthshire, the Highlands and the Western Isles.

Why should they go to the trouble of doing this? Probably because they felt under threat - perhaps from other tribal groups - and living on water gave them a feeling of defence and security.

Certainly these complex wooden structures, which date from around 500BC, were formidable and would have been difficult to attack. A rebuilt example of a crannog is now in existence at Kenmore in Perthshire, where it can be visited during summer months.

Another type of building dating from this period was the broch - large round wood or stone Iron Age towers apparently used as farmhouses.

During this period, no-one thought of Scotland as a separate country. It was principally a peaceful, highly evolved farming nation where people's main concern was looking after their families and surviving as best they could.

And that was the way it was to remain - at least, until the Romans arrived.

Q1: Is the any evidence of Scotland's early geological formation left?
Answer:
Plenty - it's all around you. Look at the buildings, for instance. The granite structures of Aberdeen, warm red tenements of Glasgow and blonde sandstone of Edinburgh's New Town all contain stone from various periods in Scotland's ancient past.

Q2: How have we managed to find so much evidence of our history?
Answer:
Often, by nothing more than pure chance and accident. Over the course of history, explorers and scientists have stumbled on some remarkable treasures. Many fossils have been found in this way, as have precious artefacts from periods such as the bronze and iron ages. You can see many of the finds in Scotland's national museums

Q3: Presumably, after moving all over the globe hundreds of millions of years ago, Scotland has now finally come to a standstill?
Answer:
Actually, it hasn't. It's still shifting away from North America at about seven or eight centimetres every year. That's about the rate at which your nails grow.

Q4: Can we be sure that humans arrived about 8000BC?
Answer:
Not really - in fact, there is some evidence they may have been living in Scotland thousands of years before this. A flint scraper was found in seawater off Shetland in an area which was dry land 18,000 years ago. The big question is: does it date from then, or was it dropped overboard later?

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Sean Connery

Sean Connery / Actor

  • Name  : Connery
  • Born  : 1930
  • Died  :
  • Category  : Actors
  • Finest Moment : Being present at the official opening of Scotland's first Parliament since 1707

Award winning actor, sex symbol, passionate Scot and now a Knight of the British realm - Sean Connery has certainly made his mark since his humble beginnings in Edinburgh's Fountainbridge area.

After giving up a career in the Royal Navy due to health problems, he tried his hand at a number of occupations including milk man, coffin polisher, lifeguard and artists model.

In the early 1950s his enthusiasm for bodybuilding saw him represent Scotland in the Mr Universe contest where he finished an impressive third. His physique also won him a role in the chorus line of the musical South Pacific.

Some stage and television work followed but it was not until 1962 when he was cast as Ian Fleming's secret agent James Bond in the first 007 film Dr No that he began his rise to international superstardom.

Connery played Bond seven times. His last appearance was in the 1983 Never Say Never Again. Although a number of actors have taken on the Bond mantle, notably Roger Moore and more recently Pierce Brosnan, Connery remains for many film fans the definitive 007.

Some of his finest performances though have been in other roles. In 1956 he played an army prisoner in the dark and brutal film The Hill while in 1975 he starred alongside Michael Caine in The Man Who Would Be King.

His 1986 performance in The Name Of The Rose won him a BAFTA award for Best Actor and in 1987 he won an Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor for his portrayal of an Irish policeman in The Untouchables.

He has also starred alongside Harrison Ford in Indiana Jones and The Last Crusade, opposite Catherine Zeta Douglas in Entrapment and as the voice of the dragon in the children's film Dragonheart.

In 1998 Connery hit the headlines again after he was left out of the UK's New Year's Honours List. His support for Scottish independence and his financial support for the SNP was said to be the reason.

He was eventually awarded a knighthood in July 2000 and became Sir Sean Connery. That same month he returned to his hometown to witness the official opening of Scotland's first Parliament in nearly 300 years.

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Second World War

Second World War & Scotland

No event in modern history has caused as much upheaval in Scotland as the Second World War.

The battle against Hitler once again saw Scots in the front line of the fighting - only this time, civilians at home suffered as much as the soldiers, sailors and airmen who were confronting the enemy directly.

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Thirteenth Century

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Thirteenth Century Scotland

  • 1214

William I dies and is succeeded by Alexander II.

  • 1250

Pope Innocent IV declares Margaret a saint. Her remains, along with Malcolm's, are moved to a shrine outside Dunfermline Abbey.

  • 1270

William Wallace born.

  • 1272

Edward I becomes King of England.

  • 1274

Robert the Bruce born, in either Essex or Ayrshire.

  • 1291

Wallace declared an outlaw.

  • 1292

John Balliol becomes King of Scots.

  • 1292

Bruce becomes Earl of Carrick.

  • 1296

Edward invades Scotland. Balliol abdicates and is captured by the English. Edward becomes overlord.

  • 1297

Wallace sacks Lanark.

  • 1297

Bruce is believed to have knighted William Wallace after the battle of Stirling Bridge.

  • 1297

Battle of Stirling Bridge.

  • 1298

Wallace slips away to France.

  • 1298

Bruce appointed Guardian of Scotland, along with John "The Red" Comyn.

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Thomas Chalmers

Thomas Chalmers / Religious Figures

  • Name  : Chalmers
  • Born  : 1740
  • Died  : 1847
  • Category  : Religious Figures
  • Finest Moment : Christian and Civic Economy of Large Towns (3 vols., 1821-26)

Born 17 March 1780, at Anstruther in Fife, Chalmers went to St Andrews University aged 11. He was made a minister at Kilmeny parish in Fife, in 1803. An influential publication for him was William Wilberforce's Practical View of the Prevailing Religious System (1797). Chalmers, who was interested more in solving human problems, particularly those of the poor, than playing about with religious doctrines, took an evangelical stance, and became popular for his great orations at the pulpit of Tron parish, in Glasgow.

In 1819, he became minister at St John's in Glasgow, the largest, and poorest parish in the city. He received permission from the city to administer charitable donations made to the church, and was successful in helping the poor more efficiently. He returned to St Andrews as Professor of Moral Philosophy in 1823, five years later moving to Edinburgh University as Professor of Divinity. Religious politics, like it or not, began to impinge on his active mind when, in 1843, there arose the Disruption. This was a mass walk out at the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland by 203 commissioners, in protest for the right of parishioners to choose their own minister (rather than have one chosen by a patron).

Chalmers was then made Moderator of the new Free Church of Scotland, and was later made principal of the church's College, founded in Edinburgh for ministerial training. He was still principal when he died, on 30 May 1847, in Edinburgh.

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