Scotland. 



[GENERAL 



i-3 



244 I 



266 



2S4 

 29S 

 30S 



3i« 



313 



Scotland. 1 



360-3*7 The Scots invade tlic Roman jiart of 



Britian - . . i, 211-257 



500JI A iVeOi Colony of Scots fettle in Argyle - 222 



■ Tlicir in:!niifa(5tui'es, Sec 



718 They fi;:ht tlie firft niVal battle recorded in 



Britini hiftory 

 S36 Said to have a great filTiing trade 

 843 They acquire a great pint of the Pichtilh do- 

 minions - — 

 q^jo A filver cafe made and engraved in Scotland 

 1037-1054 Country llourilliing in the reign of Mac. 

 beth by the filliery, and receives a balance 

 from foreigners - - . 

 j666 Scotland has a]>pnrentlv no large towns 

 1 093 II Trade encouraged by King Malcolm 

 1098 Scotland deprived of Kentire by* a quibble 

 1 120 The king rich, has fome foreign luxuries 

 ii24-it53 Coiumerce and iiuprovements — manufac- 

 ttne — new towns inhabited by Eni'lifhmcn 

 — m.:nufaChires regulated 



— Laws of the burghs — the Scots fail to foreign 



countiies - - . . 



King David has a (ilver mine in Cumberland 



— - l-'ilhcry for herrings, Sec in the Firth of Forth 



324, ^25 

 1 156 IjTrading towns of Scotland 



Money coined by hilhops 



1190 Scotland pays jf 10,000 to England 

 1495 The money of Scotland reformed 

 1209 The burghs contribute a large Aim to tlie kino- 



— the woolen manufafture dvc. regulated 



Flax raifed — fiflieries — trade to Norway 



1140 The country pillaged by the pope 



J 249 A Ihip built at Invernefsfor France 



1250 Tlie money rccoined and improved 



1266 The kingdom of Mann, I'cc purchafed by Kin"- 



Alexander - - . 



i272';'|Revenuc of the kingdom 

 1274 The Flemings fi(h on the coaft of Scotland 

 1:81 Salt filh an edablilhed article of exportation on 



both fides of Scotland 

 1183 The fiatutes of the gild cnafted at Berwick 

 ' The court of the four burghs, a board of trade 



■ the chamberlain's court 



1249-1286 Agriculture promoted — plentiful crops — 



juftl.iws — flouridiingtiade — Lombards pro. 



pofe to eftablifli tailorics— a Flemilh factory 



— the chief trade at Berwick . . 44- 



The magiltr.icy of the towns - . 446 



— — Injudicious laws — (hipping — general opulence 447 



1191 Firll certain notice of a coal mine - 450 

 £304 The king of England attempts to crurti the Scot- 



tilh trade in Fraice and Flanders 272, 473 



1315 The Scots preferve the independence of Flan 



ders .... 



1321 A truce with England — no intercourfe — a Scot 

 ti(h and a Flemidi vefl'el releafed in Eng- 

 land - . . . 

 132^ Another truce — ftill no intercourfe 

 4326 Firft certain notice of burgelfes in parliament 

 '333 The war with England renewed 



Cuftom duties lower tlian in England 509, 569 



1335 The war maritime, an Englilh veffel taken in 



the Tliames ... 



1336 The Scots and allies take many Englidi vef. 



fels, &c. ... 



<347 The parliament grant freedom of trade and cur- 

 rency ot Englifh money, and tax the ex- 

 ponalion of money 



1351 The Scottlfh merchants apparently now re- 

 fpei^able 



32 + 

 3^4 



332 

 334 

 351 

 3S(> 



3T5 

 376 



392 

 397 



397 



416 



427 



436 

 439 



440 



480 



4S9 

 495 

 498 



5or 



5'=> 

 515 



537 



'iSS The money deteriorated — pearls exportsd 55^,55 



545 



S 



'357 Truce with England — reciprocal liberty for 

 velTeh in dillrefs to enter the ports of either 

 nation . . . i^ ^^j 



Scotiifh cruifers annoy the Englifh coaft 5^8 



Lilt of towns reprefented in parliament — mod 



of themon the cad coaft . , ^^j 



Scotland pays ;f 100,000 for the king's ranfom, 



and feems to have a favourable balance of 

 trade - . . . 



Scottidi greyhounds in rcqueft in France 



A new exchange. Sec eftablidied 



1358 Mutual freedom of trade with England 



1359 Cattle fent from Scotland to England 

 i362!lTlie Scots infeiSled w ith a frenzy for vifiting St. 



Thomas ... 



1363 Sch.eine for an union with England 

 1367 Money diminidied, tax on exportation of mo- 

 ney lowered, taxes on liorfes, cows, &:c 

 1369 Mutual freedom of trade with England 

 1372 Arcliitectur.il knowlege feems extinft 

 1375 The king demands redrefs in France for Scot- 

 tidi traders plundered by Norman pirates 



Grain and malt imported 



1380 A Scottidi Ihip V lUied at 7,000 marks 



13S3 The Englilh parliament forbid carrying armour, 



corn, &c to Scotland 



1386 Peace with England, and fecurity for merchants 



trom the Spey to the Thames 



1387 Scottidi vedels at Sluys taken by the Enslidi 

 1400 Logan, attempting to drive Englidi fidfermeii 



off the coaft of Aberdeen, is hinifelf taken 

 by them - - . . 



1405 Scottidi traders haraded by Englilfi cruifersin 

 time of peace ... 



Delegates from all the burghs required to at. 



tend the parliament of the four burghs 

 1410 Many veflTels burnt and taken, and much plun. 

 der carried off from tlie Firth of Forth, by 

 10 Englidi diips ot war 



1422 The Scots by oppofing Henry V in France, are 



happily indrumental in faving Britain from 

 being a province of France '. 



1423 Horfes, oxen, dieep, fold to England 



1424 Scotland agrees to pay England /40, 000 for the 



keeping of King }amc», and 4 chief towns 

 are fureties 



Some good laws enafled — exportation of mo. 



ney permitted, but taxed — foreigners ob- 

 liged to invelt their proceeds in Scottidi 

 liierchaiidife — duties on cattle, herrings, 

 and dcins, exported — beggars regulated — 

 a general tax — amount of it - 639 



1525 Sundry commercial laws enaifed . i, 640 



Lombards trade to Scotland in large carracks 



The daple of Scottidi commerce, having been 



removed from Flanders to Zeland, is now 

 rcrtored to Flanders in confideration of in. 

 ciTifed privileges ... 



1426 Parliament order importation of arms, &c. and 



regulate weights and meafures — they order 

 the laws to be promulgated 



Mutual free trade wiili Denmark, &c 



1427 Parliament fix fome meafures, and makearule 



rcfpefting the property of merchants dying 

 abroad . . . . ' 



1425 The navigation aft conditionally fufpended for 



one year ... 



1430 A fumptuarylaw — law for wrecks — land.owners 

 required to furnilh vedels for the public 



The king gets many articles for his own ufe 



from London, and a cannon from Flanders 645 



Truce with England — tnerchants not to be 



feizcd . ... 6^4 



559 

 559 1 

 560 

 560 

 sGo 



5«4 



5*9 



574 

 577 

 579 



5S1 



5»! 



590 



395 



597 

 59» 



6!1 



6'5 

 616 



624 



637 



637 



63* 



n'40 



641 



6 + r 

 641 



642 

 642 

 645 



