Free Republic 2nd Qtr 2024 Fundraising Target: $81,000 Receipts & Pledges to-date: $28,398
35%  
Woo hoo!! And we're now over 35%!! Thank you all very much!! God bless.

Keyword: scotland

Brevity: Headers | « Text »
  • 'Three people stabbed to death' in Glasgow city centre (Scotland, UK)

    06/26/2020 7:35:31 AM PDT · by PghBaldy · 13 replies
    BBC ^ | June 26 | Staff
    Three people are believed to have been stabbed to death in a hotel stairwell in Glasgow city centre. Armed police shot the suspect, who is also understood to have died. The Scottish Police Federation have confirmed a police officer was stabbed. Armed police remain at the scene outside the Park Inn in West George Street.
  • Man ends up in court for calling ex’s Irish boyfriend a ‘leprechaun’ [Aberdeen, Scotland]

    06/23/2020 11:46:42 AM PDT · by Olog-hai · 30 replies
    Aberdeen Evening Express ^ | 06/22/2020, 10:29 pm | Danny McKay
    An Aberdeen man has been fined after branding his ex partner’s new boyfriend a “leprechaun” in a threatening email. Terry Myers, 41, appeared in the dock at Aberdeen Sheriff Court over the email, which made reference to the woman’s new partner being Irish and threatened to assault him. Fiscal depute Susan Love said Myers had previously been in a relationship with the woman, but that they were no longer together and she had a new partner. She told the court during Saturday morning the woman received an email from Myers in which “he made various threats to assault her new...
  • Paleontologists Find World's Oldest Fossil Bug

    06/21/2020 9:26:10 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 12 replies
    Sci-News ^ | June 2, 2020 | News Staff / Source
    Named Kampecaris obanensis, the prehistoric millipede lived during the Silurian period, about 425 million years ago. The ancient creature was a small (2-3 cm in length), short-bodied animal with three recognizable sections. It likely lived near a lake in a semi-arid forested environment and ate decomposing plants. Its fossilized remains were unearthed on the island of Kerrera in the Scottish Inner Hebrides. The specimen is about 75 million years younger than the age other paleontologists have estimated the oldest millipede to be using a technique known as molecular clock dating. The oldest fossil of a land-dwelling, stemmed plant, Cooksonia, has...
  • Robert the Bruce statue at Bannockburn defaced by 'BLM' graffiti

    06/15/2020 1:31:52 PM PDT · by SJackson · 64 replies
    The National Scotland ^ | 6-15-20 | Laura Webster
    The Robert the Bruce statue was spray-painted with graffiti calling him a 'racist king'. Credit for photographs: Grant Stobbart THE Battle of Bannockburn site was found vandalised yesterday with graffiti branding Robert the Bruce a “racist king” and calling for his statue to be removed. Images on social media appeared to show markings on the wall at the visitor centre and the statue. National Trust for Scotland bosses, who operate the centre, said they were “disappointed” by the act. The general manager for Edinburgh and East, Stuart Maxwell, said: “We are very disappointed by the vandalism of the iconic Bruce...
  • Rare evidence of 5,000-year-old fabric discovered in Orkney

    06/13/2020 7:12:11 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 7 replies
    BBC ^ | 2 June 2020 | unattributed
    Evidence of woven textile from 5,000 years ago has been found for only the second time in Scotland. The piece of Neolithic fabric has not survived, but archaeologists did find the impression it left on the wet clay of a pot millennia ago. The discovery was made by archaeologists examining markings on pottery from Ness of Brodgar in Orkney. Evidence of Neolithic woven textile in Scotland was first found at Flint Howe, near Stranraer, in 1966. An impression of the fabric had also been spotted on a piece of clay... Organic material from prehistory only survives under certain conditions, and...
  • Tree ring study unlocks history of St Giles' Cathedral ahead of 900th anniversary (Scotland)

    06/01/2020 9:42:05 AM PDT · by rdl6989 · 10 replies
    Edinburgh Evening News ^ | June 1 2020 | Alison Campsie
    A tree ring study of the ancient timbers used to build the bell tower of St Giles’ Cathedral has unlocked new details about the kirk as it approaches its 900th anniversary. The research has been able to pinpoint when the trees were felled for the ambitious construction project with it now known the oak was cut over two spells from a native forest in Moray. As a result, it is now believed the St Giles’ bell tower was finished between 1460 and 1467 with the study being able to refine the date for the first time. The research has also...
  • 'First tartan' on Roman statue

    02/10/2013 9:10:38 AM PST · by SunkenCiv · 14 replies
    BBC News ^ | December 3, 2012 | unattributed
    Remnants of a Roman statue in North Africa could be the "first-ever depiction of tartan", according to a BBC Scotland documentary. A piece of a bronze statue of the Emperor Caracalla contains the small figure of a Caledonian warrior wearing what appears to be tartan trews. The third century Roman emperor Caracalla styled himself as the conqueror of the Caledonians. A statue marking his achievements stood in the Moroccan city of Volubilis. It stood above a great archway in the ancient city, which lay in the south west of the Roman empire, 1,500 miles from Caledonia -- modern day Scotland....
  • Borders Folks May Be Descended From Africans (Hadrian's Wall)

    06/13/2004 2:15:19 PM PDT · by blam · 61 replies · 1,694+ views
    The Telegraph (UK) ^ | 6-11-2004 | David Derbershire
    Borders folk may be descended from Africans By David Derbyshire (Filed: 11/06/2004) Families who have lived in the English-Scottish Borders for generations could be descended from African soldiers who patrolled Hadrian's Wall nearly 2,000 years ago. Archaeologists say there is compelling evidence that a 500-strong unit of Moors manned a fort near Carlisle in the third century AD. Richard Benjamin, an archaeologist at Liverpool University who has studied the history of black Britons, believes many would have settled and raised families. "When you talk about Romans in Britain, most people think about blue eyes and pale complexions," he said. "But...
  • Trekking The Roman Road To Scotland

    05/31/2020 12:27:12 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 25 replies
    Timeline ^ | May 31, 2020 | host Tony Robinson
  • Biotech firm: Screening to ‘avoid’ babies with Down syndrome is a ‘cash cow’

    05/27/2020 10:25:58 PM PDT · by Morgana · 4 replies
    Live Action News ^ | May 22 2020 | Right to Life UK
    (Right to Life UK) – A Chinese biotech firm has declared “screening out” babies with Down syndrome is a “cash cow” funding the growth of the whole business. The admission comes from a spokesperson for BGI Group – a Chinese genetics conglomerate whose main business is offering non-invasive prenatal tests, primarily used to diagnose Down syndrome. In a segment from an Aljazeera documentary titled Genesis 2.0, the spokesperson gestures towards a digital map of the world and says: “You can see clearly, especially for Down’s syndrome, we have nearly two million samples all over the world. This part is, what...
  • When Septimus Severus Invaded Scotland | Britain's African Emperor [3rd c AD]

    05/17/2020 6:28:29 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 38 replies
    Timeline via YouTube ^ | May 17, 2020 | All 3 Media / Little Dot Studios
    Nearly two thousand years ago most of Britain was a settled province of the Roman Empire. But those in the north held out against the world superpower and insurrection flared across Hadrian's Wall. So, in 208AD, the Roman Emperor Septimius Severus marched into Scotland with 40,000 men - one of the largest invasion armies Rome ever mobilised.When Septimus Severus Invaded Scotland | Britain's African Emperor | Timeline | Published May 17, 2020
  • Nextrush Unplugged: Weekend Version DC 19 The Mask Is Not Freedom. Militarized Vaccine, Protests Today

    05/16/2020 8:12:53 PM PDT · by Nextrush · 7 replies
    Nextrush Free ^ | 5/16/2020 | Nextrush/Self
    "Wear your mouth cover, Its a sign of your surrender" Gavin Seim For Liberty Facebook Post 5/12/2020 "Under instructions to enforce social distancing, maintain proper hygiene and have children grade four and up wear face masks, it was up to municipalities to decide when each school in its jurisdiction was full prepared to open, Netanyahu said" In Israel children are allowed to go back to school at all grade levels starting Sunday the details of restrictions remind us that masks prevent complete breathing and cut off air from people of all ages. Small children will not be required to wear...
  • Ancient Tap O' Noth hillfort in Aberdeenshire one of 'largest ever'

    05/16/2020 11:04:41 AM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 23 replies
    BBC News ^ | May 14, 2020 | unattributed
    A hillfort in Aberdeenshire is one of the largest ancient settlements ever discovered in Scotland, researchers have said. University of Aberdeen archaeologists say 4,000 people may have lived in more than 800 huts perched high on the Tap O' Noth near Rhynie. Many had thought it dated from the Bronze or Iron Age. The team said carbon dating suggested it was likely to be Pictish, dating back as far as the third century AD. They believe at its height it may have rivalled the largest known post-Roman settlements in Europe. Archaeologists from the university have conducted extensive fieldwork in the...
  • The First Vikings

    06/18/2013 7:31:52 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 45 replies
    Archaeology Magazine ^ | Monday, June 10, 2013 | Andrew Curry
    According to historians, the Viking Age began on June 8, A.D. 793, at an island monastery off the coast of northern England. A contemporary chronicle recorded the moment with a brief entry: "The ravages of heathen men miserably destroyed God’s church on Lindisfarne, with plunder and slaughter." ...In the centuries that followed, the Vikings' vessels carried them deep into Russia and as far south as Constantinople, Sicily, and possibly even North Africa. They organized flotillas capable of carrying warriors across vast distances, and terrorized the English, Irish, and French coasts with lightning-fast raids. Exploratory voyages to the west took them...
  • Remembering President Trump’s Mom and the Family’s Long Faith Journey from Scotland to American Success

    05/10/2020 2:02:10 PM PDT · by Maudeen · 6 replies
    Focus on the Family ^ | 5/8/2020 | Paul Batura
    Under sunny, seventy-degree skies, 18-year-old Mary Anne Smith MacLeod, the future mother of President Donald J. Trump, stepped off the steamship Transylvania onto Ellis Island and into a future that would exceed her wildest dreams. It was 90 years ago, Sunday, May 11, 1930 – Mother’s Day – that Mary MacLeod completed a 9-day journey across the Atlantic Ocean from the small Hebridean Island of Lewis, off the west coast of Scotland. With $50 in her pocket, she would settle with family in the New York City borough of Queens. For 6 years, Mary worked as a nanny before meeting...
  • Drone Finds Long Lost Hidden Fort of Scottish Hero William Wallace

    05/09/2020 2:43:30 PM PDT · by 11th_VA · 46 replies
    The Vintage News ^ | May 9, 2020 | Steven Palace
    Is this the stronghold of freedom fighter William Wallace? It’s pretty overgrown now, but a combination of drone flight and 3D tech appears to have found “Wallace’s House” in southern Scotland. From this fort, the legendary thorn in England’s side planned an attack on nearby Lochmaben Castle in Dumfries and Galloway. The Scotsman reports how Forestry and Land Scotland (FLS) – in association with Skyscape Survey – launched an aerial exploration of the site. Drone footage was taken over a “massive earthen rampart and the promontory where the waters of the Black Linn (River) and the Tor Linn meet.” From...
  • Macbeth (c.1005 - 1057) [Mac Bethad mac Findlaich]

    04/27/2020 4:45:14 PM PDT · by SunkenCiv · 19 replies
    BBC ^ | 2014 | unattributed
    Macbeth was a king of the Scots whose rule was marked by efficient government and the promotion of Christianity, but who is best known as the murderer and usurper in William Shakespeare's tragedy. Shakespeare's Macbeth bears little resemblance to the real 11th century Scottish king. Mac Bethad mac Findláich, known in English as Macbeth, was born in around 1005. His father was Finlay, Mormaer of Moray, and his mother may have been Donada, second daughter of Malcolm II. A 'mormaer' was literally a high steward of one of the ancient Celtic provinces of Scotland, but in Latin documents the word...
  • God in you [charismatic caucus]

    04/20/2020 11:50:59 AM PDT · by Jedediah · 1 replies
    Bible ^ | Bible
    My Tapestry is inbedded in you For you carry each and every strand and complexity of My Kingdom Harmonics ~~~ even in your voice ! So it is as you Declare My Rhema Kingdom WORD(JESUS) I ELOHIM open The storehouses of Heaven and bear forth My Fruit from The Tree of Life That is You in Me(The Father of Lights). You see My children I AM THAT I AM and We are ONE. BEAR FORTH MY KINGDOM IN YOU for you are My Bread of Life to others as My Melchizedek for My New Wine of Victory flows through your...
  • Nicola Sturgeon's SNP government DROPS plans to halt trial by jury in Scotland after an outcry from lawyers

    04/01/2020 10:07:57 AM PDT · by Olog-hai · 6 replies
    Daily Mail (UK) ^ | 11:43 EDT, 1 April 2020 | David Wilcock
    The Scottish government was forced to drop plans to axe jury trials today as its coronavirus bill jumped its first parliamentary hurdle. The SNP administration confirmed it had dropped the measure after an outcry from opposition parties and senior lawyers following the publication of the Coronavirus (Scotland) Bill on Tuesday. The bill originally proposed trials going ahead without juries to “ensure that criminal justice systems can continue to operate during the coronavirus restrictions”. But the move was branded “draconian” by the Scottish Criminal Bar Association and The Law Society of Scotland insisted there was not “sufficient justification” for ending the...
  • News Summary-Intelligence Report Monday 3/23/2020 Political Crisis In Israel Court Forces....

    03/23/2020 6:43:17 PM PDT · by Nextrush · 3 replies
    Nextrush Free ^ | 3/23/2020 | Nextrush/Self
    Israel's Supreme Court ruling today that a vote must be held on a new speaker for Israel's parliament.... Tonight the parliament (Knesset) met boycotted by members supporting Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with a majority approving a new Arrangements Committee.... The anti-Netanyahu majority approved six new temporary committees..... Politics here in the USA and the winner of the Democrats Abroad Caucus for Democrats living outside the United States is Bernie Sanders.... US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo arrived in Afghanistan on an unannounced visit today.... The late word is that the US has decided to cut one billion dollars in aid...