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Lowland
Scotland

The
Lowland Clearances: Scotland's... The Highland Clearances
are a well-documented episode in Scotland's past but they were
not unique. The process began in the Scottish Lowlands nearly
a century before the glens and straths were emptied of people.
Tens of thousands of Lowlanders were moved from the land by
estate owners who replaced them with livestock or enclosed fields
of crops. This revolution of "improvement" helped
shape the landscape we accept today as the Scottish countryside.
But it also swept aside a traditional way of life, causing immense
upheaval and trauma for rural dwellers, many of whom moved to
the new towns and cities or emigrated. In the late 18th-century,
the simple act of losing land and becoming landless was much
more significant for large numbers of people in Lowland society
than it was for those in the Gaelic-speaking Highlands of Scotland.
The Lowland Clearances also set in train the trend of depopulation
which continues to affect Scotland to this day; the number of
people who left the Lowlands during the agricultural revolution
far exceeded the number exiled from the Highlands. And yet,
compared to the Highlands, very little has been written or published
about the Lowland Clearances. This book, based on the BBC documentary
series, aims to redress that imbalance. It does not deny the
clearances in the Highlands and Islands but reflects pioneering
historical research which establishes them as part of a wider
process of clearance which affected the whole of Scotland.
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