Under Robert Bruce and his successors, Scotland's indipendence from England was maintained and its sense of nationhood developed. Alexander Grant shows how this had a profound effect upon domestic as well as foreign affairs, and how it led to the evolution of a distinctive Scottish government, nobility, Church and economy.
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At the same he puts Scottish history into the international context of the 100 Years War, the economic and demographic upheaval caused by the bubonic plague, and the Christianity of the pre-Reformation era. Challenging traditional assumptions of general late-medieval decline, Indipendence and Natiohood demonstrates how the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries were a crucially important period of change and growth for Scotland.