Here is the Scottish Declaration of Independence, which
is more often called by its other name the Declaration of Arbroath.
The
Declaration of Arbroath
Most Holy
Father and Lord, we know and from the chronicles and books of the
ancients we find that among other famous nations our own, the Scots, has
been graced with widespread renown. They journeyed from Greater Scythia
by way of the Tyrrhenian Sea and the Pillars of Hercules, and dwelt for
a long course of time in Spain among the most savage tribes, but nowhere
could they be subdued by any race, however barbarous. Thence they
came, twelve hundred years after the people of Israel crossed the Red
Sea, to their home in the west were they live today. The Britons
they first drove out, the Picts they utterly destroyed, and, even though
very often assailed by the Norwegians, the Danes and the English, they
took possession of that home with many victories and untold efforts;
and, as the historians of old time bear witness, they have held it free
of all bondage ever since. In their kingdom there have reigned one
hundred and thirteen of their own royal stock, the line unbroken by a
single foreigner.
The high qualities and deserts of these people, were
they not otherwise manifest, gain glory enough from this: that the King
of kings and Lord of lords, our Lord Jesus Christ, after His Passion and
Resurrection, called them, even though settled in the uttermost parts of
the earth, almost the first to His most holy faith. Nor would He
have them confirmed in that faith by merely anyone but by the first of
His third in rank - the most gentle Saint Andrew, the blessed Peter's
brother, and desired him to keep them under his protection as their
patron for ever.
The Most Holy Fathers your predecessors gave careful
heed to these things and bestowed many favours and numerous privileges
on this same kingdom and people, as being the special charge of the
Blessed Peter's brother. Thus our nation under their protection
did indeed live in freedom and peace up to the time when that mighty
prince the King of the English, Edward, the father of the one who reigns
today, when our kingdom had no head and our people harboured no malice
or treachery and were then unused to wars or invasions, came in the
guise of a friend and ally to harass them as, in enemy. The deeds
of cruelty, massacre, violence, pillage, arson, imprisoning prelates,
burning down monasteries robbing and killing monks and nuns, and yet
other outrages without number which he committed against our people,
sparing neither age nor sex, religion nor rank, no one could describe
nor fully imagine unless he had seen them with his own eyes.
But from these countless evils we have been set free,
by the help of Him who though He afflicts yet heals and restores, by our
most tireless Prince, King and Lord, the Lord Robert. He, that his
people and his heritage might be delivered out of the hands of our
enemies, met toil and fatigue, hunger and peril, like another Maccabaeus
or Joshua, and bore them cheerfully. Him, too, divine providence,
his right of succession according to our laws and customs which we shall
maintain to the death, and the due consent ,and assent of us all have
made our Prince and King.
To him, as to the man by whom salvation has been
wrought unto our people, we are bound both by law and by his merits that
our freedom may be still maintained, and by him, come what may, we mean
to stand.
Yet if he should give up what he has begun, and agree
to make us or our kingdom subject to the King of England or the English,
we should exert ourselves at once to drive him out as our enemy and a
subverter of his own rights and ours, and make some other man who was
well able to defend us our King; for, as long as but a hundred of us
remain alive, never will we on any conditions be brought under English
rule. It is in truth not for glory, nor riches, nor honours that
we are fighting, but for freedom, for that alone which no honest man
gives up but with his life itself.
Therefore it is, Reverend Father and Lord, that we
beseech your Holiness with our most earnest prayers and suppliant
hearts, inasmuch as you will in your sincerity and goodness consider all
this, that, since with Him Whose vice-regent on earth you are there is
neither weighing nor distinction of Jew and Greek, Scotsman or
Englishman, you will look. with the eyes of a father on the troubles and
privations brought by the English upon us and upon the Church of God.
May it please you to admonish and exhort the King of the English, who
ought to be satisfied with what belongs to him since England used once
to be enough for seven kings or more, to leave us Scots in peace, who
live in this poor little Scotland, beyond which there is no dwelling
place at all, & covet nothing but our own. We are sincerely
willing to do anything for him,
having regard to our condition, that we can, to win peace for ourselves.
This truly concerns you, holy Father, since you see the
savagery of the heathen raging against the Christians, as the sins of
Christians have indeed deserved, and the frontiers of Christendom being
pressed inward every day; and how much it will tarnish your Holiness's
memory if (which God forbid) the Church suffers eclipse or scandal in
any branch of it during your time, you must perceive. Then rouse
the Christian princes who for false reasons pretend that they cannot go
to the help of the Holy Land because of wars they have on hand with
their neighbours. The real reason that prevents them is that in making
war on their smaller neighbours they find quicker profit and weaker
resistance. But how cheerfully our Lord the King and we too would
go there if the King of the English would leave us in peace, He from
Whom nothing is hidden well knows; and we profess and declare it to you
as the Vicar of Christ and to all Christendom.
But if your Holiness puts too much faith in the tales
the English tell and
will not give sincere belief to all this, nor refrain from favouring
them to
our prejudice, then the slaughter of bodies, the perdition of souls, and
all
the other misfortunes that will follow, inflicted by them on us and by
us on them, will, we believe, be surely laid by the Most High to your
charge.
be, as far as any duty calls us,
ready to do your will in all things, as obedient sons to you as His
Vicar; and to Him as the Supreme King and judge, we commit the
maintenance of our cause, casting our cares upon Him and firmly trusting
that He will inspire us with courage and bring our enemies to nought.
May the Most High preserve you to His Holy Church in
holiness and health and grant you length of days.
(Given at the
monastery of Arbroath in Scotland on the sixth day of the month of April
in the year of grace thirteen hundred and twenty and the fifteenth year
of the reign of our King aforesaid. (Robert I of Scotland.))