Blimey. I thought the chip on your shoulder was only three hundred years old.
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Would you prefer a more 'high brow' vocabulary to discuss the relative foreign policies of Scotland and England, the precarious position of the regent Marie de Guise at court in the ferment of the nascent Reformation and the first stirrings of the iconoclasm which would define the character of religio-political thought in Scotland for the next five generations?
Or the relative poor health of the child of the Tudor who was obsessed both with prestige and grabbing as many Protestant states as allies -despite none of those states being 'his' kind of Protestant?
I could do so, if you wish.
I could also contrast the relative governmental systems of the two kingdoms, and show that the measures Henry VIII tried to subvert Commons were alien to Scotland, where monarchical power was never absolute, and royal authority frequently ignored if the main power players felt like it?
The two systems were diametrically opposite - matching the ethos and mind set of the two nations.
The Act of Union simply bolted on a handful of measures onto the English Parliament, ignoring that of Scotland entirely.
Had the takeover been complete - and all the institutions of state been incorporated into the new system, things would have been radically different today.
They were not, however - and, yes, there has been a simmering resentment for three centuries - read Scots literature over the time period and you will see that. Even the most pro-Union writers such as Scott kept that flame of resentment burning.
Recent Westminster attitudes have only fanned it.