Postby Allen Johnson » Fri Mar 03, 2006 8:36 am
Some interesting thoughts on this matter coming from George MacDonald Fraser's book, "The Steel Bonnets". This is THE BOOK when one wants to study the english/scottish Border Reivers. Anyway, its a great read.
These regions and thier peoples were very notorious for hundreds of years of constant teft, arson, and bloodshed. Things which all basic religions usually preach aginst.
p.45 - "Leslie is interesting on Border morality as applied to property and theft. "They have a pursuasion that all property is common by the law of nature, and is therefore liable to be appropriated by them in their necessity." Later he adds: "Besides, they think the art of plundering so very lawful, that they never say over thier prayers more fervently, or have more devout recurrence to thier beads and thier rosaries, than when they have made an expedition"...Rascals they might be, but Leslie counted them among his flock. Possibly he had not heard the story of the visitor to Liddesdale who, finding no churches demanded, "Are there no Christians here?" and he recieved the reply, "Na, we's a' Elliots and Armstrangs." "
This has a little more to do with plundering but violence always accompanied such activities. And its a good example of people who take a religion and kind of tailor fit it to thier needs/wants. History is full of all kinds of people who did various misdeads "in the name of God".
p. 195
"It was natural, in the climate of the times, to blame lack of religion for much of the evil along the frontier. "Want of knowledge of God, whereby the better sort forget oath and duty" was condemmed by Eure. He saw churches "mostly ruined to the ground, ministers and teachers comforthless to com and remaine where such heathenish people are." - it goes on to state that it was said that most of the Border folk could not recite the Lords Prayer and that numbers of horses were a much higher priority to even the leaders of the community than the presence of religion.
p. 223 & Appendix I
In 1525 (I think? its a little unclear) the Archbishop of Glasgow, Gavin Dunbar, issued a formal 1500 word "cursing" of the Border Reivers. Formally excommunicating the lot of them. The full contents of this cursing are in the appendix of the book. Perhaps this shunning of the church fueled an already violent culture into more of the same? Though the presence of religion prior to this seems to have had little effect anyhow.
"Why is there a picture of a man with a sword in his head on your desk?" -friends inquiry