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1587

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Compare 1577 edition: 1 This Rothsay (perceiuing the Scotish nation in|creased Rothsay. The Scots ferris ouer in|to the we|sterne Iles. to a greater multitude in Ireland than the countrie was well able to susteine) transported o|uer certeine numbers of them into the Iles anci|entlie called Ebonides, afterwards Hebrides, but now by the Scots, the westerne Iles, bicause they lie on the west halfe of Scotland: and there they pla|ced them to inhabit. He named also that Ile which he first began to possesse Rothsay, after his owne They inhabie the Ile of Rothsay. name. Which translation of these Scotishmen into those Iles was 133 yeeres after the coronation of Brechus.

Compare 1577 edition: 1 2 This Rothsay had not béene long in those Iles, but that hearing of his fathers deceasse, he returned in|to Ireland to succéed in his place. Where the Sco|tishmen perceiuing the fertilitie of the Iles, and how the same serued well for the breeding of cattell, became so des [...]ous to inhabit there, that they went ouer thither da [...]lie in great numbers, with their wiues, children, and whole families, so that within a short time they multiplied in such wise, that the Iles The Scots inhabit the maine land of Scotland. were not large inough to find them sustenance, by reason whereof diuers companies of them got them ouer into the maine land of the north part of this our Britaine, called as then Albion, where they first inhabited a waste and desert portion thereof, lieng toward the west, ouer against the foreremembred Iles, by them alreadie inhabited, Anno 3383. That 4617 H. B. They inhabit the countrie called Arguile part where they first began to settle themselues, they named Argathelia, after the name of their first cap|tein and guide Gathelus, but the inhabitants at this day call it Arguile.

Compare 1577 edition: 1 2 3 At their first comming, bicause they perceiued they could not liue without lawes and ciuill gouern|ment, They make lawes and or|dinances. Gouernors had in reue|rence. they seuered themselues into tribes, or as it were into hundreds, or wapentakes, euerie of the same hauing a speciall gouernor to see their lawes ministred, and iustice mainteined: which gouernors were had in such reuerence, that they were as much afraid to sweare by the name of any one of them, as they were by the gods. In this state they continued many a yéere, increasing in processe of time vnto a mightie nation, and liued in good rest without trou|ble They liue in peace. The Picts came into Scotland out of Germanie. of warres or inuasion made vpon them by any forren enimie. In this meane time also, the Picts, which were a certeine people of Germanie, as most writers doo agrée, came and set foot also in another part of Britaine, which now is comprehended like|wise within Scotland.

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