Dictionary Definition
Lowlander n : a native of the Lowlands of
Scotland
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Noun
- One who lives in the lowlands.
Antonyms
Extensive Definition
The Scottish Lowlands (a' Ghalldachd, meaning
roughly 'the non-Gaelic region', in Gaelic,
and called Lawlands or Lallans in Scots),
although not officially a geographical area of the country, in
normal usage is generally meant to include those parts of Scotland not
referred to as the Highlands
(or Gàidhealtachd),
that is, everywhere due south and east of a line (the Highland
Boundary Fault) between Stonehaven and
Helensburgh (on
the Firth of
Clyde). Confusingly, some parts of the Lowlands, such as the
Southern
Uplands are not physically 'low', and some sections of the
Highlands, such as Islay are
low-lying.
It therefore includes the traditional Scottish
counties of Ayrshire, Berwickshire,
Clackmannanshire,
Dumfriesshire,
East
Lothian[1], Fife, Kinross-shire,
Kirkcudbrightshire,
Lanarkshire,
Mid-Lothian[2],
Peeblesshire,
Renfrewshire,
Roxburghshire,
Selkirkshire,
West
Lothian[3] and Wigtownshire.
Traditional Scottish counties which include both
Highland and Lowland sections include Angus[4], Dunbartonshire,
Stirlingshire,
Perthshire,
Kincardineshire,
Aberdeenshire,
Banffshire and
Moray.
Although Caithness, is
sometimes classified under Highlands
and Islands, it is also often considered 'Lowland' and are
differentiated from the Gàidhealtachd
when, for example, discussing Lowland
Scots (although sections of Caithness spoke Gaelic into the
20th century). Orkney and Shetland are
sometimes called 'lowland', mainly because of their current
language, but have a separate identity derived from the Norse to the
point of some islanders not considering themselves Scottish.
Geographically, Scotland is divided into three
distinct areas: the Highlands,
the Central plain (Central
Belt), and the Southern
Uplands. The Lowlands cover roughly the latter two. Strictly
speaking, the northeast plain is also low-land, both geographically
and culturally, but in some contexts may be grouped together with
the Highlands.
The southernmost counties of Scotland, nearest
the border with England, are also
known as the Borders.
They are sometimes considered separately to the rest of the
Lowlands. Many descendants of the Scots-Irish, as
they are known in the United States, or Ulster-Scots,
originated from the lowlands and borders region before having
migrated to the Ulster
Plantation in the 17th century and later the American frontier,
many prior to the American Revoultion.
The term Scottish Lowlands is generally used
mostly with reference to the Lowland
Scots, Scottish
history and the Scottish
clan system, as well as in family history and genealogy.
Notes
- [1] East Lothian was known as Haddingtonshire until 1921.
- [2] Mid-Lothian was known as Edinburghshire until 1921.
- [3] West Lothian was known as Linlithgowshire until 1921.
- [4] Angus was known as Forfarshire until 1928.
lowlander in Danish: Lowlands (Skotland)
lowlander in Spanish: Lowlands (Escocia)
lowlander in French: Lowlands
lowlander in Scottish Gaelic: Galldachd
lowlander in Japanese: ローランド地方
lowlander in Norwegian: Det skotske
lavlandet
lowlander in Polish: Lowlands
lowlander in Portuguese:
Lowlands