SCOTIA
'Scotia' was originally the Latin name for Ireland, known to the Romans as Hibernia. Use of the name shifted in the Middle Ages to designate Scotland, since many of the Irish ''Scotii'' colonised that area which the Romans referred to as Caledonia.
Scotia was never in the Middle Ages one fixed place. It was a way of saying "Land of the Gaels"; compare ''Angli'', 'Anglia'; ''Franci'', 'Francia'; ''Romani'', 'Romania'; etc. Hence, it once could be used to mean Ireland, as when Isidore of Seville says "Scotia eadem et Hibernia, "Scotland and Ireland are the same country" (Isidore, lib. xii. c. 6)", but the connotation is still ethnic. This is how it is used, for instance, by King Robert I of Scotland and Domhnall Ua Neill during the Scottish Wars of Independence, when Ireland was called ''Scotia Maior'', and Scotland ''Scotia Minor''. In this way, the usage of the word ''Scotia'' in the Middle Ages might be compared with the 21st century usage of the word Gaidhealtachd. They both mean the same thing descriptively; and like ''Scotia'', ''Gà idhealtachd'' has obtained an official and fixed meaning while retaining something of a descriptive meaning (i.e. the territory of Highland Council or the Highlands in general coincides with no linguistic frontier; and neither do the Gaeltachtaà of Ireland).
However, after the 11th century, ''Scotia'' was used mostly for northern Britain, and in this way became fixed. As a translation of Alba, Scotia could mean both the whole Kingdom belonging to the ''rex Scottorum'', or just Scotland north of the Forth.
In the bureaucratic world of the Roman Catholic Church, Pope Leo X eventually granted Scotland exclusive right over the word, and this led to Anglo-Scottish takeovers of continental Gaelic monasteries (e.g. the Schottenklöster).
It is from ''Scotia'' that all Romance names for Scotland derive, names such as the French ''Écosse''.
The term is also used in a Canadian province named Nova Scotia (New Scotland); the village of Scotia in New York State, the Scotia Sea between Antarctica and South America, and in Scotiabank, a trade name for the Bank of Nova Scotia.
The term also is used to describe a piece of wood millwork that is used at the base of columns and in stair construction.
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| See also |
See also
★ Gaidhealtachd
★ Scoti
★ Scotia Sea
★ Scotia Plate
★ Scotia Tower
★ Nova Scotia
★ Scotiabank
Scotia seems to derive from the Greek "Skotia" meaning "darkness"
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