• Six objects that tell stories of the Trust's women
    May 3 2024

    This week, Jackie and her guest discuss six objects in the Trust’s collections that help to tell the stories of some of the most fascinating women connected to Trust places. Regional curators Emma Inglis and Antonia Laurence-Allen help to paint a picture of these six women, whose lives and jobs range from being an ale-brewer in 1600s Edinburgh to the daughter of an earl in Clackmannanshire.

    What does a job application from 1910 tell us about the changing world of work at the turn of the century? Why was ale-making seen as a predominantly female profession? And who was the historical figure behind Alloa’s successful glasswork?

    For more information about the places mentioned in this episode, please follow the links below:

    Gladstone’s Land

    Weaver’s Cottage

    Alloa Tower

    Hill House

    Broughton House

    Tenement House

    Remember to follow Love Scotland so you don’t miss any future episodes.

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    40 mins
  • A beginner's guide to Scotland's early monarchs
    Apr 26 2024

    So far this series we’ve looked at two of Scotland’s most famous monarchs: Robert the Bruce and Mary, Queen of Scots. Today, we step back further in time to meet the rulers whose names have become more forgotten to time.

    Helping Jackie to acquaint herself with the earliest kings and queens of Scotland is Richard Oram, a professor of medieval and environmental history at Stirling University. Together, they piece together a picture of the most significant crown-wearers leading up to Robert the Bruce.

    How did Scotland come to be ruled by a king in the first place? Who made the biggest mark on the kingdom? And just how accurate is Shakespeare’s take on early monarchs Macbeth and Duncan?

    Find out more about the Trust’s castles and royal places here.

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    31 mins
  • The Afterlife of Mary, Queen of Scots
    Apr 18 2024

    Arguably the most famous monarch in Scottish history, Mary, Queen of Scots remains a figure of global intrigue more than 400 years after her death. One question, then: why?

    In a previous episode of Love Scotland, Jackie explored the life and times of Mary. Today, she’s on a mission to find out why Mary’s story and legacy have been pored over in such detail for centuries.

    Joining Jackie in the studio is Professor Steven Reid of the University of Glasgow, who is also the author of The Afterlife of Mary, Queen of Scots. Together, they unpick the posthumous interest in Mary, the many different perceptions of her legacy, and how Mary’s death has been used throughout history to further different groups’ objectives.

    For more information on Falkland Palace, click here.

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    42 mins
  • Robert the Bruce: Battles of a King
    Apr 12 2024

    In the second part of a two-episode biography of Robert the Bruce’s life, Jackie returns to the studio with Professor Dauvit Broun of the University of Glasgow.

    Last week, we looked at the early life of Robert and how his canny abilities, not to mention his tendency to switch allegiance at opportune moments, helped him to secure power. But what came next?

    Picking up their conversation in 1306, when Scotland has been conquered by Edward I of England and Robert faces a tussle for power with the most powerful family in Scotland, Jackie and Dauvit will look at all that happened in Robert’s reign.

    To find out more about visiting Bannockburn, click here.

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    30 mins
  • Robert the Bruce: Fact and Fiction
    Apr 5 2024

    Welcome to a new series of Love Scotland.

    In this week’s episode, Jackie is joined by Professor Dauvit Broun of the University of Glasgow to discuss the life of Robert the Bruce.

    Robert, King of Scots from 1306-1329, led a fascinating life full of changing allegiances, shifting power and military victories.

    How much of our common understanding of this Scottish ruler is based in fact? What motivated him to switch sides, on several occasions, in the wars of the 13th and 14th centuries? And why has his legacy had such a lasting effect on the nation’s history?

    Next week, Jackie and Dauvit continue their conversation, charting the events that followed Bannockburn.

    To find out more about visiting Bannockburn, click here.

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    27 mins
  • Season 8 Trailer
    Mar 29 2024

    Jackie gives a brief introduction to brand-new season of the Love Scotland podcast.

    We're going across the centuries to delve into the stories of Mary Queen of Scots and Robert the Bruce, then skipping ahead to the tales of the Georgian Tea Room. Jackie also hears from the Trust's archaeology team about wartime relics beind unearthed across the country.

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    1 min
  • For Auld Lang Syne: how a song of friendship became a global anthem
    Dec 15 2023


    As another series of Love Scotland draws to a close, Jackie gathers two companions to discuss the “song that everybody sings”: Auld Lang Syne. With lyrics penned by Robert Burns in 1788, but origins dating back further, it is now a global anthem of friendship, celebration, yearning and nostalgia. 

    Mairi Campbell, a Scottish musician whose version of the song appeared in the Sex and the City film and who has since created a show inspired by Auld Lang Syne, is the first of Jackie’s two guests. Also joining the conversation is Professor Gerard Carruthers, Fellow of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and the Francis Hutcheson Chair of Scottish Literature at the University of Glasgow. 

    With just a few weeks to go until people sing Auld Lang Syne on Hogmanay, Mairi and Gerard reveal their personal connections to the song and its words, how it came to international significance, and how it has evolved since its very early origins. 

    To find out more about Robert Burns Birthplace Museum, click here.

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    39 mins
  • Winter wildlife at St Abb's Head: Scottish Borders seal pups recover after Storm Arwen
    Dec 8 2023

    Seals and other winter wildlife at St Abb’s Head

    This week, Jackie makes a return to St Abb’s Head in the Scottish Borders, just months after she last visited to investigate the summer’s avian flu outbreak. In the winter, many of the seabirds may have disappeared – but there are still a lot to be found.

    Joined once again by Head Ranger Ciaran Hatsell, Jackie spends some time getting to know the seal pups on the beach, two years after the population was devastated by Storm Arwen. She also finds out what has happened at St Abb’s Head since the flu outbreak, and how the seals signal the wider health of the local ecosystem.

    Weather warning report by Alex Deakin courtesy of the Met Office.

    To find out more about St Abb’s Head National Nature Reserve, click here.

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    29 mins