That depends on where in England your starting point is and where in Scotland your destination is. If you walked from one side of the border to the other it might only take a matter of seconds but if you were walking from Lands End to John O'Groats it would take considerably longer.
Yes, and the population is 10 times bigger. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Yes, If you take population and area but if you take tourist inflow and culture then Scotland is far ahead. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- England is 1.66 times the area of Scotland.
Scotland was not founded by England!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!Scotland was a country in itself, it still is a country. Only now it is in a "union" with England, meaning they are supposedly equal partners (this now includes Wales and Northern Ireland). However, England did obviously try to take over Scotland many times and eventually forced through the Act of Union in 1707.But Scotland is a country and has been for many many hundreds of years, a long time before England and Scotland joined and made Britain. Scotland is a country. On its own. Just as much as England is a country, or France is a country, or Italy is a country, to name some random examples. Scotland was NOT founded by England!!
Yes, you can drive directly from Scotland to England through road connections like the A1 or M6. Alternatively, you can take a ferry from various Scottish ports to English ports, such as from Cairnryan to Larne in Northern Ireland and then drive to England.
England became a unified state in 927. The equivalent point in time for Scotland is less clear. Tradition suggests the state was founded in 843 by Kenneth MacAlpin but in written history he is merely king of the Picts. The first king of Scotland/Scots was Donald II who ruled in 889. From this point of view Scotland is slightly older. Edit: It wasn't until 1018 that the Angles were finally defeated in Scotland when Malcolm II defeated the English and Lothian became part of the country. This date of 1018 is also accepted as the formal foundation date for Scotland, making England nearly 100 years older than Scotland, so it depends if you want to take 843 or 1018 as the start date, both could be argued to be correct.
There is no direct train from Paris to Scotland. One option is to take a train from Paris to London, and then take another train from London to Scotland. The total travel time can range from around 7 to 11 hours depending on the connections and routes chosen.
Glastonbury is in Somerset, England. It is not in Scotland.
6 hours
About 3 hours
About five hours.
9-10 hours
9 hours and 9 minutes
You need to state the departure and arrival points and the type of vessel.
I don't think you can sail around Scotland as it is attached to England. maybe there is a canal link between Edinburgh and Glasgow.
Yes, and the population is 10 times bigger. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Yes, If you take population and area but if you take tourist inflow and culture then Scotland is far ahead. -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- England is 1.66 times the area of Scotland.
About an hour.
Google maps says 4h 30mins. That's probably optimistic.
Prob about 8-10 hours,depending on how you drive and what kind of breaks you take etc etc