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With
such a unique and distinctive national dress, with the renowned
whisky and bagpipe music plus a landscape and folklore that often
defies description, Scotland has shaped an identity recognisable
the world over.
Whether
it's a view over misty lochs or a dramatic west coast sunset, a
glimpse back in time of Edinburgh's Royal Mile or a viewing of our
artistic heritage in the National Gallery. Scotland will always
be a country of great contrasts possessing a real magical quality.
From the northernmost tip to the border with England, the Scottish
mainland reaches about 440 km (275 miles). However, Scotland's rugged,
intricate coastline stretches over 20 times that distance at nearly
10,000 km (6,200 miles). Scotland has over 750 major islands, many
of the located on its northern and western coasts.
Scotland's topography is often extremely mountainous with wild
heather clad moorlands in the north and west, pine forests mixed
with quality pasture in the middle, fertile farmland in the east
and north east. In the south, we find the rounded, grass-covered
hills of the Lowlands with lochs and rivers scattered throughout.

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Most of Scotland's five million people live in the country's
Central Belt. The Scots cherish the differences that set them
apart from the English. They cling tenaciously to their regional
differences- their customs, dialects and the Gaelic language.
It is perhaps more by their differences than in the similarities
that the Scots can be defined but, for all that, they are
immensely proud of their nation and its separate institutions,
such as education and law.
The Scots can often be dour but equally they can flash with
inspiration. They have a delightful self-depreciating humour
and are renowned throughout the world for their tradition
of a warm and generous hospitality.
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