I’ve been reading up on the English Civil War lately, and I came across this, in the Parliamentary bill abolishing the monarchy:
So, I get why Wales, Guernsey, and Jersey are singled out, but why Berwick-upon-Tweed? Wouldn’t thaqt be part of “the commonwealth of England and Ireland”?
Berwick-upon-Tweed is smack between Scotland and England. It changed hands 14 times in the two centuries up to 1482. Under the Treaty of Perpetual Peace (“perpetuity” apparently being 11 years) between Henry VII of England and James IV of Scotland in 1502, Berwick was given a special status as being “of” the Kingdom of England but not “in” it. In 1603, Berwick was the first English town to greet James VI of Scotland on his way to being crowned James I of England - upon crossing Berwick Bridge, James is supposed to have declared the town’s belonging to neither England nor Scotland but being part of the united Crown’s domain. In 1639 Charles I negotiated a settlement with General Alexander Leslie, “the Pacification of Berwick,” under which the King agreed that all disputed questions (something to do with the Church of Scotland) should be referred to another General Assembly or to the Scottish Parliament.
It is right on the border of England and Scotland, and at some points in history it has been considered ambiguous as to which it belonged to. See Berwick-upon-Tweed - Wikipedia
Worth noting also is the section on relations with Russia. Wiki says the story is apocryphal (which may well be), but I can remember hearing it when one of the Soviet leaders (Kosygin, maybe?) paid a state visit to Britain and gave a speech in Berwick promising not to attack, despite the state of war that existed between them and Russia.
That would probably be Gretna Green, it became popular for English people to elope to Scotland to marry because English law prevented people under 21 getting married without the consent of both parents, this law did not apply in Scotland.
I doubt it, since the “war with Russia” story arose in connection with the Crimean war, in the 19th century. Even though the story may be false, it derives its plausibility from Berwick having an ambiguous status.
Anyway, even though the Act of Union may have untied England and Scotland politically, they remained (and still remain) distinct countries, with, for instance, different legal and educational systems. It now seems to be established that Berwick is in England. According to its Wikipedia entry, however, although it had long been treated, in most circumstances, as a de facto part of England, that status was not formalized (and then only in an offhanded way) until 1972.
It wasn’t just the consent issue. English law also required advance public notice of a wedding (“publication of the banns”), so weddings could not be celebrated either (a) discreetly or (b) quickly. Scottish weddings could be both. Gretna Green was the first Scottish village on the principal mail coach route from London to Edinburgh; hence the first convenient place at which travellers on that route could celebrate a wedding under Scottish rules.