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Stirling revives makar role after 500 years

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Published Date: 24 October 2008
A SCOTTISH city is to appoint its first makar for almost 500 years, it was announced yesterday. Stirling Council will spend £1,500 on an official poet in the new year, the first in the city since William Dunbar during the reign of James IV. His publicly funded successor will pen poems for city events, celebrations, triumphs and tragedies, and "record everyday life".
Glasgow and Edinburgh already have makars, and former first minister Jack McConnell appointed Edwin Morgan Scotland's makar – or national poet laureate – in 2004.

The Stirling post will run for three years, with the poet paid a retainer of £500 a year.





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  • Last Updated: 23 October 2008 10:02 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

donald,

glasgow 24/10/2008 06:47:41
They could also revive the Sterling Mint, destroyed by on of the many broken act of the Treaty of Onion,. 1705.
2

Guga II,

Rockall 24/10/2008 09:46:58
#1 Donald.

Don't be daft Donald. If they did that, there wouild be a danger that the Scots might get delusions of grandeur, and think that they are no longer under the jackboot of English imperialism.
3

noswod,

Honestus 24/10/2008 10:52:23
Coins from the Striling mint would be worthless unless they were made O Gold. A Scottish poond on its own probadly would be at aboot 2.50 or 5.00 to the English one noo as a Scottish Government headed towards the IMF for a bail oot
4

Calum Crubag,

24/10/2008 12:49:10
Makar? Not bard? Stirling and it's surroundings would've been Gaelic speaking at the time.

Bàrd Shruighlea. Sounds good.

 

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