I first read the two essays on kilts as part of The Invention of Tradition in my university days. It's no lie to say that they were key to changing my view on the world. For the first time I understood how people's culture defines them, and how they choose to define their culture. It was a breakthrough moment in my academic life. This book expands on that theme, and shows how the Scots also attempted to invent a literary and political history that plays to their romantic and glorious ideals. Trevor-Roper tells the story of the creation (or forgery, if you prefer) of these cultural narratives, and the way they were subsequently propagated, debunked, and repeatedly resurrected. Still today, many Scots, particularly the more nationalist ones, believe these myths, and treat them as central to Scottish culture.
The fact is that early Scotland - prior to roughly Macbeth in about 1066 - was not a sophisticated kingdom. It was made up of squabbling Irish, Pictish, Norse, Celtic & Saxon tribes who lived in mud huts. There were no great early epic Scottish poets - Ossian, if he existed, was Irish. Kilts and tartans are not traditional Scottish dress. They're a Victorian invention. Scottish nationalists, going back to the 14th century, made all this stuff up in order to legitimize various total lines or to make Scotland look like it had a more exciting past.
A fascinating and enjoyable book, certain to offend many Scots, but which has a lot to say about the role of history, nationalist myth, fiction and culture in defining how we see ourselves and who we like to think we are.