Charlie Reid and Craig Reid (born 5 March1962 in Leith, Scotland) are identical twin brothers, famous as singers and songwriters in The Proclaimers. March 5 is the 64th day of the year in the Gregorian Calendar (65th in leap years). ... 1962 was a common year starting on Monday (link will take you to calendar). ... Former Royal Yacht Britannia is permanently moored at Leith harbour. ... Scotland (Scottish Gaelic: Alba) is a country in northwest Europe, occupying the northern third of the island of Great Britain. ... The Proclaimers are a Scottish band composed of identical twins Charlie and Craig Reid. ...
The twins were brought up in Auchtermuchty, Fife. After several punk bands at school, they formed The Proclaimers in 1983. Auchtermuchty is a town in Fife, Scotland, situated beside Pitlour Hill nine miles north of Glenrothes. ... Fife (Scottish Gaelic, Fiobh) is a unitary council region of Scotland situated between the Firth of Tay and the Firth of Forth. ...
Reid points out that both King Charles and his opponents claimed to champion the rule of traditional law and thereby emphasized that law’s centrality to the rights of Englishmen and the vitality of that legal tradition.
Reid tells us that, at this time, “the attorney who seems to have had the greatest influence with Cromwell was Bulstrode Whitelocke, a leading barrister and lord commissioner of the treasury” (p.57).
Reid, in his last chapter and conclusion, asserts “Rule’s Determinacy”: the thick and complex substance of the law did not yield to evanescent political and social pressures but endured to preserve the legal rights of litigants, perhaps even beyond the administrative empires that emerged in twentieth-century American government.