1999 in Scotland explained
Events from the year 1999 in Scotland.
Incumbents
Law officers
Events
- 7 February – Sunday Herald newspaper is launched.
- 12 February – scientists at the Rowett Research Institute in Aberdeen reinforce warnings that genetically modified food may be damaging to the human body.[1]
- 31 March – Buchanan Galleries shopping mall opened to the public in Glasgow city centre.
- 6 May – 1999 Scottish Parliament election: the first elections to the new Scottish Parliament.
- 7 May – no party wins overall majority in the first general election to the Scottish Parliament. The Labour Party and the Liberal Democrats agree to form a coalition government, with Donald Dewar as the First Minister of Scotland.
- 12 May – the Scottish Parliament meets in Edinburgh for its first session in the General Assembly Hall of the Church of Scotland on the Royal Mile.
- 17 May – Donald Dewar is officially sworn in as the First Minister of Scotland.[2]
- 31 May – the Orkney island of Papa Stronsay is purchased by The Transalpine Congregation of the Most Holy Redeemer, a traditionalist Catholic religious institute which will establish Golgotha Monastery there.[3]
- June – Scotland's first Gaelic-medium primary school, Glasgow Gaelic School (Bunsgoil Ghàidhlig Ghlaschu), opens.
- 11 June – fire at Garnock Court (flats), Irvine with one fatality.
- 1 July – formal transfer of powers from Westminster to the new Scottish Parliament.
- 4 August – George Robertson, MP for Hamilton South, appointed as Secretary General of NATO.
- 9 August – Charles Kennedy, MP for Ross, Cromarty and Skye, elected leader of the Liberal Democrats (UK).[4]
- August – composer James MacMillan in a speech "Scotland's Shame" at the Edinburgh Festival attacks religious bigotry in Scotland.[5]
- 13 September – Mental Health (Public Safety and Appeals) (Scotland) Act 1999 becomes the first Act of the Scottish Parliament to be passed, adding public safety to the grounds for not discharging certain patients detained under the Mental Health (Scotland) Act 1984, thus closing a legal loophole.
- 23 September – Hamilton South by-election results in Labour's Bill Tynan holding the UK parliament seat by 556 votes in the face of a 22.6% swing to the SNP.
- November – Scottish Women's Football League (SWFL) established[6]
- 3 November – the Lanarkshire-born actor Ian Bannen is killed in a car accident near Loch Ness.
- 17 November – the Scotland national football team fail to qualify for UEFA Euro 2000 after a 2–1 aggregate defeat by England in the qualifying playoff round.
- 30 November – Museum of Scotland in Edinburgh officially opened.[7]
- 2 December – the 'Heart of Neolithic Orkney' is designated as a World Heritage Site.
- The last Elder of the Glasite Church dies in Edinburgh.
Arts and literature
Births
Deaths
See also
Notes and References
- News: 1999: Scientists highlight hazards of GM food. BBC News. 12 February 1999.
- Web site: Dewar receives the royal warrant . HeraldScotland . 21 December 2020 . en.
- Web site: A brief history of the Sons of the Most Holy Redeemer. Golgotha Monastery Island. 2015-01-06. 6 June 2019. https://web.archive.org/web/20190606105428/http://www.papastronsay.com/fssr/history/index.html. dead.
- News: 1999: Kennedy wins Lib Dem leadership. BBC News. 2008-02-13. 1999-08-09.
- News: Scotland's shame. BBC News. 1999-08-09. 2010-01-12.
- Book: Scraton . Sheila . Magee . Jonathan . Caudwell . Jayne . Liston . Katie . Women, Football and Europe: Histories, Equity and Experience . 2008 . Meyer & Meyer Verlag . 9781841262253 . 19 . en.
- John. Crompton. Industry in the National Museums of Scotland. Industrial Archaeology News. 113. Summer 2000. 2-3.
- Web site: Brogan Hay . Rangers Football Club, Official Website . 28 April 2020.
- Web site: Eartha Cumings . Bristol City . 28 April 2020 . en.
- Web site: Ian Bannen . the Guardian . 17 September 2022 . en . 5 November 1999.