C
CRM_Brother
Guest
Well, the three areas you mentioned had very different liturgies during the middle Ages. In England, as @adamhovey1988 has mentioned, the Sarum rite was in usage. In Ireland, during the early medieval period Greek liturgies were in usage in a large part of the island up until the Norman Conquest. It was so prevalent that the Greek alphabet replaced the original Olgham before switching the Latin alphabet. The Scottish situation was extremely complex. There was Greek influence through the Irish monastic missionaries but there was also direct Roman influence through Italian missionaries and English clergymen establishing parochial systems in southern Scotland. In short, Scotland was a hodgepodge of Christian ritual.