Karen comes from Inverness, in North East(ish) Scotland. Her accent is very definitely Scottish, not Irish. (Many people - including those in UK, seem to have probs telling difference between Scots and Irish, for some reason).
The reason that used to be given for the clear, slightly refined Inverness accent - which may or may not be apocryphal - is that at the end of the 18th Century, following a nearly successful uprising by mainly Gaelic speaking Highlanders (and some other Scots)in support of Bonnie Prince Charlie (Charles Edward Stewart, the Stewart claimant to the Britain crown), the British government set in motion a whole range of policies to prevent any such future uprisings in the North, and to suppress Highland culture. One of these was the suppression of the Gaelic language, and a policy of teaching English (enforced?) to the Highlanders. Inverness, one of the more populated areas in the north, is supposed to have 'benefited' from graduates of Oxford and Cambridge being sent north as English teachers. Hence, the more refined, educated tone of the Inverness accent, which it retains to this day.
Anyway, that's the story I heard when I was young. Absolutely no idea if there is any truth in it - but it was often said that the 'best' English in the British Isles could be heard on the streets of Inverness.
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