Tag: scotland

  • The Cat in the Cradle: Conspiracy Theories and Credible News, 1688 – and Now

    The Cat in the Cradle: Conspiracy Theories and Credible News, 1688 – and Now

    By Laura Doak On 10 June 1688 a new Prince of Wales was born at St. James’s Palace, London, and whispers swept across Europe. Some claimed that the baby, born to King James VII & II and his queen, Mary of Modena, was a fake. Stories circulated that it was a plot to engineer counter-Reformation…

  • Blurring the lines of the two kingdoms: kirk and council in Scotland, 1689-1708

    Blurring the lines of the two kingdoms: kirk and council in Scotland, 1689-1708

    By Robbie Tree As the British Cabinet continues to run rough shod over its responsibilities, we hear grumblings over the effectiveness of our leaders and the legitimacy of central government intervention into the daily lives of the populace. These issues were relevant to early modern Scots as well, in terms of the government of both…

  • Women collectors, Lady Associates and the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland

    Women collectors, Lady Associates and the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland

    By Julie Holder When I tell people that I research the nineteenth-century history of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, a very specific idea of an ‘antiquary’ comes to mind: white, male, and middle or upper class. And to a great extent this view is correct. However, that does not mean that women were not…

  • Analysing Jacobite Prisoner Lists with JDB45

    Analysing Jacobite Prisoner Lists with JDB45

    Analogous Analysis Paralysis: The Stultifying Weltschmerz of Jacobite Prisoner Lists DR DARREN SCOTT LAYNE Now nearly three centuries on from Jacobitism’s imminent threat to the British post-revolution state, the movement’s historical record is still a living entity with plenty of room for growth. To wit, the demographic characteristics of both domestic and international participation in…

  • Role Theory and Protestant Spirituality in Early Modern Scotland

    Role Theory and Protestant Spirituality in Early Modern Scotland

    CIARAN JONES I recently submitted my PhD thesis on Protestant spirituality in early modern Scotland. Focussing on witchcraft trials, my thesis was mainly concerned with how your average seventeenth-century peasant articulated certain spiritual ideas. Using mostly manuscript records of witchcraft trial confessions as my source base, I compared how these ideas were expressed in different but related…