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"Not to know what happened before we were born is to remain
perpetually a child. For what is the worth of a human life unless it is
woven into the life of our
ancestors by the records of history"

-Cicero (106-43 B.C.E.)


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How the Scots Invented the Modern World
by ARTHUR HERMAN

Amazon.com"I am a Scotsman," Sir Walter Scott famously wrote, "therefore I had to fight my way into the world." So did any number of his compatriots over a period of just a few centuries, leaving their native country and traveling to every continent, carving out livelihoods and bringing ideas of freedom, self-reliance, moral discipline, and technological mastery with them, among other key assumptions of
what historian Arthur Herman calls the "Scottish mentality."

It is only natural, Herman suggests, that a country that once ranked among Europe's poorest, if most literate, would prize the ideal of progress, measured "by how far we have come from where we once were." Forged in the Scottish Enlightenment, that ideal would inform the political theories of Francis Hutcheson, Adam Smith, and David Hume, and other Scottish thinkers who viewed "man as a product of history," and whose collective enterprise involved "nothing less
than a massive reordering of human knowledge" (yielding, among other things, the Encyclopaedia Britannica, first
published in Edinburgh in 1768, and the Declaration of Independence, published in Philadelphia just a few years later). On
a more immediately practical front, but no less bound to that notion of progress, Scotland also fielded inventors, warriors, administrators, and diplomats such as Alexander Graham Bell, Andrew Carnegie, Simon MacTavish, and Charles James Napier, who created empires and great fortunes, extending Scotland's reach into every corner of the world.

Herman examines the lives and work of these and many more eminent Scots, capably defending his thesis and arguing,
with both skill and good cheer, that the Scots "have by and large made the world a better place rather than a worse place." --Gregory McNamee--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.




From Publishers Weekly The story of Mary Stuart has been told in many contexts (most recently in Elizabeth and Mary), but nowhere has she been defended more rigorously than in this new study. Guy,
a fellow at Cambridge University and BBC consultant, describes Mary's formative years in France, but the heart of the book is her short reign in Scotland. Negotiations with Elizabeth Tudor over the succession in England and the shadow of Mary's final fate dominate the narrative, but while Guy effectively establishes that Elizabeth's chief minister William Cecil was Mary's true English enemy, what is most shocking is how suppliant he shows Mary to have been to Elizabeth. The most dramatic moments, however, are supplied
by the Scottish nobles, who shifted alliances around her and colluded in kidnappings and assassinations. Though not the
first to challenge Mary's femme fatale image, Guy does not even deign to discuss the accusation that she was romantically involved with her Italian secretary Rizzio and convincingly absolves her of involvement in the death of her second husband.

He re-examines her actions and choices and offers a lively textual analysis of letters usually used as evidence against her.
Yet he does not conclusively argue that she ruled from the head, and, in the end, the question of whether Mary Stuart
ruled from her head or her heart appears beside the point. Guy's detailed account of the familial, political and religious machinations of the forces swirling around the queen suggests that it was not flaws in Mary's character but the entire constellation of circumstances that doomed her rule in Scotland and led to her execution. 16 pages of b&w photos.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.




Scotland by Magnus Magnusson

Amazon.com Near Stirling, Scotland, stands a memorial to the warrior William Wallace, put to death
at the orders of the English king Edward I in 1305. Within that memorial stands a glass case, and inside
of it stands a broadsword 1.7 meters long. Legend has it that the hero himself wielded the weapon, and so "Wallace's Sword" it is.

Magnus Magnusson, a native of Iceland who has long lived in and written about Scotland, may spoil it
for some readers when he writes that Wallace's Sword probably wasn't Wallace's. To use it, Wallace would have had to have stood at least 6-foot-6 in height and to have lived two centuries later. The business of the sword
 is just one of the "cherished conceptions" about Scottish history that Magnusson picks apart and then, corrected and
improved, restores. At other turns he considers the true identity of the legendary king Macbeth (and entertains some surprising but plausible theories about the king's alter ego); reconstructs decisive battles such as Otterburn, Flodden, and Glencoe; and looks closely at the complicated negotiations (and, many would say, treacheries) that led to the union with England of 1707. Magnusson closes with an account of modern independence movements and the recent return of some measure of national autonomy, opening a "new chapter in a nation's story, which the people of Scotland are now beginning
to write."

Lucid, witty, and unafraid of controversy, Magnusson's book does a fine job of condensing a complex history, stretching out for 10 millennia, into a single volume. --Gregory McNamee--This text refers to the Hardcover edition.


 
Scotland by Fitzroy MacLean, Magnus Linklater

The Scotsman
Magnificently illustrated, it is a constant visual delight . . . an admirable introduction to a fascinating subject.

Times Literary Supplement
A truly remarkable collection of illustrations, mostly unfamiliar, gathered with excellent judgement
from many sources and beautifully reproduced.




Collins Scottish Clan & Family Encyclopedia

by George Way, Romilly Squire (Editor)




A Genealogist's Guide to Discovering Your Scottish Ancestors
by Linda Jonas, Paul Milner

Book Description More than ten million Americans claim Scottish as their primary ethnicity. This book provides easy, step-by-step instruction that enables readers to research Scottish records more easily and efficiently, and discover their Scottish ancestors. Linda Jonas and Paul Milner cover a
broad range of topics including getting started in Scottish research, accessing resources on the Internet, retrieving published records available at university and public libraries, and examining microfilmed original records through the Family History Library. They also feature the records of an actual family to illustrate how to
 use the wealth of resources available to genealogists.




The Scots-Irish in the Carolinas (Kennedy, Billy. Scots-Irish Chronicles.)
by Billy Kennedy

Book Description
The Carolina regions of the United States of America were settled in large numbers during the 18th century by tens of thousands of Ulster-Scots Presbyterians, who left their native shores for reasons of religious persecution and economic deprivation.

In this third volume of the series on the hardy Scots-Irish communities who tamed the wilderness of the American frontier, journalist-author Billy Kennedy heads on a journey from the north of Ireland to the port of Charleston, South Carolina and the Carolina Piedmont, along the Great Wagon Road from Pennsylvania, through the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia, into
the western highlands of North Carolina and down to the historic Waxhaws, where President Andrew Jackson spent his childhood and early youth.

On this trail of the Scots-Irish in the Carolinas, five American Presidents emerge as direct descendants of the first
frontier Carolina settlers. Also, John C. Calhoun, American Vice President for two terms, was the son of an Ulsterman
who settled in the Carolina upcountry and literally hauled himself up by his bootlaces from a log cabin to a position as one
of the nation's most influential policy makers.

The culture, political heritage, and legacy of the Scots-Irish so richly adorn the historical fabric of American life. Through
this series on the Scots-Irish, people on both sides of the Atlantic may develop an awareness of our illustrious past which
will assist them in facing the future with renewed insight and wisdom. The contributions of the Scots-Irish to the building of the great American nation were profound and deserve our full recognition.




Discover Your Scottish Ancestry
by Graham S. Holton

Book Description This ideal guide to tracing your Scottish ancestors combines the traditonal
methods of researching family history withnew mwthods offered by information technology and the
key investigatory tool, the internet.








Tracing Your Scottish Ancestors
by National Archives of Scotland, Cecil Sinclair

Book Description Based on the vast collection of records in the National Archives, this edition
includes all the latest internet developments, yet still covers all the traditional resources thoroughly.
The National Archives of Scotland is the government department responsible for the custody and preservation of the records of the government of Scotland.







Your Scottish Ancestry: A Guide for North Americans
 by Sherry Irvine

Book Description Broaden your base of resources to the rich Scottish soil by searching for your
Scottish ancestors without leaving North America! The acclaimed Sherry Irvine has an insiders
perspective to searching for information about Scottish Ancestors and gives you insightful advice to
where to go, what to use and how to use it. Winner of NGS's 1998 Award for Excellence in
Genealogical Methods and Sources, this book is a complete reference of records and techniques for Scottish research in North America. It presents the many research facilities and sources available for Scottish research in North America and includes how to access records in Scotland. 

Your Scottish Ancestry covers all records back to 1600.


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