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22 MIN LESEZEIT

THE MARIAN CIVIL WAR

10 minutes on

Woodcut of the siege of Edinburgh castle, held for Mary until 1573, from Holinshed’s Chronicles (1577)

The turbulent personal rule of Mary Queen of Scots came to an end in 1567, when, incarcerated in the grim fortress at loch Leven, she was forced to abdicate the throne in favour of her infant son, James VI. But Mary, famously, escaped her prison the following year, quickly assembling an army and confronting her enemies at the battle of Langside. Here, her forces were defeated, and she precipitously fied to England, remaining a prisoner of Elizabeth I until her execution 19 years later.

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History Scotland
Jan - Feb 2019
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History Scotland
FROM THE EDITOR
Welcome to the first History Scotland issue of 2019
NEWS
Entries invited for The Alasdair Ross prize
The Scottish History Society and History Scotland magazine
Three new galleries will showcase more than 1,500 historic items
Three new galleries will showcase more than 1,500 historic
Professor Eric Richards remembered
Professor John M.Mackenzie pays tribute to the late Professor Eric Richards, who passed away on 21 September 2018
New research suggests ‘certain and possible examples’ of human sacrifice in Viking Age Britain and Ireland
New research suggests ‘certain and possible examples’
THE RESTORATION OF MONTEATH MAUSOLEUM
David Freeman charts the progress of an ongoing project to restore a magnificent mausoleum built for a fiercely private soldier who went to great lengths to ensure his final resting place would be an imposing building where he could lie in solitary splendour
RETURNING TO CLAN HOMELANDS
This month Neil McLennan visits Inverness and surrounds, using the history of his ancestral clan as a springboard for his explorations
FEATURES
GOLD IN PREHISTORIC SCOTLAND
Dr Alison Sheridan introduces a new joint project to explore what we know – and what we have yet to discover – about early gold use in Britain
Scotland: DEFENDING THE NATION
Christopher Fleet, map curator at National Library of Scotland, presents three very different maps which help tell the story of how the nation has been defended – and threatened – over the centuries
THE ROMAN CAVALRY IN SCOTLAND
John Richardson of the Antonine Guard society describes the history of the Roman cavalry in Scotland
Lazy hussies dreaming by a murmuring brook?
Vanessa Habib goes on a journey to identify the lost linen bleachfields of Scotland
ARCHAEOLOGY NEWS
Sky above, Skye below
Investigating an archaeological landscape
Uncovering the house of the Blackfriars in Stirling
Investigations on the outskirts of medieval Stirling discovered the foundations of the medieval dominican friary and the remains of a young man who may have been a friar there
IN-DEPTH FEATURES
These curs’d rufians’and heir women’ DUNDEE WHALING AND WHALERS
Malcolm Archibald delves into the lives of Dundee’s whaling seamen, a group traditionally reviled as rough and uncouth, but who in fact emerge as hard-working (if also hard-playing) professionals, and moreover as men for whom their relationships with women were of central importance
The Robertsons of Alvie in Van Diemen’s Land
In the opening half of a two-part study, Dr David Taylor tells the story of the Robertsons, a group of brothers from Badenoch who emigrated to Van Diemen’s Land – modern Tasmania – in the early 19th century, hoping to strike it rich as farmers
‘Idly sauntering and lithering about’ The Scots in early modern England. Part 2
Concluding their study of Scottish migrants in early modern England, Professor Keith Brown and Dr Allan Kennedy explore how Scots were received by their English hosts, investigating the nature of anti-Scottish prejudice, how far Scots were able to assimilate into English society and how they dealt with the issue of identity
MARY OF GUELDERS A EUROPEAN QUEEN
In the fourth volume of her ground-breaking study, Dr Amy Hayes considers the queenship of Mary of Guelders, wife of James II and the first Stewart queen from continental Europe, and also the first Scottish consort who managed to exploit her position as the king’s wife to gain a significant political role
In the next issue of history SCOTLAND
Coastal history in Scotland Following on from his appearance
REGULARS… IN EVERY ISSUE
Conceiving a nation
Neil McGuigan delves into a reappraisal of Scotland’s ‘dark age’, and the literary sources and physical evidence that bring the period to life
When war came to the Hebrides
Anne Rutten explores a study of the sinking of the Tuscania and the Otranto and the effect of these tragedies on the community of Islay
From Robots to Robert Burns
Start the year with something a little different, as
‘A very arduous period’ the Register Houses at war, 1914-1918
For an organisation dedicated to maintaining a large tranche of the nation’s collective memory, it seems strange that the National Records of Scotland has not inherited from its predecessor organisations memorials to all the staff who died in both world wars, writes Dr Tristram Clarke
Girlguiding Scotland Archive
Margaret Grosset introduces this unique archive that covers more than a century of girlguiding history, showing how girl guiding in Scotland has changed over the years, and highlighting the work of some of the movement’s prominent members
EDINBURGH IN SNOW
Our seasonal work of art is a winter painting of the city of Edinburgh, showing familiar landmarks transformed through a powerful use of light and visual signals
Spotlight on… Clyne Heritage Society
Since its inception in 1998, the Clyne Heritage Society’s
The end of the great war
This month, Ken Nisbet shares his top tips for using medical registers and directories to research ancestors who used the services of a hospital or doctor
TREASURES OF THE SCOTTISH HISTORY SOCIETY
Dr Annie Tindley highlights a volume which explores in rich detail the stories of Scots who migrated to America from the mid 17th century to the early 20th century
FINAL WORD
Natasha Ferguson, Project Reveal Lead Inventory Officer at National Trust for Scotland, talks about the Trust’s extensive archaeology collections, which are part of an ongoing project to catalogue and photograph tens of thousands of artefacts held at its sites around the country