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Moray: Castle to cathedral to cashmere

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History Scotland
July - Aug 2018
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A suffragette archive IN ABERDEEN
Sarah Pedersen and Karen Shaw of Robert Gordon University introduce a unique suffragette collection held at Aberdeen Art Gallery which tells the story of a remarkable member of the WSPU who carried out her votes for women campaigning alongside her role as a newspaper reporter
EXCITING DISCOVERIES ON THE BLACK ISLE
Eric Grant explores the range of discoveries made through the three-year community archaeology project Tarradale Through Time
Monuments and moral in the Highlands
In light of the recent controversy about confederate statutes in the USA, Dr Elizabeth Ritchie considers what the modest Sutherland monument to Sir John A. MacDonald, the Scottish-born first prime minister of Canada, tells us about the complexities of public memorialisation, and asks what might be done to improve the way we commemorate our past
EUPHEMIA ROSS THE SURPRISE QUEEN
In the first instalment of a major new six-part series, Dr Amy Hayes explores the life and legacy of Euphemia Ross, the first Stewart queen of Scots as wife of Robert II, and discovers an enigmatic but fascinating character who deserves to be more widely known
ONLINE RESEARCH
This month’s website picks cover military history, the history of Britain and Ireland and adverse weather
Remembering the ELLIOT JUNCTION RAIL DISASTER
More than a century after a railway tragedy near Arbroath, townspeople are working on a memorial which will remember those lost and the bravery of those who worked to save others. By Margaret Bowman
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Dr Aonghus MacKechnie discusses a 1592 plan for a proposed new town at Edzell, one of Scotland’s oldest surviving architectural drawings and a fascinating insight into the town-planning ideas of the 16th century
LOVAT’S SCOUTS – BIRTH OF A LEGEND?
Iona Bruce explores the creation and deployment of Lovat’s Scouts, the famous yeomanry regiment raised by Simon Fraser, 16th lord Lovat during the Boer War, and asks how far the reality matches the legend of the Lovat ‘ghillie corps’
The Mason’s Mark Project
Moira Greig introduces a research project which has recorded more than 8,000 marks from over 1,200 stone masons, raising some intriguing questions about the work that these men did and the buildings on which they practiced their craft
‘WE ARE ALL ON TIPTOE HERE’ QUEEN VICTORIA’S VISIT TO THE CLYDE
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RHS/HISTORY SCOTLAND UNDERGRADUATE DISSERTATION AWARD 2018
The winner of the Royal Historical Society/History Scotland award has been announced, and the winning disseration will be published in an upcoming issue of the magazine
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An oral history project brings together memories of the heady days of the autumn of 1967, when a new university opened in Stirling, offering an alternative to the centuries-old academic establishments around the country. By Professor Angela Smith
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Dr Adrián Maldonado, the new Glenmorangie Research Fellow at National Museums Scotland, talks to History Scotland about the future of the project, which was established in 2008 and has uncovered many new insights into Scotland’s medieval past
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