Description

Book Synopsis
Charts the story of the people of the Scottish Highlands from medieval times to the great crofter's rebellion in the 1880s

Trade Review

This is the most pathbreaking book in Highland history since Donald Gregory's appraisal of clanship originally published in the 1840s ... this outstanding work should be prescribed reading for any serious student of Scottish Gaeldom.'
Allan I. MacInnes, Innes Review

'Written by Scotland’s master historian, this remains the best overview we have of the tumultuous transformation of the Highlands from the collapse of Jacobitism to the great crofting agitation. All of Tom Devine’s superb skills are on display: fluent and accessible prose, perceptive arguments, and incisive analysis.'
Angela McCarthy, Professor of Scottish and Irish History, University of Otago, New Zealand

'Professor Devine's book is scrupulously researched and provides the definitive explanation of the Highland crofting system.'
Press and Journal

'A book that any student of Highland history will want to read.'
The Herald

'A powerful story, written with great passion, of defeat, social destruction, emigration, rebellion and cultural revival ... a masterful book ... by the leading authority on the subject.'
Teaching History

Widely considered the definitive work since its original publication in 1994, this study of the Highlands in the 18th and 19th Centuries by Scotland’s premier historian receives a welcome reissue. It’s a book densely packed with information, following the Highlands from the collapse of Jacobitism to the Crofters’ War of the 1880s, and explains how the clan system was supplanted by a new orthodoxy much more in line with the priorities of an urbanising and industrialising Britain. Devine is part of the tendency which believes that the clan system was already in decline before 1745 and that the Duke of Cumberland, while making a useful symbol, did much less harm to the Highlands than the inevitable march of progress which was already transforming the Lowlands. Delving into the language and culture of the region, as well as the pain that eviction, famine and emigration exacted on the people, this is a comprehensive account of the period that is still to be bettered.

-- .

Table of Contents

1. Clanship
2. Jacobitism and the '45
3. The transformation of Gaeldom
4. The final phase of clearance
5. Revolution in landownership
6. The making of Highlandism, 1746–1822
7. The social impact of protestant evangelicalism
8. The language of the Gael
9. Peasant enterprise: illicit whisky-making, 1760–1840
10. The migrant tradition
11. The great hunger
12. A century of emigration
13. After the famine
14. Patterns of popular resistance and the Crofter's War, 1790–1886
15. The intervention of the state
16. Diaspora: Highland migrants in the Scottish city
Index

Clanship to Crofters War The Social

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    A Paperback by T Devine

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      View other formats and editions of Clanship to Crofters War The Social by T Devine

      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 9/30/2013 12:00:00 AM
      ISBN13: 9780719090769, 978-0719090769
      ISBN10: 0719090768

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Charts the story of the people of the Scottish Highlands from medieval times to the great crofter's rebellion in the 1880s

      Trade Review

      This is the most pathbreaking book in Highland history since Donald Gregory's appraisal of clanship originally published in the 1840s ... this outstanding work should be prescribed reading for any serious student of Scottish Gaeldom.'
      Allan I. MacInnes, Innes Review

      'Written by Scotland’s master historian, this remains the best overview we have of the tumultuous transformation of the Highlands from the collapse of Jacobitism to the great crofting agitation. All of Tom Devine’s superb skills are on display: fluent and accessible prose, perceptive arguments, and incisive analysis.'
      Angela McCarthy, Professor of Scottish and Irish History, University of Otago, New Zealand

      'Professor Devine's book is scrupulously researched and provides the definitive explanation of the Highland crofting system.'
      Press and Journal

      'A book that any student of Highland history will want to read.'
      The Herald

      'A powerful story, written with great passion, of defeat, social destruction, emigration, rebellion and cultural revival ... a masterful book ... by the leading authority on the subject.'
      Teaching History

      Widely considered the definitive work since its original publication in 1994, this study of the Highlands in the 18th and 19th Centuries by Scotland’s premier historian receives a welcome reissue. It’s a book densely packed with information, following the Highlands from the collapse of Jacobitism to the Crofters’ War of the 1880s, and explains how the clan system was supplanted by a new orthodoxy much more in line with the priorities of an urbanising and industrialising Britain. Devine is part of the tendency which believes that the clan system was already in decline before 1745 and that the Duke of Cumberland, while making a useful symbol, did much less harm to the Highlands than the inevitable march of progress which was already transforming the Lowlands. Delving into the language and culture of the region, as well as the pain that eviction, famine and emigration exacted on the people, this is a comprehensive account of the period that is still to be bettered.

      -- .

      Table of Contents

      1. Clanship
      2. Jacobitism and the '45
      3. The transformation of Gaeldom
      4. The final phase of clearance
      5. Revolution in landownership
      6. The making of Highlandism, 1746–1822
      7. The social impact of protestant evangelicalism
      8. The language of the Gael
      9. Peasant enterprise: illicit whisky-making, 1760–1840
      10. The migrant tradition
      11. The great hunger
      12. A century of emigration
      13. After the famine
      14. Patterns of popular resistance and the Crofter's War, 1790–1886
      15. The intervention of the state
      16. Diaspora: Highland migrants in the Scottish city
      Index

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