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Arthur Williamson

Scottish National Consciousness in the Age of James VI

This book deals with the problem of Scottish identity within the British context in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. On James VI’s succession to the English throne in 1603 the Scots were troubled at the prospect of Scotland’s nationhood being absorbed by a supremely confident and intolerant England. Their strategic response was to develop a self-conscious attention to Scotland’s past.
The non-institutionalized nature of Scottish society made it difficult for the Scots to produce a long and respectable history to vie with England’s much-vaunted and impressive pedigree. The idea that the Scots seized on to define and validate their identity was that of the covenant with God — and this had profound and far-reaching results.
This original and stimulating book provides a valuable contribution to the understanding of the processes of secularization in early modern Europe, and indicates the significant ways in which the Scottish experience differed from that of England. It therefore provides a useful corrective to an Anglocentric interpretation of ‘Britain’.
429 trykte sider
Oprindeligt udgivet
2004
Udgivelsesår
2004
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