Scottish Pride is a compendium of 101 reasons the Scots have to be proud of their heritage. From the cuisine of the highlands to actors (Sean Connery) and artists (John Duncan Fergusson) to bagpipers, golf courses, kilts and Scotch Whiskey: this book is a unique tribute to a fine and accomplished people. Included here are profiles of great Scots like Alexander Hamilton and Scottish heroes like Robert the Bruce. From royalty (Mary Stuart), to rock stars (Rod Stewart), to politicians (David Hume), these are the luminaries who have changed the face of history.
Wherever I went , I took the essential Edinburgh books , The Heart of Midlothian , Weir of Hermiston , Magnus Merriman , Cockburn's Memorials , Lockhart's Scott and Peter's Letters , Fergusson and Garioch , Mossner's Hume .
... 289 Loch - na - Gar : Queen Victoria's accent of , 305-7 Long , Harry Alfred , 134 Longa Island , 10 Low , Revd Mr , 168 Lumphinnans , 173 , 174-5 Lundie , Margaret , 206 MacBhannain , Angus , 301 Macdiarmid , Hugh : account of pubs ...
Stephen Maxwell era consciente de los " inestables " cimientos de la identidad política escocesa , es decir , de la ... su primigenia monarquía y de las secuelas de cierto sentimiento de " inferioridad " respecto a sus vecinos del sur .
Stone Voices is Neal Ascherson's return to his native Scotland. It is an exploration of Scottish identity, but this is no journalistic rumination on the future of that small nation....
In this volume, prominent Scots reflect on their identity. It gives an insight into the certainties and ambiguities of personality and belonging.
CAPTIONS TO PLATES FOLLOWING PAGE 96 Photographs are reproduced by kind permission of the Scottish Ethnological Archive , National Museums of Scotland 1 Scots ministers of religion followed in an intrepid line of saints and martyrs .
Murray Pittock traces the Stuart myth from the days of Charles I to the modern Scottish National Party, and discusses both pro- and anti-Union propaganda.
' Hugh Trevor-Roper.
This volume provides a comparative overview of the nineteenth century emergence of military Scottishness and explores how the construction and performance of Scottish military identity has evolved in different Commonwealth countries over ...
In this comical, yet trenchant, enquiry Andrew Burnside explores the unrealities of being Scottish. Burnside suggests that the Scot, more than others, has built and goes on building a divide between reality and what he imagines he is.