History of Scotland

by J. D. Mackie

Other authorsGeoffrey Parker (Editor), Bruce Lenman (Editor)
Paperback, 1984

Status

Available

Call number

941.1

Collection

Publication

Pelican / Penguin (Non-Classics) (1984), Edition: reprint, Paperback, 416 pages

Description

A history that is equally entertaining and enlightening, illustrating all of the changes of power and intricacies that are necessary to understand the interrelation between England and Scotland and the Highland and Lowland populations. It shows how Duncan (1034-40) emerged from 'the union of the four peoples' as the first king of a united Scotland and provides detailed, reign-by-reign accounts from then on. Above all Professor Mackie reveals how the Scots long pursued an independent line - in religion, law, culture and foreign policy - that helped them keep at bay the Romans, the French and the English.

User reviews

LibraryThing member JohnPhelan
Good in parts. The author had a real turn of phrase when he wanted to and his final chapter had some funny moments. But too often it was bogged down in blow by blow descriptions of religious and academic disputes and stuff about the constitution.
LibraryThing member mbmackay
Helps to put some facts on the family myth-history. Like - who Bonnie Prince Charlie actually was!
Read in Samoa Feb 2003

Subjects

Language

Original publication date

1964

Physical description

416 p.; 7.3 inches

ISBN

014020671X / 9780140206715
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