In an unprecedented act of peaceful, albeit contentious, statesmanship, the 1707 Treaty of Union joined Scotland and England into one sovereign country. Now governed by the Parliament of Great Britain, Scotland was allowed forty-five parliamentary members divided between the country's counties and burghs. Relinquishing its own Parliament, Scotland was obligated to adapt and to accept a seismic shift in the political management of its government. Not only were Scottish politics affected by this shift at a national level, but local elections were also significantly impacted by this change. Due to its physical size, peculiar demographics, and politically-active gentry, the county of Fife has proven to be an ideal subject for studying this pr...
After the Union, Scotland remained semi-independent, with its own church, legal and political struc...
Vigorous extra-parliamentary public debate over the question of union helped to ensure that Scotlan...
In 1707 Scotland’s parliament ceased to exist. Yet it has since been the subject of two monumental a...
In an unprecedented act of peaceful, albeit contentious, statesmanship, the 1707 Treaty of Union joi...
In Scotland the Revolution of 1688 - 1689 has received little academic attention - considered littl...
This thesis outlines the structure of government in Scotland after the Treaty of Union, and in addi...
Assesses attempts to create a closer union between Scotland and England in the Union of Crowns perio...
The period 1573 to 1603 offers a unique opportunity for the study of power politics in Scotland and...
Historians of the Scottish parliament have paid little attention to shire elections because of an ap...
Since 1707, observers have asked to what degree the Scottish parliament of 1706–7 was ‘managed’ int...
This thesis analyses the political development and the growth of popular political awareness in Gla...
Scottish government, with parliament at its centre, was reconstructed in this period in a more cent...
In the 19th and 20th centuries, scholarship on the Scottish parliament was heavily informed by a nar...
This article examines popular political participation in early modern Scotland. In Scotland, some of...
This thesis examines the political role of the three estates in the Scottish parliament and general...
After the Union, Scotland remained semi-independent, with its own church, legal and political struc...
Vigorous extra-parliamentary public debate over the question of union helped to ensure that Scotlan...
In 1707 Scotland’s parliament ceased to exist. Yet it has since been the subject of two monumental a...
In an unprecedented act of peaceful, albeit contentious, statesmanship, the 1707 Treaty of Union joi...
In Scotland the Revolution of 1688 - 1689 has received little academic attention - considered littl...
This thesis outlines the structure of government in Scotland after the Treaty of Union, and in addi...
Assesses attempts to create a closer union between Scotland and England in the Union of Crowns perio...
The period 1573 to 1603 offers a unique opportunity for the study of power politics in Scotland and...
Historians of the Scottish parliament have paid little attention to shire elections because of an ap...
Since 1707, observers have asked to what degree the Scottish parliament of 1706–7 was ‘managed’ int...
This thesis analyses the political development and the growth of popular political awareness in Gla...
Scottish government, with parliament at its centre, was reconstructed in this period in a more cent...
In the 19th and 20th centuries, scholarship on the Scottish parliament was heavily informed by a nar...
This article examines popular political participation in early modern Scotland. In Scotland, some of...
This thesis examines the political role of the three estates in the Scottish parliament and general...
After the Union, Scotland remained semi-independent, with its own church, legal and political struc...
Vigorous extra-parliamentary public debate over the question of union helped to ensure that Scotlan...
In 1707 Scotland’s parliament ceased to exist. Yet it has since been the subject of two monumental a...