In 1751, James Murray, the second Duke of Atholl (1690–1764), wrote to his nephew, John Murray, who was then enjoying a tour of the continent at his uncle’s expense, and asked him to look out for portraits of William of Nassau, Prince of Orange, and his third wife, Charlotte de Bourbon. These images were to form part of an elaborate dynastic representational scheme that he would display in his renovated family seat in Perthshire, Atholl House. These renovations would become a key topic within an emotive correspondence bonding James Murray and the nephew who would in time become his heir. This chapter explores how the eighteenth-century Atholl family, and James Murray and his nephew John Murray in particular, developed spaces for feeling in ...
This project investigates the ideals and experience of elite marriage in early modern Britain throug...
Despite its reputation as an age of sensibility, the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries ...
This second part of a two-part study of the 14th-century Fleming earls of Wigtown explores the conse...
This research project will explore interpersonal relationships in early modern Scotland. The early m...
The princes étrangers, or the foreign princes, were an influential group of courtiers in early moder...
The perception of Dalkeith Palace for centuries tended to focus upon the martial history of the curr...
This chapter discusses the family, kinship and clan policy in the sixteenth century Scottish Gaeldom
This chapter examines the changing role of the younger brother of the king in the monarchy of France...
The goal of this research is to examine family structure in early modern Scotland and England though...
The goal of this research is to examine family structure in early modern Scotland and England throug...
This is the first book in English to study the history of the Estates General of Burgundy during the...
The first part of a two-part study of the 14th-century Fleming earls of Wigtown, this paper explores...
James VI and Noble Power in Scotland explores how Scotland was governed in the late sixteenth centur...
Kinship was an organising principle throughout pre-industrial Scottish society. However, as a conse...
This regional study examines the character and pace of change in landed society in the eighteenth ce...
This project investigates the ideals and experience of elite marriage in early modern Britain throug...
Despite its reputation as an age of sensibility, the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries ...
This second part of a two-part study of the 14th-century Fleming earls of Wigtown explores the conse...
This research project will explore interpersonal relationships in early modern Scotland. The early m...
The princes étrangers, or the foreign princes, were an influential group of courtiers in early moder...
The perception of Dalkeith Palace for centuries tended to focus upon the martial history of the curr...
This chapter discusses the family, kinship and clan policy in the sixteenth century Scottish Gaeldom
This chapter examines the changing role of the younger brother of the king in the monarchy of France...
The goal of this research is to examine family structure in early modern Scotland and England though...
The goal of this research is to examine family structure in early modern Scotland and England throug...
This is the first book in English to study the history of the Estates General of Burgundy during the...
The first part of a two-part study of the 14th-century Fleming earls of Wigtown, this paper explores...
James VI and Noble Power in Scotland explores how Scotland was governed in the late sixteenth centur...
Kinship was an organising principle throughout pre-industrial Scottish society. However, as a conse...
This regional study examines the character and pace of change in landed society in the eighteenth ce...
This project investigates the ideals and experience of elite marriage in early modern Britain throug...
Despite its reputation as an age of sensibility, the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries ...
This second part of a two-part study of the 14th-century Fleming earls of Wigtown explores the conse...