Acknowledging the considerable degree of identity which developed between Episcopalianism and the Jacobite movement in Scotland, this study investigates the character of Episcopalian thought at the end of the seventeenth and in the first decade of the eighteenth century, making particular use of the writings of Bishop John Sage (1652-1711) and Principal Alexander Monro (d. 1698). It comments on the origins of that thought, with reference to both locally and temporally specific circumstances and the intellectual traditions of the seventeenth century, notably an increasing emphasis on historical method and the cultivation of neo-Stoicism. In commenting on the content of this thought, it centrally seeks to explain the relationship of the domin...
This thesis offers a new interpretation of the origins of eighteenth-century popular political consc...
In the early eighteenth century Scottish universities played a crucial role in the education of diss...
Historians have seen John Simson (1668-1740) as either a heretic or a rationalist. He is a frequentl...
Enlightenment notions for Counter Enlightenment purposes have not to date been used to provide a com...
The Revolution of 1688 takes second place only to the Reformation in Scottish Ecclesiastical histor...
The study investigates the late seventeenth century origins of the Scottish Enlightenment, and it of...
In the Jacobite period, the north-east was a geographically and culturally distinct region of Lowlan...
What was the Scottish Enlightenment? Long since ignored or sidelined, it is now a controversial topi...
The primary purpose of this article is to examine the strength in depth of Jacobitism within Scotlan...
The essays in this collection examine religion, politics and commerce in Scotland during a time of i...
This article examines the connections between the Scottish Enlightenment thinker David Hume (1711–7...
Eighteenth-Century British American Presbyterian ministers incorporated covenantal theology, ideas f...
This thesis attempts to shed light on a little-studied moment in the history of the Williamite revol...
What was the Scottish Enlightenment? Long since ignored or sidelined, it is now a controversial topi...
This thesis opens with a survey of state policy and puritan political opinion from the 1620's to the...
This thesis offers a new interpretation of the origins of eighteenth-century popular political consc...
In the early eighteenth century Scottish universities played a crucial role in the education of diss...
Historians have seen John Simson (1668-1740) as either a heretic or a rationalist. He is a frequentl...
Enlightenment notions for Counter Enlightenment purposes have not to date been used to provide a com...
The Revolution of 1688 takes second place only to the Reformation in Scottish Ecclesiastical histor...
The study investigates the late seventeenth century origins of the Scottish Enlightenment, and it of...
In the Jacobite period, the north-east was a geographically and culturally distinct region of Lowlan...
What was the Scottish Enlightenment? Long since ignored or sidelined, it is now a controversial topi...
The primary purpose of this article is to examine the strength in depth of Jacobitism within Scotlan...
The essays in this collection examine religion, politics and commerce in Scotland during a time of i...
This article examines the connections between the Scottish Enlightenment thinker David Hume (1711–7...
Eighteenth-Century British American Presbyterian ministers incorporated covenantal theology, ideas f...
This thesis attempts to shed light on a little-studied moment in the history of the Williamite revol...
What was the Scottish Enlightenment? Long since ignored or sidelined, it is now a controversial topi...
This thesis opens with a survey of state policy and puritan political opinion from the 1620's to the...
This thesis offers a new interpretation of the origins of eighteenth-century popular political consc...
In the early eighteenth century Scottish universities played a crucial role in the education of diss...
Historians have seen John Simson (1668-1740) as either a heretic or a rationalist. He is a frequentl...