The final rebellion of Donald Dubh, heir to the forfeited MacDonald lordship of the Isles, is usually examined within the context of Highland rebellions that occurred in the half century after forfeiture. However, the factors that motivated the Islesmen to rise in rebellion in 1545 are multi-faceted and can only be fully understood by placing the rising in a wider context, which considers national and archipelagic events. The discussion that follows explores the reasons why the Islesmen, almost unanimously, entered into agreement with Henry VIII to attack Scotland from the west and why this endeavour failed. At the same time, the article highlights Henry’s recognition of the strategic importance of the west which led him into alliance with ...
The reasons for the failure of the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745 lie chiefly in the almost unanimously ...
Current understanding of Williamite Scotland tends to emphasise a few familiar themes, especially Ja...
This article is the first analysis of Gaelic sources relating to the involvement of Scottish Highlan...
The final rebellion of Donald Dubh, heir to the forfeited MacDonald lordship of the Isles, is usuall...
The final rebellion of Donald Dubh, heir to the forfeited MacDonald lordship of the Isles, is usuall...
The short and militarily inglorious rebellion launched in May 1685 by Archibald Campbell, 9th earl o...
This paper examines the extent to which the Clan Donald, as political force in Scotland, deintegrate...
The year 1558 was one of open war between England and Scotland. Previous scholarly accounts of this ...
This article examines aspects of Highland or Gaelic Society in the decades immediately preceeding an...
In November 1523 a Scottish army, led by John Stewart, duke of Albany, invaded England for the first...
This paper provides a detailed historiographical analysis of published work on the Lordship of the I...
Very late on the 19th March 1286, in the teeth of a howling gale on a dark and stormy night, Scotlan...
The rebellion against Charles I's authority that began in Edinburgh in 1637 involved the Scots in su...
The following discussion explores the reciprocal relationships between Campbell chiefs and their kin...
This paper examines the twelfth-century Latin poem known as the Song of the Death of Somerled and ar...
The reasons for the failure of the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745 lie chiefly in the almost unanimously ...
Current understanding of Williamite Scotland tends to emphasise a few familiar themes, especially Ja...
This article is the first analysis of Gaelic sources relating to the involvement of Scottish Highlan...
The final rebellion of Donald Dubh, heir to the forfeited MacDonald lordship of the Isles, is usuall...
The final rebellion of Donald Dubh, heir to the forfeited MacDonald lordship of the Isles, is usuall...
The short and militarily inglorious rebellion launched in May 1685 by Archibald Campbell, 9th earl o...
This paper examines the extent to which the Clan Donald, as political force in Scotland, deintegrate...
The year 1558 was one of open war between England and Scotland. Previous scholarly accounts of this ...
This article examines aspects of Highland or Gaelic Society in the decades immediately preceeding an...
In November 1523 a Scottish army, led by John Stewart, duke of Albany, invaded England for the first...
This paper provides a detailed historiographical analysis of published work on the Lordship of the I...
Very late on the 19th March 1286, in the teeth of a howling gale on a dark and stormy night, Scotlan...
The rebellion against Charles I's authority that began in Edinburgh in 1637 involved the Scots in su...
The following discussion explores the reciprocal relationships between Campbell chiefs and their kin...
This paper examines the twelfth-century Latin poem known as the Song of the Death of Somerled and ar...
The reasons for the failure of the Jacobite Rebellion of 1745 lie chiefly in the almost unanimously ...
Current understanding of Williamite Scotland tends to emphasise a few familiar themes, especially Ja...
This article is the first analysis of Gaelic sources relating to the involvement of Scottish Highlan...