The Kings of Alba
Title | The Kings of Alba PDF eBook |
Author | Alasdair Ross |
Publisher | Birlinn Ltd |
Total Pages | 335 |
Release | 2011-07-18 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1788853679 |
The events of 1000-1130 were crucial to the successful emergence of the medieval kingdom of the Scots. Yet this is one of the least researched periods of Scottish history. We probably now know more about the Picts than the post-1000 events that underpinned the spectacular expansion of the small kingdom which came to dominate north Britain by the 1130s. This expansion included the defeat and absorption of other significant cultural and political groups to the north and south of the core kingdom, and was accompanied by the introduction of reformed monasticism. But perhaps the most momentous process amongst all these political and cultural changes was the move towards the domination of the kingship by just one segment of the royal kindred, the sons of King Mael Coluim mac Donnchada's second marriage to Queen Margaret. The story of how these sons managed to achieve political supremacy through machination, murder and mutilation runs like an unsavoury thread throughout this book. The book also investigates the building blocks from which the kingdom was constructed and the various processes which eventually allowed the kings of the different peoples of north Britain to describe themselves as Rex scottorum. It is a hugely rewarding voyage of discovery for anyone interested in the formation of the kingdom of the Scots.
Scottish Independence and the Idea of Britain
Title | Scottish Independence and the Idea of Britain PDF eBook |
Author | Dauvit Broun |
Publisher | Edinburgh University Press |
Total Pages | 328 |
Release | 2013-08-20 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0748685200 |
This book offers a fresh perspective on the question of Scotland's relationship with Britain. It challenges the standard concept of the Scots as an ancient nation whose British identity only emerged in the early modern era.
From Pictland to Alba, 789-1070
Title | From Pictland to Alba, 789-1070 PDF eBook |
Author | Alex Woolf |
Publisher | Edinburgh University Press |
Total Pages | 400 |
Release | 2007-10-26 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 0748628215 |
In the 780s northern Britain was dominated by two great kingdoms; Pictavia, centred in north-eastern Scotland and Northumbria which straddled the modern Anglo-Scottish border. Within a hundred years both of these kingdoms had been thrown into chaos by the onslaught of the Vikings and within two hundred years they had become distant memories. This book charts the transformation of the political landscape of northern Britain between the eighth and the eleventh centuries. Central to this narrative is the mysterious disappearance of the Picts and their language and the sudden rise to prominence of the Gaelic-speaking Scots who would replace them as the rulers of the North. From Pictland to Alba uses fragmentary sources which survive from this darkest period in Scottish history to guide the reader past the pitfalls which beset the unwary traveller in these dangerous times. Important sources are presented in full and their value as evidence is thoroughly explored and evaluated.
King Hereafter
Title | King Hereafter PDF eBook |
Author | Dorothy Dunnett |
Publisher | Vintage |
Total Pages | 1219 |
Release | 2010-08-11 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0307762343 |
Back in print by popular demand--"A stunning revelation of the historical Macbeth, harsh and brutal and eloquent." --Washington Post Book World. With the same meticulous scholarship and narrative legerdemain she brought to her hugely popular Lymond Chronicles, our foremost historical novelist travels further into the past. In King Hereafter, Dorothy Dunnett's stage is the wild, half-pagan country of eleventh-century Scotland. Her hero is an ungainly young earl with a lowering brow and a taste for intrigue. He calls himself Thorfinn but his Christian name is Macbeth. Dunnett depicts Macbeth's transformation from an angry boy who refuses to accept his meager share of the Orkney Islands to a suavely accomplished warrior who seizes an empire with the help of a wife as shrewd and valiant as himself. She creates characters who are at once wholly creatures of another time yet always recognizable--and she does so with such realism and immediacy that she once more elevates historical fiction into high art.
The History of the Kings of Rome
Title | The History of the Kings of Rome PDF eBook |
Author | Thomas Henry Dyer |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 584 |
Release | 1868 |
Genre | Rome |
ISBN |
Kings, Clerics and Chronicles in Scotland, 500-1297
Title | Kings, Clerics and Chronicles in Scotland, 500-1297 PDF eBook |
Author | Simon Taylor |
Publisher | |
Total Pages | 216 |
Release | 2000 |
Genre | Biography & Autobiography |
ISBN |
Ten essays from a February 1999 conference in St. Andrews, Scotland, celebrate the scholar's career. Their topics include evidence of a lost Pictish source in the Historia Regum Anglorum of Symeon of Durham, the thriving of Dalriada, the Chronicle of the Kings of Alba, recovering the full text of Ve
Máel Coluim III, 'Canmore'
Title | Máel Coluim III, 'Canmore' PDF eBook |
Author | Neil McGuigan |
Publisher | Birlinn Ltd |
Total Pages | 585 |
Release | 2021-06-03 |
Genre | History |
ISBN | 1788851447 |
Shortlisted for the Saltire Society History Book of the Year The legendary Scottish king Máel Coluim III, also known as 'Malcolm Canmore', is often held to epitomise Scotland's 'ancient Gaelic kings'. But Máel Coluim and his dynasty were in fact newcomers, and their legitimacy and status were far from secure at the beginning of his rule. Máel Coluim's long reign from 1058 until 1093 coincided with the Norman Conquest of England, a revolutionary event that presented great opportunities and terrible dangers. Although his interventions in post-Conquest England eventually cost him his life, the book argues that they were crucial to his success as both king and dynasty-builder, creating internal stability and facilitating the takeover of Strathclyde and Lothian. As a result, Máel Coluim left to his successors a territory that stretched far to the south of the kingship's heartland north of the Forth, similar to the Scotland we know today. The book explores the wider political and cultural world in which Máel Coluim lived, guiding the reader through the pitfalls and possibilities offered by the sources that mediate access to that world. Our reliance on so few texts means that the eleventh century poses problems that historians of later eras can avoid. Nevertheless Scotland in Máel Coluim's time generated unprecedented levels of attention abroad and more vernacular literary output than at any time prior to the Stewart era.