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Kingship And Unity Scotland 10001306 G W S Barrow

  • SKU: BELL-51974574
Kingship And Unity Scotland 10001306 G W S Barrow
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

4.7

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Kingship And Unity Scotland 10001306 G W S Barrow instant download after payment.

Publisher: Edinburgh University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 18.8 MB
Pages: 224
Author: G W S Barrow
ISBN: 9781474401821, 1474401821
Language: English
Year: 2015

Product desciption

Kingship And Unity Scotland 10001306 G W S Barrow by G W S Barrow 9781474401821, 1474401821 instant download after payment.

A stunning overview of the medieval landscape of Scotland

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This is a history of the forging of the Scottish kingdom during the first three centuries of the second millennium. In AD 1000 the Scottish kings had embarked on the annexation of English-speaking Lothian and of Cumbric-speaking Clydesdale, Ayrshire and Dumfriesshire. The country’s enlargement continued under a line of remarkably able kings with the inclusion first of the highlands and then, after the defeat of the Norwegians in 1263, of the islands of the Inner and Outer Hebrides. How Scotland’s landscape influenced its people and conditioned its outlook on the world is a theme running throughout the book.


Geoffrey Barrow describes the evolution of Scottish kingship and government during the period, in the process examining the character of Scottish feudalism and the manner of its imposition. He discusses the social, economic and political changes of the period, with separate chapters on the expansion of towns and trade, the role of the church, and advances in education and learning. A sense of national identity had, he argues, become sufficiently strong by the end of the thirteenth century for the country to survive humiliation by Edward I and to reunite under Robert Bruce. With Bruce’s coronation as Robert I in 1306 this richly detailed and readable account of Scotland’s formative period comes to an end.


Since its first edition in 1981, this revised edition in The New History of Scotland series, as indicated in the preface by the series editor Jenny Wormald, can now rightly take its place amongst the classics of Scottish history.


Key features:
  • Appearing for the first time in the Edinburgh Classic Edition series
  • Long seen as a key text for students of medieval Scotland
  • Geoffrey Barrow a respected and renowned historian
  • Readable, cinematic in scope, colourful and scholarly at the same time

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