Clan Spens of the Lowlands of Scotland, Series No. 8


Book Description

The genealogy of the Nathanial Spens, a Mormon convert, who was originially from Scotland and immigrated to Utah in the United States.




Clan Spens of the Lowlands of Scotland, Series No. 7


Book Description

At the time of the Thirty Years' War, a certain Albrecht Spens settled in the Bohemian Crown, in the Tesin region, coming from the ancient Spens clan of Lowland Scotland. Around the middle of the 17th century, Albrecht Spens, a Scotsman from the Spens family of Boddam, appeared in Tesin. In 1665 he bought a free courtyard in Steborice from Leonard St. Mr. Neuhaus. In addition, he kept the property of the Town Hall and Stanislavice. On November 6, 1671, he received a confirmation of his ancient nobility and innocence. He was twice married, for the first time with Katerina Wipplarova from Usice and secondly with Anna Katerina Helen Cibulkova from Lipultovice. This volume is number 7 in the Spens / Spence Family History Series about families related to the Clan Spens of the Scottish Lowlands.







When Scotland Was Jewish


Book Description

The popular image of Scotland is dominated by widely recognized elements of Celtic culture. But a significant non-Celtic influence on Scotland's history has been largely ignored for centuries? This book argues that much of Scotland's history and culture from 1100 forward is Jewish. The authors provide evidence that many of the national heroes, villains, rulers, nobles, traders, merchants, bishops, guild members, burgesses, and ministers of Scotland were of Jewish descent, their ancestors originating in France and Spain. Much of the traditional historical account of Scotland, it is proposed, rests on fundamental interpretive errors, perpetuated in order to affirm Scotland's identity as a Celtic, Christian society. A more accurate and profound understanding of Scottish history has thus been buried. The authors' wide-ranging research includes examination of census records, archaeological artifacts, castle carvings, cemetery inscriptions, religious seals, coinage, burgess and guild member rolls, noble genealogies, family crests, portraiture, and geographic place names.







The British Confederate


Book Description

The interplay of roles of the Marquess of Argyll, as clan chief, Scottish magnate and influential British statesman, make him a worthy counterpoint to Cromwell. This book reviews Argyll's formative influence in shaping British frontier policy during the period 1607–38 and his radical, financially creative and highly partial leadership of the Covenanting Movement in Scotland, 1638–45, when Covenanters rather than Royalists or Parliamentarians directed the political agenda in Britain. It examines his role as reluctant but calculated revolutionary in pursuing confessional confederation throughout the British Isles, and in restoring Scotland's international relations particularly with France. His ambivalent role as a military leader is contrasted with that of his genius as a political operator, 1646–51. Reappraising his trial and execution as a scapegoat for reputedly collaborating with Oliver Cromwell and the regicides who executed Charles I in the 1650s, it rehabilitates Argyll's reputation as a tarnished Covenanting hero rather than an unalloyed Royalist villain. The book is firmly grounded in public and private archival sources in the UK, the USA and Scandinavia, and draws especially on privileged access to archives in Inveraray Castle, Argyllshire. It should appeal to those interested in clanship, civil war and British state formation.







Plantation and Civility in the North Atlantic World


Book Description

The settlement of the Hebrides is usually considered in terms of the state formation agenda. Yet the area was subject to successive attempts at plantation, largely overlooked in historical narrative. Aonghas MacCoinnich’s study, Plantation and Civility, explores these plantations against the background of a Lowland-Highland cultural divide and competition over resources. The Macleod of Lewis clan, ‘uncivil’, Gaelic Highlanders, were dispossessed by the Lowland, ‘civil,’ Fife Adventurers, 1598-1609. Despite the collapse of this Lowland Plantation, however, the recourse to the Mackenzie clan, often thought a failure of policy, was instead a pragmatic response to an intractable problem. The Mackenzies also pursued the civility agenda treating with Dutch partners and fending off their English rivals in order to develop their plantation.




Art and Identity in Scotland


Book Description

This lively and erudite cultural history of Scotland, from the Jacobite defeat of 1745 to the death of an icon, Sir Walter Scott, in 1832, examines how Scottish identity was experienced and represented in novel ways. Weaving together previously unpublished archival materials, visual and material culture, dress and textile history, Viccy Coltman re-evaluates the standard clichés and essentialist interpretations which still inhibit Scottish cultural history during this period of British and imperial expansion. The book incorporates familiar landmarks in Scottish history, such as the visit of George IV to Edinburgh in August 1822, with microhistories of individuals, including George Steuart, a London-based architect, and the East India Company servant, Claud Alexander. It thus highlights recurrent themes within a range of historical disciplines, and by confronting the broader questions of Scotland's relations with the rest of the British state it makes a necessary contribution to contemporary concerns.




Clan Spens of the Lowlands of Scotland


Book Description

This book is a detailed examination of the families related to Clan Spens based in Fifeshire in Scotland. Clan MacDuff of Fife; Spens of Wormiston in Fifeshire; Spens of Unthank in Lanarkshire; Spens of Lathallan in Fifeshire; Spens of Kilspindie & Condie in Perthshire; Spens of Boddum in Aberdeenshire; Spens of Craigsanquhar in Fifeshire; Spens of Blairsanquhar in Fifeshire; Spence of Berryholl in Fifeshire; Spence of Chirnside in Berwickshire; and Spens of Bruntstane Hill in Aberdeenshire.