Emblems in Scotland


Book Description

Emblems in the visual arts use motifs which have meanings, and in Emblems in Scotland Michael Bath, leading authority on Renaissance emblem books, shows how such symbolic motifs address major historical issues of Anglo-Scottish relations, the Reformation of the Church and the Union of the Crowns. Emblems are enigmas, and successive chapters ask for instance: Why does a late-medieval rood-screen show a jester at the Crucifixion? Why did Elizabeth I send Mary Queen of Scots tapestries showing the power of women to build a feminist City of God? Why did a presbyterian minister of Stirling decorate his manse with hieroglyphics? And why in the twentieth-century did Ian Hamilton Finlay publish a collection of Heroic Emblems?













Art in Scotland


Book Description




The Miscellany of the New Spalding Club: Register of burgesses of guild and trade of the burgh of Aberdeen, 1349-1631, ed. by A. M. Munro, with a note on names in the Register by James Moir. inventories of ecclesiastical records of northeastern Scotland, ed. by P. J. Anderson, with an introduction by James Moir. Index to the Register of burgesses


Book Description