148 research outputs found

    Iona in the Kingdom of the Picts: a note

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    Logie: an ecclesiastical place-name element in eastern Scotland

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    Hebridean connections: in Ibdone Insula, Ibdaig, Eboudai, Uist

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    Logie: an ecclesiastical place-name element in eastern Scotland

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    Writing in Britain and Ireland, c. 400 to c. 800

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    The International Companion to Scottish Poetry

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    A range of leading international scholars provide the reader with a comprehensive and innovative investigation of the extraordinary richness and diversity of Scotland\u2019s poetry. Addressing Languages and Chronologies, Poetic Forms, and Topics and Themes, this International Companion covers the entire subject from from the early Middle Ages to the modern day, and explores the connections, influences and interrelations between English, Gaelic, Latin, Old Norse and Scots verse. CONTENTS Series Editors\u2019 Preface Introduction (Carla Sassi) Part 1: Languages and Chronologies Early Celtic Poetry (to 1500) (Thomas Owen Clancy) Scots poetry in the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Centuries (R. D. S. Jack) Poetry in Latin (Roger Green) Poetry in the Languages and Dialects of Northern Scotland (Roberta Frank, Brian Smith) The Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries (S\uecm Innes, Alessandra Petrina) The Eighteenth Century (Ronald Black, Gerard Carruthers) The Nineteenth Century (Ian Duncan, Sheila Kidd) The Poetry of Modernity (1870\u20131950) (Emma Dymock, Scott Lyall) Contemporary Poetry (1950\u2013) (Attila D\uf3sa, Michelle Macleod) Part 2: Poetic Forms The Form of Scottish Gaelic poetry (William Gillies) Scots Poetic Forms (Derrick McClure) The Ballad in Scots and English (Suzanne Gilbert) Part 3: Topics and Themes Nature, Landscape and Rural Life (Louisa Gairn) Nation and Home (Carla Sassi, Silke Stroh) Protest and Politics (Wilson McLeod, Alan Riach) Love and Erotic Poetry (Peter Mackay) Faith and Religion (Meg Bateman, James McGonigal) Scottish Poetry as World Poetry (Paul Barnaby) The Literary Environment (Robyn Marsack) Endnotes Further Reading Notes on Contributors Index

    The Campbells: lordship, literature and liminality

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    The Campbells have the potential to offer much to the theme of literature and borders, given that the kindred’s astonishing political success in the late medieval and early modern period depended heavily upon the ability to negotiate multiple frontiers: between Highlands and Lowlands; between Gaelic Scotland and Ireland, and, especially after the Reformation, with England and the matter of Britain. This paper will explore the literary dimension to Campbell expansionism, from the Book of the Dean of Lismore in the earlier sixteenth century, to poetry addressed to dukes of Argyll in the earlier eighteenth century. Particular attention will be paid to the literary proclivities of the household of the Campbells of Glenorchy on either side of what appears to be a major watershed in 1550; and to the agenda of the Campbell protĂ©gĂ© John Carswell, first post-Reformation bishop of the Isles, and author of the first printed book in Gaelic in either Scotland or Ireland, Foirm na n-Urrnuidheadh (‘The Form of Prayers’), published at Edinburgh in 1567
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