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From the Invention of Great Britain to the Creation of British History: A New Historiography - The British Isles, 1100–1500: Comparisons, Contrasts, and Connections. Edited by R. R. Davies. Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers, 1988. Pp. xi + 159. £18.00. - Scotland and England, 1286–1815. Edited by Roger A. Mason. Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers, 1987. Pp. viii + 270. £20.00 - The Formation of the British State: England, Scotland, and the Union, 1603–1707. By Brian P. Levack. New York: Oxford University Press, 1987. Pp. viii + 260. $24.95.

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 January 2014

Arthur H. Williamson*
Affiliation:
California State University, Sacramento

Abstract

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Type
Reviews
Copyright
Copyright © North American Conference of British Studies 1990

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References

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1 Journal of Modern History 47 (1975): 601–28CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

2 Barrow, G. W. S., Feudal Britain, 1066–1314 (London, 1956)Google Scholar; see also his discussion of the medieval usage of the name “Scotland” in “The Highlands in the Lifetime of Robert the Bruce,” in his The Kingdom of the Scots (New York, 1973), pp. 362–83Google Scholar.

3 Grant, Alexander, Independence and Nationhood: Scotland, 1306–1469 (London, 1984), pp. 200220Google Scholar.

4 Barrow, “Highlands in the Lifetime of Robert the Bruce.”

5 Dawson, Jane, “The Fifth Earl of Argyle, Gaelic Lordship and Political Power in Sixteenth-Century Scotland,” Scottish Historical Review 67 (1988): 127Google Scholar.

6 See my Scotland, Antichrist, and the Invention of Great Britain,” in New Perspectives on the Politics and Culture of Early Modern Scotland (Edinburgh, 1982), pp. 3458Google Scholar, and, more generally, Scottish National Consciousness in the Age of James VI: the Apocalypse, the Union, and the Shaping of Scotland's Public Culture (Edinburgh, 1979Google Scholar).

7 SirFortescue, John, De laudibus legum Anglie, trans. Chrimes, S. B. (Cambridge, 1949), pp. 3233Google Scholar, chap. 13, lines 13–18: “Sic namque regnum Anglie quod ex Bruti comitiva troianorum quam ex Italie et Grecorum finibus perduxit, in dominum politicum et regale. Sic et Scotia quod ei quondam ut ducatus obedivit, in regnum crevit politicum et regale.”

8 Calderwood, David, ed. The History of the Kirk of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1845), 6:523Google Scholar.

9 For a further discussion of these themes, see my The Jewish Dimension of the Scottish Apocalypse: Climate, Covenant, and World Renewal,” in Menasseh Ben Israel and His World, ed. Kaplan, Y. and Popkin, R. H. (Leiden, 1989), pp. 730Google Scholar.