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4 - ‘Plumb-Pudding Stone’ and the Romantic Sublime: The Landscape and Geology of the Trossachs in The Statistical Account of Scotland (1791–9)

Tom Furniss
Affiliation:
University of Strathclyde
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Summary

Everyone knows that it was Walter Scott's The Lady of the Lake (1810) that made the Trossachs and Loch Katrine into the epitome of Romantic Scotland for readers, writers and tourists from Britain and Europe. But I want to suggest here that the cultural work of turning these places into an exemplary Romantic locality was begun nearly two decades earlier in the parish report on Callander that was included in the massive twenty-one-volume Statistical Account of Scotland, edited by Sir John Sinclair and published in Edinburgh between 1791 and 1799. Although some nineteenth-century writers suggested that the Reverend James Robertson of Callander was the first writer to ‘discover’ the Trossachs, the bulk of academic work on the explosion of interest in the people, culture and localities of Highland Scotland in the second half of the eighteenth century has focused on the increasing number of published tours and guide books in the period. While some of these tours and guidebooks were written by Scots, they were usually, like the increasing number of English and European travellers to the Scottish Highlands, merely visitors to the localities they wrote about. The distinctive feature of the 938 parish reports in the Statistical Account of Scotland is that they were written by parish ministers who typically combined intimate local knowledge with a university education in one of the centres of the Scottish Enlightenment.

Type
Chapter
Information
Romantic Localities
Europe Writes Place
, pp. 51 - 66
Publisher: Pickering & Chatto
First published in: 2014

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