Scots and the UnionEdinburgh University Press, 14 de abr. de 2014 - 480 páginas This book traces the background to the Treaty of Union of 1707, explains why it happened and assesses its impact on Scottish society, including the bitter struggle with the Jacobites for acceptance of the union in the two decades that followed its inaugur |
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Página 25
... Trade'; as late as Lockhart of Carnwath could still accept the principle of union.14 It was incorporation and the means the court used to obtain this that stuck in his craw. But incorporating union was not wholly an English ...
... Trade'; as late as Lockhart of Carnwath could still accept the principle of union.14 It was incorporation and the means the court used to obtain this that stuck in his craw. But incorporating union was not wholly an English ...
Página 43
... trade' with England and her colonies would, they believed, benefit Scotland; for many it was the sole advantage. The vote in favour of the fourth article of union, granting 'full Freedom and Intercourse of Trade and Navigation ...
... trade' with England and her colonies would, they believed, benefit Scotland; for many it was the sole advantage. The vote in favour of the fourth article of union, granting 'full Freedom and Intercourse of Trade and Navigation ...
Página 44
... trading and manufacturing interests.96 'Trade', wrote Andrew Fletcher in , was the 'golden ball'for which all ... trade that the power and wealth of nations was based and, according to one pamphleteer of the time, 'every wise ...
... trading and manufacturing interests.96 'Trade', wrote Andrew Fletcher in , was the 'golden ball'for which all ... trade that the power and wealth of nations was based and, according to one pamphleteer of the time, 'every wise ...
Página 45
... trade' with England. It was this, including the right to trade freely with England's plantations, which the Scots obtained in , along with compensation for the lost colony of Caledonia, at Darien. From , lacking the ...
... trade' with England. It was this, including the right to trade freely with England's plantations, which the Scots obtained in , along with compensation for the lost colony of Caledonia, at Darien. From , lacking the ...
Página 46
... trade' in the sale of 'your Linning Cloth and Cattell'.108 Others included the earl of Errol, who led a grouping of nobles in the Scottish Parliament which voted consistently against the articles. Even lesser individuals who had played ...
... trade' in the sale of 'your Linning Cloth and Cattell'.108 Others included the earl of Errol, who led a grouping of nobles in the Scottish Parliament which voted consistently against the articles. Even lesser individuals who had played ...
Conteúdo
1 | |
23 | |
70 | |
ambition and achievement and the aftermath of the Revolution | 104 |
a nation in crisis | 139 |
5 The most neglected if not opprest State in Europe? Confrontations and the search for compromise 17005 | 184 |
Parliament and the reconstruction of the pathway towards union 17056 | 224 |
the union commissioners and the hearts and minds of the people | 243 |
the union Parliament and the Scottish nation | 274 |
9 Union in the balance union accomplished | 322 |
Appendix A Membership of the Council of Trade elected 1705 voting record foragainst the court in the thirty recorded divisions in the union Parlia... | 381 |
Bibliography | 392 |
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