The Grimsay Press
Kinship And Survival
Kinship And Survival
Couldn't load pickup availability
Novel aspects include:
• The concept of an "expanding historical torrent" and the importance of kinship in ensuring survival over the long-term.
• Local history (Roxburghshire and Berwickshire, East and Middle Marches) from the Earls of Douglas to the Age of Improvement as a camera obscura, giving a comprehensible slant to wider Scottish history over 600 years.
• Lairdship over time, changing lifestyle, nature of land holding, farming, occupations, tower houses, etc.
• Social metamorphosis and decline, fragmentation of laird class, younger sons, urban middle class merchants, professionals and artisans, as well as agricultural workers.
• Migration and the pressures which caused it, rural to urban, Scotland to northern England, and overseas.
• Sense of identity: what kinship and the name (under several spellings) and the transition from the old church to the new kirk conveyed in the context of Border locality; Scotland and Scottishness, then Britishness and the Empire to World War I.
Share
