St. Andrews: The Haunted Town
The site of her oldest university and the home of one of her earliest missionary Saints, St. Andrews holds a special position in the history of Scotland, as Russell Kirk here explains.
The site of her oldest university and the home of one of her earliest missionary Saints, St. Andrews holds a special position in the history of Scotland, as Russell Kirk here explains.
Sarah Fraser considers how the Statutes of Iona were an early answer to the problems of citizenship and integration.
The romantic ‘braveheart’ image of Scotland’s past lives on. But, as Christopher A. Whatley shows, a more nuanced ‘portrait of the nation’ is emerging, one that explores the political and religious complexities of Jacobitism and its enduring myth-making power.
Patricia Cleveland-Peck tells the story of Fanny Calderón de la Barca and her life as an author, ambassador’s wife and governess to the Spanish royal family.
Roger Hudson on a moment in the story of Scottish emigration captured in 1923.
The debate on Scottish independence has been dominated by economic arguments, to its detriment, argues Tim Stanley.
The invention of the telephone, the early years of the steamboat and other great Scottish firsts.
The historical debate over the United Kingdom has been led by those who wish to bring the Union to an end. David Torrance believes the public deserves a more balanced discussion.
David Torrance examines a pioneering article, first published in History Today in 1990, which argued that the Scottish Enlightenment was not restricted to Edinburgh but was a genuinely national phenomenon.
The story of a country that has long punched above its weight is told in Scotland’s refurbished National Museum, says David Forsyth.