Rev. James Fraser, 1634-1709
A New Perspective on the Scottish Highlands Before Culloden
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Edinburgh University Press
Published:10th Jan '23
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This book studies the revealing autobiographical sources left by Rev. James Fraser of Kirkhill (1634–1709), a Gaelic-speaking scholar, traveller and minister. It examines Fraser’s self-presentation and situates him within his locality, Scotland, the British Isles and Europe, also incorporating recent historiography to provide a more comprehensive presentation of the social, economic and cultural trajectories of the early modern Highlands. David Worthington focuses on the Scottish Highlands’ strong engagement with Europe and early entanglement with empire. He challenges the assumption that the north Highlands, in particular, was sealed off from the rest of the world before Culloden and he identifies the agency, vitality and resilience of the people of the Highlands prior to the peripheralisation, depopulation and under-development that then occurred.
An impressively researched and lively biographical study of polymath and polyglot Reverend James Fraser, Gaelic minister of Kirkhill: traveller, historian, linguist, scientist. This book provides a critically important picture of the integration of the later seventeenth-century cultural and intellectual world of the Highlands with that of early modern Europe. -- Elizabeth Ewan, University of Guelph
David Worthington's passionate commitment, both to the study of history and to the mission of the UHI, underlies his book, which is not so much a biography as a biographical-based study intended to illuminate a neglected feature of the ‘Early Modern Highlands’: a region which ‘maverick, exceptional scholars, those with curious minds, were not always forced to abandon in order to make their mark on the world’. -- Frank D. Bardgett * West Highland Notes and Queries *
Out of the seventeenth-century Highlands, often thought a place apart, steps a determinedly cosmopolitan individual. David Worthington’s study of James Fraser – Gael, linguist, scientist, historian, continent-wide traveller and locally rooted parish minister – is a masterly portrayal of a well lived and productive Highland life. -- James Hunter, University of the Highlands and Islands
This excellent new book uses the fascinating life and times of Rev. James Fraser (1634–1709) to illustrate the Scottish Highlands' strong interaction and engagement with the rest of Europe and the burgeoning British Empire. This eminently readable, well-researched book provides a tour of Scotland through the eyes of Rev. Fraser, showing it as a vital, interconnected part of the British Empire and Europe before the Battle of Culloden, thus refuting the common and lazy narrative of the Highlands as a remote, backward region. Summing Up: Recommended. General readers through faculty. -- S. M. McDonald * CHOICE Connect *
This book is required reading for anyone wishing to understand life in the northern Highlands, especially during the second half of the seventeenth century. -- Edwin C. Sheffield * Scottish Historical Review *
Worthington’s portrayal of James Fraser offers a comprehensive view of this multifaceted individual and the world he inhabited. This book also dispels the perception, still far from absent among historians of eighteenth-century Scotland, that the Highlands in the pre-Culloden era should be considered peripheral or isolated from the rest of the world. -- Jamie Kelly * Eighteenth-Century Scotland *
The book is wholly successful in its aim to show the Highlands as a meeting point for early modern cultures… ...Worthington’s work reminds us of the complexity of early modern identity and how the Scottish Highlands served as a busy hub of intellectual and cultural relationships. -- Chris R. Langley * Scottish Church History *
ISBN: 9781399501279
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
248 pages