Scottish Presbyterianism Re-established

The Case of Stirling and Dunblane, 1687-1710

Andrew T N Muirhead author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Edinburgh University Press

Published:18th Oct '21

Should be back in stock very soon

Scottish Presbyterianism Re-established cover

A local history of Presbyterianism as the new governance of the Church of Scotland In 1690, the Church of Scotland rejected episcopal authority and settled as Presbyterian. The adjacent Presbyteries of Stirling and Dunblane covered an area that included both lowland and highland communities, speaking both English and Gaelic and supporting both the new government and the old – thus forming a fairly representative picture of the nation as a whole. This book will examine the ways in which the two Presbyteries operated administratively, theologically and geographically under the new regime. By surveying the complete indices of surviving church records from 1690 to 1710 at Presbytery and parish level, Andrew Muirhead will show how the two Presbyteries related to civil authorities, how they dealt with problematic discipline cases referred by the Kirk Sessions and their overall functioning as human, as well as religious, institution in seventeenth-century Scotland. The resulting study will advance our understanding of the profound impact that Presbyteries had on those involved with them in any capacity. Key features Compares the new Presbyterian regime and the Calvinist Episcopalianism it replaced; Examines church records available in Stirling Archives (e.g. recruitment records and header texts of the week-to-week preaching of ministers), civil records (e.g. hearth tax, burgh and guildry records) as well as memoirs and diaries; Provides statistical analysis of the recruitment and experiences of new ministers, their relationships with each other and heritors; Forms the backdrop for the origins of the First Secession in Stirling 30–40 years later.

Supports the modern narrative of the period in question with painstaking research [...] provides a body of evidence that can be used to reveal yet more in the future. -- M. R. Taylor, University of Aberdeen * Eighteenth-Century Scotland *
The overthrow of James VII heralded turmoil in the Church of Scotland. The enduring structures of Presbyterianism were built up, but there was stout Episcopalian resistance. Here Andrew Muirhead reveals how the interplay of local leadership and popular preferences in the presbyteries of Dunblane and Stirling illuminates national developments. -- David Bebbington, Emeritus Professor of History, University of Stirling

ISBN: 9781474447386

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: unknown

280 pages