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Subject History
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Scholars connected with the University of
Edinburgh have been interested in Scotland’s
past ever since the University’s foundation
in 1582.
In those days history was one of the
things that all well-educated people needed
to understand, but it usually had a more directly
non-historical purpose than it does today.
Scholars were mainly interested in the past
as a means to understand public affairs, to
understand God’s purposes in the world,
or to understand their own identity. ‘Scottish’ history
was often a means of explaining Scottish identity.
The University of Edinburgh was founded
for the dual purposes of providing a broad
humanistic education and of training Protestant
ministers. One of the very earliest graduates
of the University, Robert Johnston (c.1567-1639),
wrote a Latin History of Scotland
that covered the minority of James VI. Much
better known is the massive History
of the Kirk of Scotland by another
early graduate, David Calderwood (c.1575-1650),
a presbyterian minister whose polemical
purpose was shouted from every page. A more
humanistic work by another early alumnus
of the University was the encyclopedic History
of the Earldom of Sutherland by the
courtier Sir Robert Gordon of Gordonstoun
(1580-1656).
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The eighteenth
century |
New standards in history were set by the Edinburgh
graduate James Anderson in his Historical
Essay Shewing that the Crown and Kingdom
of Scotland is Imperial and Independent
(1705). This was written for an immediate
political purpose during the negotiations
that culminated in the Union of 1707, but
took a sophisticated and critical approach
to record sources rather than assuming that
all previous statements about the past were
straightforwardly factual.
William Robertson, who wrote an acclaimed
History of Scotland during the Reigns
of Queen Mary and James VI (1759),
later became Principal of the University.
It was he who commissioned the present Old
College building (begun in 1789), and he
is commemorated today by the William Robertson
Building, headquarters of the School of
History, Classics and Archaeology. Robertson
also wrote histories of America and of the
Emperor Charles V, some of the most influential
historical works of the eighteenth century.
By profession, though, Robertson was a Church
of Scotland minister, much occupied with
high-level ecclesiastical politics. History
was not yet an entirely distinct subject.
Next: The nineteenth century |
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Contact us
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Scottish History
School of History, Classics and Archaeology
Doorway 4
Teviot Place
Edinburgh, EH8 9AG
Tel +44 (0)131 650 4030
Fax +44 (0)131 650 4042
Email: Scottish.History@ed.ac.uk
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