Building Early Modern Edinburgh: A Social History of Craftwork and Incorporation

Author:   Aaron Allen
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9781474442381


Pages:   152
Publication Date:   30 September 2018
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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Building Early Modern Edinburgh: A Social History of Craftwork and Incorporation


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Author:   Aaron Allen
Publisher:   Edinburgh University Press
Imprint:   Edinburgh University Press
ISBN:  

9781474442381


ISBN 10:   1474442382
Pages:   152
Publication Date:   30 September 2018
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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"A book such as this is a torchlight for all to show what can be done. The author is Dr Aaron Allen of Edinburgh University, whose passion and knowledge of the city's trades shines through in the text so much that there appears to be more room for his insights and demonstrations of craft skills than the three hundred pages can contain.--Anthon Lewis, Glasgow Life ""The Innes Review"" Allen skillfully plots a path through the extraordinarily complex history of early modern Edinburgh, and one of the great strengths of the book is his focus on the original archival material... a major contribution to the institutional history of the city, as well as the context for architectural historians to do further work on how buildings actually came to be constructed.--John Lowrey, University of Edinburgh ""Renaissance Quarterly"" Edinburgh's history, long dominated by the story of its merchant elite and professions, is given extensive, new insights. The ten 'arts' in the 'House' of St Mary's Incorporation, centred around the masons and wrights, were largely responsible for building the Old Town. A ground-breaking and definitive work of new research.--Michael Lynch, Emeritus Professor, University of Edinburgh The author is to be congratulated for producing a readable and interesting work on a united yet divided group of craftsmen, and for his careful exploration of the things that brought unity and those that brought division. One of its most significant achievements is in showing that it is possible to write a full-length academic study of a single incorporated trade, in spite of the sometimes difficult source base. Finally, the present-day Incorporation of Mary's Chapel is to be commended for supporting the extensive research that lay behind this book. May such a significant gesture of commitment to scholarly research into what remains a remarkably under-studied aspect of Scottish urban history serve as an inspiration to other similar bodies, in Edinburgh and other historic burghs, so that the contribution of the incorporated trades to the social, economic and cultural development of urban Scotland continues to be explored and brought to light.--Alan R. Macdonald, University of Dundee ""Scottish Historical Review"" The scholarship and exhaustive research that underpins this fine book is impressive and adds considerably to our understanding of all early modern Scottish cities and Edinburgh in particular, moving the focus in an existing extensive literature away from elites and politics with a big 'p' to the politics and preoccupations of the skilled working man and woman. The book comes alive when we learn more about these individuals and their work and circumstances.--Stana Nenadic, University of Edinburgh ""Journal of Scottish Historical Studies"" This deeply researched book has a great deal to commend it, above all is its emphasis on the importance of corporatism. The author weaves the concept of corporatism through each chapter as he examines its social, political, religious and economic ramifications, and the result is a book that will most certainly find an important place in the growing field of the early modern history of work.--James R. Farr, Purdue University Building Early Modern Edinburgh is an important book. It takes a certain �lan to approach sources of this nature when other scholars will actively ignore them due to their complexity. In so doing, Allen has paved a way for scholars in the future to further explore Scotland's social history, while also reflecting on the ways in which religious Reformation had deep and lasting impacts on Scotland's social fabric.--Chris R. Langley, Newman University, Birmingham ""Scottish Church History"""


A book such as this is a torchlight for all to show what can be done. The author is Dr Aaron Allen of Edinburgh University, whose passion and knowledge of the city's trades shines through in the text so much that there appears to be more room for his insights and demonstrations of craft skills than the three hundred pages can contain. --Anthon Lewis, Glasgow Life The Innes Review


"A book such as this is a torchlight for all to show what can be done. The author is Dr Aaron Allen of Edinburgh University, whose passion and knowledge of the city's trades shines through in the text so much that there appears to be more room for his insights and demonstrations of craft skills than the three hundred pages can contain. --Anthon Lewis, Glasgow Life ""The Innes Review """


Author Information

Aaron Allen is currently a Teaching Fellow at the University of Edinburgh. He is the author of The Locksmith Craft in Early Modern Edinburgh (2007) and co-editor, with Cathryn Spence, of Edinburgh Housemails Taxation Book, 1634-1636 (2014).

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