| # | Author | Title | Format | Pages | Release | Publisher | Genre |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 438 | Fitzroy Maclean | Highlanders: A History of the Scottish Clans | Hardcover | 288 | 01 Sep 1995 | Studio | History: United Kingdom |
Highlanders: A History of the Scottish Clans Fitzroy MacleanReaderRating: 4.0 (6 votes) DateAdded: 14 Dec 2006 Summary: This book is a treasure to me. It sits in a prominent spot on my bookshelf, and will someday be handed down to my children. Flooded with relevant pictures, beautifully written, if you love Scotland, you will love this book.
Subjects
Biography Clans Ethnohistory Ethnology Europe - Great Britain - Scotland Highlands Highlands (Scotland) History History - General History History: World Scotland Scotland - History History / General |
|||||||
| 439 | Arthur Herman | How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of How Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created Our World & Everything in It | Trade Paperback | 480 | 01 Sep 2002 | Three Rivers Press | History: United Kingdom |
How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of How Western Europe's Poorest Nation Created Our World & Everything in It Arthur HermanReaderRating: 4.0 (66 votes) DateAdded: 05 Dec 2006 Summary: "I am a Scotsman," Sir Walter Scott famously wrote, "therefore I had to fight my way into the world." So did any number of his compatriots over a period of just a few centuries, leaving their native country and traveling to every continent, carving out livelihoods and bringing ideas of freedom, self-reliance, moral discipline, and technological mastery with them, among other key assumptions of what historian Arthur Herman calls the "Scottish mentality." It is only natural, Herman suggests, that a country that once ranked among Europe's poorest, if most literate, would prize the ideal of progress, measured "by how far we have come from where we once were." Forged in the Scottish Enlightenment, that ideal would inform the political theories of Francis Hutcheson, Adam Smith, and David Hume, and other Scottish thinkers who viewed "man as a product of history," and whose collective enterprise involved "nothing less than a massive reordering of human knowledge" (yielding, among other things, the "Encyclopaedia Britannica," first published in Edinburgh in 1768, and the Declaration of Independence, published in Philadelphia just a few years later). On a more immediately practical front, but no less bound to that notion of progress, Scotland also fielded inventors, warriors, administrators, and diplomats such as Alexander Graham Bell, Andrew Carnegie, Simon MacTavish, and Charles James Napier, who created empires and great fortunes, extending Scotland's reach into every corner of the world. Herman examines the lives and work of these and many more eminent Scots, capably defending his thesis and arguing, with both skill and good cheer, that the Scots "have by and large made the world a better place rather than a worse place." "--Gregory McNamee"
Subjects
Civilization Civilization, Modern Europe - Great Britain - Scotland History History - General History History: World National characteristics, Scottish Scots Scottish influences History / Civilization World history |
|||||||


