Some Old Families: A Contribution to the Genealogical History of Scotland, with an Appendix of Illustrative Documents

Front Cover
Heritage Books, 2020 - History - 512 pages

This important work of Scottish genealogy was originally published in 1890 in a limited edition of only one hundred privately circulated copies. The text is divided into eleven chapters, detailing the ancestry of eleven venerable Scottish families: the Allan family, the Dalrymple family of Waterside, the Halkerston family of Halkerston Beath, the Hardy family, the Liston family, the McCall family, the Orr family, the Ranken family of Colden, the Scott family of Thirlestane, the Wilkie family of Rathobyres and the Young family. For each family, the author presents a plethora of archival information including numerous illustrative documents, sixteen pedigree sheets, portraits, illustrations of seals and coat of arms, traditions, anecdotes, tombstone inscriptions and extensive biographical material. The original index has been retained for this edition. It is with great pleasure that Heritage Books, Inc. makes this text once again available to today's family researchers and scholars of Scottish history.

 

Contents

I
II
25
III
35
IV
49
V
77
VI
119
VII
143
VIII
157
IX
169
X
237
XI
261
XII
291
XIII
xxxix
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Page ii - HEAR this, ye old men, and give ear, all ye inhabitants of the land. Hath this been in your days, or even in the days of your fathers? Tell ye your children of it, and let your children tell their children, and their children another generation.
Page xiv - There are some persons," writes Mr. LOWER, in his " Curiosities of Heraldry " (p. 292), " who cannot discriminate between the taste for pedigree" (or genealogy) "and the pride of ancestry. Now these two feelings, though they often combine in one individual, have no necessary connection with each other. Man is said to be a hunting animal. Some hunt foxes ; others for fame or fortune. Others hunt in the intellectual field; some for the arcana of Nature and of mind; some for the roots of words, or the...
Page 5 - Mary of glorious and immortal! memory, and of the security of our religion and liberties by the settlement of the Crown upon the Illustrious House of Hanover ; and his zealous attachment to his Majesty King George II. and our present happy constitution in Church and State, we do admit the said Sir Andrew Agnew a member of the Club.

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