Available Formats
Scotland and the British Army, 1700-1750: Defending the Union
By (Author) Victoria Henshaw
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Academic
17th December 2015
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
European history
941.071
Paperback
312
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
440g
The wholesale assimilation of Scots into the British Army is largely associated with the recruitment of Highlanders during and after the Seven Years War. This important new study demonstrates that the assimilation of Lowland and Highland Scots into the British Army was a salient feature of its history in the first half of the 18th century and was already well advanced by the outbreak of the Seven Years War. Scotland and the British Army, 1700-1750 analyses the wider policing functions of the British Army, the role of Scotlands militia and the development of Scotlands military roads and institutions to provide a fuller understanding of the purpose and complexity of Scotlands military organisation and presence in Scotland in the turbulent decades between the Glorious Revolution and the defeat of Bonnie Prince Charlie, which has been too often simplified as an army of occupation for the suppression of Jacobitism. Instead, Victoria Henshaw reveals the complexities and difficulties experienced by Scottish soldiers of all ranks in the British Army as nationality, loyalty and prejudice clouded Scottish desires to use military service to defend the Glorious Revolution and the Union of 1707.
The book has been published at in interesting moment in Anglo-Scottish politics, and has equally interesting arguments ... It is a very welcome addition to the literature on British history, and of wider significance for explorations of the transformations and assimilations of states in the eighteenth century. * English Historical Review *
Victoria Henshaw has a PhD from the University of Birmingham, UK.