Available Formats
Scotch Baronial: Architecture and National Identity in Scotland
By (Author) Miles Glendinning
By (author) Aonghus MacKechnie
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Visual Arts
10th January 2019
United Kingdom
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
History of art
European history
720.103
Hardback
312
Width 156mm, Height 234mm
612g
As the debate about Scottish independence rages on, this book takes a timely look at how Scotlands politics have been expressed in its buildings, exploring how the architecture of Scotland in particular the constantly-changing ideal of the castle has been of great consequence to the ongoing narrative of Scottish national identity. Scotch Baronial provides a politically-framed examination of Scotlands kaleidoscopic castle architecture, tracing how it was used to serve successive political agendas both prior to and during the three unionist centuries from the early 17th century to the 20th century. The book encompasses many of the countrys most important historic buildings from the palaces left behind by the lost monarchy, to revivalist castles and the proud town halls of the Victorian age examining their architectural styles and tracing their wildly fluctuating political and national connotations. It ends by bringing the story into the 21st century, exploring how contemporary neo-modernist architecture in todays Scotland, as exemplified in the Holyrood parliament, relates to concepts of national identity in architecture over the previous centuries.
An ambitious and wide-ranging but closely argued and well referenced account of the complex interplay, over more than eight centuries, between castellated architecture in its original and revival forms and changing concepts of national identity in Scotland ... The authors are to be congratulated on maintaining an appropriate balance and pace across such a broad chronological span and such an intricately interwoven set of themes. * The Castle Studies Group *
It is always a pleasure to pick up an elegantly written book, which wears its research lightly, yet doesnt skimp on scholarship. * Innes Review *
A rich and thought-provoking overview of Scotlands pre-eminent national style. * Books & Ideas *
Miles Glendinning is Professor of Architectural Conservation at the Edinburgh School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, University of Edinburgh, UK. Aonghus MacKechnie is an architectural historian and Head of Heritage Management at Historic Scotland. Together, they have co-authored numerous books including A History of Scottish Architecture (1996, co-authored with Ranald MacInnes), and Scottish Architecture (2004).