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Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Historiography |  | Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Historiography: Encyclopedia II - Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Historiography |  | Scotland in this period, for such a small region of Eurasia, is relatively well studied in this period. New works come out every year, and the field of Scottish medievalism is a vibrant and changing one. Scottish medievalists can generally be grouped into two categories: Celticists and Normanists. The former, such as Thomas Owen Clancy, Dauvit Broun, and others are interested in the native cultures of the country, and often have linguistic training necessary for their specialism. Normanists on the other hand, are concerned with the French an ...
See also:Scotland in the High Middle Ages, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Historiography, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Origins of the Kingdom of Alba, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Kingdom of Alba or Scotia, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Gaelic kings: Domnall II to Alexander I, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Scoto-Norman kings: David I to Alexander III, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Other Kingdoms, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Geography, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Economy, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Demographics, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Society, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Law and government, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Military, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Christianity & the Church, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Saints, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Monasticism, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Ecclesia Scoticana, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Culture, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Outsiders view, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - National Identity, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Notes |  | | Scotland in the High Middle Ages, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Christianity & the Church, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Culture, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Demographics, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Ecclesia Scoticana, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Economy, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Gaelic kings: Domnall II to Alexander I, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Geography, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Historiography, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Kingdom of Alba or Scotia, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Law and government, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Military, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Monasticism, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - National Identity, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Notes, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Origins of the Kingdom of Alba, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Other Kingdoms, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Outsiders view, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Saints, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Scoto-Norman kings: David I to Alexander III, Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Society |  | |
|  |  | Scotland in the High Middle Ages: Encyclopedia II - Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Historiography
Scotland in the High Middle Ages - Historiography
Scotland in this period, for such a small region of Eurasia, is relatively well studied in this period. New works come out every year, and the field of Scottish medievalism is a vibrant and changing one. Scottish medievalists can generally be grouped into two categories: Celticists and Normanists. The former, such as Thomas Owen Clancy, Dauvit Broun, and others are interested in the native cultures of the country, and often have linguistic training necessary for their specialism. Normanists on the other hand, are concerned with the French and Anglo-French culture which is introduced to Scotland after the eleventh century. The most prominent of such scholars is G.W.S. Barrow, who has devoted his life to studying British feudalism and Scotland in the central Middle Ages.
The change-continuity debate which derives from this division is currently one of the most active topics of discussion. For much of the twentieth century, scholars tended to stress the cultural change which took place in Scotland in the Norman era. However, many scholars, for instance, Cynthia Neville and Richard Oram, while not ignoring cultural changes, are arguing that continuity with the Gaelic past was just as if not more important.[2]
Other related archives3, 57, 62, 8, 900, Aberdeen, Ailred of Rievaulx, Alba, Alexander, Alexander II, Alexander III, Alnwick, Anglo-French, Anglo-Saxon, Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, Antonine Wall, Archbishop of York, Archbishops, Argyll, Augustinians, Ayr, Balloch, Bannockburn, Battle of Dunbar (1296), Battle of the Standard, Benedictine, Berwick, Berwick-upon-Tweed, Bishopric of Durham, Brechin, Britannia, Buchan, Caithness, Canon Law, Canterbury, Carrick, Causantín, Causantín II, Causantín of Fife, Celestine III, Christianity in Medieval Scotland, Cináed mac Ailpín, Cistercians, Columba, Cult of Saints, Culture of Scotland in the High Middle Ages, Cumbric language, David I, De Situ Albanie, Declaration of Arbroath, Domnall Bán, Domnall II, Donnchad, Donnchad I, Donnchad II, Dornoch, Dumfries, Dunblane, Dunfermline, Dunkeld, Dunnotar, Dál Riata, Earl, Earldom of Orkney, Economy of Scotland in the High Middle Ages, Edgar, Edinburgh, Edmund of England, Elgin, English, English language, Eurasia, European High Middle Ages, Ferchar mac in tSagairt, Fergus, Fergus Mór mac Eirc, Fergus of Galloway, Fife, Fifth Crusade, First Crusade, Flemish, Forres, Forth, Fortriu, Fortrose, France, Frankish, French, French culture, French monarchs, Friedrich II, Gaelic, Gaelic language, Gaelic-speaking world, Gaelicisation, Gaelicization, Galloway, Galwegian, Galwegian revolt, Galwegians, German, Germanic, Gilla Brigte, Gilla Brigte of Galloway, Glasgow, God, Grampians, Great Britain, Guibert of Nogent, Hadrian's Wall, Harrying of the North, Henry of Huntingdon, High King of Ireland, Iceland, Idulb, Inchcolm, Ireland, Isle of Man, Isles, James VI/I, Justiciar, King of Galloway, King of the English, Kingdom of Alba, Kingdom of Bernicia/Northumbria, Kingdom of Strathclyde, Kingdom of the Scots, Kintyre, Lanfranc, Latin, Legal institutions of Scotland in the High Middle Ages, Lennox, Lismore, Loch Leven, Lochlann of Galloway, Lochlann/Roland, Lords of Galloway, Lordship of Galloway, Lorne, Lothian, Lulach mac Gillai Coemgáin, Mac Bethad mac Findláich, MacAlpin's Treason, MacDuff, Macbeth, Mann, Margaret, Marianus Scotus, Matthew Paris, Melrose, Middle English, Middle English language, Middle Irish language, Moray, Mormaer, Mormaer of Moray, Mormaer of Strathearn, Mormaerdom of Fife, Mormaers of Lennox, Mormaers of Strathearn, Muirchertach Ua Briain, Máel Coluim, Máel Coluim I, Máel Coluim II, Máel Coluim III, Máel Petair of Mearns, Máel Snechtai, Máel Ísu, Newcastle-Upon-Tyne, Norman Conquest, Norman Conquest of England, Norse, Norse-Gaelic, Northern Isles, Norway, Ogilvie, Old French, Old French language, Origins of the Kingdom of Alba, Orkney, Orkneyinga Saga, Papal Bull, Peel, Perth, Pictish language, Picts, Poppleton Manuscript, Premonstratensians, Robert I, Roman de Fergus, Rome, Rosemarkie, Ross, Roxburgh, Schottenklöstern, Scone, Scotia, Scotland, Scoto-Norman, Scots, Scottish Wars of Independence, Scythia, Shetland, Skye, Society of Scotland in the High Middle Ages, Somairle mac Gillai Brigte, St Andrew, St Andrews, St Cuthbert, St Kentigern, St Louis, Stirling, Strathclyde, Thurstan, Tironensians, Treaty of Perth, Treaty of York, Trondheim, Viking, Vikings, Walter Bower, Walter of Coventry, Warfare of Scotland in the High Middle Ages, Wars of Independence, Welsh language, Wessex, Western, Western Isles, Wigtown, William I, William Shakespeare, William fitz Duncan, William of Newburgh, William the Conqueror, abbey at Dunfermline, abbots, acres, al-Idrisi, arable farming, barter goods, below, buffer state, burghs, camel, clerical celibacy, common law, continental European, culdees, de Situ Albanie, dioscesan structure, earl, early Gaelic Law, elephant, eleventh, eleventh centuries, eleventh century, feudalism, fourteenth, fourteenth century, genealogies, genealogy, government, hosting, husbandman, its own language, kings of Scotland, kinship groups, law, literary language, medieval Gaelic, medieval Scottish, monasticism, monks, mormaer, national identity, native Scots, ninth century, north of the Forth, pastoralism, peninsula, pilgrimage, ploughgate, propaganda, province of Britannia, rebellion of the Galwegians, regal, regal lordship, river Clyde, river Forth, royal burghs, ruler of Moray, rulers of England, seventh century, slave, south-west, status, tenth, tenth century, thirteenth, thirteenth century, twelfth century, twentieth century, vernacular, Óengus, Óengus of Moray
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Historiography", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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