Kinship and clientage : : Highland clanship, 1451-1609 / / Alison Cathcart.

This volume examines Highland society during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries highlighting the extent to which kinship and clientage were organising principles within clanship. Based on clans located in the central and eastern Highlands this study goes some way to addressing the imbalance in Hi...

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:The Northern World ; 20
VerfasserIn:
Place / Publishing House:Leiden : : Brill,, [2006]
©2006
Year of Publication:2006
Language:English
Series:The Northern World ; 20.
Physical Description:1 online resource (xvii, 257 p. ); ill., maps ;
Notes:Based on the author's thesis (Ph.D.--University of Aberdeen).
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Table of Contents:
  • List of illustrations
  • List of maps
  • Acknowledgements
  • List of abbreviations
  • Introduction - setting the scene
  • • Historiographical introduction
  • • Central and eastern Highlands
  • • Origins of clans
  • • Structure of clans
  • Chapter one - the Highlands in context
  • • Perception of the Highlands: savagery & barbarism
  • • Role of the crown
  • Chapter two - internal clientage
  • • Role of the chief
  • • Clan formation: fine & satellite kindreds
  • • Fosterage & socio-economic manrent
  • • Military cadres & caterans
  • Chapter three - external clientage
  • • Marriage
  • • Clientage
  • • Bonds of political manrent
  • • Bonds of friendship
  • Chapter four - land: property & possession
  • • Tenurial superiority and customary claims
  • • Economic considerations
  • • 'Inalienable possessions'
  • Chapter five - regional lordship in the central and eastern Highlands
  • • Conflicting spheres of influence
  • • Dominant influence of the Gordons earls of Huntly
  • • 1609 and its impact at local level
  • Chapter six - conclusion
  • List of chiefs
  • Chronology
  • Family trees
  • • Grants of Freuchy
  • • Mackintoshes of Dunachton
  • Bibliography.