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Romanticism in Scotland

Romanticism in Scotland was an artistic, literary and intellectual movement that developed between the late eighteenth and the early nineteenth centuries. It was part of the wider European Romantic movement, which was partly a reaction against the Age of Enlightenment, emphasising individual, national and emotional responses, moving beyond Renaissance and Classicist models, particularly into nostalgia for the Middle Ages. The concept of a separate national Scottish Romanticism was first articulated by the critics Ian Duncan and Murray Pittock in the Scottish Romanticism in World Literatures Conference held at UC Berkeley in 2006 and in the latter's Scottish and Irish Romanticism (2008), which argued for a national Romanticism based on the concepts of a distinct national public sphere and differentiated inflection of literary genres; the use of Scots language; the creation of a heroic national history through an Ossianic or Scottian 'taxonomy of glory' and the performance of a distinct national self in diaspora.[1][2]

In the arts, Romanticism manifested itself in literature and drama in the adoption of the mythical bard Ossian, the exploration of national poetry in the work of Robert Burns and in the historical novels of Walter Scott. Scott also had a major impact on the development of a national Scottish drama. Art was heavily influenced by Ossian and a new view of the Highlands as the location of a wild and dramatic landscape. Scott profoundly affected architecture through his re-building of Abbotsford House in the early nineteenth century, which set off the boom in the Scots Baronial revival. In music, Burns was part of an attempt to produce a canon of Scottish song, which resulted in a cross fertilisation of Scottish and continental classical music, with romantic music becoming dominant in Scotland into the twentieth century.

Intellectually, Scott and figures like Thomas Carlyle played a part in the development of historiography and the idea of the historical imagination. Romanticism also influenced science, particularly the life sciences, geology, optics and astronomy, giving Scotland a prominence in these areas that continued into the late nineteenth century. Scottish philosophy was dominated by Scottish Common Sense Realism, which shared some characteristics with Romanticism and was a major influence on the development of Transcendentalism. Scott also played a major part in defining Scottish and British politics, helping to create a romanticised view of Scotland and the Highlands that fundamentally changed Scottish national identity.

Romanticism began to subside as a movement in the 1830s, but it continued to significantly affect areas such as music until the early twentieth century. It also had a lasting impact on the nature of Scottish identity and outside perceptions of Scotland.

Definitions edit

Romanticism was a complex artistic, literary and intellectual movement that originated in the second half of the eighteenth century in western Europe, and gained strength during and after the Industrial and French Revolutions.[3] It was partly a revolt against the political norms of the Age of Enlightenment which rationalised nature, and was embodied most strongly in the visual arts, music, and literature,[3] but significantly influenced historiography,[4] philosophy[5] and the natural sciences.[6] However in Scotland it has been argued that Romanticism displayed a degree of continuity with some of the key themes of Enlightenment thought.[7]

Romanticism has been seen as "the revival of the life and thought of the Middle Ages", reaching beyond Rationalist and Classicist models to elevate medievalism and elements of art and narrative perceived to be authentically medieval, in an attempt to escape the confines of population growth, urban sprawl and industrialism, embracing the exotic, unfamiliar and distant.[8] It is also associated with political revolutions, beginning with those in Americana and France and movements for independence, particularly in Poland, Spain and Greece. It is often thought to incorporate an emotional assertion of the self and of individual experience along with a sense of the infinite, transcendental and sublime. In art there was a stress on imagination, landscape and a spiritual correspondence with nature. It has been described by Margaret Drabble as "an unending revolt against classical form, conservative morality, authoritarian government, personal insincerity, and human moderation".[9]

Literature and drama edit

 
Robert Burns in Alexander Nasmyth's portrait of 1787

Although after union with England in 1707 Scotland increasingly adopted English language and wider cultural norms, its literature developed a distinct national identity and began to enjoy an international reputation. Allan Ramsay (1684–1758) laid the foundations of a reawakening of interest in older Scottish literature, as well as leading the trend for pastoral poetry, helping to develop the Habbie stanza as a poetic form.[10] James Macpherson (1736–96) was the first Scottish poet to gain an international reputation. Claiming to have found poetry written by the ancient bard Ossian, he published translations that acquired international popularity, being proclaimed as a Celtic equivalent of the Classical epics. Fingal, written in 1762, was speedily translated into many European languages, and its appreciation of natural beauty and treatment of the ancient legend has been credited more than any single work with bringing about the Romantic movement in European, and especially in German literature, through its influence on Johann Gottfried von Herder and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe.[11] It was also popularised in France by figures that included Napoleon.[12] Eventually it became clear that the poems were not direct translations from the Gaelic, but flowery adaptations made to suit the aesthetic expectations of his audience.[13]

Robert Burns (1759–96) and Walter Scott (1771–1832) were highly influenced by the Ossian cycle. Burns, an Ayrshire poet and lyricist, is widely regarded as the national poet of Scotland and a major influence on the Romantic movement. His poem (and song) "Auld Lang Syne" is often sung at Hogmanay (the last day of the year), and "Scots Wha Hae" served for a long time as an unofficial national anthem of the country.[14] Scott began as a poet and also collected and published Scottish ballads. His first prose work, Waverley in 1814, is often called the first historical novel.[15] It launched a highly successful career, with other historical novels such as Rob Roy (1817), The Heart of Midlothian (1818) and Ivanhoe (1820). Scott probably did more than any other figure to define and popularise Scottish cultural identity in the nineteenth century.[16] Other major literary figures connected with Romanticism include the poets and novelists James Hogg (1770–1835), Allan Cunningham (1784–1842) and John Galt (1779–1839).[17]

Scotland was also the location of two of the most important literary magazines of the era, The Edinburgh Review (founded in 1802) and Blackwood's Magazine (founded in 1817), which significantly influenced the development of British literature and drama in the era of Romanticism.[18][19] Ian Duncan and Alex Benchimol suggest that publications like the novels of Scott and these magazines were part of a highly dynamic Scottish Romanticism that by the early nineteenth century, caused Edinburgh to emerge as the cultural capital of Britain and become central to a wider formation of a "British Isles nationalism."[20]

 
The Theatre Royal, Edinburgh, as it was from 1769–1830

Scottish "national drama" emerged in the early 1800s, as plays with specifically Scottish themes began to dominate the Scottish stage. Theatres had been discouraged by the Church of Scotland and fears of Jacobite assemblies. In the later eighteenth century, many plays were written for and performed by small amateur companies and were not published and so most have been lost. Towards the end of the century there were "closet dramas", primarily designed to be read, rather than performed, including work by Scott, Hogg, Galt and Joanna Baillie (1762–1851), often influenced by the ballad tradition and Gothic Romanticism.[21]

The Scottish national drama that emerged in the early nineteenth century was largely historical in nature and based around a core of adaptations of Scott's Waverley novels.[21] The existing repertoire of Scottish-themed plays included Shakespeare's Macbeth (c. 1605), Friedrich Schiller's Maria Stuart (1800), John Home's Douglas (1756) and Ramsay's The Gentle Shepherd (1725), with the last two being the most popular plays among amateur groups. Ballets with Scottish themes included Jockey and Jenny and Love in the Highlands.[22] Scott was keenly interested in drama, becoming a shareholder in the Theatre Royal, Edinburgh.[23] Baillie's Highland themed The Family Legend was first produced in Edinburgh in 1810 with the help of Scott, as part of a deliberate attempt to stimulate a national Scottish drama.[24] Scott also wrote five plays, of which Hallidon Hill (1822) and MacDuff's Cross (1822) were patriotic Scottish histories.[23] Adaptations of the Waverley novels, first performed primarily in minor theatres, rather than the larger Patent theatres, included The Lady in the Lake (1817), The Heart of Midlothian (1819) (specifically described as a "romantic play" for its first performance), and Rob Roy, which underwent over 1,000 performances in Scotland in this period. Also adapted for the stage were Guy Mannering, The Bride of Lammermoor and The Abbot. These highly popular plays saw the social range and size of the audience for theatre expand and helped shape theatre-going practices in Scotland for the rest of the century.[22]

Art edit

 
Jacob More's The Falls of Clyde: Corra Linn, c. 1771

The Ossian cycle itself became a common subject for Scottish artists, and works based on its themes were created by figures such as Alexander Runciman (1736–85) and David Allan (1744–96).[25][26] This period saw a shift in attitudes to the Highlands and mountain landscapes in general, from viewing them as hostile, empty regions occupied by backward and marginal people, to interpreting them as aesthetically pleasing exemplars of nature, occupied by rugged primitives, who were now depicted in a dramatic fashion.[27] Produced before his departure to Italy, Jacob More's (1740–93) series of four paintings "Falls of Clyde" (1771–73) have been described by art historian Duncan Macmillan as treating the waterfalls as "a kind of natural national monument" and has been seen as an early work in developing a romantic sensibility to the Scottish landscape.[27] Runciman was probably the first artist to paint Scottish landscapes in watercolours in the more romantic style that was emerging towards the end of the eighteenth century.[28]

The effect of Romanticism can also be seen in the works of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century artists such as Henry Raeburn (1756–1823), Alexander Nasmyth (1758–1840) and John Knox (1778–1845). Raeburn was the most significant artist of the period to pursue his entire career in Scotland. He was born in Edinburgh and returned there after a trip to Italy in 1786. He is most famous for his intimate portraits of leading figures in Scottish life, going beyond the aristocracy to lawyers, doctors, professors, writers and ministers,[29] adding elements of Romanticism to the tradition of Reynolds.[30] He became a knight in 1822 and the King's limner and painter for Scotland in 1823.[29] Nasmyth visited Italy and worked in London, but returned to his native Edinburgh for most of his career. He produced work in a range of forms, including his portrait of Romantic poet Robert Burns, which depicts him against a dramatic Scottish background, but he is chiefly remembered for his landscapes and has been seen as "the founder of the Scottish landscape tradition".[31] The work of Knox continued the theme of landscape, directly linking it with the Romantic works of Scott,[32] and he was also among the first artists to depict the urban landscape of Glasgow.[33]

Architecture edit

The Gothic revival in architecture has been seen as an expression of Romanticism, and according to Alvin Jackson, the Scots baronial style was "a Caledonian reading of the gothic".[34] Some of the earliest evidence of a revival in Gothic architecture are from Scotland. Inveraray Castle, constructed from 1746 with design input from William Adam, incorporates turrets into a conventional Palladian-style house. His son Robert Adam's houses in this style include Mellerstain and Wedderburn in Berwickshire and Seton House in East Lothian. The trend is most clearly seen at Culzean Castle, Ayrshire, remodelled by Robert from 1777.[35]

 
Abbotsford House, re-built for Walter Scott, helped to launch the Scots Baronial revival.

Important for the re-adoption of the Scots Baronial in the early nineteenth century was Abbotsford House, the residence of Scott. Re-built for him from 1816, it became a model for the revival of the style. Common features borrowed from sixteenth- and seventeenth-century houses included battlemented gateways, crow-stepped gables, pointed turrets and machicolations. The style was popular across Scotland and was applied to many relatively modest dwellings by architects such as William Burn (1789–1870), David Bryce (1803–1876),[36] Edward Blore (1787–1879), Edward Calvert (c. 1847–1914) and Robert Stodart Lorimer (1864–1929). Examples in urban contexts include the building of Cockburn Street in Edinburgh (from the 1850s) as well as the National Wallace Monument at Stirling (1859–69).[37] The rebuilding of Balmoral Castle as a baronial palace, and its adoption as a royal retreat by Queen Victoria from 1855–58, confirmed the popularity of the style.[38]

In ecclesiastical architecture, a style similar to that developed in England was adopted. Important figures in this movement included Frederick Thomas Pilkington (1832–98), who developed a new style of church building which accorded with the fashionable High Gothic, but which adapted it for the worship needs of the Free Church of Scotland. Examples include Barclay Viewforth Church, Edinburgh (1862–64).[39] Robert Rowand Anderson (1834–1921), who trained in the office of George Gilbert Scott in London before returning to Edinburgh, worked mainly on small churches in the "First Pointed" (or Early English) style that is characteristic of Scott's former assistants. By 1880, his practice was designing some of the most prestigious public and private buildings in Scotland, such as the Scottish National Portrait Gallery; the Dome of Old College, Medical Faculty and McEwan Hall, Edinburgh University; the Central Hotel at Glasgow Central station; the Catholic Apostolic Church in Edinburgh; and Mount Stuart House on the Isle of Bute.[40]

Music edit

 
George Thomson by Henry Raeburn

One characteristic of Romanticism was the conscious creation of bodies of nationalist art music. In Scotland this form was dominant from the late eighteenth century to the early twentieth century.[41] In the 1790s Robert Burns embarked on an attempt to produce a corpus of Scottish national song, building on the work of antiquarians and musicologists such as William Tytler, James Beattie and Joseph Ritson.[42] Working with music engraver and seller James Johnson, he contributed about a third of the eventual songs of the collection known as the Scots Musical Museum, issued between 1787 and 1803 in six volumes.[43] Burns collaborated with George Thomson in A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs, published from 1793 to 1818, which adapted Scottish folk songs with "classical" arrangements. Thompson was inspired by hearing Scottish songs sung by visiting Italian castrati at the St Cecilia Concerts in Edinburgh. He collected Scottish songs and obtained musical arrangements from the best European composers, who included Joseph Haydn and Ludwig van Beethoven. Burns was employed in editing the lyrics. A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs was published in five volumes between 1799 and 1818. It helped make Scottish songs part of the European cannon of classical music,[44] while Thompson's work brought elements of Romanticism, such as harmonies based on those of Beethoven, into Scottish classical music.[41] Also involved in the collection and publication of Scottish songs was Scott, whose first literary effort was Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border, published in three volumes (1802–03). This collection first drew the attention of an international audience to his work, and some of his lyrics were set to music by Schubert, who also created a setting of Ossian.[45]

 
Hamish MacCunn

Perhaps the most influential composer of the first half of the nineteenth century was the German Felix Mendelssohn, who visited Britain ten times, for a total of twenty months, from 1829. Scotland inspired two of his most famous works, the overture Fingal's Cave (also known as the Hebrides Overture) and the Scottish Symphony (Symphony No. 3). On his last visit to England in 1847, he conducted his own Scottish Symphony with the Philharmonic Orchestra before Queen Victoria and Prince Albert.[46] Max Bruch (1838–1920) composed the Scottish Fantasy (1880) for violin and orchestra, which includes an arrangement of the tune "Hey Tuttie Tatie", best known for its use in the song Scots Wha Hae by Burns.[47]

By the late nineteenth century, there was in effect a national school of orchestral and operatic music in Scotland. Major composers included Alexander Mackenzie (1847–1935), William Wallace (1860–1940), Learmont Drysdale (1866–1909), Hamish MacCunn (1868–1916) and John McEwen (1868–1948).[41] Mackenzie, who studied in Germany and Italy and mixed Scottish themes with German Romanticism,[48] is best known for his three Scottish Rhapsodies (1879–80, 1911), Pibroch for violin and orchestra (1889) and the Scottish Concerto for piano (1897), all involving Scottish themes and folk melodies.[41] Wallace's work included an overture, In Praise of Scottish Poesie (1894); his pioneering symphonic poem about his namesake, medieval nationalist William Wallace AD 1305–1905 (1905); and a cantata, The Massacre of the Macpherson (1910).[49] Drysdale's work often dealt with Scottish themes, including the overture Tam O’ Shanter (1890), the cantata The Kelpie (1891), the tone poem A Border Romance (1904), and the cantata Tamlane (1905).[50] MacCunn's overture The Land of the Mountain and the Flood (1887), his Six Scotch Dances (1896), his operas Jeanie Deans (1894) and Dairmid (1897) and choral works on Scottish subjects[41] have been described by I. G. C. Hutchison as the musical equivalent of Abbotsford and Balmoral.[51] McEwen's more overtly national works include Grey Galloway (1908), the Solway Symphony (1911) and Prince Charlie, A Scottish Rhapsody (1924).[41]

Historiography edit

 
Raeburn's portrait of Walter Scott in 1822

In contrast to Enlightenment histories, which have been seen as attempting to draw general lessons about humanity from history, the German philosopher Johann Gottfried von Herder in his Ideas upon Philosophy and the History of Mankind (1784), set out the concept of Volksgeist, a unique national spirit that drove historical change. As a result, a key element in the influence of Romanticism on intellectual life was the production of national histories.[52] The nature and existence of a national Scottish historiography has been debated among historians. Those authors who consider that such a national history did exist in this period indicate that it can be found outside of the production of major historical narratives, in works of antiquarianism and fiction.[53]

An important element in the emergence of a Scottish national history was an interest in antiquarianism, with figures like John Pinkerton (1758–1826) collecting sources such as ballads, coins, medals, songs and artefacts.[54] Enlightenment historians had tended to react with embarrassment to Scottish history, particularly the feudalism of the Middle Ages and the religious intolerance of the Reformation. In contrast many historians of the early nineteenth century rehabilitated these areas as suitable for serious study.[55] Lawyer and antiquarian Cosmo Innes, who produced works on Scotland in the Middle Ages (1860), and Sketches of Early Scottish History (1861), has been likened to the pioneering history of Georg Heinrich Pertz, one of the first writers to collate the major historical accounts of German history.[56] Patrick Fraser Tytler's nine-volume history of Scotland (1828–43), particularity his sympathetic view of Mary, Queen of Scots, have led to comparisons with Leopold von Ranke, considered the father of modern scientific historical writing.[56] Tytler was co-founder with Scott of the Bannatyne Society in 1823, which helped further the course of historical research in Scotland.[57] Thomas M'Crie's (1797–1875) biographies of John Knox and Andrew Melville, figures generally savaged in the Enlightenment, helped rehabilitate their reputations.[58] W. F. Skene's (1809–92) three part study of Celtic Scotland (1886–91) was the first serious investigation of the region and helped spawn the Scottish Celtic Revival.[58] Issues of race became important, with Pinkerton, James Sibbald (1745–1803) and John Jamieson (1758–1839) subscribing to a theory of Picto-Gothicism, which postulated a Germanic origin for the Picts and the Scots language.[54]

 
Thomas Carlyle, a major figure in Romantic historical writing

Among the most significant intellectual figures associated with Romanticism was Thomas Carlyle (1795–1881), born in Scotland and later a resident of London. He was largely responsible for bringing the works of German Romantics such as Schiller and Goethe to the attention of a British audience.[59] An essayist and historian, he invented the phrase "hero-worship", lavishing largely uncritical praise on strong leaders such as Oliver Cromwell, Frederick the Great and Napoleon.[60] His The French Revolution: A History (1837) dramatised the plight of the French aristocracy, but stressed the inevitability of history as a force.[61] With French historian Jules Michelet, he is associated with the use of the "historical imagination".[62] In Romantic historiography this led to a tendency to emphasise sentiment and identification, inviting readers to sympathise with historical personages and even to imagine interactions with them.[63] In contrast to many continental Romantic historians, Carlyle remained largely pessimistic about human nature and events. He believed that history was a form of prophecy that could reveal patterns for the future. In the late nineteenth century he became one of a number of Victorian sage writers and social commentators.[64]

Romantic writers often reacted against the empiricism of Enlightenment historical writing, putting forward the figure of the "poet-historian" who would mediate between the sources of history and the reader, using insight to create more than chronicles of facts. For this reason, Romantic historians such as Thierry saw Walter Scott, who had spent considerable effort uncovering new documents and sources for his novels, as an authority in historical writing.[65] Scott is now seen primarily as a novelist, but also produced a nine-volume biography of Napoleon,[66] and has been described as "the towering figure of Romantic historiography in Transatlantic and European contexts", having a profound effect on how history, particularly that of Scotland, was understood and written.[67] Historians that acknowledged his influence included Chateaubriand, Macaulay, and Ranke.[68]

Science edit

 
Mary Somerville, a major influence on Humboldtian science in Britain

Romanticism has also been seen as affecting scientific enquiry. Romantic attitudes to science varied, from distrust of the scientific enterprise to endorsing a non-mechanical science that rejected the mathematicised and the abstract theorising associated with Newton. Major trends in continental science associated with Romanticism include Naturphilosophie, developed by Friedrich Schelling (1775–1854), which focused on the necessity of reuniting man with nature,[69] and Humboldtian science, based on the work of Alexander von Humboldt (1769–1859). As defined by Susan Cannon, this form of inquiry placed a stress on observation, accurate scientific instruments and new conceptual tools; disregarded the boundaries between different disciplines; and emphasised working in nature rather than the artificial laboratory.[70] Privileging observation above calculation, Romantic scientists were often attracted to the areas where investigation, rather than calculation and theory, was most important, particularly the life sciences, geology, optics and astronomy.[71]

James Allard identifies the origins of Scottish "Romantic medicine" in the work of Enlightenment figures, particularly the brothers William (1718–83) and John Hunter (1728–93), who were, respectively, the leading anatomist and surgeon of their day and in the role of Edinburgh as a major centre of medical teaching and research.[72] Key figures that were influenced by the Hunters' work and by Romanticism include John Brown (1735–88), Thomas Beddoes (1760–1808) and John Barclay (1758–1826). Brown argued in Elementa Medicinae (1780) that life is an essential "vital energy" or "excitability" and that disease is either the excessive or diminished redistribution of the normal intensity of the human organ, which became known as Brunonianism. This work was highly influential, particularly in Germany, on the development of Naturphilosophie.[73] This work was translated and edited by Beddoes, another graduate of Edinburgh, whose own work, Hygeia, or Essays Moral and Medical (1807) expanded on these ideas.[72] Following in this vein, Barclay in the 1810 edition of the Encyclopædia Britannica identified physiology as the branch of medicine closest to metaphysics.[74] Also important were the brothers John (1763–1820) and Charles Bell (1774–1842), who made significant advances in the study of the vascular and nervous systems, respectively.[75][76]

 
A plate from Robert Brown's paper "On the natural order of plants called Proteaceae" (1810)

The University of Edinburgh was also a major supplier of surgeons for the royal navy, and Robert Jameson (1774–1854), Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh, ensured that a large number of these were surgeon-naturalists, who were vital in the Humboldtian and imperial enterprise of investigating nature throughout the world.[70][77] These included Robert Brown (1773–1858), one of the major figures in the early exploration of Australia. His later use of the microscope paralleled that noted among German students of Naturphilosophie, and he is credited with the discovery of the cell nucleus and the first observation of Brownian motion.[78] Charles Lyell's work Principles of Geology (1830) is often seen as the foundation of modern geology. It was indebted to Humboldtian science in its insistence on measurements of nature,[79] and, according to Noah Heringman, retains a much of the "rhetoric of the sublime", which is characteristic of Romantic attitudes to landscape.[80]

Romantic thinking was also evident in the writings of Hugh Miller, stonemason and geologist, who followed in the tradition of Naturphilosophie, arguing that nature was a pre-ordained progression towards the human race.[81] Publisher, historian, antiquarian and scientist Robert Chambers (1802–71) became a friend of Scott, writing a biography of him after the author's death. Chambers also became a geologist, researching in Scandinavia and Canada. His most influential work was the anonymously published Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation (1844), which was the most comprehensive written argument in favour of evolution before the work of Charles Darwin (1809–82).[82] His work was strongly influenced by transcendental anatomy, which, drawing on Goethe and Lorenz Oken (1779–1851),[83] looked for ideal patterns and structure in nature[84] and had been pioneered in Scotland by figures including Robert Knox (1791–1862).[85]

David Brewster (1781–1868), physicist, mathematician and astronomer, undertook key work in optics, where he provided a compromise between Goethe's Naturphilosophie-influenced studies and Newton's system, which Goethe attacked.[86] His work would be important in later biological, geological[87] and astrological discoveries. Diligent measurement in South Africa allowed Thomas Henderson (1798–1844) make the observations that would allow him to be the first to calculate the distance to Alpha Centauri, before returning to Edinburgh to become the first Astronomer Royal for Scotland from 1834.[88] Influenced by Humboldt, and much praised by him, was Mary Somerville (1780–1872), mathematician, geographer, physicist, astronomer and one of the few women to gain recognition in science in the period.[89] A major contribution to the "magnetic crusade" declared by Humboldt was made by Scottish-born astronomer John Lamont (1805–79), head of the observatory in Munich, when he found a decennial period (ten-year cycle) in the Earth's magnetic field.[90]

Politics edit

 
David Wilkie's flattering portrait of the kilted King George IV

In the aftermath of the Jacobite risings, a movement to restore Stuart King James II of England to the throne, the British government enacted a series of laws that attempted to speed the process of the destruction of the clan system. Measures included a ban on the bearing of arms, the wearing of tartan and limitations on the activities of the Episcopalian Church. Most of the legislation was repealed by the end of the eighteenth century as the Jacobite threat subsided.

Soon after, there was a process of the rehabilitation of highland culture. Tartan had already been adopted for highland regiments in the British army, which poor highlanders joined in large numbers until the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815, but by the nineteenth century it had largely been abandoned by the ordinary people of the region. In the 1820s, tartan and the kilt were adopted by members of the social elite, not just in Scotland, but across Europe.[91][92] The international craze for tartan, and for idealising a romanticised Highlands, was set off by the Ossian cycle[93][94] and further popularised by the works of Scott. His "staging" of the royal visit of King George IV to Scotland in 1822 and the king's wearing of tartan resulted in a massive upsurge in demand for kilts and tartans that could not be met by the Scottish linen industry. Individual clan tartans was largely defined in this period, and they became a major symbol of Scottish identity.[95] This "Highlandism", by which all of Scotland was identified with the culture of the Highlands, was cemented by Queen Victoria's interest in the country, her adoption of Balmoral as a major royal retreat and her interest in "tartanry".[92]

The romanticisation of the Highlands and the adoption of Jacobitism into mainstream culture have been seen as defusing the potential threat to the Union with England, the House of Hanover and the dominant Whig government.[96] In many countries Romanticism played a major part in the emergence of radical independence movements through the development of national identities. Tom Nairn argues that Romanticism in Scotland did not develop along the lines seen elsewhere in Europe, leaving a "rootless" intelligentsia, who moved to England or elsewhere and so did not supply a cultural nationalism that could be communicated to the emerging working classes.[97] Graeme Moreton and Lindsay Paterson both argue that the lack of interference of the British state in civil society meant that the middle classes had no reason to object to the union.[97] Atsuko Ichijo argues that national identity cannot be equated with a movement for independence.[98] Moreton suggests that there was a Scottish nationalism, but that it was expressed in terms of "Unionist nationalism".[53] A form of political radicalism remained within Scottish Romanticism, surfacing in events like the foundation of the Friends of the People in 1792 and in 1853 the National Association for the Vindication of Scottish Rights,[99] which was in effect a federation of romantics, radical churchmen and administrative reformers.[100] However, Scottish identity was not directed into nationalism until the twentieth century.[99]

Philosophy edit

 
Dugald Stewart, a major figure in the popularisation of Common Sense Realism

The dominant school of philosophy in Scotland in the late eighteenth century and the first half of the nineteenth century is known as Common Sense Realism. It argued that there are certain concepts, such as our existence, the existence of solid objects and some basic moral "first principles", that are intrinsic to our make-up and from which all subsequent arguments and systems of morality must be derived. It can be seen as an attempt to reconcile the new scientific developments of the Enlightenment with religious belief.[101] The origins of these arguments are in a reaction to the scepticism that became dominant in the Enlightenment, particularly that articulated by Scottish philosopher David Hume (1711–76). This branch of thinking was first formulated by Thomas Reid (1710–96) in his An Inquiry into the Human Mind on the Principles of Common Sense (1764).[102] It was popularised in Scotland by figures including Dugald Stewart (1753–1828) and in England by James Beattie. Stewart's students included Walter Scott, Walter Chambers and Thomas Brown,[103] and this branch of thought would later be a major influence on Charles Darwin.[104] William Hamilton (1788–1856) attempted to combine Reid's approach with the philosophy of Kant.[105]

Common Sense Realism not only dominated Scottish thought but also had a major impact in France,[106] the United States, Germany and other countries. Victor Cousin (1792–1867) was the most important proponent in France, becoming Minister of Education and incorporating the philosophy into the curriculum.[103] In Germany the emphasis on careful observation influenced Humboldt's ideas about science and was a major factor in the development of German Idealism.[107] James McCosh (1811–94) brought Common Sense Realism directly from Scotland to North American in 1868 when he became president of Princeton University, which soon became a stronghold of the movement. Noah Porter (1811–92) taught Common Sense Realism to generations of students at Yale.[103] As a result, it would be a major influence on the development of one of the most important offshoots of Romanticism in New England, Transcendentalism, particularly in the writing of Ralph Waldo Emerson (1803–82).[103]

Decline edit

 
William McTaggart's The Storm, 1890, incorporating elements of Impressionism into the Scottish landscape tradition

In literature, Romanticism is often thought to have ended in the 1830s,[108][109] with a few commentators, like Margaret Drabble, describing it as over by 1848.[9] Romanticism continued much longer in some places and areas of endeavour, particularly in music, where it has been dated from 1820 to 1910.[110] The death of Scott in 1832 has been seen as marking the end of the great romantic generation,[111] and Scottish literature and culture in general lost some of its international prominence from this point. Scott's reputation as a writer also went into decline in the late nineteenth century, only recovering in the twentieth.[112] Economic and social change, particularly the better communications brought by the railways, decreased the ability of Edinburgh to function as an alternative cultural capital to London, with its publishing industry moving to London.[113] Lack of opportunities in politics and letters led many talented Scots to leave for England and elsewhere. The sentimental Kailyard tradition of J. M. Barrie and George MacDonald, of those that continued to pursue Scottish topics at the end of the nineteenth century, was seen by Tom Nairn as "sub-romantic".[114]

In art, the tradition of Scottish landscape painting continued into the later nineteenth century, but Romanticism gave way to influences including French Impressionism, Post-Impressionism and eventually Modernism.[115] The Scots baronial style continued to be popular until the end of the nineteenth century, when other styles began to dominate.[116] Although Romanticism persisted in music much longer than in almost every area, it fell out of fashion in the twentieth century and anti-Romantic currents in Britain virtually buried Victorian and Edwardian music not written by Edward Elgar or Arthur Sullivan.[49] The idea of the historical imagination was replaced with the source-based empiricism championed by Ranke.[117] Marinel Ash has noted that after the death of Scott, Scottish national history lost its momentum, and the Scottish literati stopped writing Scottish histories. Colin Kidd has observed a change of attitudes to historical writing and suggests that this was one reason for a lack of the development of political nationalism.[53] In science, the rapid expansion of knowledge increased a tendency towards specialisation and professionalism and a decline of the polymath "man of letters" and amateurs that had dominated Romantic science.[118] Common Sense Realism began to decline in Britain in the face of the English empiricism outlined by John Stuart Mill in his An Examination of Sir William Hamilton's Philosophy (1865).[119]

Influence edit

 
The young Leo Tolstoy, one of the many writers directly influenced by Scottish Romanticism

Scotland can make a claim to have begun the Romantic movement with writers such as Macpherson and Burns.[120] In Scott it produced a figure of international fame and influence, whose virtual invention of the historical novel would be picked up by writers across the world, including Alexandre Dumas and Honoré de Balzac in France, Leo Tolstoy in Russia and Alessandro Manzoni in Italy.[121] The tradition of Scottish landscape painting significantly influenced art in Britain and elsewhere through figures like J. M. W. Turner, who took part in the emerging Scottish "grand tour".[122] The Scottish baronial style influenced buildings in England and was taken by Scots to North America,[123] Australia[124] and New Zealand.[125] In music, the early efforts of men like Burns, Scott and Thompson helped insert Scottish music into European, particularly German, classical music, and the later contributions of composers like MacCuun were part of a Scottish contribution to the British revival of interest in classical music in the late nineteenth century.[126]

The idea of history as a force and the romantic concept of revolution were highly influential on transcendentalists like Emerson, and through them on American literature in general.[61] Romantic science maintained the prominence and reputation that Scotland had begun to obtain in the Enlightenment and helped in the development of many emerging fields of investigation, including geology and biology. According to Robert D. Purington, "to some the nineteenth century seems to be the century of Scottish science".[127] Politically the initial function of Romanticism as pursued by Scott and others helped to diffuse some of the tension created by Scotland's place in the Union, but it also helped to ensure the survival of a common and distinct Scottish national identity that would play a major part in Scottish life and emerge as a significant factor in Scottish politics from the second half of the twentieth century.[128] Externally, modern images of Scotland worldwide, its landscape, culture, sciences and arts, are still largely defined by those created and popularised by Romanticism.[129]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Pittock, Murray (2008). Scottish and Irish Romanticism. Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. 7. ISBN 9780199232796.
  2. ^ "Re-Mapping Romanticism: The Scottish Question | Townsend Center for the Humanities". townsendcenter.berkeley.edu. Retrieved 30 July 2021.
  3. ^ a b A. Chandler, A Dream of Order: the Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth-Century English Literature (London: Taylor & Francis, 1971), p. 4.
  4. ^ David Levin, History as Romantic Art: Bancroft, Prescott, and Parkman (1967).
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  6. ^ Ashton Nichols, "Roaring Alligators and Burning Tygers: Poetry and Science from William Bartram to Charles Darwin," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 2005 149(3): 304–315
  7. ^ Pittock, Murray (2008). Scottish and Irish Romanticism. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  8. ^ R. R. Agrawal, The Medieval Revival and its Influence on the Romantic Movement (Abhinav, 1990), p. 1.
  9. ^ a b M. Drabble, The Oxford Companion to English Literature (Oxford: Oxford University Press, fifth edn., 1985), pp. 842–3.
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  11. ^ J. Buchan, Crowded with Genius (London: Harper Collins, 2003), ISBN 0-06-055888-1, p. 163.
  12. ^ H. Gaskill, The Reception of Ossian in Europe (Continuum, 2004), ISBN 0826461352, p. 140.
  13. ^ D. Thomson, The Gaelic Sources of Macpherson's "Ossian" (Aberdeen: Oliver & Boyd, 1952).
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romanticism, scotland, artistic, literary, intellectual, movement, that, developed, between, late, eighteenth, early, nineteenth, centuries, part, wider, european, romantic, movement, which, partly, reaction, against, enlightenment, emphasising, individual, na. Romanticism in Scotland was an artistic literary and intellectual movement that developed between the late eighteenth and the early nineteenth centuries It was part of the wider European Romantic movement which was partly a reaction against the Age of Enlightenment emphasising individual national and emotional responses moving beyond Renaissance and Classicist models particularly into nostalgia for the Middle Ages The concept of a separate national Scottish Romanticism was first articulated by the critics Ian Duncan and Murray Pittock in the Scottish Romanticism in World Literatures Conference held at UC Berkeley in 2006 and in the latter s Scottish and Irish Romanticism 2008 which argued for a national Romanticism based on the concepts of a distinct national public sphere and differentiated inflection of literary genres the use of Scots language the creation of a heroic national history through an Ossianic or Scottian taxonomy of glory and the performance of a distinct national self in diaspora 1 2 In the arts Romanticism manifested itself in literature and drama in the adoption of the mythical bard Ossian the exploration of national poetry in the work of Robert Burns and in the historical novels of Walter Scott Scott also had a major impact on the development of a national Scottish drama Art was heavily influenced by Ossian and a new view of the Highlands as the location of a wild and dramatic landscape Scott profoundly affected architecture through his re building of Abbotsford House in the early nineteenth century which set off the boom in the Scots Baronial revival In music Burns was part of an attempt to produce a canon of Scottish song which resulted in a cross fertilisation of Scottish and continental classical music with romantic music becoming dominant in Scotland into the twentieth century Intellectually Scott and figures like Thomas Carlyle played a part in the development of historiography and the idea of the historical imagination Romanticism also influenced science particularly the life sciences geology optics and astronomy giving Scotland a prominence in these areas that continued into the late nineteenth century Scottish philosophy was dominated by Scottish Common Sense Realism which shared some characteristics with Romanticism and was a major influence on the development of Transcendentalism Scott also played a major part in defining Scottish and British politics helping to create a romanticised view of Scotland and the Highlands that fundamentally changed Scottish national identity Romanticism began to subside as a movement in the 1830s but it continued to significantly affect areas such as music until the early twentieth century It also had a lasting impact on the nature of Scottish identity and outside perceptions of Scotland Contents 1 Definitions 2 Literature and drama 3 Art 4 Architecture 5 Music 6 Historiography 7 Science 8 Politics 9 Philosophy 10 Decline 11 Influence 12 NotesDefinitions editSee also Romantic literature in English Romanticism was a complex artistic literary and intellectual movement that originated in the second half of the eighteenth century in western Europe and gained strength during and after the Industrial and French Revolutions 3 It was partly a revolt against the political norms of the Age of Enlightenment which rationalised nature and was embodied most strongly in the visual arts music and literature 3 but significantly influenced historiography 4 philosophy 5 and the natural sciences 6 However in Scotland it has been argued that Romanticism displayed a degree of continuity with some of the key themes of Enlightenment thought 7 Romanticism has been seen as the revival of the life and thought of the Middle Ages reaching beyond Rationalist and Classicist models to elevate medievalism and elements of art and narrative perceived to be authentically medieval in an attempt to escape the confines of population growth urban sprawl and industrialism embracing the exotic unfamiliar and distant 8 It is also associated with political revolutions beginning with those in Americana and France and movements for independence particularly in Poland Spain and Greece It is often thought to incorporate an emotional assertion of the self and of individual experience along with a sense of the infinite transcendental and sublime In art there was a stress on imagination landscape and a spiritual correspondence with nature It has been described by Margaret Drabble as an unending revolt against classical form conservative morality authoritarian government personal insincerity and human moderation 9 Literature and drama editMain article Scottish literature nbsp Robert Burns in Alexander Nasmyth s portrait of 1787Although after union with England in 1707 Scotland increasingly adopted English language and wider cultural norms its literature developed a distinct national identity and began to enjoy an international reputation Allan Ramsay 1684 1758 laid the foundations of a reawakening of interest in older Scottish literature as well as leading the trend for pastoral poetry helping to develop the Habbie stanza as a poetic form 10 James Macpherson 1736 96 was the first Scottish poet to gain an international reputation Claiming to have found poetry written by the ancient bard Ossian he published translations that acquired international popularity being proclaimed as a Celtic equivalent of the Classical epics Fingal written in 1762 was speedily translated into many European languages and its appreciation of natural beauty and treatment of the ancient legend has been credited more than any single work with bringing about the Romantic movement in European and especially in German literature through its influence on Johann Gottfried von Herder and Johann Wolfgang von Goethe 11 It was also popularised in France by figures that included Napoleon 12 Eventually it became clear that the poems were not direct translations from the Gaelic but flowery adaptations made to suit the aesthetic expectations of his audience 13 Robert Burns 1759 96 and Walter Scott 1771 1832 were highly influenced by the Ossian cycle Burns an Ayrshire poet and lyricist is widely regarded as the national poet of Scotland and a major influence on the Romantic movement His poem and song Auld Lang Syne is often sung at Hogmanay the last day of the year and Scots Wha Hae served for a long time as an unofficial national anthem of the country 14 Scott began as a poet and also collected and published Scottish ballads His first prose work Waverley in 1814 is often called the first historical novel 15 It launched a highly successful career with other historical novels such as Rob Roy 1817 The Heart of Midlothian 1818 and Ivanhoe 1820 Scott probably did more than any other figure to define and popularise Scottish cultural identity in the nineteenth century 16 Other major literary figures connected with Romanticism include the poets and novelists James Hogg 1770 1835 Allan Cunningham 1784 1842 and John Galt 1779 1839 17 Scotland was also the location of two of the most important literary magazines of the era The Edinburgh Review founded in 1802 and Blackwood s Magazine founded in 1817 which significantly influenced the development of British literature and drama in the era of Romanticism 18 19 Ian Duncan and Alex Benchimol suggest that publications like the novels of Scott and these magazines were part of a highly dynamic Scottish Romanticism that by the early nineteenth century caused Edinburgh to emerge as the cultural capital of Britain and become central to a wider formation of a British Isles nationalism 20 nbsp The Theatre Royal Edinburgh as it was from 1769 1830Scottish national drama emerged in the early 1800s as plays with specifically Scottish themes began to dominate the Scottish stage Theatres had been discouraged by the Church of Scotland and fears of Jacobite assemblies In the later eighteenth century many plays were written for and performed by small amateur companies and were not published and so most have been lost Towards the end of the century there were closet dramas primarily designed to be read rather than performed including work by Scott Hogg Galt and Joanna Baillie 1762 1851 often influenced by the ballad tradition and Gothic Romanticism 21 The Scottish national drama that emerged in the early nineteenth century was largely historical in nature and based around a core of adaptations of Scott s Waverley novels 21 The existing repertoire of Scottish themed plays included Shakespeare s Macbeth c 1605 Friedrich Schiller s Maria Stuart 1800 John Home s Douglas 1756 and Ramsay s The Gentle Shepherd 1725 with the last two being the most popular plays among amateur groups Ballets with Scottish themes included Jockey and Jenny and Love in the Highlands 22 Scott was keenly interested in drama becoming a shareholder in the Theatre Royal Edinburgh 23 Baillie s Highland themed The Family Legend was first produced in Edinburgh in 1810 with the help of Scott as part of a deliberate attempt to stimulate a national Scottish drama 24 Scott also wrote five plays of which Hallidon Hill 1822 and MacDuff s Cross 1822 were patriotic Scottish histories 23 Adaptations of the Waverley novels first performed primarily in minor theatres rather than the larger Patent theatres included The Lady in the Lake 1817 The Heart of Midlothian 1819 specifically described as a romantic play for its first performance and Rob Roy which underwent over 1 000 performances in Scotland in this period Also adapted for the stage were Guy Mannering The Bride of Lammermoor and The Abbot These highly popular plays saw the social range and size of the audience for theatre expand and helped shape theatre going practices in Scotland for the rest of the century 22 Art editMain article Art in Scotland nbsp Jacob More s The Falls of Clyde Corra Linn c 1771The Ossian cycle itself became a common subject for Scottish artists and works based on its themes were created by figures such as Alexander Runciman 1736 85 and David Allan 1744 96 25 26 This period saw a shift in attitudes to the Highlands and mountain landscapes in general from viewing them as hostile empty regions occupied by backward and marginal people to interpreting them as aesthetically pleasing exemplars of nature occupied by rugged primitives who were now depicted in a dramatic fashion 27 Produced before his departure to Italy Jacob More s 1740 93 series of four paintings Falls of Clyde 1771 73 have been described by art historian Duncan Macmillan as treating the waterfalls as a kind of natural national monument and has been seen as an early work in developing a romantic sensibility to the Scottish landscape 27 Runciman was probably the first artist to paint Scottish landscapes in watercolours in the more romantic style that was emerging towards the end of the eighteenth century 28 The effect of Romanticism can also be seen in the works of late eighteenth and early nineteenth century artists such as Henry Raeburn 1756 1823 Alexander Nasmyth 1758 1840 and John Knox 1778 1845 Raeburn was the most significant artist of the period to pursue his entire career in Scotland He was born in Edinburgh and returned there after a trip to Italy in 1786 He is most famous for his intimate portraits of leading figures in Scottish life going beyond the aristocracy to lawyers doctors professors writers and ministers 29 adding elements of Romanticism to the tradition of Reynolds 30 He became a knight in 1822 and the King s limner and painter for Scotland in 1823 29 Nasmyth visited Italy and worked in London but returned to his native Edinburgh for most of his career He produced work in a range of forms including his portrait of Romantic poet Robert Burns which depicts him against a dramatic Scottish background but he is chiefly remembered for his landscapes and has been seen as the founder of the Scottish landscape tradition 31 The work of Knox continued the theme of landscape directly linking it with the Romantic works of Scott 32 and he was also among the first artists to depict the urban landscape of Glasgow 33 Architecture editMain article Scottish baronial architecture The Gothic revival in architecture has been seen as an expression of Romanticism and according to Alvin Jackson the Scots baronial style was a Caledonian reading of the gothic 34 Some of the earliest evidence of a revival in Gothic architecture are from Scotland Inveraray Castle constructed from 1746 with design input from William Adam incorporates turrets into a conventional Palladian style house His son Robert Adam s houses in this style include Mellerstain and Wedderburn in Berwickshire and Seton House in East Lothian The trend is most clearly seen at Culzean Castle Ayrshire remodelled by Robert from 1777 35 nbsp Abbotsford House re built for Walter Scott helped to launch the Scots Baronial revival Important for the re adoption of the Scots Baronial in the early nineteenth century was Abbotsford House the residence of Scott Re built for him from 1816 it became a model for the revival of the style Common features borrowed from sixteenth and seventeenth century houses included battlemented gateways crow stepped gables pointed turrets and machicolations The style was popular across Scotland and was applied to many relatively modest dwellings by architects such as William Burn 1789 1870 David Bryce 1803 1876 36 Edward Blore 1787 1879 Edward Calvert c 1847 1914 and Robert Stodart Lorimer 1864 1929 Examples in urban contexts include the building of Cockburn Street in Edinburgh from the 1850s as well as the National Wallace Monument at Stirling 1859 69 37 The rebuilding of Balmoral Castle as a baronial palace and its adoption as a royal retreat by Queen Victoria from 1855 58 confirmed the popularity of the style 38 In ecclesiastical architecture a style similar to that developed in England was adopted Important figures in this movement included Frederick Thomas Pilkington 1832 98 who developed a new style of church building which accorded with the fashionable High Gothic but which adapted it for the worship needs of the Free Church of Scotland Examples include Barclay Viewforth Church Edinburgh 1862 64 39 Robert Rowand Anderson 1834 1921 who trained in the office of George Gilbert Scott in London before returning to Edinburgh worked mainly on small churches in the First Pointed or Early English style that is characteristic of Scott s former assistants By 1880 his practice was designing some of the most prestigious public and private buildings in Scotland such as the Scottish National Portrait Gallery the Dome of Old College Medical Faculty and McEwan Hall Edinburgh University the Central Hotel at Glasgow Central station the Catholic Apostolic Church in Edinburgh and Mount Stuart House on the Isle of Bute 40 Music editMain article Music of Scotland nbsp George Thomson by Henry RaeburnOne characteristic of Romanticism was the conscious creation of bodies of nationalist art music In Scotland this form was dominant from the late eighteenth century to the early twentieth century 41 In the 1790s Robert Burns embarked on an attempt to produce a corpus of Scottish national song building on the work of antiquarians and musicologists such as William Tytler James Beattie and Joseph Ritson 42 Working with music engraver and seller James Johnson he contributed about a third of the eventual songs of the collection known as the Scots Musical Museum issued between 1787 and 1803 in six volumes 43 Burns collaborated with George Thomson in A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs published from 1793 to 1818 which adapted Scottish folk songs with classical arrangements Thompson was inspired by hearing Scottish songs sung by visiting Italian castrati at the St Cecilia Concerts in Edinburgh He collected Scottish songs and obtained musical arrangements from the best European composers who included Joseph Haydn and Ludwig van Beethoven Burns was employed in editing the lyrics A Select Collection of Original Scottish Airs was published in five volumes between 1799 and 1818 It helped make Scottish songs part of the European cannon of classical music 44 while Thompson s work brought elements of Romanticism such as harmonies based on those of Beethoven into Scottish classical music 41 Also involved in the collection and publication of Scottish songs was Scott whose first literary effort was Minstrelsy of the Scottish Border published in three volumes 1802 03 This collection first drew the attention of an international audience to his work and some of his lyrics were set to music by Schubert who also created a setting of Ossian 45 nbsp Hamish MacCunnPerhaps the most influential composer of the first half of the nineteenth century was the German Felix Mendelssohn who visited Britain ten times for a total of twenty months from 1829 Scotland inspired two of his most famous works the overture Fingal s Cave also known as the Hebrides Overture and the Scottish Symphony Symphony No 3 On his last visit to England in 1847 he conducted his own Scottish Symphony with the Philharmonic Orchestra before Queen Victoria and Prince Albert 46 Max Bruch 1838 1920 composed the Scottish Fantasy 1880 for violin and orchestra which includes an arrangement of the tune Hey Tuttie Tatie best known for its use in the song Scots Wha Hae by Burns 47 By the late nineteenth century there was in effect a national school of orchestral and operatic music in Scotland Major composers included Alexander Mackenzie 1847 1935 William Wallace 1860 1940 Learmont Drysdale 1866 1909 Hamish MacCunn 1868 1916 and John McEwen 1868 1948 41 Mackenzie who studied in Germany and Italy and mixed Scottish themes with German Romanticism 48 is best known for his three Scottish Rhapsodies 1879 80 1911 Pibroch for violin and orchestra 1889 and the Scottish Concerto for piano 1897 all involving Scottish themes and folk melodies 41 Wallace s work included an overture In Praise of Scottish Poesie 1894 his pioneering symphonic poem about his namesake medieval nationalist William Wallace AD 1305 1905 1905 and a cantata The Massacre of the Macpherson 1910 49 Drysdale s work often dealt with Scottish themes including the overture Tam O Shanter 1890 the cantata The Kelpie 1891 the tone poem A Border Romance 1904 and the cantata Tamlane 1905 50 MacCunn s overture The Land of the Mountain and the Flood 1887 his Six Scotch Dances 1896 his operas Jeanie Deans 1894 and Dairmid 1897 and choral works on Scottish subjects 41 have been described by I G C Hutchison as the musical equivalent of Abbotsford and Balmoral 51 McEwen s more overtly national works include Grey Galloway 1908 the Solway Symphony 1911 and Prince Charlie A Scottish Rhapsody 1924 41 Historiography editSee also Historiography nbsp Raeburn s portrait of Walter Scott in 1822In contrast to Enlightenment histories which have been seen as attempting to draw general lessons about humanity from history the German philosopher Johann Gottfried von Herder in his Ideas upon Philosophy and the History of Mankind 1784 set out the concept of Volksgeist a unique national spirit that drove historical change As a result a key element in the influence of Romanticism on intellectual life was the production of national histories 52 The nature and existence of a national Scottish historiography has been debated among historians Those authors who consider that such a national history did exist in this period indicate that it can be found outside of the production of major historical narratives in works of antiquarianism and fiction 53 An important element in the emergence of a Scottish national history was an interest in antiquarianism with figures like John Pinkerton 1758 1826 collecting sources such as ballads coins medals songs and artefacts 54 Enlightenment historians had tended to react with embarrassment to Scottish history particularly the feudalism of the Middle Ages and the religious intolerance of the Reformation In contrast many historians of the early nineteenth century rehabilitated these areas as suitable for serious study 55 Lawyer and antiquarian Cosmo Innes who produced works on Scotland in the Middle Ages 1860 and Sketches of Early Scottish History 1861 has been likened to the pioneering history of Georg Heinrich Pertz one of the first writers to collate the major historical accounts of German history 56 Patrick Fraser Tytler s nine volume history of Scotland 1828 43 particularity his sympathetic view of Mary Queen of Scots have led to comparisons with Leopold von Ranke considered the father of modern scientific historical writing 56 Tytler was co founder with Scott of the Bannatyne Society in 1823 which helped further the course of historical research in Scotland 57 Thomas M Crie s 1797 1875 biographies of John Knox and Andrew Melville figures generally savaged in the Enlightenment helped rehabilitate their reputations 58 W F Skene s 1809 92 three part study of Celtic Scotland 1886 91 was the first serious investigation of the region and helped spawn the Scottish Celtic Revival 58 Issues of race became important with Pinkerton James Sibbald 1745 1803 and John Jamieson 1758 1839 subscribing to a theory of Picto Gothicism which postulated a Germanic origin for the Picts and the Scots language 54 nbsp Thomas Carlyle a major figure in Romantic historical writingAmong the most significant intellectual figures associated with Romanticism was Thomas Carlyle 1795 1881 born in Scotland and later a resident of London He was largely responsible for bringing the works of German Romantics such as Schiller and Goethe to the attention of a British audience 59 An essayist and historian he invented the phrase hero worship lavishing largely uncritical praise on strong leaders such as Oliver Cromwell Frederick the Great and Napoleon 60 His The French Revolution A History 1837 dramatised the plight of the French aristocracy but stressed the inevitability of history as a force 61 With French historian Jules Michelet he is associated with the use of the historical imagination 62 In Romantic historiography this led to a tendency to emphasise sentiment and identification inviting readers to sympathise with historical personages and even to imagine interactions with them 63 In contrast to many continental Romantic historians Carlyle remained largely pessimistic about human nature and events He believed that history was a form of prophecy that could reveal patterns for the future In the late nineteenth century he became one of a number of Victorian sage writers and social commentators 64 Romantic writers often reacted against the empiricism of Enlightenment historical writing putting forward the figure of the poet historian who would mediate between the sources of history and the reader using insight to create more than chronicles of facts For this reason Romantic historians such as Thierry saw Walter Scott who had spent considerable effort uncovering new documents and sources for his novels as an authority in historical writing 65 Scott is now seen primarily as a novelist but also produced a nine volume biography of Napoleon 66 and has been described as the towering figure of Romantic historiography in Transatlantic and European contexts having a profound effect on how history particularly that of Scotland was understood and written 67 Historians that acknowledged his influence included Chateaubriand Macaulay and Ranke 68 Science editSee also Romanticism in science nbsp Mary Somerville a major influence on Humboldtian science in BritainRomanticism has also been seen as affecting scientific enquiry Romantic attitudes to science varied from distrust of the scientific enterprise to endorsing a non mechanical science that rejected the mathematicised and the abstract theorising associated with Newton Major trends in continental science associated with Romanticism include Naturphilosophie developed by Friedrich Schelling 1775 1854 which focused on the necessity of reuniting man with nature 69 and Humboldtian science based on the work of Alexander von Humboldt 1769 1859 As defined by Susan Cannon this form of inquiry placed a stress on observation accurate scientific instruments and new conceptual tools disregarded the boundaries between different disciplines and emphasised working in nature rather than the artificial laboratory 70 Privileging observation above calculation Romantic scientists were often attracted to the areas where investigation rather than calculation and theory was most important particularly the life sciences geology optics and astronomy 71 James Allard identifies the origins of Scottish Romantic medicine in the work of Enlightenment figures particularly the brothers William 1718 83 and John Hunter 1728 93 who were respectively the leading anatomist and surgeon of their day and in the role of Edinburgh as a major centre of medical teaching and research 72 Key figures that were influenced by the Hunters work and by Romanticism include John Brown 1735 88 Thomas Beddoes 1760 1808 and John Barclay 1758 1826 Brown argued in Elementa Medicinae 1780 that life is an essential vital energy or excitability and that disease is either the excessive or diminished redistribution of the normal intensity of the human organ which became known as Brunonianism This work was highly influential particularly in Germany on the development of Naturphilosophie 73 This work was translated and edited by Beddoes another graduate of Edinburgh whose own work Hygeia or Essays Moral and Medical 1807 expanded on these ideas 72 Following in this vein Barclay in the 1810 edition of the Encyclopaedia Britannica identified physiology as the branch of medicine closest to metaphysics 74 Also important were the brothers John 1763 1820 and Charles Bell 1774 1842 who made significant advances in the study of the vascular and nervous systems respectively 75 76 nbsp A plate from Robert Brown s paper On the natural order of plants called Proteaceae 1810 The University of Edinburgh was also a major supplier of surgeons for the royal navy and Robert Jameson 1774 1854 Professor of Natural History at Edinburgh ensured that a large number of these were surgeon naturalists who were vital in the Humboldtian and imperial enterprise of investigating nature throughout the world 70 77 These included Robert Brown 1773 1858 one of the major figures in the early exploration of Australia His later use of the microscope paralleled that noted among German students of Naturphilosophie and he is credited with the discovery of the cell nucleus and the first observation of Brownian motion 78 Charles Lyell s work Principles of Geology 1830 is often seen as the foundation of modern geology It was indebted to Humboldtian science in its insistence on measurements of nature 79 and according to Noah Heringman retains a much of the rhetoric of the sublime which is characteristic of Romantic attitudes to landscape 80 Romantic thinking was also evident in the writings of Hugh Miller stonemason and geologist who followed in the tradition of Naturphilosophie arguing that nature was a pre ordained progression towards the human race 81 Publisher historian antiquarian and scientist Robert Chambers 1802 71 became a friend of Scott writing a biography of him after the author s death Chambers also became a geologist researching in Scandinavia and Canada His most influential work was the anonymously published Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation 1844 which was the most comprehensive written argument in favour of evolution before the work of Charles Darwin 1809 82 82 His work was strongly influenced by transcendental anatomy which drawing on Goethe and Lorenz Oken 1779 1851 83 looked for ideal patterns and structure in nature 84 and had been pioneered in Scotland by figures including Robert Knox 1791 1862 85 David Brewster 1781 1868 physicist mathematician and astronomer undertook key work in optics where he provided a compromise between Goethe s Naturphilosophie influenced studies and Newton s system which Goethe attacked 86 His work would be important in later biological geological 87 and astrological discoveries Diligent measurement in South Africa allowed Thomas Henderson 1798 1844 make the observations that would allow him to be the first to calculate the distance to Alpha Centauri before returning to Edinburgh to become the first Astronomer Royal for Scotland from 1834 88 Influenced by Humboldt and much praised by him was Mary Somerville 1780 1872 mathematician geographer physicist astronomer and one of the few women to gain recognition in science in the period 89 A major contribution to the magnetic crusade declared by Humboldt was made by Scottish born astronomer John Lamont 1805 79 head of the observatory in Munich when he found a decennial period ten year cycle in the Earth s magnetic field 90 Politics editMain article Scottish Highlands nbsp David Wilkie s flattering portrait of the kilted King George IVIn the aftermath of the Jacobite risings a movement to restore Stuart King James II of England to the throne the British government enacted a series of laws that attempted to speed the process of the destruction of the clan system Measures included a ban on the bearing of arms the wearing of tartan and limitations on the activities of the Episcopalian Church Most of the legislation was repealed by the end of the eighteenth century as the Jacobite threat subsided Soon after there was a process of the rehabilitation of highland culture Tartan had already been adopted for highland regiments in the British army which poor highlanders joined in large numbers until the end of the Napoleonic Wars in 1815 but by the nineteenth century it had largely been abandoned by the ordinary people of the region In the 1820s tartan and the kilt were adopted by members of the social elite not just in Scotland but across Europe 91 92 The international craze for tartan and for idealising a romanticised Highlands was set off by the Ossian cycle 93 94 and further popularised by the works of Scott His staging of the royal visit of King George IV to Scotland in 1822 and the king s wearing of tartan resulted in a massive upsurge in demand for kilts and tartans that could not be met by the Scottish linen industry Individual clan tartans was largely defined in this period and they became a major symbol of Scottish identity 95 This Highlandism by which all of Scotland was identified with the culture of the Highlands was cemented by Queen Victoria s interest in the country her adoption of Balmoral as a major royal retreat and her interest in tartanry 92 The romanticisation of the Highlands and the adoption of Jacobitism into mainstream culture have been seen as defusing the potential threat to the Union with England the House of Hanover and the dominant Whig government 96 In many countries Romanticism played a major part in the emergence of radical independence movements through the development of national identities Tom Nairn argues that Romanticism in Scotland did not develop along the lines seen elsewhere in Europe leaving a rootless intelligentsia who moved to England or elsewhere and so did not supply a cultural nationalism that could be communicated to the emerging working classes 97 Graeme Moreton and Lindsay Paterson both argue that the lack of interference of the British state in civil society meant that the middle classes had no reason to object to the union 97 Atsuko Ichijo argues that national identity cannot be equated with a movement for independence 98 Moreton suggests that there was a Scottish nationalism but that it was expressed in terms of Unionist nationalism 53 A form of political radicalism remained within Scottish Romanticism surfacing in events like the foundation of the Friends of the People in 1792 and in 1853 the National Association for the Vindication of Scottish Rights 99 which was in effect a federation of romantics radical churchmen and administrative reformers 100 However Scottish identity was not directed into nationalism until the twentieth century 99 Philosophy editMain article Scottish Common Sense Realism nbsp Dugald Stewart a major figure in the popularisation of Common Sense RealismThe dominant school of philosophy in Scotland in the late eighteenth century and the first half of the nineteenth century is known as Common Sense Realism It argued that there are certain concepts such as our existence the existence of solid objects and some basic moral first principles that are intrinsic to our make up and from which all subsequent arguments and systems of morality must be derived It can be seen as an attempt to reconcile the new scientific developments of the Enlightenment with religious belief 101 The origins of these arguments are in a reaction to the scepticism that became dominant in the Enlightenment particularly that articulated by Scottish philosopher David Hume 1711 76 This branch of thinking was first formulated by Thomas Reid 1710 96 in his An Inquiry into the Human Mind on the Principles of Common Sense 1764 102 It was popularised in Scotland by figures including Dugald Stewart 1753 1828 and in England by James Beattie Stewart s students included Walter Scott Walter Chambers and Thomas Brown 103 and this branch of thought would later be a major influence on Charles Darwin 104 William Hamilton 1788 1856 attempted to combine Reid s approach with the philosophy of Kant 105 Common Sense Realism not only dominated Scottish thought but also had a major impact in France 106 the United States Germany and other countries Victor Cousin 1792 1867 was the most important proponent in France becoming Minister of Education and incorporating the philosophy into the curriculum 103 In Germany the emphasis on careful observation influenced Humboldt s ideas about science and was a major factor in the development of German Idealism 107 James McCosh 1811 94 brought Common Sense Realism directly from Scotland to North American in 1868 when he became president of Princeton University which soon became a stronghold of the movement Noah Porter 1811 92 taught Common Sense Realism to generations of students at Yale 103 As a result it would be a major influence on the development of one of the most important offshoots of Romanticism in New England Transcendentalism particularly in the writing of Ralph Waldo Emerson 1803 82 103 Decline edit nbsp William McTaggart s The Storm 1890 incorporating elements of Impressionism into the Scottish landscape traditionIn literature Romanticism is often thought to have ended in the 1830s 108 109 with a few commentators like Margaret Drabble describing it as over by 1848 9 Romanticism continued much longer in some places and areas of endeavour particularly in music where it has been dated from 1820 to 1910 110 The death of Scott in 1832 has been seen as marking the end of the great romantic generation 111 and Scottish literature and culture in general lost some of its international prominence from this point Scott s reputation as a writer also went into decline in the late nineteenth century only recovering in the twentieth 112 Economic and social change particularly the better communications brought by the railways decreased the ability of Edinburgh to function as an alternative cultural capital to London with its publishing industry moving to London 113 Lack of opportunities in politics and letters led many talented Scots to leave for England and elsewhere The sentimental Kailyard tradition of J M Barrie and George MacDonald of those that continued to pursue Scottish topics at the end of the nineteenth century was seen by Tom Nairn as sub romantic 114 In art the tradition of Scottish landscape painting continued into the later nineteenth century but Romanticism gave way to influences including French Impressionism Post Impressionism and eventually Modernism 115 The Scots baronial style continued to be popular until the end of the nineteenth century when other styles began to dominate 116 Although Romanticism persisted in music much longer than in almost every area it fell out of fashion in the twentieth century and anti Romantic currents in Britain virtually buried Victorian and Edwardian music not written by Edward Elgar or Arthur Sullivan 49 The idea of the historical imagination was replaced with the source based empiricism championed by Ranke 117 Marinel Ash has noted that after the death of Scott Scottish national history lost its momentum and the Scottish literati stopped writing Scottish histories Colin Kidd has observed a change of attitudes to historical writing and suggests that this was one reason for a lack of the development of political nationalism 53 In science the rapid expansion of knowledge increased a tendency towards specialisation and professionalism and a decline of the polymath man of letters and amateurs that had dominated Romantic science 118 Common Sense Realism began to decline in Britain in the face of the English empiricism outlined by John Stuart Mill in his An Examination of Sir William Hamilton s Philosophy 1865 119 Influence edit nbsp The young Leo Tolstoy one of the many writers directly influenced by Scottish RomanticismScotland can make a claim to have begun the Romantic movement with writers such as Macpherson and Burns 120 In Scott it produced a figure of international fame and influence whose virtual invention of the historical novel would be picked up by writers across the world including Alexandre Dumas and Honore de Balzac in France Leo Tolstoy in Russia and Alessandro Manzoni in Italy 121 The tradition of Scottish landscape painting significantly influenced art in Britain and elsewhere through figures like J M W Turner who took part in the emerging Scottish grand tour 122 The Scottish baronial style influenced buildings in England and was taken by Scots to North America 123 Australia 124 and New Zealand 125 In music the early efforts of men like Burns Scott and Thompson helped insert Scottish music into European particularly German classical music and the later contributions of composers like MacCuun were part of a Scottish contribution to the British revival of interest in classical music in the late nineteenth century 126 The idea of history as a force and the romantic concept of revolution were highly influential on transcendentalists like Emerson and through them on American literature in general 61 Romantic science maintained the prominence and reputation that Scotland had begun to obtain in the Enlightenment and helped in the development of many emerging fields of investigation including geology and biology According to Robert D Purington to some the nineteenth century seems to be the century of Scottish science 127 Politically the initial function of Romanticism as pursued by Scott and others helped to diffuse some of the tension created by Scotland s place in the Union but it also helped to ensure the survival of a common and distinct Scottish national identity that would play a major part in Scottish life and emerge as a significant factor in Scottish politics from the second half of the twentieth century 128 Externally modern images of Scotland worldwide its landscape culture sciences and arts are still largely defined by those created and popularised by Romanticism 129 Notes edit Pittock Murray 2008 Scottish and Irish Romanticism Oxford Oxford University Press p 7 ISBN 9780199232796 Re Mapping Romanticism The Scottish Question Townsend Center for the Humanities townsendcenter berkeley edu Retrieved 30 July 2021 a b A Chandler A Dream of Order the Medieval Ideal in Nineteenth Century English Literature London Taylor amp Francis 1971 p 4 David Levin History as Romantic Art Bancroft Prescott and Parkman 1967 S Swift Romanticism Literature And Philosophy Expressive Rationality in Rousseau Kant Wollstonecraft And Contemporary Theory Continuum International Publishing Group 2006 ISBN 0826486444 Ashton Nichols Roaring Alligators and Burning Tygers Poetry and Science from William Bartram to Charles Darwin Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 2005 149 3 304 315 Pittock Murray 2008 Scottish and Irish Romanticism Oxford Oxford University Press R R Agrawal The Medieval Revival and its Influence on the Romantic Movement Abhinav 1990 p 1 a b M Drabble The Oxford Companion to English Literature Oxford Oxford University Press fifth edn 1985 pp 842 3 J Buchan Crowded with Genius London Harper Collins 2003 ISBN 0 06 055888 1 p 311 J Buchan Crowded with Genius London Harper Collins 2003 ISBN 0 06 055888 1 p 163 H Gaskill The Reception of Ossian in Europe Continuum 2004 ISBN 0826461352 p 140 D Thomson The Gaelic Sources of Macpherson s Ossian Aberdeen Oliver amp Boyd 1952 L McIlvanney Hugh Blair Robert Burns and the Invention of Scottish Literature Eighteenth Century Life vol 29 2 Spring 2005 pp 25 46 K S Whetter Understanding Genre and Medieval Romance Aldershot Ashgate 2008 ISBN 0 7546 6142 3 p 28 N Davidson The Origins of Scottish Nationhood Pluto Press 2008 ISBN 0 7453 1608 5 p 136 A Maunder FOF Companion to the British Short Story Infobase Publishing 2007 ISBN 0816074968 p 374 A Jarrels Associations respect ing the past Enlightenment and Romantic historicism in J P Klancher A Concise Companion to the Romantic Age Oxford John Wiley amp Sons 2009 ISBN 0631233555 p 60 A Benchimol ed Intellectual Politics and Cultural Conflict in the Romantic Period Scottish Whigs English Radicals and the Making of the British Public Sphere Aldershot Ashgate 2010 ISBN 0754664465 p 210 A Benchimol ed Intellectual Politics and Cultural Conflict in the Romantic Period Scottish Whigs English Radicals and the Making of the British Public Sphere Aldershot Ashgate 2010 ISBN 0754664465 p 209 a b I Brown The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature Enlightenment Britain and Empire 1707 1918 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2007 ISBN 0748624813 pp 229 30 a b I Brown The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature Enlightenment Britain and Empire 1707 1918 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2007 ISBN 0748624813 p 231 a b I Brown The Edinburgh History of Scottish Literature Enlightenment Britain and Empire 1707 1918 Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2007 ISBN 0748624813 pp 185 6 M O Halloran National Discourse or Discord Transformations of The Family Legend by Baille Scott and Hogg in S R Alker and H F Nelson eds James Hogg and the Literary Marketplace Scottish Romanticism and the Working Class Author Aldershot Ashgate Publishing Ltd 2009 ISBN 0754665690 p 43 I Chilvers ed The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists Oxford Oxford University Press fourth edn 2009 ISBN 019953294X p 554 The Houghton Mifflin Dictionary of Biography Houghton Mifflin Harcourt 2003 ISBN 061825210X pp 34 5 a b C W J Withers Geography Science and National Identity Scotland Since 1520 Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2001 ISBN 0521642027 pp 151 3 E K Waterhouse Painting in Britain 1530 to 1790 Yale University Press fifth edn 1994 ISBN 0300058330 p 293 a b D Campbell Edinburgh A Cultural and Literary History Signal Books 2003 ISBN 1902669738 pp 142 3 C C Ochterbeck ed Michelin Green Guide Great Britain Edition Michelin 5th edn 2007 ISBN 1906261083 p 84 I Chilvers ed The Oxford Dictionary of Art and Artists Oxford Oxford University Press fourth edn 2009 ISBN 019953294X p 433 R J Hill Picturing Scotland Through the Waverley Novels Walter Scott and the Origins of the Victorian Illustrated Novel Aldershot Ashgate 2010 ISBN 0754668061 p 104 D Kemp The Pleasures and Treasures of Britain A Discerning Traveller s Companion Dundurn 1992 ISBN 1550021591 p 401 A Jackson The Two Unions Ireland Scotland and the Survival of the United Kingdom 1707 2007 Oxford Oxford University Press 2011 ISBN 019959399X p 152 I D Whyte and K A Whyte The Changing Scottish Landscape 1500 1800 London Taylor amp Francis 1991 ISBN 0415029929 p 100 L Hull Britain s Medieval Castles London Greenwood 2006 ISBN 0275984141 p 154 M Glendinning R MacInnes and A MacKechnie A History of Scottish Architecture from the Renaissance to the Present Day Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2002 ISBN 978 0 7486 0849 2 pp 276 85 Henry Russell Hitchcock Architecture Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Yale University Press fourth edn 1989 ISBN 0300053207 p 146 G Stamp The Victorian kirk Presbyterian architecture in nineteenth century Scotland in C Brooks ed The Victorian Church Architecture and Society Manchester Manchester University Press 1995 ISBN 0719040205 pp 108 10 M Glendinning R MacInnes and A MacKechnie A History of Scottish Architecture From the Renaissance to the Present Day Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 1996 ISBN 0 7486 0849 4 p 552 a b c d e f M Gardiner Modern Scottish Culture Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 2005 ISBN 0748620273 pp 195 6 H Matherson Robert Burns and national song in D Duff and C 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1902930290 pp 193 5 a b M Sievers The Highland Myth as an Invented Tradition of 18th and 19th Century and Its Significance for the Image of Scotland GRIN Verlag 2007 ISBN 3638816516 pp 22 5 P Morere Scotland and France in the Enlightenment Bucknell University Press 2004 ISBN 0838755267 pp 75 6 W Ferguson The identity of the Scottish Nation an Historic Quest Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press 1998 ISBN 0748610715 p 227 N C Milne Scottish Culture and Traditions Paragon Publishing 2010 ISBN 1899820795 p 138 F McLynn The Jacobites London Taylor amp Francis 1988 ISBN 0415002672 p 211 a b A Ichijo Scottish Nationalism and the Idea of Europe Concepts Of Europe and the Nation London Routledge 2004 ISBN 0714655910 pp 35 6 A Ichijo Scottish Nationalism and the Idea of Europe Concepts Of Europe and the Nation London Routledge 2004 ISBN 0714655910 p 37 a b N Davidson The Origins of Scottish Nationhood Pluto Press 2008 ISBN 0 7453 1608 5 p 187 D Hempton Religion and Political Culture in Britain and Ireland From the Glorious Revolution to the Decline of Empire Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1996 ISBN 0521479258 p 69 Paul C Gutjahr Charles Hodge Guardian of American Orthodoxy Oxford Oxford University Press 2011 ISBN 0199740429 p 39 E J Wilson and P H Reill Encyclopedia of the Enlightenment Infobase Publishing 2nd edn 2004 ISBN 0816053359 pp 499 501 a b c d B W Redekop Reid s influence in Britain Germany France and America in T Cuneo and R van Woudenberg eds The Cambridge Companion to Thomas Reid Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2004 ISBN 0521012082 pp 313 40 C Loring Brace Evolution In An Anthropological View Rowman amp Littlefield 2000 ISBN 0742502635 p 51 J Skorupski The Cambridge Companion to Mill Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1998 ISBN 0521422116 p 143 A Hook The French taste for Scottish Romantic literature in D Dawson and P Morere eds Scotland and France in the Enlightenment Bucknell University Press 2004 ISBN 0838755267 p 93 M Kuehn Scottish Common Sense 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University of Oklahoma Press 2000 ISBN 0806132531 p 136 B Marshall and C Johnston France and the Americas Culture Politics and History a Multidisciplinary Encyclopedia Volume 2 ABC CLIO 2005 ISBN 1851094113 M D Prentis The Scots in Australia UNSW Press 2008 ISBN 1921410213 p 166 Larnach s Castle An Encyclopedia of New Zealand retrieved 9 January 2008 W Apel Harvard Dictionary of Music Harvard University Press 2nd edn 1969 ISBN 0674375017 p 760 Robert D Purrington Physics in the Nineteenth Century Rutgers University Press 1997 ISBN 0813524423 p 14 N Davidson The Origins of Scottish Nationhood Pluto Press 2000 ISBN 0745316085 pp 162 3 and 200 1 G Jack and A M Phipps Tourism And Intercultural Exchange Why Tourism Matters Channel View Publications 2005 ISBN 1845410173 p 147 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Romanticism in Scotland amp oldid 1159210199, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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