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Book Chapter

'Inressyng of kyndnes, and renewing off thair blud': the family, kinship and clan policy in Sixteenth-Century Scottish Gaeldom

Details

Citation

Cathcart A (2008) 'Inressyng of kyndnes, and renewing off thair blud': the family, kinship and clan policy in Sixteenth-Century Scottish Gaeldom. In: Ewan E & Nugent J (eds.) Finding the Family in Medieval and Early Modern Scotland. Women and Gender in the Early Modern World. Abingdon: Ashgate Publishing, pp. 127-138. https://www.routledge.com/Finding-the-Family-in-Medieval-and-Early-Modern-Scotland-1st-Edition/Ewan-Nugent/p/book/9780754660491

Abstract
Kinship was an organising principle throughout pre-industrial Scottish society. However, as a consequence of political, social and economic change, there appears to have been a lessening of kin relations throughout the wider community during the late medieval period. This was evidence in the Highlands where kinship and the expression of kinship and 'kyndnes' were of heightened significance. This chapter seeks to emphasise the contribution of the chiefly family to the maintenance of internal clan cohesion as well as the creation of external political and military alliances with neighbouring clan chiefs and client clans. In the formation of these alliances, the chief's blood relatives were significant, but it is not just who created them that is important. In light of the argument of declining kinship within the wider community this paper will also explore how such alliances were established and maintained.

Keywords
family; kinship; clan policy; Scottish Gaeldom;

Notes
I do not have an electronic version of my chapter, so this is a scanned copy.

StatusPublished
Funders
Title of seriesWomen and Gender in the Early Modern World
Publication date31/12/2008
Publication date online17/10/2008
URL
PublisherAshgate Publishing
Publisher URL
Place of publicationAbingdon
ISBN9780754660491
eISBN9781315255231

People (1)

Professor Alison Cathcart

Professor Alison Cathcart

Professor, History