
Contents
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1. Patronage and The Enlightenment 1. Patronage and The Enlightenment
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2. The Data and Scope of the Study 2. The Data and Scope of the Study
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3. Politics and University Patronage 3. Politics and University Patronage
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4. The Processes of Appointment 4. The Processes of Appointment
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5. Other Aims of this Book 5. Other Aims of this Book
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Notes Notes
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Cite
Abstract
This chapter discusses the coverage of this study which focuses on patronage in one set of institutions essential to the articulation of the Scottish Enlightenment — the universities. It considers 280 men who held university teaching positions in the three southern Scottish universities of Glasgow, Edinburgh, and St Andrews after the purge of 1690. This study seeks to show how politics worked to shape the universities during this period by looking in detail at placements and patrons. It asks who put in their places the men and women who had expressed and institutionalized novel ideas in that society; why were they patronized and who made it possible for their ideas to be acted upon. These questions are asked with respect to Scotland during the period 1690 to 1806, from the settlement of the country in the aftermath of the 1688 revolution to the end of the reign of ‘Harry IX’ — Henry Dundas (1742–1811).
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