Iona: The Living Memory of a Crofting Community, 1750 - 1914

E. Mairi MacArthur
4.25
8 ratings 1 reviews
The Hebridean island of Iona has been the focus of intense outside interest for over fourteen hundred years, from the time of St Columba's monastery in the sixth century through to the transfer of its renowned monuments into the care of Historic Scotland in the year 2000.Yet the people who lived and worked alongside its sacred sites have been largely overshadowed until now. This book is the first to redress the balance, taking an in-depth look at Iona's economic and social history during the 18th and 19th centuries, a period that saw profound change across the Highlands and Islands. It charts the agricultural reorganisation that led to a crofting system, follows the islanders through the harsh decade of the potato famine and records their worship and education, their crafts and customs, and the ties of kinship that underpinned their community. A broad range of sources are woven together - documentary, material, topographical and photographic, along with oral testimony handed down the generations - to create a vivid picture of Iona's past.
Genres: HistoryScotland
296 Pages

Community Reviews:

5 star
3 (38%)
4 star
4 (50%)
3 star
1 (13%)
2 star
0 (0%)
1 star
0 (0%)

Readers also enjoyed

Other books by E. Mairi MacArthur

Lists with this book

How the Scots Invented the Modern World: The True Story of How Western Europe’s Poorest Nation Created our World & Everything in It
Outlander
Mary Queen of Scots
Scottish History
278 books66 voters