E137: The Covenanters and Ayrshire, 1637-1651 – CL
Carnegie Library, **NEW for Academic Year 2024-2025**, Glasgow 850, Modern History
This one-day seminar at Carnegie
Library Ayr will examine the role and importance of Ayr in the Covenanting
movement that emerged in 1637 and ruled Scotland until 1651 when Scotland was
conquered by the military forces of Oliver Cromwell. Ayrshire was one of the
main areas of support for the Covenanters in Scotland. David Dickson, Church of
Scotland, minister at Irvine, for example was one of the leaders of the
petitioning campaign against the introduction of the controversial 1637 Prayer
Book and many Ayrshire parishes petitioned against this. The Kennedy brothers
in Ayr, Hugh Kennedy and John Kennedy, often represented the burgh of Ayr in
the Scottish Parliament and they played an important role in supplying a
Covenanting army of 11,000 troops, sent into Ireland in 1642. Ayrshire was
impacted by the outbreak of the 1641 rebellion in Ireland and many people fled
a war zone back to Scotland through the Ayrshire ports causing a humanitarian
aid problem. Scotland was one of the main areas of witch-hunting in Europe and
the Reverend William Adair, minister of Ayr Auld Kirk was a notorious Ayrshire
witch-hunter in the 1660s, but during the 1640s he was one of the Church of
Scotland ministers sent to Ireland to spread Presbyterianism. The military
battles of the Covenanting period impacted on Ayrshire, most notably the 1648
Battle of Mauchline Moor, and this is a theme that will be examined. Explore
these key events and personalities. Lecture style with question and answer
time.
‘’With Glasgow celebrating its 850th year, celebrate the
fascinating and complex history of our dear green place. Led by Dr John Young
from Strathclyde’s Department of Humanities and well-known Scottish historian,
this series of seminars and tours will become a regular feature of our
programmes”.
Dr John Young teaches courses that are mainly focused on seventeenth
century and early eighteenth-century Scotland. He is committed to research-led
teaching as well as the teaching of Scottish history within a wider
international context. He teaches courses on Scotland, 1707-1832, The
Covenanters and the British Civil Wars, the 1707 Act of Union, and Scotland and
Ulster in the Early Modern North Atlantic World.
An adult learning class from one of CLL’s satellite facilities, the Carnegie Library in Ayr.
Please note this seminar will run from 10.00-16.00 with an hour break for lunch.
Further Information Links
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