| Historia Scotarum Index | Bibliography |
Historia Scotarum
Partial List of Members
Last updated 30 Jul 2006
These are the members of Historia Scotarum. Those with initials in bold after their names are contributors to the Annotated Bibliography of Scottish Pre-Modern Women's History.
Attention, Web Surfers! Please don't e-mail the members listed below with trivial questions. Go to the library; read the works mentioned in the Annotated Bibliography of Scottish Pre-Modern Women's History. (If you're new to Scottish history, read some good general Scottish histories as well. A listing of some can be found at the Scottish Medieval Bibliography web site.) After you have done this, if you still have questions that aren't answered by these works, join the Historia-Scotarum e-mailing list and ask your questions there.
- Gordon DesBrisay, Ph.D. (University of St. Andrews) [GdB]
- Sharon L. Krossa, B.A. (Mount Holyoke College) [SLK]
E-mail: <skrossa-hs @A@T@ MedievalScotland .D.O.T. org>
Sharon studied for a Ph.D. at the University of Aberdeen, Scotland; the minor corrections to her dissertation, "A Study of Expectations: Women in the Burgh of Aberdeen in the Later Middle Ages" were recently approved and she plans to attend the Nov 2006 graduation. She is currently living in California. She is the list coordinator for the Historia-Scotarum e-mailing list and editor of the Annotated Bibliography of Scottish Pre-Modern Women's History.
Research Interests: Women in Scottish towns; 16th century Scottish women; Aberdeen; onomastics; forms of personal identification in historical records; change of name (or not) at marriage.
Web Page: Medieval Scotland
- David G Mullan, Ph.D. (University of Guelph)
E-mail: <mullan @A@T@ uccb .D.O.T. ns .D.O.T. ca>
David is associate professor of history and religious studies at the University College of Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. He is a graduate of the University of Guelph where he wrote his doctoral thesis under Professor Ted Cowan. It was published in 1986 as Episcopacy in Scotland: The History of an Idea, 1560-1638. He has written a number of essays on Scotland in the 17th century, and has edited the spiritual autobiography of Mistress Rutherford for publication in Scottish History Society Miscellany, vol. xiii (and a related essay in Bunyan Studies, 1997) His Scottish Puritanism, 1590-1638 was published by Oxford University Press in 2000, and a collection of documents, Religious Controversy in Scotland, 1625-1639, will be published by the Scottish History Society. He is currently working on a book on Scottish religious autobiography 1600-1720.
- All sorts of other people who have yet to submit biographies.
Members are encouraged to send a short, third person biographical paragraph and list of research interests to Sharon L. Krossa, <skrossa-hs @A@T@ MedievalScotland .D.O.T. org>. Please indicate whether or not you would like your e-mail address published. (E-mail addresses will only be published disguised, like those in the listings above, to try to discourage spam.) Listing of degrees is optional; it is only suggested because it might prove interesting to see the variety of backgrounds that have led to an interest in Scottish pre-modern women's history. If you have a personal or historical web page, this may also be included. Those who have publications, especially ones related to Scottish women's history, are encouraged to list the titles. (Members who are undergraduate students and others who are not professional academics, please don't be put off by this! Anyone who is seriously interested in Scottish women's history in this period is welcome, whatever their background or current occupation.)
| Historia Scotarum Index | Bibliography |
©1998-2006. All rights reserved.
Web pages maintained by Sharon L. Krossa (contact).