Genealogy Books, Genealogy CDs & Family History – Genealogical.com
Home My Account View Cart Check Out Help

Sign up for Genealogy Pointers »


Browse or Download our Full Catalog »
Search over 2,000 genealogy books and CDs to further your research needs.

Browse in the US
New England
The South

More US Genealogy »
Browse the World
England
Germany

More World Genealogy »
Browse by Category
Colonial
Immigration
Passenger Lists
Revolutionary War
Royal & Noble
Family History
Vital Records

More Genealogy Categories »
Genealogy Pointers


Learn More About:




New Genealogy Books and CDsBrowse our Full CatalogGenealogy Book Sales and Bargains
Genealogy BestsellersGenealogy for BeginnersGenealogy Research EssentialsGenealogy LinksOur Genealogy Blog
Huguenot and Scots Links, 1575-1775

David Dobson
 

Format: Paper

Pages: vi + 92 pp.

Published: 2005

Reprinted: 2008

Price: $14.50

ISBN: 9780806352848

Item #: CF9881

Are you on the trail of a Huguenot (French Protestant) immigrant ancestor? Has the trail grown cold after you pursued every possible lead? If so, have you ever thought that your family might have settled in Scotland for a period of time prior to arriving in the New World? If not, consider the following.

Until its revocation in 1685, the Edict of Nantes had granted French Protestants a degree of religious freedom. After Louis XIV rescinded the Edict, Huguenots, fearing reprisals, fled to whichever of the Protestant countries would receive them. While most Huguenots took their skills and remaining capital to The Netherlands, Germany, Scandinavia, England, and America, some of them or their descendants made their way to Scotland, which officially had become a Protestant country in 1560. While a small number of refugees and emigrants from France settled in Scotland in the immediate aftermath of the revocation, the main influx occurred in the last quarter of the 17th century. Most of these emigrants (craftsmen, artisans, and merchants) settled in the Canongate, then a separate burgh but now a part of Edinburgh. The second largest occupational group of French Protestants joined Scottish regiments and fought against the armies of France or its Jacobite allies in Scotland and Ireland.

Researchers will discover the identities of many of these Huguenot emigres or their descendants in a groundbreaking new work from David Dobson entitled, Huguenot and Scots Links, 1575-1775. Working from baptismal registers, burgess rolls, tax lists, marriage registers, and other primary sources, Mr. Dobson has unearthed information concerning over 1,000 Scottish Huguenots or their descendants. For each individual, the compiler provides the name, a locale, a date, usually an occupation, and something about the person (e.g., "admitted as a burgess," or "apprenticed to James Smart a merchant in Edinburgh," or "married Beatrix Cowan in Canongate"). While this new book can scarcely claim to list every person of Huguenot descent who made Scotland his or her new home, in referring to over 2,000 subjects and their family members or associates, it holds out newfound hope to bewildered researchers.

Customers who bought this product also purchased...
Later Scots-Irish Links, 1725-1825. Part Two
Later Scots-Irish Links, 1725-1825. Part Two
Later Scots-Irish Links, 1725-1825: Part Three
Later Scots-Irish Links, 1725-1825: Part Three
Scotland During the Plantation of Ulster: The People of Dumfries and Galloway, 1600-1699
Scotland During the Plantation of Ulster: The People of Dumfries and Galloway, 1600-1699
Later Scots-Irish Links, 1725-1825. Part One
Later Scots-Irish Links, 1725-1825. Part One
Irish Passenger Lists, 1803-1806
Irish Passenger Lists, 1803-1806
Irish Emigrants in North America [1670-1830], Part Six
Irish Emigrants in North America [1670-1830], Part Six

 New Genealogy Books & CDs | Browse Full Catalog | Sales & Bargains
 Genealogy Warehouse | Genealogy for Beginners | Genealogy Essentials | Genealogy Links | Our Genealogy Blog
 Home | My Account | View Cart | Check Out | Help
Contact Us | Customer Service | Shipping | Affiliate Info | About Us | Site Map

Back to top ^

Copyright Info | Terms of Use | Legal & Security Policies