Scotch Baronial

Scotch Baronial

by Miles Glendinning (Author), Aonghus Mac Kechnie (Author)

Synopsis

As the debate about Scottish independence rages on, this book takes a timely look at how Scotland's politics have been expressed in its architecture. It is an aspect of Scottish history that has hitherto been little discussed, and yet the architecture of Scotland - in particular the Scotch Baronial style - has been of great consequence to the ongoing narrative of Scottish national identity. This book fills that gap in scholarship through a politically-framed examination of Scotland's architecture, tracing how it was used to serve successive political agendas within Scotland during the three `unionist centuries' from the early 17th to the early 20th century. It is a history which encompasses all the principal public architectural works of secular Scottish architecture of the period, from the palaces left behind by the `lost' monarchy to revivalist castles and the proud town halls of the Victorian age, tracing their wildly fluctuating political and national connotations. It is also a story which reaches beyond Scotland and into a wider, international picture: the Scotch Baronial was the world's first self-consciously nationalist architecture - the harbinger of an international movement of `national' styles, rejecting classical antiquity for local medieval inspiration. The book ends by bringing the story into the 21st century, relating the paradox of contemporary `neo-modernist' architecture in today's Scotland, as exemplified in the Holyrood parliament, with the paradoxes embodied in 300 years of the Scotch Baronial style.

$128.38

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 304
Publisher: Bloomsbury Visual Arts
Published: 10 Jan 2019

ISBN 10: 1474283470
ISBN 13: 9781474283472
Book Overview: A timely look at the world's first `nationalist' style of architecture.

Author Bio
Aonghus MacKechnie is an architectural historian and Head of Heritage Management at Historic Scotland. Miles Glendinning is Professor of Architectural Conservation at the Edinburgh School of Architecture and Landscape Architecture, University of Edinburgh, UK. Together, they have co-authored numerous books including A History of Scottish Architecture (1996, co-authored with Ranald MacInnes), and Scottish Architecture (2004).