A History of Clan Shaw

A History of Clan Shaw
Author: Charles John Shaw
Publisher:
Total Pages: 456
Release: 1983
Genre: Reference
ISBN:

The Shaw family of Scotland between the 1200s and the present, including branches in Ireland, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and elsewhere.

A Bernard Shaw Chronology

A Bernard Shaw Chronology
Author: A. Gibbs
Publisher: Springer
Total Pages: 446
Release: 2001-02-14
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 0230599583

A.M. Gibbs provides an authoritative and comprehensive account of the life, career and associations of George Bernard Shaw (1856-1950), one of the most eminent and influential literary figures of the modern age. Drawing on a wide range of published and unpublished material, this work illuminates the complex fabric of Shaw's extraordinary career as playwright, novelist, critic, orator, political activist, social commentator, avant-garde thinker and controversialist. Images of Shaw's daily private life, and of his tangled love affairs, flirtations and friendships, are intertwined with the records of his prodigiously productive career as public figure and creative writer, in a fully documented study which is both a scholarly resource and a lively biographical portrait. An introductory chapter explores theoretical issues in biography raised by the chronology form; and a chapter on Shaw's ancestry and family supplies new evidence about his Irish background. A Who's Who section contains thumbnail sketches of over two hundred contemporaries of Shaw who had significant associations with him.

Kinship and Clientage

Kinship and Clientage
Author: Alison Cathcart
Publisher: BRILL
Total Pages: 288
Release: 2006-05-01
Genre: History
ISBN: 9047409191

This volume examines Highland society during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries highlighting the extent to which kinship and clientage were organising principles within clanship. Based on clans located in the central and eastern Highlands this study goes some way to addressing the imbalance in Highland historiography which hitherto has concentrated largely on the west Highlands and islands. Focusing initially on internal clan structure, the study broadens into an analysis of local politics within the context of regional and national affairs, raising questions regarding the importance of land and the nature of lordship as well as emphasising the need for Highland history to be integrated further into broader studies of Scottish society during this period.