Articles categorised as 19th Century
Two hundred years of Scots dictionaries
It is now two hundred years since the Rev John Jamieson (1759-1838) published the first dictionary given over entirely to the Scots language, in 1808. Jamieson was born and brought up in Glasgow...
Breaking the mould
After the Union with England in 1707, it was the language of that country that increasingly came to be the language of formality and officialdom, in spite of the fact that most people spoke Scots....
Remembering Wee Willie Winkie
On 2 September a new memorial was unveiled on the wall of Tennents’ Brewery, Duke Street, Glasgow, to Scots language writer William Miller (1810-72) and his most famous composition ‘Wee Willie...
New RLS Website Now Live
A new website about the life and work of Robert Louis Stevenson is now live on the internet. With full information about RLS’s life, pictures never before seen by the public and downloadable...
Scots monologues now online
Traditional musician, Nigel Gatherer, has collected a number of Scots monologues on his web site. The Monologue was a popular comic form in the 19th and early 20th century. Many were recorded and...
James Hogg songs
A major research project about the early 19th century Scottish writer James Hogg is culminating in the creation of a growing and valuable online resource. It currently contains articles and talks...
Scots comedy readings on Radio Ulster
For six weeks in July and August BBC Radio Ulster will be broadcasting a series of dramatised readings in the Ulster Scots dialect which were first performed in the nineteenth century as humorous...
Scots language history lecture
We have here a link to an historical academic presentation by Dr Dauvit Horsbroch about the Scots language. Dr Horsbroch uses the Scots language to discuss the early evidence of Scots, it's...
Rab Wilson - Tradition of Scots language
BBC Scotland has produced a range of new Scots language resources. Check them out at the BBC Learning Zone.
Sauchs, Scaurs and Signage
I want them back, the written-over names that gentrifying fashion anglicised, that bland or blind tuition vandalised. I want the stories that the map disclaims. the Brig o Allan, Corntoun, Chuckie...
Jacobite Songs
Scots songs celebrating Prince Charles Edward Stuart and his relatives were very much in vogue in the 19th century, although few, if any, were contemporaneous with the events of the Jacobite...
Representing Ayrshire
The Ayrshire Federation of Historical Societies and The Association For Scottish Literary Studies are holding a conference called 'Representing Ayrshire: John Galt and His successors' beginning at...
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Scots Language in Scotland's Census 2011 | Shetland and Orcadian Scots dialect | Caithness Scots dialect | North East Doric Scots dialect | East central Scots dialects | Angus and Tayside Scots Dialect | Galloway Scots Dialect | West Central Scots Dialect | Borders Scots Dialect | Ulster Scots Dialect | Scotch language | Scots leid | Scottish Language | Ulster Scots Dialect |



