2016
DOI: 10.3366/shr.2016.0293
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The Settlements of the Beauly-Wick Coast and the Historiography of the Moray Firth

Abstract: Narrow strips of sea do not always function as ‘chokepoints’ for the communities that live around them. This article interrogates the historiography of the ‘corridors’ of the Moray Firth region, taken here to be inclusive of the Dornoch Firth, the Cromarty Firth and the inner Moray Firth, and incorporating the Inverness, Kessock and Beauly Firths. Although public and private bodies use the term ‘Moray Firth’ frequently, with few exceptions historians have refrained from doing so. The settlements of the norther… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(2 citation statements)
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References 25 publications
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“…Along this (coast) line, our arguments around place led us back to the ecosystems of the in-between, as our intellectual and empirical home. We have recently become intrigued with the work of coastal scholars, and historians of the shore, who study the complex and rich ecotone at the edges of sea and land, where so many of the population now live, for almost every continent outside Africa (Gillis, 2012, p1; see also Land, 2007;Worthington, 2016;Cunliffe, 2017). Such scholars demonstrate "that homo sapiens are best described as an edge species that has consistently thrived in the coastal ecotone where the ecosystems of land and sea meet" (Gillis, 2012, p4).…”
Section: Discussion: a Short Travel Guide To The In-betweenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Along this (coast) line, our arguments around place led us back to the ecosystems of the in-between, as our intellectual and empirical home. We have recently become intrigued with the work of coastal scholars, and historians of the shore, who study the complex and rich ecotone at the edges of sea and land, where so many of the population now live, for almost every continent outside Africa (Gillis, 2012, p1; see also Land, 2007;Worthington, 2016;Cunliffe, 2017). Such scholars demonstrate "that homo sapiens are best described as an edge species that has consistently thrived in the coastal ecotone where the ecosystems of land and sea meet" (Gillis, 2012, p4).…”
Section: Discussion: a Short Travel Guide To The In-betweenmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recent essays by Cameron, Aonghas Maccoinnich, Niall Mackenzie and Andrew Perchard, and David Worthington (2010, 2013, 2015, 2016) challenge this view because, as they show, international networks and a remarkable diversity of indigenous economic activities existed in the area over a period spanning centuries, including during the Improvement Era. However, we are still largely missing work recognizing the connections found in the history of economic intervention over the longue durée in the H&I and the connections found there and elsewhere in Great Britain that integrated economic development into a pan-Britannic vision of agricultural and industrial development, that often saw the H&I as an integral part of British improvement.…”
Section: Tracing the Origins Of Economic Intervention In The Handi Of Smentioning
confidence: 99%