A quick heads up that my new 5 week course for Pharos Teaching and Tutoring Ltd (www.pharostutors.com), entitled Researching Scottish Ancestral Crisis starts again on November 13th, with spaces still available!
For some ten years or so, Pharos offered two Scottish themed courses, Scottish Research Online and Scotland 1750-1850: Beyond the Old Parish Registers. In the first course, we've shown how to access certain records for Scottish research online, whilst the second course has taken things further by showing how to access records not just online, but in archives. At the same time it has also shown how various aspects of Scotland worked, as a means to locate records offline and online that might help when the OPRs don't.In this third course, we now turn things seriously up to
eleven...! In the past, records were often kept at the point of crisis
on a range of fronts, and in this course, I not only explore those
scenarios, but also explain how the country worked, the types of records
generated, and how to access them. The church and the state are both
included, and believe me when I say I have had a lot of fun writing it!
If you have done the previous two courses - or feel yourself to be
somewhat further along with your research experience - I hope you can
sign up to this course, which, as ever, I hope will be both fulfilling
and fun!
The following is the course description:
Researching Scottish Ancestral Crisis
As
in our own lives, many of our Scottish ancestors had to overcome great
adversity on occasions to simply make it through the day. Illness,
death, bigamy, abandonment, accidents, eviction, victimhood, ethnic
cleansing, and so much more a dramatic range of experiences across a
series of lifetimes. And whenever such crises emerged, somebody was
usually close to hand with a quill and ink to bear witness. In so doing,
a great documentary legacy was created that can greatly help us to
understand the true lives of our forebears, and the struggles that led
to who we became today.
Many challenges and hardships were faced
across time. There were the laws of the local parish church and the
punishments awaiting those who breached kirk discipline, diligently
recorded in the kirk session and presbytery papers, but additional
courts existed elsewhere in society, from the Crown and the burghs to
the local justices of the peace and trade incorporations. Records of the
churches and heritors, as well as the post-1845 poor law records, can
detail the struggles of those who struggled to avoid poverty, whilst
documents such as letters of horning and warrants of poinding, as well
as sequestration and cessio bonorum, can detail the persecution and
stigma of being a debtor or a bankrupt. In other areas, the court
records can also reveal some of the ingenious methods by which people
could avoid inheriting the debts of their predecessors.
The
darkest moments of the soul, from mental health issues and illness, are
revealed in historic asylum and hospital records held in archives across
Scotland, whilst cases of murder and suicide can be uncovered in court
processes, newspapers and broadsheets. Dramatic moments of rebellion,
when our forebears drew a line in the sand against a perceived tyranny
or democratic deficit, can be found in contemporary records of the
Covenanters, the Jacobites, the Chartists, the Suffragettes, crofters,
and those cleared from the land to make way for more profitable sheep,
from the forfeiture of lands and prosecutions to the folk songs of many
who were forced to emigrate.
This course will reveal the many
areas of Scottish ancestral hardship that have been documented over the
last few centuries, and explore how to access the relevant records. It
follows on from two previous Pharos courses, Scottish Research Online,
which explores websites offering some of the more basic records for
Scottish research, and Scotland 1750: Beyond the Old Parish Registers,
which takes students to more advanced records found offline and online,
and which flags up the importance of using catalogues. Although not
compulsory, it is recommended that both courses are completed prior to
studying Researching Scottish Ancestral Crisis.
Lesson Headings:
* Law and Order
* Family Events and Relationships
* Poverty and Debt
* Medical Issues
* The State and the People
Each
lesson includes lesson notes, activities and forum exercises for
students to complete during the week and a one-hour live tutorial (text
chat or Zoom) with the tutor and the rest of the class. Times for the
tutorials are set at the beginning of each course by the tutor.
See How the Courses Work.
Relevant Countries: Scotland
Course Length: 5 weeks
Start Date: 12 Jun 2023
Cost: £58.00
To sign up, please visit https://www.pharostutors.com/details.php?coursenumber=303
I hope to see you there!
ChrisOrder Tracing Your Belfast Ancestors in the UK at https://bit.ly/BelfastAncestors. Also available - Tracing Your Irish Ancestors Through Land Records, Sharing Your Family History Online, Tracing Your Scottish Family History on the Internet, Tracing Your Irish Family History on the Internet (2nd ed), and Tracing Your Scottish Ancestry Through Church and State Records - to purchase, please visit https://bit.ly/ChrisPatonPSbooks. For purchase in tthe USA visit https://www.penandswordbooks.com. Further news published daily on The Scottish GENES Facebook page, on Threads at @scottishgenesblog and via Mastodon at https://mastodon.scot/@ScottishGENES.
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