Skip to product information
1 of 0

Anti-Catholicism in Scotland, 1688–1750

Regular price $130.00
Regular price $0.00 Sale price $130.00
Sold out
Situates anti-Catholicism in Scotland within a 'long Reformation', demonstrating that opposition to 'popery' was influenced equally by the changing culture of Scottish Protestantism and the externa...
Read More
  • 17 November 2026
View Product Details
Situates anti-Catholicism in Scotland within a 'long Reformation', demonstrating that opposition to 'popery' was influenced equally by the changing culture of Scottish Protestantism and the external threat of Jacobitism.


The revolution of 1688-90 brought about the overthrow and exile of the Catholic James VII and II, and an abrupt end to the unprecedented freedoms that Catholics had enjoyed under James's reign. But the revolution had equally profound consequences for Scottish Protestantism, overturning Episcopacy and re-establishing Presbyterian government. Over the subsequent half-century, Scottish Protestantism underwent a series of significant transformations, evolving from a culture that emphasised religious unity and uniformity to one that was increasingly pluralistic. Anti-Catholicism was an important part of those transformations: opposition to 'popery' was shaped by Scotland's changing religious culture, and shaped it in turn.

Situating this topic within bigger frameworks of 'long Reformation' in Britain and Ireland after 1689, the book demonstrates that opposition to 'popery' in this period was influenced as much by the changing culture of Scottish Protestantism as it was by the external threat of Jacobitism. As such, it had a much more significant role in the shaping and reshaping of Scottish religious culture than has hitherto been recognised. Reframing opposition to popery in this way reveals the continued potential for anti-Catholicism to precipitate divisions, between individual Protestant confessions and within them. The book thus reveals the multi-faceted, disruptive and destabilising nature of opposition to popery and its role in forging multiple Protestant identities. By reconstructing the ways in which popery informed contemporary religious politics, Protestant confrontations with the Catholic community, and the significance of popery as a discourse navigating confessional divides, this monograph makes a substantial contribution to our understanding of religious intolerance, and the development of Protestantism in Scotland in a period of confessional upheaval, political change and intellectual transformation.
files/i.png Icon
Price: $130.00
Pages: 304
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Inc.
Imprint: Boydell Press
Publication Date: 17 November 2026
Trim Size: 9.21 X 6.14 in
ISBN: 9781837651894
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / Europe / Great Britain / General, European history, HISTORY / Modern / 17th Century, HISTORY / Modern / 18th Century, RELIGION / History, History of religion, Roman Catholicism, Roman Catholic Church
REVIEWS Icon
Acknowledgements
List of Abbreviations
Editorial Conventions
Introduction
1. Conceptualising Popery
Part I: Church, State and the 'Popery' Problem
2. The 'Increase of Popery'
3. Popery and Religious Politics in the Early Hanoverian State
Part II: Confronting Popery
4. Discipline, Co-Existence and Conformity
5. Organised Missions
Part III: Contesting Popery
6. Popery and Political Crisis
7. Popery and Protestant Transformation
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index